The Witch's Quest. Michele Hauf
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The demon tilted a look toward the ground, taking in Valor, pinned to the forest floor by the elder oak. “Looks like she’s in a pinch.”
“Nothing we can’t handle,” Kelyn said. “Right, Valor?”
“Uh, yep. We’re good!”
“A witch and a faery,” the demon said. “Pretty.” He narrowed his gaze at Kelyn’s neck, where he always wore two talismans on leather cords. “Interesting. You’ve been to Faery?”
“No,” Kelyn answered.
“But that talisman.” The demon tapped his own neck.
“A gift. Now, enough of this. Begone with you!”
“Very well. But you’ll never get her loose. She’s been pinned through to Faery.”
“How do you know? What does that mean?” Valor rushed out.
“It means you must be unpinned from Faery,” the demon explained.
Sensing the demon wasn’t so much being helpful as teasing at the dreadful future that awaited Valor, Kelyn did not relent in his stance before her and only wished he’d brought along his bow and arrows this evening. But he could take this dark creature. Easily.
The demon eyed Kelyn’s clenched fist. “You said you meant me no harm.”
“I’ll do what I must to defend her.”
“Touching. The dying witch has a faery champion.”
“Leave!” Kelyn said. “Take your smirk into the shadows and let us figure this out alone.”
“As you wish.” The demon stepped back and spread his elongated hands out before him. “But, unlike you, I have access to Faery. I can get into Faery and unpin her. If you wish it.”
Valor didn’t say anything, and Kelyn was thankful she hadn’t rushed to beg the demon for the help.
But really? If the Wicked could get Valor unpinned, he’d be willing to do anything. Even take a few spiteful punches, if necessary. Because Valor’s life was at stake. And she hadn’t much time remaining. Her hips were beginning to sink into the ground.
“You tell me true?” Kelyn asked.
The demon nodded. “I am not heartless. And...you have something I want.” Again the demon’s eyes glanced across Kelyn’s chest where the talismans hung.
Of course such assistance would not be provided without recompense. Which was fair enough, Kelyn thought. He felt Valor’s hopeful breaths taint the air. She needed rescue and he would not leave this forest without her in his arms. Alive.
“What might that be?” Kelyn asked the sly demon.
The demon smiled and walked before him, turning in a half circle before coming around to face them both and saying, “Your wings.”
“No!” Valor yelled from behind Kelyn.
“That’s the deal. Take it or leave it,” the demon said.
“We don’t—”
“Valor,” Kelyn said to shush her. “Be still.”
“You can’t give him your wings. They are what make you...you! That’s a terrible thing to ask in trade for—”
“For a life?” the demon interjected. “Seems more than fair to me. But if you’re not keen on breathing, witch, then so be it.”
The demon’s eyes glimmered vivid pink. He was preparing to flash out of the forest as swiftly and quietly as he had appeared.
“Wait!” Kelyn reacted from his heart and soul, not his better senses. “You can have them.”
The demon smiled.
“Absolutely not!” Valor punched the ground with an ineffectual fist.
Kelyn turned to face her, and the spill of tears down her cheeks startled him. Wasn’t she the feisty tomboy of the group of witches who owned a local brewery? The one who hung around with Sunday and fixed cars and motorbikes, and never met a greasy engine she didn’t want to take apart?
Or so he’d heard. He’d made it a point to listen when Valor was spoken about. Because he had lusted after her. Had wanted to ask her out. And almost did. Until...Trouble.
But with the lingering taste of her kiss still on his lips, he couldn’t deny that those feelings had not grown any lesser.
“You are not going to sacrifice your wings for me,” Valor said on a desperate pleading tone. “Just go! Get out of here!”
“And allow you to die? I am a better man than that. It’s not my nature to walk away when I can help.”
“Help? No! Just no! I couldn’t live with myself if you gave up your wings to save me.”
“Well, you’re going to have to.”
He tugged his ankle away from her grasping, pleading hands and turned to the demon. With an inhale that shivered through his system and tweaked at his back between his shoulder blades where his wings could unfurl, he grasped decisiveness. “We have a deal. But you will promise you’ll go immediately to Faery and unpin Valor.”
“With your wings in hand, my entrance to Faery will be secured. The moment you hand them over to me, I will leave and unpin your tragic lover.”
Kelyn almost said “She’s not my lover,” but semantics were less important than getting this cruel task completed. Because to sacrifice his wings would be like handing over himself. He’d become lesser. Not even the faery he was now. He would lose...
Kelyn held out his hands. The violet sigils that circled his wrists were a match for those sigils on his chest. They were his magic. His strength. As were his wings.
But to walk away from a helpless woman when he had a means to save her?
“Do it,” Kelyn said firmly.
The demon thrust out his arm, and in his blackened hand materialized a gleaming sword of violet light. “Kneel, faery.”
Feeling the intense sidhe magic that emanated from the weapon shimmer in his veins, Kelyn dropped to his knees, his side facing the demon.
“No” gasped from Valor’s lips.
Lips he’d kissed, and on which he’d tasted a sweet promise. But he must never taste that promise again. He couldn’t bear it.
“Do it!” he yelled.
And his wings shivered as he unfurled them and stretched them out behind him into the fresh spring air. Moonlight glamorized the sheer violet appendages, glinting in the silver support