had cut the hose!
âI spent twenty bucks on that hose!â I cried, then felt myself pale as the entire clan fronted me, tiny spears probably tipped with poison ivy. âEr, can we talk about this?â I stammered.
I dropped the hose, and the orange-winged fairy grinned like a vampire stripper at a bachelorette party. My heart pounded and I wondered if I should flee inside the church, and subject myself to Ivyâs laughter, or tough it out and get a bad case of poison ivy.
The sound of pixy wings brought my heart into my throat. âJenks!â I exclaimed, turning to follow the head fairyâs worried gaze, fixed beyond my shoulder. But it wasnât Jenks, it was his wife, Matalina, and eldest daughter, Jih.
âBack off,â Matalina threatened, hovering beside me at head height. The harsh clatter of her more maneuverable dragonfly-like wings set the stray strands of my damp hair to tickle my face. She looked thinner than last winter, her childlike features severe. Determination showed in her eyes, and she held a drawn bow with an arrow at the string. Her daughter looked even more ominous, with a wood-handled sword of silver in her grip. She had possession of a small garden across the street and needed silver to protect it and herself since she had yet to take a husband.
âItâs mine!â the fairy screamed in frustration. âTwo women canât hold a garden!â
âI need only hold the ground I fly over,â Matalina said resolutely. âGet out. Now.â
He hesitated, and Matalina pulled the bow back farther, making a tiny creak.
âWeâll only take it when you leave!â he cried, motioning for his clan to retreat.
âThen take it,â she said. âBut while I am here, you wonât be.â
I watched, awed, while a four-inch pixy stood down an entire clan of fairies. Such was Jenksâs reputation, and such was the capabilities of pixies. They could rule the world by assassinations and blackmail if they wanted. But all they desired was a small plot of ground and the peace to tend it. âThanks, Matalina,â I whispered.
She didnât take her steely gaze off them as they retreated to the knee-high wall that divided the garden from the graveyard. âThank me when Iâve watered seedlings with their blood,â she muttered, shocking me. The pretty, silk-clad pixy looked all of eighteen, her usual tan pale from living with Jenks and her children in that Wereâs basement all winter. Her billowy green, lightweight dress swirled in the draft from her wings. They were a harsh red with anger, as were her daughterâs.
The faire of garden fairies fled to a corner of the graveyard, hovering and dancing in a belligerent display over the dandelions almost a street away. Matalina pulled her bow, loosing an arrow on an exhale. A bright spot of orange jerked up and then down.
âDid you get him?â her daughter asked, her ethereal voice frightening in its vehemence.
Matalina lowered her bow. âI pinned his wing to a stone. He tore it when he jerked away. Something to remember me by.â
I swallowed and nervously wiped my hands on my jeans. The shot was clear across the property. Steadying myself, I went to the faucet and turned off the spraying water. âMatalina,â I said as I straightened, bobbing my head at her daughter in greeting. âThanks. They almost filled me with poison ivy. How are you? Howâs Jenks? Will he talk to me?â I blurted, but my brow furrowed and my hope fell when she dropped her eyes.
âIâm sorry, Rachel.â She settled upon my offered hand, her wings shifting into motion, then stilling as they turneda dismal blue. âHeâ¦Iâ¦Thatâs why Iâm here.â
âOh God, is he all right?â I said, suddenly afraid when the pretty woman looked ready to burst into tears. Her ferocity had been washed away in misery, and I glanced at the distant
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington