Home > Into the Woods: Tales from the Hollows and Beyond(77)

Into the Woods: Tales from the Hollows and Beyond(77)
Author: Kim Harrison

Jax had been his first newling he'd managed to keep alive through the winter. Jih, his eldest daughter, had survived in Matalina's arms that same season. Scarcely nine years old, Jih had moved across the street alone to start a garden, and Jax left to follow in his father's footsteps by partnering with a thief instead of devoting himself to a family and the earth.

Jenks had never wanted more than to tend a spot of ground, but four years ago, forced by a late spring and suffering newlings, he'd shamefully taken a part-time job as backup for Inderland Security, finding that he not only enjoyed it, but was good at it. Working for the man had eventually evolved into a partnership with Rachel and Ivy, and now he was on the streets more than in the garden. Turning his back on his first independent job wasn't going to happen. Blowing up the statue wouldn't be the hard part-it would be getting around Daryl to do it.

A nymph and a dryad, he thought sourly as he sucked on a sweetball in the quiet. Why couldn't it be something he knew something about? Nymphs had vanished during the Industrial Revolution, and the dryads had been decimated by deforestation shortly after that. There was even a conspiracy theory that the dryads had been responsible for the plague that had wiped out a big chunk of humanity forty years ago. If so, it had sort of worked. The forests were returning, and eighty-year-old trees were again becoming common. Nymphs, though, were still missing. Sleeping, maybe?

And what about Daryl, anyway? A deluded nymph, Sylvan had said. A goddess, Daryl claimed. There were no gods or goddesses. Never had been, but there were documented histories of Inderlanders taking advantage of humans, posing as deities. He frowned. Her eyes were downright creepy, and he hadn't liked demons being mentioned, either.

Jenks started, jerking when his chair moved. The breeze of four pairs of dragonfly wings blew the red dust of surprise from him, and he looked up to find four of his boys trying to move his chair with him in it. They were all grinning at him, looking alike despite Jumoke's dark hair and eyes, in matching pants and tunics that Matalina had stitched.

"Enough!" Matalina called out in a mock anger, her feet in a shaft of light, a dusting rag in her hands, and a flush to her cheeks. "Leave your papa alone. There's the girls' things to be moved if you need something to do."

"Sorry, Papa!" Jack said cheerfully, dropping his corner to make the chair thump. Jenks's feet flew up, and his wing bent back under him. "Didn't see you there."

"Dust a little," Jaul said, tangling his wings with Jack's, and Jack dusted heavily, shifting as he pushed him away. "The fairies will think you're dead," he finished, sneezing.

"Come and carry you away," Jumoke added, his wings lower in pitch than everyone else's. It made him different, along with his dusky coloring, and Jenks worried, not liking how Vincet had looked at him as if he were ill or deformed.

Jake just grinned, his wings glittering as he hovered in the background. Apart from Jumoke, they were the eldest in the garden now, as fresh-faced and innocent as they should be, strong and able to use a sword to kill an intruder twice their size. He loved them, but it was likely this would be the last spring they'd help the family move. Jack, especially, would probably find wanderlust on him this fall and leave.

"Go do what your mother said," he grumped, grabbing four sweetballs from the bowl beside him and throwing them to each boy in turn. "And keep your sugar level up! You're no good to me laid flat out in a field."

"Thanks, Papa!" they chorused, cheeks bulging. It kept them quiet, too.

Matalina came closer, smiling fondly as she shooed them out. "Go on. After the girls' room, find the big pots and fill them. Check for cracks. I'm soaking spider sacks tomorrow for the silk. They've been in the cool room all winter. If we're not careful, we're going to have a hatching. I'm not going to make your clothes out of moonbeams, you know."

"Naked in the garden is okay with me," Jumoke mumbled, and Matalina swatted him.

"Out!"

"Remember what happened the last year?" Jaul said, his words muffled from the sweetball as they headed for opening.

"Webs everywhere!" Jack said, laughing.

"Yeah, well you're the one that moved the sacks into the sun," Jumoke said, and they were gone, the dust from them settling in a glowing puddle to slowly fade.

"How else was I going to win the bet as to when they were going to hatch?" came faintly from outside the desk, and Jenks chuckled. It had been an unholy mess.

Slowly their voices vanished, and Jenks watched Matalina's expression, gauging her mood as she smiled. Wings stilling, she walked across the varnished oak wood to settle next to him, their wings tangling as she snuggled in against him. Slowly their mingling dust shifted to the same contented gold.

"I can't wait to get back into the garden," she said, gazing at the pile of laundry across the room. "I'll admit I don't like moving day, but I'll not set myself to sleep like that again with the fear of guessing who might not wake up with me in the spring." Reaching to the bowl, she deftly twisted a sweetball into two parts and handed him half. "You're quiet. What's got your updraft cold this morning?"

"Nothing." Setting his half of the sweet back in the bowl, he draped his arm over her shoulder, moving his thumb gently against her arm. Remembering the smell of the newlings, he dropped his gaze to her flat belly, not swelling with life for more than a year now. His wish for sterility might have extended her life-but had it also made her last years empty?

Setting her sweetball aside as well, Matalina shifted from him, pulling out of his reach to sit facing him. "Is it the pixy that you and Bis went into Cincinnati to help? I'm proud of you for that. The children enjoy watching the garden when you're gone. They feel important, and they'll be all the more prepared when they've a garden of their own."

A garden of their own, he thought. His children were leaving. Vincet's children were so young. His entire adult life was before him. "Mattie, do you ever wish for newlings?" he asked.

Her eyes fell from his, and her breath seemed to catch as she stared at the piles of clothes.

Fear struck Jenks at her silence, and he sat up to take her hands in his. "Tink's tears. I'm sorry," he blurted. "I thought you didn't want any more. You said . . . We talked about it . . ."

Smiling to look even more beautiful, Matalina placed a fingertip to his lips. "Hush," she breathed, leaning her head forward to touch his as her finger dropped away. "Jenks, love, of course I miss newlings. Every time Jrixibell or any of the last children do something for the first time, I think that I'll never see the joy of that discovery on another child's face, but I don't want any more children who won't survive a day after me."

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