The Goblins of Bellwater

“Me. I want her,” another goblin said, bulling his way in against Redring’s shoulder. Or at least, Skye assumed it was a he. His voice was deeper and his gaze upon Skye more lustful—it made her shudder, but all she could do was avert her eyes.

Redring shoved him. “Be patient, Slide!” She grinned at Skye again and softened her voice. “You see, there is a procedure for this. You will go home again, but eventually you will come to us.”

Someone shoved another sticky bite of food into Skye’s mouth: orange marmalade. She grimaced, but her obedient enchanted mouth chewed and swallowed it.

“You will want to,” Redring continued.

A different goblin crammed what tasted like musty mince pie into her mouth. She swallowed that too.

“You will lose your way in the human world.”

Another stuffed her mouth with stale cake with raspberry filling, gelatinous and with too many seeds. Tears of despair ran down her temples, yet she ate it.

“You will come to the woods and choose your mate.”

“Me!” the gruff goblin shouted, while someone smashed a handful of candied cherries into Skye’s mouth.

“Shut up!” Redring told him, and the others cackled. “She called to us, so she gets to choose. Besides, it’s more fun, watching to see who she picks.” She turned to Skye again. “And when you have withered enough among the humans, you will join us here. You will become goblin.”

Skye shuddered, alone at home over her weird holly-and-jellyfish art. She picked up her mug of coffee. It was three-quarters gone and the remainder was cold and stale, but she swilled the rest anyway, welcoming the bitterness. Anything to rinse away the memory of those sticky, horrible fruits.

That first night, back at home, after she’d climbed into bed shivering with a fever, Livy had brought her some mint tea and offered to make toast. “With blackberry jam?” Livy had suggested, and reeled back in shock when Skye had abruptly found her voice and shouted, “No!”

Skye flipped back a few pages in her sketchbook, and glowered at the pencil drawings there. The day after the assault, she had drawn Redring from memory, along with the goblins’ treetop dwellings. Apparently she could do that much. But so what? She’d shoved the drawings in front of Livy, who had dutifully examined them and said, “Huh. Those are really cool. Trying something new?”

The spell wouldn’t let Skye say anything about the connection between her silence and these drawings. She couldn’t even pantomime it. All she could do was gaze at Livy in burning frustration.

No one would get it. Of course they wouldn’t. Why would they, if they hadn’t seen what she’d seen?

She should have been tearing things apart in her fury over how little she could communicate. Her former self would have, the Skye who had walked into the forest that night, the Skye from every day of her life before that. But when the doctors said she’d been hit with a sudden depression, they weren’t entirely wrong. The spell brought with it a lack of desire to do much at all, an inability to care strongly about anything. Or at least, anything beyond following the dictates of the spell: feel the pull of the woods, retreat from human life, come and choose your mate…

She did want to fight it, ached to tell Livy or someone. But the fight in her was as dampened as her voice. Even drawing this unsuccessful sketch had proven exhausting.

The front door opened. Livy peeked into the kitchen, tugging off her rubber boots. “Hey.”

Skye closed the sketchbook. “Hey.” She could echo words well enough, usually. It was coming up with her own that had become challenging.

Livy had grown accustomed to it and kept up more of the conversation alone than she used to. Which was also pretty damn depressing.

“Cold out, but the water’s nice and smooth today.” Livy took off her baseball cap, tugged the ponytail holder out of her hair, and shook the curls loose. They had gotten frizzier in the damp outdoor air. Skye had always wanted tighter curls like those, and Livy’s blonder color, rather than her own dark brown, sort-of-wavy, sort-of-straight combo. She’d told Livy so in the past. She wished she could compliment her again today.

“Nice,” Skye echoed instead. Goddamn magic.

Livy peeled off her raincoat and hung it over the back of a chair. “Also, I caught Kit Sylvain stealing driftwood.”

Skye lifted her eyebrows.

Livy gave a one-note chuckle. “I didn’t bust him. I helped him put it in his truck. We all know he does it. I mean, how else would he carve that stuff? He’s part of the local color; we can’t mess with it.” She wandered to the coffee machine, sniffed at the remaining brew, wrinkled her nose, and dumped it in the sink.

Skye looked down at her sketchbook with a sigh. It would be useful to tell Livy what other sorts of local color existed around here.

“He kind of asked me out, too.” Livy rinsed the pot under the tap. “Offered to buy me coffee. I took a raincheck.”

She leaned sideways against the counter, her curves hugged by her faded jeans and dusty-pink hoodie. She looked so solemn and lovely with her downcast eyelashes and full lips. Men should ask her sister out, and Livy should go out and have fun. Skye hadn’t wanted much lately except the goblins and the woods, and at the same time to be free of the goblins and the woods, but she wanted this.

This desire helped her rebel against her spell long enough to push two encouraging words to the surface.

“He’s cute.”

Livy looked at her in astonishment. The water filling the pot overflowed and ran down her hand. She shut it off, then sent a grin at Skye. “It’s true. He is, damn it.” She set the pot on the counter and shook off her wet hand. “Suppose I could take him up on that raincheck.” She glanced at the clock. “But not today. Got to do some work, even though it’s Saturday. You’re working too, right?”

Skye nodded. Her hopes sank back down into their usual mire as she envisioned another afternoon of trying to serve customers at the cafe without being able to converse freely, nor even smile. God, why did they have to make the spell so she couldn’t smile? That was a diabolical touch. The fever had gone away after one day, but the rest of the magical symptoms were only getting worse by the week.

She glanced up to find Livy chewing her lip as she regarded Skye. “Might want to…wash your hair?” Livy cringed in apology.

Skye lowered her face again. Not giving a shit what she looked like: another side effect. She scooped up her notebook and shuffled off to the shower.





CHAPTER FIVE


SKYE SAYING “HE’S CUTE” ABOUT KIT WAS UNUSUAL ENOUGH, IN SKYE’S LIMITED COMMUNICATION LATELY, THAT IT made Livy think all week about how she probably should go find him and have coffee. After all, Skye seemed to think she should. So maybe, somehow, it would improve Skye’s well-being if she did—which made no sense. But the thought wouldn’t stop pestering Livy, and by the end of the week she’d decided to act on it.

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