Лорел Гамильтон - A Stroke Of Midnight

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A faerie princess turned private investigator in a world where faeries are not only known to the general public, but are also fashionable, the title heroine is Princess Meredith NicEssus, also known as Merry Gentry. As niece to Andais, The Queen of Air and Darkness, she is a royal of the Unseelie Court. While her aunt tried to kill her as a child, she has since offered her the title as crown princess as the Court needs more heirs.

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The two pale oval faces stared up at me. There was a little more squareness to his jaw, a somewhat daintier curve to hers. He was a little taller than she, a little more broad of shoulder, narrow of hip, but beyond the basic differences that made them male and female, they looked identical.

“You’re twins,” I said, “Pennyroyal, Penny and Royal.” It was a custom among the demi-fey to divide a name up among twins.

He nodded. She just stared at me. They were even dressed alike in gauzy tunics of deep purple. They were both dressed in more clothing than the majority of the demi-fey. Her dress covered her from neck to knees. His tunic covered him from neck to knees, as well. I realized as I looked at the wingless ones that they were all dressed in a similar fashion. The winged fey men went for what amounted to kilts or loincloths of gauze. The women were in mini-dresses or less. Only Queen Niceven wore a gown that swept to her ankles. She was their queen, she got more clothes, but I’d never noticed the marked difference in clothing between those who had wings and those who did not.

“I have not agreed to this,” Niceven said, and came to hover at my shoulder.

“Please, Your Majesty, let me try. You do not know what it is like to be without wings, doomed to walk or ride forever.”

She crossed her arms over her thin chest. “I feel for your plight, Royal, and all of you who are so cursed, but you might get a great deal more than just wings from touching this one.” She motioned at me. “Look what has happened with the green knight.”

“Would having one of your people able to conjure such enchantments be a bad thing, Your Majesty?” he asked.

She came to hover near my face. “How can I trust you, Princess, when you have insulted me and my court so severely?”

Doyle said, “You spoke of an insult when you first arrived. You said the princess had done it. What has she done?”

Niceven turned in the air so she could see him, then moved backwards so she could see us both as she spoke. “You arrested one of my people without asking my permission. Beatrice was not sidhe, she was mine. Though trapped in her human-sized form, she was demi-fey. Beatrice was cursed but she was not Andais’s or yours. The murderer is one of mine, the victim is one of mine, and you did not give me even the courtesy of a message. No other court would have been so ignored.” She moved close enough that the air from her wings brushed my hair against my face. “You would have at the very least contacted Kurag, Goblin King. He would not have had to learn of such a thing from rumor and gossip as I did. Sholto, King of the Sluagh, sat in the consort’s throne for you last night. You would not have arrested his people without asking him first.” She flew to the ceiling, and stayed there fluttering like an angry butterfly back and forth above us.

I watched her, all white and glittering, all hurt pride and wounded arrogance, and fear. Fear that her court had become so little among us that she truly was queen in name only. She was right.

“I should have sent you a messenger when we arrested Peasblossom. I should have sent you a message when we discovered that one of the murdered was a demi-fey. You are right, I would have notified Kurag, Goblin King. I would have contacted Sholto. I would not have done to them what I have done to you.”

“You are a princess of the sidhe,” Frost said. “You explain yourself to no one.”

I shook my head and patted his arm. “Frost, I spend a great deal of time explaining myself to everyone.”

“Not to demi-fey,” he said, and his face was arrogant, cold, and heartbreakingly handsome.

“Frost, either the demi-fey are a court unto themselves, worthy of respect, or they are not. Queen Niceven is within her rights to be angry about this.”

His hand gripped the hilt of his sword, but he didn’t say anything. To insult them beyond a certain point was to break them as a court, as a people. He wasn’t willing to do that.

“Merry’s right.” Galen stood slowly, being as careful where he put his feet as I had been. He still held the tiny brown winged fey asleep in his hand. “I may not like Queen Niceven and the demi-fey, but she is a queen and they are a court. We should have sent someone to tell her what was happening.” He gazed up at the tiny queen. “I don’t know if you care what I think, but I’m sorry.”

She came slowly down from the ceiling. Her wings had slowed, fanning gently, so that the illusion of some graceful moth was back. “After what we did to you, it is you who offers us an apology.” She looked at him, as if she had never truly seen him before. “You fear us, hate us. Why would you show us courtesy?”

He frowned, and I watched him try to put into words what was simply him. It had been the right thing to do, and for once it had even been the politically smart thing to do, but that hadn’t been why he’d done it.

“We owed you an apology,” he said at last. “Merry explained it. I wasn’t sure that anyone else would agree with her, so I did.”

Niceven floated over to face me. “He apologized to us because it was the right thing to do.”

“Yes,” I said.

She looked back at him, then at me. “Oh, Princess, you must keep this one close, for he is too dangerous to be left alone among the sidhe.”

“Too dangerous,” Galen said, “dangerous to whom?”

“To yourself, for one,” Niceven said, fluttering over to him. She put thin, pale hands on the hips of her white dress. “I see goodness in your face, goodness and gentleness. You are in the wrong court, green knight.”

“My father was a pixie, and my mother an Unseelie sidhe.” He shook his head, vigorously enough that Niceven moved a little back from him. “No, the glittering throng wouldn’t touch me.”

Niceven gazed down at the flowers and her besotted people. “They might now.”

“No,” Hawthorne said, “Taranis doesn’t forgive a sidhe who joins the darkling court. If you take your exile to the humans and wander lost for a few centuries, maybe he’ll forgive you, but,” he lifted his helmet off, “once you’ve been accepted here, there is no going back.”

“Perhaps,” Niceven said, “or perhaps not.”

“Queen Niceven,” I said.

She turned to me, her face carefully passive, her thin hands folded in front of her.

“What do you mean ‘perhaps not’?”

She shrugged. “Oh, someone who can be a fly upon the wall hears things.”

“What sort of things?” I asked.

“Things that I might share with someone who was my ally, and honored their bargains.”

“If you will not take blood directly from me, then I will need a new magical proxy,” I said.

She turned in the air, and looked at Royal and his sister in their rat-drawn cart. “Royal,” she said.

He stood straighter, almost to attention, though without wings he could not be in Niceven’s guard. “Yes, my queen.”

“Would you taste the blood of the princess and share the essence with me?”

“Gladly, my queen.”

Penny clung to him. “Don’t, Royal, don’t do it.”

He drew her away from him, and looked down into her face. “How long have we dreamed of wings?”

She let her arms fall limp to her sides. “Forever,” she said.

“I didn’t give Sage wings,” I said.

“No,” Royal said, “you gave him wings.” He pointed at Nicca.

“But Nicca wasn’t tasting my blood when it happened.”

Royal nodded, and stepped from the cart. He gazed up at me. “It was during sex.”

I looked at him. He was about ten inches tall, a little shorter than a Barbie doll, but not by much. I tried to think of a polite way to say it, and finally settled for, “I think the size difference is a little much.”

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