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Page 52 of A Kiss from the Fae (Mistress of Magic #2)

Faye cried out, trying to get to her feet. ‘Please. The baby’s coming.’

‘I will help you, sidhe-leth .’ Levantiana’s eyes never left Moronoe’s, and the tone of her voice was icy. ‘Yet, I hoped you would call on me before now, when it is almost too late. Tell the Queen of Falias that she may leave us. She has no business here.’

Faye managed to get to her feet and backed away from the tide that was sweeping in.

At the edge, it carried branches, bottles, rusted cans and other wrack, which it never usually did – the shore of Abercolme was a clean one as a rule.

Yet suddenly, the sea seemed to be attacking the shore with anything it could find.

Levantiana stood in the tide, and Moronoe on the sand.

Both queens were taller than humans, and Moronoe’s heft and girth was at odds with a kind of translucence that emanated from the faerie queen of water.

Lightning crackled between them, and the day had darkened to a kind of twilight.

‘Niece. I asked you to call on me when the baby was coming, and you have not. Will you ask me now to take you to my realm, where I will help your labour and protect the child from this vulture ?’ Moronoe boomed over the storm.

‘You do not have long before the baby comes. Take my hand and all will be well.’

‘No,’ Faye cried out, clutching her belly as another contraction came.

This time, the pain left her breathless.

‘Please. Leave me alone. I won’t give you the baby.

Either of you,’ she panted. She reached for the obsidian crystal she always carried inside her bra and held it aloft as if to fend them off.

Levantiana laughed. Her eyes glowed under the cowled blue hood of her robe, and she flicked her hand. The crystal flew from Faye’s grip and landed on the sand several metres away.

‘You have already given him to me. We have struck a bargain. I do not need any further permission,’ she said, reaching out her hand.

‘All I have to do is touch you, and he will be mine. Do not worry, sidhe-leth . You will not be harmed. You will be free to make as many more babies as you like with your human lovers after this. But this one is mine.’ Levantiana’s tone was dismissive.

‘There is no way that I’m letting you take my child!

’ Faye screamed. ‘I banish you! Both of you! Back to the realms from which you came!’ The contractions were coming fast now, and her mind was focused on the pain.

Breathe through it, breathe through the pain , she told herself, her hands clutching at the wet sand in panic.

She knew, with a sudden flash of inspiration, that she’d have to give birth here on the beach. There was no time to get away now.

Faye held up the hag stone to her right eye and looked through it at Levantiana.

‘Break the spell; truth to tell!’ she cried out, and Levantiana took a step backwards.

Faye repeated it with Moronoe. She pulled her strength together as hard as she could and recited the faerie protection spell from the book Gabriel had given her.

Reaching into her pocket, she opened the felt bag.

Faye sprinkled its contents around herself in a circle, as wide as she could make it.

Break the spell, truth to tell,

Faeries, heed my magic spell!

Dark thy magic, dark thy throne,

I banish thee from hearth and home,

I banish thee from body, mind,

Heart and organs, shadow-kind,

Dark thy magic, dark thy throne,

I bid you leave my heart alone

Break the spell, truth to tell,

Faeries, heed my magic spell!

Faye grunted with the effort and returned to her hands and knees, panting hard.

‘Stupid girl! Do you think your folk charms can stop me?’ Levantiana crowed, and reached forward for Faye’s belly with her long blue-white fingers.

But as the herb powder touched the sand, it raised a wall of shadow around Faye.

Levantiana’s black fingernails grazed it, and she pulled her hand back as if in pain.

‘What is this sorcery?’ she raged, and threw herself at the shadow wall, but it threw her back like an electric fence.

‘Faye. Look at me.’ Moronoe’s hands were outstretched.

Faye so wanted to fall into them, wanted the support that they promised.

Of the two queens, Moronoe was at least her kin in some kind of distant way.

What if Finn had been lying when he said that Moronoe wanted her child for her own reasons?

Faye had believed her when she said she wasn’t involved in Lyr’s war against Murias and the other faerie realms, but that didn’t necessarily mean she could be trusted.

‘Faye. Undo this charm. We only want to help you. You are our kin, Faye. Dear child. There is no need for this,’ she cooed, her voice honey, but Faye resisted.

‘No.’ Faye panted, grateful for the protection of her own spell, though she was unsure how long it would last. She looked up, meeting Levantiana’s furious gaze. ‘Is it Finn’s baby? He says it is. Tell me the truth. For once.’ Faye grimaced as another contraction came, searing and intense.

Levantiana laughed cruelly as the thunder rumbled and cracked directly above them.

‘You do not deserve a child of the throne of Murias. Give it to me, and I will make sure it is raised in our royal house. And, you, fat bitch: get out of my way. You know as well as I do that when a mortal makes a bargain, you have no right to stand in my way to claim it.’ Levantiana shoved Moronoe out of her way and began circling the shadow boundary.

‘Your spell will only hold so long, Faye. And when it breaks, I will take the baby. You might as well give it to me gently as have me force you,’ she threatened, snarling.

Faye, on her hands and knees, felt the desire to push with the next contraction.

She had no choice; the baby was coming, and wouldn’t wait.

Her vision reduced itself to a kind of tunnel of pain in which there was nothing apart from the searing, tearing pain in her abdomen and the breath that heaved in her chest. Faye rested her forehead on the sand and tasted it in her mouth.

Dimly, at the edge of her perception, she heard Gabriel’s voice.

She looked up, racked with pain, and saw him running across the headland towards the beach.

No, keep away. Run away! Faye wanted to cry out, but she had no strength left.

‘Faye. Say the word, and I will take you to Falias. I will ensure you are cared for, and the child is safe,’ Moronoe called out.

‘Just say yes, and this ordeal will be over. You do not have to fulfil a bargain such as the one the Queen of Murias proposed.’ Her voice was gentle and motherly, but Faye ignored her.

She felt the last, biggest contraction hit her, and she screamed with the pain.

She felt the baby between her thighs and reached back with her hand for it.

There was nothing to protect it from the elements.

Help me, anyone, anything, please , she prayed, rolling onto her back.

She remembered the prayer to Morgana, the queen of the Crystal Castle.

Remembered that the reverend had hinted that it was easiest to call to the fae queen when a human’s body was at its weakest, when it was close to death.

Faye doubted in that moment that she would see midnight; she was racked with pain that was unlike anything she had ever felt.

But she had taught herself the incantation, and she repeated it between gritted teeth.

Morgana Le Fae, Queen of all fae creatures, Mistress of the Moon

She who resides in the Crystal Castle

She who bestows the gift of seership

She who is the light of truth in the darkness

She who knows the deepest secrets of magic

She who heals the soul after death

She who is Mistress of Dreams

Morgana Le Fae, Queen of all fae creatures, Mistress of the Moon

You do not ask for bargains

You do not ask for gifts

You only ask for obedience and adoration

In the silence we listen for you

In the darkness we call to you

At the lowest ebb, we draw to you

When our bodies are at their weakest, our souls may fly to you

This is the mystery of the moon

This is the entry to the Crystal Castle

At the gates of death we call to you

At the gates of life we call to you

Morgana Le Fae, Queen of all fae creatures, Mistress of the Moon

Teach us the secret magic of the Crystal Castle.

The sky went black, and everything became completely silent.