Visions (Cainsville 2)
Page 155
"Tylwyth Teg. Hypothetically."
"What? The word 'fairies' offends you?"
"Hypothetically. Fae if you must."
"Fine. So these babies get switched. Why?"
He seemed to consider this, and I was bracing for him to refuse to answer when he said, "Take a look at the families involved. What do you see?"
"Well, the children don't resemble the parents--"
"Look deeper, Olivia. There is a very marked difference in the families."
"They come from different sides of the track, so to speak. One is upper-middle-class. The other is lower. The income level--"
"Deeper."
I considered. "The Conways are solid citizens. Well educated, no trouble with the law, and so on. The Shaws are none of the above. Criminal records. Addictions. A family with deep-rooted problems."
"Hmm."
"And the point is? So you took--"
"I did nothing."
"Hypothetically."
"Hypothetically or not, I did nothing."
"Fine. So someone takes a girl from a good family and switches her--"
"Reverse the situation."
"Someone takes a girl from a troubled family and--" I looked up sharply. "And gives her a better chance."
"Perhaps."
"Why would--?" I stopped myself. "Because she's the one wh
o matters. The girl born to the Shaws, who grew up as Ciara Conway."
To collect my thoughts, I got up and walked to the fence. I absently rubbed one of the chimeras, and when I did, I imagined the shrieks of children, delighted shrieks, and even if I don't have a maternal bone in my body, I felt what a parent must feel, that burst of pleasure and of pride and of something else--the instinct to keep their children happy, to keep them safe, to mow down every obstacle in their path to do it.
When I looked out again, I saw something on the grass, glowing in the moonlight. A ring of mushrooms.
A fairy ring.
I opened the gate.
"Olivia?" Patrick called.
I ignored him and walked to the ring and knelt beside it. Mushrooms, perfectly arranged in a circle. No, not quite perfectly--there were a few stray ones in the middle. Small ones, lost in the grass. Protected within the circle.
I reached to touch one . . . and the ring vanished. Gone in a blink, because it had never been there. It was a vision, a nudge in the direction I already knew was correct.
Patrick stood outside the gate, watching me.
"They're your children," I said. "Fae children. They're Tylwyth Teg."