The Serpent's Secret (Kiranmala and the Kingdom Beyond #1)

“Oof!” The demoness made a choking sound, grabbing at her throat. She repeated the nonsensical word, fluttering her hands like she wasn’t getting enough air. “Oof! Eesh! Arré!”

Then, her image flickered, like she was a broken movie reel.

It went on like this, night after night. The Rakkhoshi Rani showing up in her smelly but see-through form, insulting me, trying to tell me something, but then disappearing.

If the demoness were real, I would have guessed this was some kind of trick. But since she obviously couldn’t be, I could only surmise I should stop sneaking so many chocolate chip cookies before bedtime. Because man, was this a super weird dream. Every time we got to the part where she wanted to tell me her secret, the rakkhoshi would open her mouth and flap her lips, like some kind of landed demonic fish. She would claw at her throat. Her mouth would move, but no sound would come out. Eventually, her image would flicker and fade altogether.

The closest she got to telling me her secret was one night when she managed to tell me some kind of riddle poem that made absolutely no sense when I first heard it: Elladin belladin, Milk White Sea

Who seeks immortality?

A drum and flame, eternity

Life and death in balance be

My heart in chains where my soul sings

The prison key a bee’s wings

With father’s tooth you crack the case

Humility must wash your face

Sacrifice is love’s reward

The path of truth is ever hard

Justice can’t be stopped by a wall

Purity is not the end-all

Without the dark, the light will fail

Gods and demons both will rail

Elladin, belladin, Milk White Sea

Who seeks immortality?

“What is all that supposed to mean? What’s that elladin belladin stuff anyway?”

“Oh, this pancreatic pain! This gaseous gallbladder!” The queen groaned. “Try to listen between the lines, khichuri-brain!”

“I’m trying!” It was hard to win an argument with a figment of my imagination. “If I figure out your riddle, will you leave me alone?”

“Oh, the intestinal agony of your stupidity!” The rakkhoshi grew so big in her frustration, her crown grazed my old-fashioned popcorn ceiling. She blew green smoke out of her ears and nose, and burped like she was lactose intolerant and had just eaten a cheesy burrito chased by a dozen milkshakes.

“You can’t understand, can you Loonie-Moonie?”

“Of course I can’t understand! Because you’re. Not. Real!” I shouted so loud I actually woke myself up.

Coming back from the bathroom, though, I couldn’t help but stare at the dents in the popcorn ceiling, the flakes of plaster on the foot of my bedspread, the half-melted solar system on my dresser, and the charred spot on my carpet. Plus, my bedroom smelled all gaseous like it was at the receiving end of an exhaust vent straight from a garbage dump.

But that was all just my middle-of-the-night imagination. Or maybe some cookie-induced sleepwalking. The nightlight was obviously so old and decrepit it had just spontaneously combusted. And the smell was probably a lingering combination of melted plastic and some nasty gym clothes that I’d forgotten to wash. Or so I tried to convince myself.

But the thing about subconscious dreams that aren’t actually subconscious dreams? Eventually, they come back to bite you in the chocolate chip.

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