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Fairy Keeper

Page 25

by Amy Bearce


  Men and women were nodding, crying in their panic about the quake. Such events had become too frequent to ignore. Nell made sense to them. They crowded around her now, not to attack her but to hear more. Nell was winning them over.

  Jack drew his bow again. No wind stirred to deflect that deadly arrow now. And this time, he aimed right at Nell.

  There was no time to stop him. Sierra couldn’t move faster than a speeding arrow. But Nell alone had the ability through her prophecies to convince the people to change their ways. Sierra could only think of one thing to do, even if it condemned her and possibly Micah right along with her father.

  Phoebe is safe, Phoebe is safe, Sierra reminded herself. Using her new understanding, she reached far down into the earth at their feet to the glowing river. Pulling hard, she yanked up as much of the energy as she could, sending it into Queen, into Micah, into the air, anything to drain the magic below to a dangerous new level. Sierra hoped she was right about what would happen next.

  The tremor was immediate, forcing Jack to lower his bow while he regained his footing. The people around her shrieked and ran again, pushing and trampling each other in their haste to get out before the next big quake hit. Because it was coming. Coming right at her. Red angry energy reached up from below like molten lava. She took a deep breath and hoped Nell was far enough away to escape the worst of it. If Sierra didn’t do this, though, Nell was dead for sure. Sierra’s heart broke at the thought of possibly hurting Micah, but he would agree with her, she knew.

  She thought to her fairy, Queen, I love you. I’ll always love you. Thank you for saving me.

  Queenie sent a burst of pure love from her place at Phoebe’s side.

  Sierra whispered to Micah, “I’m sorry. I wish I could’ve had more time with you.”

  With a deep breath, she yanked one more time on the cord she had created between her and the magic underneath her feet.

  Come and get me, she thought.

  And then the earthquake hit them like a hurricane. The sky went dark as the ground exploded in one swift motion, ripped into pieces because Sierra had taken too much magical energy from the earth’s depleted supply.

  The ground underneath Jack didn’t crumble so much as simply disintegrate in a giant billow of dust. Jack screamed as he fell, landing heavily on an up-thrust sliver of stone at the bottom of the gaping jaws of the earth. The rock pierced his chest as easily as his arrow had pierced Micah’s. Blood flowed, a pool of red seeping round Jack’s still body as the quake continued. Rocks skittered down the side of the newly created cavern, but he didn’t flinch. His chest didn’t move. Sierra didn’t think she’d feel anything but relief when he died, but there was an odd grief at the sight anyway. Losing a father was not an easy task, even a terrible father like Jack.

  Sierra clung to the rocks at her feet, trying to hang onto the bucking ground. She even began to think they might make it. But then a giant hole opened at her feet. Before she could back away, a crack widened between her and Micah. He gripped Sierra’s hand tightly, and then the world tilted.

  The ground she had been standing on broke away from the rest of the earth and began falling toward the hole at a steep angle, taking her with it. Sierra shrieked, clawing at the rocks. Micah lost his grip on her for a long moment, long enough for her to slide near the edge of the small cliff that had been created when the gap opened. He grabbed her by the arms.

  “I won’t let you go,” he promised through clenched teeth.

  Nell stood high above them, still prophesying through the chaos and destruction. People were collapsing to their knees around her, acknowledging her power as a priestess of some kind, like the druids who disappeared over a hundred years ago. Even the elders listened to her, faces white with fear and awe.

  A sigh released inside of Sierra, taking with it her fear. She had done her job. Only one job remained.

  “Take care of Phoebe,” she told Micah.

  “I won’t let you go,” he insisted, face drawn with agony and grief.

  The piece of earth Sierra clung to slid farther toward the hole. Micah’s arms formed her only bridge to stable land.

  “Fight, you stubborn girl!”

  But she was done fighting. She couldn’t fight anymore.

  Sierra smiled, trying to memorize his face as she gazed at him this last time. “Take care of her for me.”

  Tears spilled from his beautiful brown eyes, tears for Sierra. Why had she never believed he really cared for her? She’d wasted so much time with all her fears.

  Feeling almost in a dream, she let go of one arm, and pulled his face low enough to kiss. One peaceful, first kiss framed by terror. His lips were as soft as she always imagined. Then she pushed him away from the edge and sent a wordless goodbye to Queenie.

  The ground crumbled beneath Sierra, and she fell. She wasn’t even scared. She closed her eyes as the wind rushed upward through her hair.

  So this is what the moment before death is like, she thought, right before she landed.

  trangely, the ground wasn’t hard. In fact, it was much softer than Sierra would have imagined. And was it rising?

  Sierra’s eyes popped open. Golden glowing light surrounded her. Startled, she flailed, but then Queenie sent her a mental picture of what was happening. Sierra was on a bed of floating fairies. They had all finally come to Queen’s calling.

  Instead of swarming to kill, they gathered to save. To save Sierra, which was the same as saving Queenie. Sierra relaxed into the soft warmth and smell, the cinnamon sweetness of her calling. Fairy keeper. As the fairies lifted her from the pit, it had never felt truer or more wonderful.

  She was a fairy keeper. And she loved her fairy. Sierra told Queenie so with every heartbeat as they rose. They shared a link so close that words were unnecessary.

  Micah greeted Sierra as her toes touched the ground. He pulled her to him, and, for once, she didn’t resist. He crushed her in a hug so tight she could barely breathe, but she didn’t care. She pressed her face into his chest and wrapped her arms around his back. He relaxed his hold, and his hands wove through her hair gently, which had fallen loose of its braid. He held her with such tenderness, she felt like she was still floating on a bed of fairies. Their golden glow surrounded them as the fairies buzzed in excitement.

  Sierra pulled back enough to touch Micah’s chest where the arrow had pierced him. The palest golden scar lined his chest, but he was otherwise healed. She leaned her cheek against that scar, so thankful Queenie shared her magic. She saved him. Him and Sierra.

  A throat cleared nearby. Sierra pulled away reflexively, pushing Micah behind her, eyes searching for the source of the sound in the great mill of people around them.

  Phoebe said, “And this is…?”

  Sierra wrapped her arms around her sister, then turned to face the amazing person she had slipped into caring for, her friend and her maybe-someday dream. Because he was most definitely a dream, even if he was also magic.

  “Meet Micah,” Sierra said.

  He bowed and kissed Phoebe’s hand.

  Yeah, he was definitely magic.

  Phoebe rolled her eyes up at Sierra. “Is he real?”

  She laughed and hugged her sister tight. “Strangely, somehow, yes.”

  “And Bentwood and Jack?” Phoebe asked, voice hesitant.

  Sierra shook her head. “They both died in the quake. I’m sorry, Phoebe.”

  “Don’t be. We’ll be okay.”

  They looked at each other, spending a moment grieving the loss of their father, or rather, of what could have been if he had been a different kind of man. Their story with Jack was now a closed book that would never have a happy ending. Painful, maybe, but when it came down to it, Sierra wouldn’t change anything. It had all led her to this point. She squeezed Phoebe’s hand.

  Phoebe squeezed back, taking a deep breath. “And now what?”

  They surveyed the crowd still clinging to Nell’s ringing words. Corbin remained beside her, a surprisingly
staunch warrior.

  Sierra had no idea.

  Micah said, “Now the fairy keepers must go forth with this message across our world. The fairies must spread far and wide to balance our world again.”

  He clasped Sierra’s other hand. Their fingers fit together perfectly.

  “It will be a great adventure,” he said solemnly. “It is a journey I would be most honored to undertake with you and your friends and sister.”

  The world seemed suspended for a long moment until Sierra’s heart was so full it could burst. He wanted to be with her. They could stay together, though what the future would hold, she wasn’t really sure. For once, she was okay with that. Right at that moment, anything seemed possible.

  “No more debts?” Sierra asked, just to be sure.

  “No debts. This is a new beginning, yes?”

  She smiled and said, “Then, let’s go.”

  “Yes? With me?”

  He looked incredulous, but Sierra was done running.

  “Yes!” She laughed, the kind of joyful sound she had hardly ever made. She thought that was about to change.

  Yesss!! cried Queenie, and she spiraled straight into the cloudless sky, brighter than the sun.

  Many people helped turn my rough idea of a story into a published novel.

  A huge thank you goes to Lisa Gus for seeing something worthwhile in Fairy Keeper and to everyone at Curiosity Quills, for believing in this story. I’m incredibly grateful to my talented editor, the lovely Krystal Wade, and the amazing cover artist Amalia Chitulescu. Many thanks also to Julie M. Rodriquez for her sharp eye during proofreading.

  This manuscript would never have been completed, though, if my fabulous friend, author Carol Pavliska, hadn’t been there without fail, reading every draft, encouraging me, responding to my many (many) emails, and making me laugh when I was frustrated. I’m sure the coffee shop people got tired of us, but I will always treasure our visits.

  I’m grateful also to Lara, Beta-Reader Extraordinaire, who read several versions of Fairy Keeper and gave vital feedback as a voracious reader of MG and YA works. My writer-friend Nikki also read an early draft and cheered me on when I wasn’t sure I should keep going. All of my friends have been, without exception, supportive and loving.

  SCBWI has been a wonderful support network, as well, offering tons of events with excellent speakers and critique opportunities with incredible authors and editors. Thanks also to the broader online writing community, with its contests, critiques, and helpful bloggers.

  And of course, none of this would be possible without my family. To my parents, my sister, and my mother-in-law. And to my husband and my children. I love you all. Thank you for everything. How fortunate I am that my biggest fans are also my family.

  Amy writes stories for tweens and teens. She is a former reading teacher who now has her Masters in Library Science and her school librarian certification.

  As an Army kid, she moved eight times before she was eighteen, so she feels especially fortunate to be married to her high school sweetheart. Together they’re raising two daughters and are currently living in Germany, though they still call Texas home.

  A perfect day for Amy involves rain pattering on the windows, popcorn, and every member of her family curled up in one cozy room reading a good book.

  Now that you have completed this book, we hope you will leave a review so that other readers may benefit from your perspective. Authors like Amy Bearce live and die by your reviews, after all!

  Please visit http://curiosityquills.com/reader-survey/ to share your reading experience with the author of this book!

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  (http://bit.ly/ZiZ6m5)

  Everyone in Arnn―a small farming town with more legends than residents―knows the story of Witchwood Hollow: if you venture into the whispering forest, the witch will trap your soul among the trees. After losing her parents in a horrific terrorist attack on the Twin Towers, fifteen-year-old Honoria and her younger brother escape New York City to Arnn.

  In the lure of that perpetual darkness, Honoria finds hope, when she should be afraid. Perhaps the witch can reunite her with her lost parents. Awakening the witch, however, brings more than salvation from mourning…

  Broken Branch Falls, by Tara Tyler

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  Doing homework for bully ogres and getting laughed at as the butt of pixie pranks, Gabe is tired of his goblin life. When he and his friends step out of their nerdy stereotype and pull a prank of their own on the dragons at the first football game, it literally backfires, bringing a High Council vote to dismantle not only Gingko High, but the whole town, too!

  The Book of Ages–hidden handbook of the High Council, filled with knowledge and power–may be Gabe’s only hope. With the help of friends old and new, can Gabe complete his quest to find the Book in time to save Broken Branch Falls? Or will he remain an outcast forever?

  Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm a Supervillain, by Richard Roberts

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  Penelope Akk wants to be a superhero. She’s got superhero parents. She’s got the ultimate mad science power, filling her life with crazy gadgets even she doesn’t understand. She has two super powered best friends. In middle school, the line between good and evil looks clear.

  In real life, nothing is that clear. All it takes is one hero’s sidekick picking a fight, and Penny and her friends are labeled supervillains. In the process, Penny learns a hard lesson about villainy: She’s good at it.

  Broken Forest, by Eliza Tilton

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  Hopeless he'll never be more than the boy who didn't save his brother, 17-year-old Avikar accepts his life as the family stable boy, trying to forget the past.

  But when his sister, Jeslyn, is kidnapped, the thought of losing another sibling catapults him on a desperate quest. With his best friend by his side, and using the tracking skills he learned from his father, he discovers Jeslyn has been taken, kidnapped by one Lucino, the young lord of Daath, a mystical place thought only to exist in fables.

  And Lucino has plans for Jeslyn…

  The Misadventures of Hobart Hucklebuck, by Stan Swanson

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  Things are not as they should be in Pennywhistle. Enchanted toasters are not toasting, enchanted sprinklers are not sprinkling and Hobart Hucklebuck’s origami messenger birds are suddenly attacking him. Someone seems to be draining the power from all of the enchanted items in the village. But who could it be and why have they implicated Hobart’s grandfather?

  Follow Hobart, Specks, and Rosie as they try to solve this mystery, straying dangerously close to disaster not only for themselves, but the entire village of Pennywhistle.

  Remembering Kaylee Cooper, by Christopher Francis

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  Kaylee Cooper is certain that Alex will become friends with a ghost this year. Alex thinks that he is far too old to be listening to a first grader and encourages Kaylee to stop jeopardizing his important sixth grade social life. Kaylee doesn’t listen and finds awkward ways to spend as much time with Alex as possible, even if it means following him into the boy’s washroom.

  Fed up, Alex develops a strategic plan to ultimately help him get rid of Kaylee Cooper for good.

  However, he soon learns about the mysterious legend of Screaming Ridge that pulls and unlikely group of friends together, including the girl of his dreams, and the school’s meanest bully. When they discover that the legend is real, and that Kaylee Cooper is at the core of the mystery, Alex stares death in the face and helps save her from an eternal life of misery and confusion.

  Elementary, My Dear Watson! The Astounding Adventure of the Ancient Dragon, by Jose Prendes

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  When 12-year-old John Watson is sent to Candlewood boarding school, he makes quick friends with a boy named Sherlock Holmes, a universally disliked know-it-all and amateur sleuth.
/>   Before long, Sherlock embroils his new friend in a covert investigation of the mysterious disappearances blamed on a vengeful ghost. Dodging the meaty fists of the bully Moriarty, and aided by bumbling patrolman Lestrade, they uncover a deadly secret hidden deep underneath Candlewood.

  But does the intrepid duo have the brains–and the brawn–to crack this dangerous case?

  Appetizer:

  Book Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Main Course:

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

 

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