The Hazel Wood

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The Hazel Wood Page 27

by Melissa Albert


  It was green leather stamped in gold. PASSPORT, it said across the top, and Hinterland. In between, a flower like the one on my arm. I held it gingerly, like it might evaporate, and opened it. There was a flurry of stamps inside, some with dates that made sense, and some that didn’t. The stamps were of doors, mostly, but one was a ship, one a train, another a stylized boot. The place-names were unfamiliar, so odd they slipped from my mind before I could understand them.

  I smiled wider than I had in weeks. “More doors. You found them.”

  “Not by myself,” Janet said modestly. “There was some mixing of refugee groups near the end. Some of them knew a few tricks I didn’t—more than you’d think relies on having the right paperwork.”

  “Near the end? Of what?”

  She tugged the passport from my grip and slipped it back into her purse, tucked the purse away. “Well. Things haven’t been so up to snuff in the Hinterland these days. I’m afraid we started a bit of a trend. One broken story begets another—you weren’t the only doomed princess to want a happier end.”

  “Wait. I was doomed? What was my end supposed to be? I never knew.”

  “I think it’s best if you keep not knowing, don’t you? Wouldn’t want to make any self-fulfilling prophecies. Anyway, the place doesn’t run the same without those stories ticking away. Things are getting a little … fuzzy.”

  “I nearly fell through a thin place,” Ingrid put in.

  “Right,” Janet said. “She was knee deep in the ground, nothing but black and stars under her feet, and the damned story kept trying to weave her out of the world. But we got her out all right, didn’t we?”

  Ingrid made a face like it wasn’t that all right.

  “Finch—did he come back with you?”

  Janet’s face went soft. “He didn’t. That boy has other worlds to explore. We’re not always born to the right one, are we?”

  I didn’t know how badly I wanted to see him again till I learned, one more time, I never would.

  “I don’t know who I am without it,” I said impulsively. I said it like an ugly secret.

  “Without the Hinterland? You weren’t back in it so long, were you?”

  “Without the ice.”

  “Ah. Well, you aren’t the first ex-Story to feel that way. It’s like half of you got sucked out with a straw, isn’t it?”

  It was. It was exactly like that. “What should I do?” I asked desperately.

  She touched my cheek, then wrote something down for me on the back of a napkin. An address, a date, a time.

  That was how I ended up in a nag champa–scented psychic’s parlor on Thirty-Sixth Street. The psychic wasn’t in—she didn’t start work till noon, and it was ten a.m. on a Sunday—but the room was half-filled with people who had singular faces. Cruel features, or lovely ones, delicately drawn. More than one of us had feral Manson eyes, rose-red lips, chapped mouths bitten till they were bloody. I estimated two-thirds of the room wore nicotine patches, and nearly everyone had ink on whatever skin was visible. Tattoos of remembrance, bits of Hinterland flora or the outline of a dagger or a teardrop or a cup. Or a door.

  And all of us had something empty in our eyes. Something eager to be filled. There were some fully human refugees there who’d lived in the Hinterland too long to know what to do with themselves back on Earth, but most of us were ex-Story. When their world fell apart—our world—they came here.

  Every week, the Hinterland’s refugees gathered in the psychic’s parlor to talk. Drink coffee. Settle grievances. It was a last stop before prison or an institution for lots of them. The violent ones, the Briar Kings, were already gone. Faded into the crowd, burying themselves where they could do the most damage, or dead. When a world dies, it doesn’t go with a whimper. I felt like an outsider there, too, but then we all did. I’d sat at enough misfit lunch tables in my life to know the feeling. We were each our own island, gathered together into one messed-up archipelago.

  I stocked oats and pecans and lucuma powder at the co-op, and tried to stay in my own bed the whole night. I read books that helped pave over the chinks and canyons in my memory, and let Ella comb henna through my hair. On Sundays I drank bad coffee and listened to the refugees’ stories, and they started to fill me up. My memories became denser. I was building a scaffolding out of them to hang a real life on.

  With a girl whose fairy tale had been so dark I didn’t see how she could be anything less than a sociopath, I made a pact: we’d go to school. Her for the first time, me again. By then the group had someone at work forging documents for anyone who needed them. My friend became Sophia Snow, a fairy-tale name I tried to talk her out of. I went with Alice Proserpine, and moved my birthday two years up. I wanted to be seventeen on the record.

  The doors to the Hinterland were closed, the world winked out. The ice was out of me. The Spinner’s world had set Finch loose, too. At night, when I couldn’t sleep, I pictured him journeying through starry spaces and dusty doors, strange universes he could sift through like coffee beans.

  Sometimes after those restless nights, I wake up early in the morning, woozy with dark dreams. I check my reflection in the mirror. I slide on sunglasses before Ella wakes up, and I go walking. I drink scalding tea and ride the ferry and breathe hard into my hands. When I come home again, my eyes are brown, and faultless, and you could almost, almost say they look like my mother’s. Ella Proserpine’s.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thank you first to Faye Bender, magnificent agent and tirelessly patient partner in explaining how all this stuff works, and then making it happen like a wizard. My friends and family have grown weary of my saying, “Man, I love Faye,” so I’ll just leave it here for posterity: Man, I love Faye.

  To Sarah Dotts Barley, my book’s perfect love match: Thank you for making the editorial process an exciting, energizing, ridiculously fun one, free of dread. I couldn’t have asked for a better advocate and second brain for the book, or a happier home for it than Flatiron/Macmillan. Big thanks also to Amy Einhorn, Liz Keenan, Emily Walters, Patricia Cave, Nancy Trypuc, Robert Allen and the audiobook team, Anna Gorovoy, Keith Hayes, Lena Shekhter, and Molly Fonseca. For the gorgeous cover, illustrations, and endpapers (endpapers!), thank you to Jim Tierney.

  Thank you to Mary Pender-Coplan, amazing film agent, and to the agents who helped this book find homes around the world: Lora Fountain (and Léo Tortchinski); Ia Atterholm; Sebastian Ritscher, Nicole Meillaud, and Annelie Geissler at Morhbooks; Milena Kaplarević, Ana Milenkovic, and Nada Cipranic at Prava i Prevodi; Gray Tan and Clare Chi at Grayhawk Agency; and Kohei Hattori at The English Agency. Thank you also to Ryan Doherty at Sony Pictures Entertainment, and to Lucy Fisher, Lucas Wiesendanger, and Charlie Morrison at Red Wagon Entertainment.

  To my parents, Steve and Diane Albert. Thank you for everything, including a childhood so loved and secure I was free to lose myself in fictional worlds, to the ultimately happy detriment of my social life, eyesight, and standing at the Cook Memorial Library. I love you very much.

  To Bryan, my childhood partner in crime. To Amy, my playmate then, my BFF now.

  To my badass beta readers, brilliant writers all: Jeanmarie Anaya, Natalie Zutter, and Jennifer Kawecki. To Emma Chastain, whose insightful, hilarious, true writing inspires me, for offering early encouragement. To Molly Schoemann-McCann, one of the funniest writers I know, for reading the first ten pages of the book and telling me it was the one to finish. To Joel Cunningham, a great SFF advocate, for general genre brilliance, support, and loving portal fiction.

  To the Quidditch Bitches, Tara Sonin, Annie Stone, Sarah Jane Abbott, Kamilla Benko, and Ellie Campisano, for your feedback, your support, your writing I can’t wait to read every time we meet—and for being people I just want to hang out with, ultimately leading to me writing more words. To Kim Graff and Phil Stamper, for writing dates that socially pressured me to write more words instead of sitting at home eating watermelon.

  Thanks to Dahlia Adler and the B&N Teen team
, for your passion and advocacy for YA literature, and for consistently blowing up my to-read list.

  To my sensitivity readers, Dylan Stasa and Mariah Barker (Gryffindor and Hufflepuff, respectively), for your smart and generous feedback, and for liking the Harry Potter references.

  And, finally, to Michael, extraordinarily handsome husband who also happens to be the funny, wonderful love of my life. Thank you.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Melissa Albert is a web editor and the founding editor of the B&N Teen Blog. She has written for McSweeney’s, Time Out Chicago, and more. Melissa grew up in Illinois and lives in Brooklyn, New York. Find her on Twitter at @mimi albert. You can sign up for email updates here.

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  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  THE HAZEL WOOD. Copyright © 2018 by Melissa Albert. All rights reserved. For information, address Flatiron Books, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.flatironbooks.com

  Illustrations by Jim Tierney

  Cover design by Jim Tierney and Keith Hayes

  The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

  ISBN 978-1-250-14790-5 (hardcover)

  ISBN 978-1-250-19219-6 (international, sold outside the U.S., subject to rights availability)

  ISBN 978-1-250-18829-8 (signed OwlCrate edition)

  ISBN 978-1-250-14791-2 (ebook)

  eISBN 9781250147912

  Our ebooks may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at 1-800-221-7945, extension 5442, or by email at [email protected].

  First Edition: January 2018

 

 

 


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