by Holly Evans
People pressed against me. The local humans had no sense of personal space. I held onto the upright bar and stared out of the window, waiting for my stop. Even a motorbike would have been an inconvenience; parking was at a premium in the ancient city. I sighed and ignored the person who pressed against my back, holding back my curses as more people piled into the tram. I hated rush hour.
Nearly everyone pushed and squeezed their way off the tram at my stop. I took a deep breath and walked down towards Salen. There were moments where I pitied the humans who had no idea what went on around them. Other moments, I wished I’d been raised as one of them, to have a boring office job and visit Salen as nothing more than another patron. I double-checked my iron filings were there. Quin had tried to convince me to just use an iron dagger like the other hunters. I explained to him that they felt wrong. I could see the conversation in my mind, the way he shook his head but couldn’t help smiling. I liked my silver-coated daggers and that was that. My fingers slipped around the unfamiliar soft leather pouch, and my heart ached for Quin. I would find him, and bring him home… then make sure he never pulled something so stupid again.
The quiet rumbling of voices came through the short entranceway into Salen. I walked down the few steps into what appeared to be a traditional little pub. Deep red ceramic tiles covered the floor, a long heavy bar ran along the wall to my left, and a number of small tables and stools were packed against the wall on my right. I wondered how many people had stopped there without realising the depths of the place.
The barman didn’t acknowledge my presence. He continued to chat to an older man with a thick beard and a large beer belly. Clearly an old regular. I pushed past the empty stools and turned down the narrow stairwell that was hidden at the far end. Another small room opened up at my side, revealing a couple in an intimate cove with two small tables, each with candles in the middle. I continued down the narrow stairwell with the exposed stone walls and high ceiling. It seemed to press in around me as it went around a shallow bend. My hand went to the dagger on my hip.
I scolded myself for being foolish as it opened out into another room with bare stone floors and exposed walls. The temperature had dropped a little; I was underground. I continued on down another flight of well-worn old steps. The bar was like a maze, with a series of rooms on different layers. When the night wore on, each room had a different style of music. I went down into the deepest part of the bar. The ceilings became much higher and the acoustics improved drastically. A small, modern-looking bar, complete with bright neon lights beaded along the shelves at the back, was tucked up in the far corner.
The air practically exploded with electricity when I stepped through the archway into the final area. Fae are almost painfully beautiful, or at least they appear that way. Some of them use glamour, others have merely stolen beautiful bodies. They’re all predators. They use that beauty to hook and draw in their prey. They’re twisted, malicious creatures with long lives and longer memories. Three of them sat huddled around a dark wood table, barely big enough for the stools the fae sat on. I smiled sweetly at them and hoped they were in a good mood. I usually let Quin speak to the fae; he had a silver tongue that would make even them proud.
The fae in question were sidhe, although they were quick to remind people that they were in fact Aos Si; the Sidhe were the mounds they used to live under. I didn’t give a shit what they felt they should be called; they were fae. Haeyl, the second in command, turned slowly and fixed me with an intense look that didn’t match the innocent smile plastered across his pretty face.
“And what brings one half of the Hawke twins here this fine evening?”
I tried to relax. There didn’t need to be a fight.
“I’m looking for Quin. He seems to have disappeared.”
Haeyl’s bright golden-green eyes widened to match his broad grin.
He glanced over at Azfin before he said, “Is that so?”
I ground my teeth together. I hated their games. Azfin’s deep brown eyes didn’t quite match his pale blond hair, but I had no doubt that most women never saw past the tightly toned body that threatened to burst out of his tight T-shirt. I forced myself to smile once more.
“He was dealing with a rogue lycan, but he never returned home.”
They all stood as one unit. I didn’t like where it was going.
4.
Foul breath filled my nostrils before I saw a filthy yellowed nail approach me from the corner of my eye. A sharp pain trickled down my neck before I caught sight of the owner, a red cap. The most vile beast of all. His unnaturally long tongue extended and curled around his nail to savour the drop of blood that sat there. I fought down my gag reflex. The Sidhe cackled; I refused to take a step back. I would not be intimidated.
Azfin said, “Miss Hawke here has lost her other half. Dear Quin has been lost without trace. Would you know anything about this, Red?”
All redcaps were referred to as Red. They weren’t the brightest sparks, perhaps they were too dim to understand the concept of a name. Red’s bloodstained lips spread into a malicious smile; his rancid breath clouded in front of me. I held back the cough. His dirt-brown eyes never left mine. I swore I could almost feel the grease on his skin and in his hair from the few feet away that I stood. A shiver of revulsion ran through me.
Red blinked and seemed to process Azfin’s words. “I may have heard a little somethin’.”
It was not going as well as I had hoped. I slipped my fingers down to the iron-filing-filled pouch and unhooked the clasp. The three Sidhe approached me slowly, in much the same way a trio of lionesses stalk up to a gazelle. I was in no mood to be a gazelle.
The Sidhe whose name I never learnt, with the sharp nose and green hair, said, “It’s about time that Hawke learnt her place in this city. She and her brother have had run of it for too long.”
Haeyl said, “Things are changing. You’re no longer required in the grand scheme of things.”
Red’s hand slipped over my stomach under my jacket before his claws went straight through my shirt into my ribs. I pinched some iron filings from the pouch and ground them into his eyes before slamming the heel of my hand into his large, crooked nose. He screamed and stepped back, giving the Sidhe free access. They were vicious and animalistic, somehow more so than the lycans. They tried to push me into a corner as they circled around me, keeping a close eye on the iron filings. The redcap was recovering, and I needed to get out of there while I could.
They glanced at each other, no doubt plotting their next move. I took advantage of the split-second pause and pushed forward. I slashed through Azfin’s barely-there shirt; he snarled as the blade bit into his skin. The cut wasn’t deep, but it was enough to coat the dagger in blood. I dipped it in the iron filings, and they all took a step back.
The nameless Sidhe put his hands up and said, “Now… there’s no need for all that.”
I saw Red step up just behind me. I twisted and hacked at his throat with the iron-filing-covered dagger. He howled and clutched at himself before he leaned back against the wall. I dipped it back into the iron filings and looked back at the Sidhe. Azfin snarled at me, but remained still.
After what felt like an agonisingly long standoff, Haeyl said, “Things are changing, bitch. Now get out of here before the rest of our brothers arrive.”
As much as I wanted to silence his pretty mouth for once and for all, I had the good sense to leave the bar. Quickly. I cursed as my ribs ached, and I tried to remember the route out. It was easy to get lost in the varying rooms and short staircases. I finally made it up into the top bar with my jacket clutched about me and a wan smile on my face. They looked like humans; they likely had no idea what went on beneath them.
Fortunately, the brunt of the rush and crush to get home had passed. I stood clutching onto my ribs, trying to stem the bleeding while waiting for another tram. There were lots of empty seats when it showed up. Unfortunately, the locals have a habit of guarding empty seats like they’r
e their last meal. I glared at an older woman in a garish yellow scarf and grey ankle-length skirt as she clutched onto the back of the seat and stood over the empty space. [ Opportunity for contemplation]
She gave me a filthy look, but relented when I growled, “Pardon,” and looked down at the seat.
I half-expected her to sit in it herself. Instead, she chose to stand over me. I sat tall and ignored her as I was once more watching the city go by.
The pain ate at me. Although, it was more the shame that I’d gotten the injury in the first place. The image of those cracked yellow nails, with the layers of dirt under them and covering the grey-brown finger, sinking into my skin made me want to retch. I wondered how safe it was to scrub myself with bleach for an hour, or possibly two. I didn’t know if I’d ever feel clean again.
The iron gate creaked and stuck at halfway open when I got home[ describe]. I sighed, lifted it a little, and carried on up the scruffy path that led to the front door of the building. It was unassuming, and more importantly, home. I gave a weak smile to the gentleman who lived on the bottom floor as he emerged with his scruffy little terrier before I slipped into the lift. I leaned back against the cool metal bar as it groaned and squeaked before it finally went up.
The temptation to kick the door when it refused to open the first time was almost too much to bear. I took a deep breath and wiggled the key. It opened without any trouble, as though mocking me. I locked all four locks on the door and threw the keys down on the kitchen counter before I went looking for Quin’s medical kit. For once, I was glad he insisted on hanging around with hedgewitches and alchemists.[ Describe sensation of coming home alone]
5.
I rifled through the large wooden box full of varying powders, liquids, and other substances trying to find something that would clean and help the increasingly painful wound on my side. I’d peeled off my shirt, but refused to look in the mirror. I lifted up two glass bottles with green crosses on them; that was a standard healing symbol. I hoped. One had a violent pink powder in it, the other was full of blue sparkly liquid that shimmered in the light. Once again, I missed Quin; he’d have been able to clean up the wound and have me back out into the city in no time. I hadn’t realised how much I needed him until he vanished. I’d kick his ass when he returned.
I poured some of the liquid into a small porcelain bowl and added a dash of the powder, stirred vigorously, and hoped for the best. The faint hissing wasn’t particularly encouraging, but it smelt of plum and cherry blossom, so I focused on that aspect. I closed my eyes, stuck a couple of fingers into the paste, and spread it onto the wounds. My eyes flew open and my hand bolted to my mouth as I held back an almighty scream. The pain was excruciating.
I jumped into the shower and turned on the water. It was of course icy cold, quickly bringing me to shiver while my breath caught in my throat. It went scalding hot before it settled into a reasonably bearable temperature. The paste clung to my skin and changed from lilac to navy blue as the water hit it. The pain faded into an intense burning. After much scrubbing with both my and Quin’s shower gels, I accepted defeat. I was stuck with four dirty holes and a smear of blue paste on my ribs. I didn’t know if it looked better or worse than the ugly purple bruises on the other side of my ribs from the lycan.
Tears threatened to join the water in cascading down my face, but I held strong. Crying wasn’t going to help me get Quin back. I needed a plan. I needed information. I peeled my jeans off. I hadn’t removed them in my mad dash for the shower. The pain in the wounds settled into an itchy burning sensation that burrowed its way into my ribs. I hoped that it wouldn’t go any deeper.
Once I was in fresh, dry clothing, I paced around the flat once more. I needed information. The fae had been useless; I’d hoped they’d give me at least something. If the redcap hadn’t have shown up, I might have gotten more than worthless threats and vague concepts. The city was always changing; such was the nature of things. Still, their words hung in the back of my mind.
The sun had set, the moon was rising, and I felt lost. I slumped down on the sofa and scrolled through my phone, wondering whom I could badger into giving me some information. Quin would have known whom to call and how to sweet-talk them. I threw my phone down onto the sofa and lay back with a groan. Wishing that Quin was there wasn’t getting me anywhere. I was beginning to feel weak as I realised just how much I needed him. He was my twin.
I needed to go to the site where the rogue and Quin had vanished. The lycans had lost their scent, but that didn’t mean they hadn’t missed something. Maybe Quin had left a clue, or whoever took them had left an identifying marker behind. Lycans weren’t known for their higher-level thinking; they could have missed a note stuck in a tree under a small neon sign saying ‘clue here’. I glanced out the window over the city. The moon was haloed by light clouds, although I could see the dark mass on the horizon. A storm was coming in. I had no doubt that it wasn’t the only one.
My stomach started growling. I realised I hadn’t eaten more than a pastry and had been in two fights. I couldn’t help but smile; Quin would have laughed at me in my bedraggled and pissed-off state. I set about making some food; it was going to be a long day. I needed my strength, and my sleep.
I woke up just before dawn. I’d told myself that I wouldn’t see much of anything in the dark; the truth was, I was exhausted and lost. I needed to calm my mind and pull myself together. The panic and fear over Quin was threatening to overwhelm me. The storm hadn’t come to much; it had built into a great wall of dark cloud and then dissipated. The feeling that it represented something clung to the back of my mind; I bit viciously into my pastry and told myself to stop being so stupid. Quin had been gone for a day, and I was unravelling. It was pathetic.
I pulled up a mental map of the city in my mind as I rummaged around the kitchen looking for more food; I couldn’t afford to be weak and hungry. A glance at the clock told me that the metro would be open again; a screech of tyres cut through my thoughts. As much as I hated public transport, it was still better than trying to drive around the city. The drivers were aggressive, verging on reckless, not that the pedestrians were much better half of the time. It was an antagonistic system.
Quin’s little alchemical box of miracles caught my eye. I still had some iron filings left. I wanted some of his energy-dispersing powder, but I didn’t know which that was or if he even had any left. I shoved the box in a cupboard out of sight. It wasn’t going to do me any good. I almost dropped the pouch of iron filings in my bad mood as I pulled on my belt. With a sigh, I carefully slipped my knives into their sheathes. I tucked my throwing knives away, just in case. My leather jacket gave me some protection and kept things out of sight; blades may be legal in the city but that didn’t mean I wanted to draw too much attention.
6.1
I leaned back against the square pillar and gazed absent-mindedly at the far side of the tracks with the inverted blue bubbles. It looked like I was inside a dalek; I didn’t know who had designed the metro station, but it was certainly memorable. People milled around me, and I couldn’t help but wonder why there were so many people down there; the businesses didn’t open for another three hours, yet they were all in office clothing. Or as close to it as Prague ever got.
Silent battles for seats occurred as everyone pushed into the train; I stood back and held onto the vertical bar in the middle of the carriage. I was only going a couple of stops. I saw no reason to incur the wrath of a local who felt that they were more deserving. Quin’s face flashed into my mind, with his broad smile and sparkling eyes. He always found amusement at my foul moods, moods that were increasingly dark in his absence. I made a note to myself to try and relax a little more when he returned. I did it for us; I needed to protect us. I had to keep him safe. He told me he understood, but I wasn’t convinced.
I pushed through the people to get out into the station. They milled around me, their minds somewhere else entirely. I took a deep breath and slipped around them
when they cut me off or stopped dead in their tracks, absorbed in their phones. Quin saw it as a game, a dance of sorts. I found myself almost smiling as I successfully navigated my way to the escalator without bumping into someone. He had a bright way of looking at things; I envied him that.
The pale morning light made me flinch as I stepped out into the small courtyard; the hotdog vendor was already there, ready for the tourists. I held back a yelp as someone elbowed my injured ribs; I gave them a dark look, not that they noticed. The walk up to the castle was reasonably peaceful, once I got away from the people. I maintained my little ritual of refusing to look back until I got to the very top of the hill, where I could pause for a moment and take in the breathtaking views. The city stretched out before me. The sky still carried the blush of pink that reflected over the red roofs. The river glittered and wove its way through the city. There was something about the collection of bridges that always caught my eye, lined up like a series of stitches pulling the city together. A sense of peace filled me.[ Expand on this em,tional state and its interaction with her earlier annoyance/despondency/etc]
The castle complex was empty apart from the soldiers in their ceremonial wear; they couldn’t keep the boredom from their faces, not that I blamed them. I wasted no time in admiring the gargoyles or the intricate architecture.[ Describe as if she’s doing it from memory to emphasize that she isn’t looking in-scene] I headed straight through to the gardens and around the back of the stables. The road was quiet; despite the rush on the metro, the traffic hadn’t begun yet. I glanced around, checking that I was alone before I started walking across the grass searching for some sign of Quin.
After some twenty minutes of searching, I’d found nothing. It had been stupid; I’d hoped to find a note or something, anything, to let me know where he was and that he was ok. Wasn’t that how it went in those movies? The brave and intrepid kidnappee would leave an ingenious clue for his saviours. I wasn’t feeling like much of a saviour. Something glinted in the light. I ran over to it, hope blooming once more. A small pile of indigo powder sparkled and glittered in the sunlight. It smelt of honeysuckle and coffee, Quin’s special little mix to use against all things magical.