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Reckless (Mirrorworld 1)

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His Own Kind

It was early afternoon by the time they finally left the forest. Dark clouds hung above fields and meadows, patches of green, yellow, and brown that stretched to the horizon. Elderberry bushes bore heavy clusters of black berries, and Elves, their wings wet with rain, fluttered among the wildflowers by the roadside. However, the farms they passed were all deserted, and on the fields cannons were rusting among the unharvested wheat.

Jacob was grateful for all the abandoned farms, for by now it would have been perfectly obvious to anyone looking at Will what was growing in his flesh. It had been raining on and off since they had come out of the forest, and the green stone on his face shimmered like the glaze of some sinister potter.

Jacob had still not told Will where he was leading him, and he was glad that Will didn't ask. It was already enough that Fox knew that their destination was the only place in the world he had sworn never to return to.

Soon the rain was falling so mercilessly that even the vixen's fur no longer gave her any protection. Jacob's shoulder throbbed with every movement, as if the Tailor was jabbing his needles into it again, but with every glance at Will's face, Jacob pushed away any thought of rest. They were running out of time.

Maybe it was the pain that made him careless. He barely noticed the abandoned farm when it appeared by the side of the road, and Fox only caught the scent when it was already too late. Eight men, ragged but armed. They suddenly emerged from one of the dilapidated barns and had their rifles trained on the travelers before Jacob could draw his pistol. Two of the men were wearing imperial tunics, and a third the gray jacket of a Goyl soldier. Plunderers and deserters. The human debris of war. Two more had hung on their belts the same trophies imperial soldiers liked to display: the fingers of their stone-skinned enemies, in all the colors they could find.

For one brief moment, Jacob hoped they wouldn't notice the stone. Because of the rain, Will had drawn the hood of his coat well over his face. However, one of them, a scrawny weasel of a man, noticed the infected hand as he dragged Will from his horse, and he yanked the hood off his head.

Clara attempted to shield him, but the one with the Goyl jacket pushed her out of the way, and Will's face turned into that of a stranger. Never before had Jacob seen in his brother's features such a powerful desire to hurt someone. Will struggled to free himself, but the weasel punched him in the face, and when Jacob's hand went for his pistol, their leader quickly put the muzzle of his rifle to Jacob's chest.

He was a heavyset fellow with only three fingers on his left hand. His threadbare jacket was covered with the semi-precious stones Goyl officers wore on their collars to denote rank. There was a lot of booty to be grabbed on the battlefields once the living left the dead behind.

"Why haven't you shot that Man-Goyl yet?" the leader asked while he searched Jacob's pockets. "Haven't you heard? There are no more rewards to be had for this lot, now that they've started negotiating with them."

He pulled out Jacob's handkerchief but shoved it back heedlessly before a gold sovereign could drop into his calloused hand. Behind them, Fox scurried into the ruined stable. Jacob could feel Clara looking at him pleadingly, but what did she expect? That he could take on eight men at once?

Threefingers poured out the contents of Jacob's purse and gave a disappointed grunt when all he found were a few copper coins. The others, however, were still staring at Will. They were going to kill him. Just for kicks. And put his fingers on their belts. Do something, Jacob! But what?

Talk, play for time, wait for a miracle.

"I am taking him to someone who will give him back his skin." The rain was running down his face, and the weasel was jabbing his rifle into Will's side. Keep talking, Jacob! "He's my brother. Let us go, and in a week's time I'll be back with a sack of gold."

"Sure!" Threefingers nodded to the others. "Take them behind the barn, and shoot this one in the head. I like his clothes."

Jacob pushed away the two men who reached out to grab him, but a third put a knife to his throat. The man was wearing the clothes of a peasant. They hadn't always been robbers.

"What are you talking about?" he hissed into Jacob's ear. "Nothing can give them their skin back. I shot my own son when the moonstone started growing on his forehead!"

The blade was pushed against his throat with such ferocity that Jacob could barely breathe.

"It's the curse of the Dark Fairy!" he croaked. "So I'm taking him to her sister. She'll break it."

How they all stared at him. Fairy. Just a word. Five letters, which contained all the magic and all the terror of this world.

The pressure of the knife eased a little, but the face of the man was still contorted with rage and helpless grief. Jacob was tempted to ask him how old his son had been.

"Nobody just goes to see a Fairy." The boy who stammered these words was fifteen at the most. "They come and get you."

"I know a way. Keep talking, Jacob. I've been there before."

"Really? So why aren't you dead, then?" The knife was breaking his skin. "Or crazy, like the ones who come back and then drown themselves in the nearest pond?"

Jacob felt Will staring at him. What was he thinking? That his older brother was telling fairy tales, just as he had done when they were young and Will couldn't sleep?

"She will help him," he said again, hoarse from the pressure of the knife. But before that, you'll kill us. And it still won't bring back your son.

The weasel pushed the muzzle of his rifle into Will's blotched cheek. "Going to see the Fairies? Can't you see he's making fun of you, Stains? Let's just shoot them already!"

He shoved Will toward the barn. Two of the others grabbed Clara. Now, Jacob. What have you go to lose? But Threefingers suddenly spun around and stared past the stables to the south. Through the rain came the snorting of horses.

Riders.

They came over the fallow fields on horses that were as gray as their uniforms, and Will's face said very clearly who they were, even before the weasel yelled it to the others.



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