Page 31 of The Devil of Arden


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Aliena cocked her head to the side. “Devil? Did he tell you to call him that?”

“No, but he won’t tell me his real name,” I explained. “Is it Robin?”

“Oh dear,” Aliena laughed again, and I couldn’t help but smile at the sound. “I think he has us well and truly fooled. Robin is what he told me to call him when we first met, when he was just a child. Others call him Puck. He seems to have tricked the entire Arden into his game. But no one else calls him Devil.” I dropped my eyes and suddenly realized that my clothes had been changed while I was asleep. I was now wearing a loose, black shift with a green ribbon woven around the scooped neckline. It was finer than anything I’d ever even touched, but I frowned at Aliena.

“Uh…who…?”

“Don’t worry,” she said, standing up to refill my water. “Arachne couldn’t stand the idea of leaving you in that filthy dress, so she helped bring you back, then she and I got your clothes changed. There’s some new things for you too, in there.” She waved to an ornate wooden trunk sitting at the foot of my little bed.

“How long was I asleep?” I ran a hand through my hair and took the cup of water she offered.

“It’s near midnight now,” Aliena yawned, “and past this old woman’s bedtime.”

“Oh, I’m sorry! I’m not particularly tired anymore though. Is it safe to…go walking around outside?”

“Just as long as you stay in the Hollow, yes.”

While Aliena washed her face in a basin and prepared to sleep, I used her sputtering candle to dig through the trunk Arachne had left. Most of the clothing seemed hearty and practical—leggings, tunics, and simple wrap-dresses made from beautifully embroidered cotton, wool, or linen. She had also included warm stockings and, to my utter shock, a near-exact replica of the Huntress moth half-cloak I’d worn every day as a child. I pulled it out of the trunk with a quiet gasp, marveling at the softness of the new wool and the rich green color. The interior was lined with impossibly plush white fur, and it fell all the way down to my knees, rather than stopping at my elbows. Whereas my old cloak had been fastened at the neck by a simple wooden toggle, this one boasted a beautiful copper clasp in the shape of a coiled snake. I rolled my eyes, realizing who must be responsible, but smiled as I wrapped the cloak around my shoulders, then pulled on a pair of warm stockings and my worn-out boots. Aliena appeared to already be asleep, so I blew out the candle and pushed aside the curtain of moss hung across her doorway.

The Arden’s night air was chill, but the silk shift and cloak kept me surprisingly warm as I walked around the cottage, trying to get a peek at the moon through the tree tops. When I came around the corner of the little house, I spotted a strange object hanging from the high limb of a gnarled post oak. As I ventured closer, I saw that it was, in fact, a pair of wings—so large, their tips brushed the grass. When the moon briefly came out from behind a cloud, I saw him stretched out up on the branch and gave a gentle tug on the joint of one wing.

“Thank you for the new cloak, featherhead.”

He turned and opened his blue eye to peer down at me, then put on a passable impression of Arachne. “If she dinnae have a cloak, she’ll be froze solid come springtime!” Suddenly, he rolled off the tree limb and landed with a solidthudright in front of me. “And besides, what’s a mothling without her wings?”

I grinned and pulled up the hood, then held the corners of the cloak and spread my arms, spinning in a circle. The Arden’s magyk, however, must have still been pulling at me, because I became dizzy far too quickly and nearly slammed rightinto Devil. He grabbed my shoulders to steady me, then stood only a few inches away and adjusted the copper snake clasp at my neck.

“Why do you stand so close to me?” I asked quietly, lifting my face to look up at him.

“Why should I not?”

“It’s bad manners.”

He snorted. “I don’t give a fig about your human manners, Mayhem.”

“But you do give a fig about me,” I said, as a statement of fact. “You care about my feelings…”

After a brief pause where something unidentifiable flickered across his face, he answered, “Yes.”

“What if I told you that it makesmeuncomfortable, regardless of manners?” He immediately took a step back, and one corner of my mouth pulled into a smile. “So, you care about whatIwant…but not about what other people think is proper or right?”

“Yes,” he said again, voice low.

“Why? Why me?”

“I told you before, I cannot be the one to…answer certain questions.”

“Because this scheme wasn’t your idea? Who is your master, anyway? I must tell him he’s doing a terrible job keeping you under control.”

Devil let out a soft laugh. “You will meet him tomorrow, and you may tell him whatever you wish. Right now, I must go. I was only waiting for you to wake up.” He waved back at the tree limb he’d been perched on.

“Oh, well…I seem none the worse for wear.”

“You’ve shed your holy iron,” he observed, nodding toward my throat. “Have you left behind the false piety too?”

I scowled. “The piety was never false, and it will be staying.”

“We shall see,” Devil said, spreading his wings. Without waiting for a response, he took off, and the burst of air nearly threw me to the ground. He shot straight up into the sky, then released an enormous shower of magyk sparks. They floated down like glittering snow, bounced off the ground, and turned into the fireflies that seemed to trail him wherever he went, beginning a slow, bobbing dance around me in the moonlight.