elegant and beautiful, with their pale skin and shimmering cobalt hair, they hemmed me in like a pack of wolves, full frosted lips twisted into ugly sneers.
âOoh, Snowberry, you were right,â one of them said, wrinkling her nose like she smelled something foul. âShe does reek of a dead pig in the summer. I donât know how Mab can stand it.â
Clenching my fists, I tried to keep my cool. I was so not in the mood for this now. God, itâs like high school all over again. Will it never end? These are ancient faeries, for Peteâs sake, and theyâre acting like my high school pom squad.
The tallest of the pack, a willowy fey with poison green streaked through her azure hair, regarded me with cold blue eyes and stepped close, crowding me. I stood my ground, and her gaze narrowed. A year ago, I might have grinned benignly and nodded and agreed with everything they said, just to get them to leave me alone. Things were different now. These girls werenât the scariest things Iâd seen. Not by a long shot.
âCan I help you?â I asked in the calmest voice I could manage.
She smiled. It was not a nice smile. âIâm just curious to see how a half-breed like you gets off on speaking to Prince Ash like an equal.â She sniffed, curling her lip in disgust. âIf I were Mab, I wouldâve frozen your throat shut just for looking at him.â
âWell, youâre not,â I said, meeting her gaze. âAnd since Iâm a guest here, I donât think sheâd approve of whatever youâreplanning to do to me. So, why donât we do each other a favor and pretend we donât exist? That would solve a lot of problems.â
âYou donât get it, do you, half-breed?â Snowberry pulled herself up, staring down her perfect nose at me. âLooking at my prince constitutes an act of war. That you actually spoke to him makes my stomach turn. You donât seem to understand that you disgust him, as well you should, with your tainted Summer blood and human stench. Weâll have to do something about that, wonât we?â
My prince? Was she talking about Ash? I stared at her, tempted to say something stupid like, Funny, he never mentioned you. She might act like a spoiled, rich, mean girl from my old school, but the way her eyes darkened until there were no pupils left reminded me that she was still fey.
âSo.â Snowberry stepped back and gave me a patronizing smile. âThis is what weâre going to do. You, half-breed, are going to promise me that you wonât so much as glance at my sweet Ash, ever again. Breaking this promise means I get to pluck out your wandering eyes and make a necklace with them. I think thatâs a fair bargain, donât you?â
The rest of the girls giggled, and there was a hungry, eager edge to the sound, like they wanted to eat me alive. I could have told her not to worry. I could have told her that Ash hated me and she didnât have to threaten to get me to stay away. I didnât. I drew myself up, looked her in the eye, and asked, âAnd what if I donât?â
Silence fell. I felt the air get colder and braced myself for the explosion. A part of me knew this was stupid, picking a fight with a faery. I would probably get my butt kicked, or cursed, or something nasty. I didnât care. I was tired of being bullied, tired of running into the bathroom to sob my eyes out. If this faery bitch wanted a fight, bring it on. Iâd do my fair share of clawing, too.
âWell, isnât this fun.â A smooth, confident voice cut through the silence, a second before all hell would have broken loose. We jumped as a lean figure dressed entirely in white materialized from the snow, his coat flapping behind him. The look on his pointed face glowed with haughty amusement.
âPrince Rowan!â
The prince grinned, his ice-blue eyes narrowed to slits. âPardon me, girls,â