Della serves me eggs over easy and two strips of a yellow fruit that tastes like apples, and I gobble it down before sheepishly asking for seconds.
As she prepares another plate for me, Juniper enters the kitchen, wearing a black jumpsuit and chunky boots. Her hair has been washed and appears fresh and curly. She looks much better than she did when they had her in the ring, though her left eye is swollen and bruised, and her upper lip is stitched. She has a steel cup in her hand, her other wrapped in bandages, but blood is seeping through them. Theyâll need to be changed soon.
âItâs quite early to be drinking, Juniper,â Della says, cutting her eyes at her as she cracks an egg.
âIt helps me think.â Juniper sits on the stool next to mine. âCan I have breakfast too?â
Della nods, fetching more eggs from the fridge. With a sigh, Juniper lifts the rim of the cup to her lips and takes a long sip.
âWhat is it that youâre always drinking?â I ask.
âBlue tonic,â she answers. âThey call it that because it eases a bad case of the blues.â She winks, and I canât help smiling. I study Dellaâs back as she works on the eggs, then side-eye Juniper again.
âListenâ¦I know aboutâ¦the teacher thing.â I glance at Juniper, who freezes.
âWho told you?â
âIt sorta came up in conversation when we were on the way to get you and Killian from those fighting caves.â
âHmm.â She sips, avoiding my eyes.
âIâm sorry that happened to you, Juniper.â
âDonât be,â she says, waving a dismissive hand. âItâs over. Happened so many years ago.â
I clamp my mouth shut and plant my elbows on the counter. Through my periphery, I see her take a bigger gulp of the drink, and I sigh for her.
I canât imagine what it must be like being a woman living in this worldâgiven no respect whatsoever. Itâs a mid-century approach, this place. The women are only looked at for sex and meals. Fortunately, Caz and his crew donât seem to be that way entirely, but encountering men who are is infuriating.
Della brings our food, setting it on the counter in front of us, then tells us she has to go to the garden for more fruit. She wipes her hands on her apron before leaving, and when itâs just Juniper and me, I smile at her. She returns a half-smile, then sets her cup down.
âThought sheâd never leave,â she says, rolling her eyes.
I huff a laugh, cutting into one of my eggs. âDo you not like Della?â
âOh, I love Della. I fancy her very much, actually. She can just be a bitâ¦overbearing.â
âShe seems very motherly.â
âHmm. Yeah. She was a mother once. A good one, I hear.â
I stop chewing. âWhat do you mean was?â
Juniper bites into her fruit. âHer son was killed by Rippies.â
âOh my God.â
âYeah, it was horrific. He was only fifteen at the time, walking home from a friendâs house. We assume he took a trail home because they found his body near there. The Rippies had carved an upside-down U on his forehead and two bullets were found in his chest. Thatâs how we knew it was them. The U represents the hills where theyâre from.â
âThatâs awful.â And suddenly I donât have the stomach to eat.
âIt was very tragic, but surprisingly Della didnât cry. Not right away, anyway. She came to Cazâs door and asked him to find the people responsible. Caz found them and he put them on a stake for her in the village, lit the stakes on fire, and let her and all of Blackwater watch them burn. It was all anyone could talk about for weeks.â
âAre you serious?â
âAbsolutely. Why would I not be serious?â Juniper looks at me as if sheâs insulted by my question.
âIâm sorryâI just meanâ¦well, I didnât know Caz had that much power to do something like that for the whole town to see. Arenât there police or authorities in Blackwater?â
âCaz is the authority here,â she says, laughing. âAs well as Killian and Rowan. Sure, there are coppers around, but they work for Caz. He pays them and tells them what to do, so they canât stop him. He rules all of Blackwater. It was handed over to him after his father died.â
âWow. Thatâs a big role to take on.â
âItâs actually quite calm here until someone steps out of line.â
âSo, is there anyone above Caz who can tell him what and what not to do?â
âThereâs The Council, but they hardly tell him what to do. Theyâre just a group of high-grade Mythics who oversee Vakeeli and make sure there is more peace than chaos, I suppose.â She rolls her eyes. âIn my opinion, theyâre doing a shitty job. Just a group of bored, superior people.â
âWow. Everything is so different here compared to where Iâm from. There are no people with gifts on Earth.â
âHow can you be so sure?â she asks. âMaybe they just hide it.â
I press my lips. Thatâs a possibility.
âWhatâs it like where youâre from anyway?â she asks, turning toward me.
âWell, there are different countries, which I suppose is similar to how every territory in Vakeeli is different. But there is moreâ¦freedom, I suppose. And way less violence. I mean, donât get me wrong, there is still violence where Iâm from, itâs just not so open like it is here. People do unspeakable things to one another there, and most times theyâre not punished for it. Justice is hardly ever served. And just like there is hate for darkies here, itâs the same in my world, only we call it racism.â
âWow. That sounds pretty shitty.â
âIt is. There are police. Theyâre like public servants, there to protect the peopleâ¦but there are some who are corrupt and do the opposite. And the food is not like the food here. Most of it isâ¦well, most of it is unhealthier, actually.â I laugh. âBut, man, would I love a cheeseburger right now.â
âA cheese-what-er?â Juniper asks, gawking.
I laugh again. âItâs like a sandwich with a quarter pound of meat. It would be easier to show you than to explain.â
She shrugs and faces forward again, using a fork to cut into her eggs. I take another bite of mine, and Juniper giggles.
âWhat are you laughing about?â I ask, smiling.
âJustâ¦you.â
âMe?â
âYes.â She sits up higher on her stool. âCaz fancies you. Iâve never seen anything like it from him.â
I look her in the eyes briefly before lowering my gaze. My mind instantly goes back to that kiss, and my heart thumps in my chest.
âHe wants me gone.â
âNever in my life have I seen him carry a womanâlet alone bring her into his house. Never. If thereâs one thing he hates more than someone touching him, itâs touching someone else.â
âThat doesnât mean he likes me. I think he just feels obligated to take care of me because weâre Tethered.â
âAh, yeah. That thing. Mum told me all about it. Still, itâs true. He hates being touched.â Juniper stretches her arms above her head, then winces and clutches her ribcage, a reminder of her pain. âThat woman from the fight cracked my rib good. That bitch.â
âI donât understand why they were making you and Killian fight.â
âBecause the Rippies are pieces of shit,â she growls, and she cuts her eyes at me before sighing. âItâs what they do when they catch people from Blackwater out of their territory. Itâs their way of degrading us before theyâ¦kill us.â
âThey were going to kill you and Killian?â I gasp.
âOf course they were. Right after theyâd gotten what they wanted, which was rubies and gold from our fights. Rami figured with two people from Cazâs clan gone, Caz would struggle to get us back and wouldnât enter Ripple Hills unless he had an army. This wouldâve started a war, and Cazâs goal is to not have them because he hates them. Rami would do that though. Heâd push Caz to his limit, try to break him so that Caz will start one. And if Caz started it and killed a shit ton of Rippiesâwhich heâs done in the pastâRami would run to The Council and cry over the damage, then Caz would pay for it with his rubies. It was all a numbers game to Rami. He was a terrible monarch who didnât care how many Rippies actually died as long as he got paid. He was a bloody idiot. Always underestimating Caz.â
âYeah. They asked Caz for rubies in exchange for you and Killian.â
Juniper scoffs. âSure, they wanted rubies, but thatâs not all they wanted. Their plan was to lure him there, in hopes that they could string him up and get him in the cage to fight too. I heard them talking about it. They were going to make him fight, make as much profit as possible, then set us free, just so Caz could come back with an army and start a war. But thatâs the last thing Caz will ever do againâfight.â She shudders as if remembering something. âIâm surprised he even went to the ring to help us.â
âWhat do you mean? He had to save you.â
She pins her eyes on me, then shakes her head. âNever mind.â I want her to elaborate, but someone clears their throat.
âAre we ready?â Cazâs voice floats through the kitchen. When I look back, heâs standing by the window, his leather-clad fingers crossed in front of him, as if heâs been there for quite some time now. Heâs put on a black trench coat and the same black cap from the first day I met him is pulled over his brows, creating a shadow over his eyes.
âSure.â I climb off the stool, carrying my plate to the sink.
âSo, youâre leaving Vakeeli for good?â Juniper questions.
âI hope so.â I feel a thump in my chest, and Caz shifts on his feet.
âWell, it was nice getting to know you for the short time I did.â She smiles and climbs off her stool to hug me.
I hug her back, then turn to Caz who has cleared his throat again, clearly wanting us to end the farewells. Iâm not family or a friend to him. Iâm just a woman in his way.
âI have the chant here,â he says, holding a sheet of paper in the air. âSeeing as I canât take you there, to the portal where youâll return, Killian will guide you to the forest and send you off. I made sure this was a one-way chant. One that will send you home so that you canât return to Blackwater, or any of the Vakeeli territories, for that matter.â
I walk to him, taking the paper and clutching it in my hand. My eyes donât leave his. A one-way chant? Why?
âThis way,â he says, leaving the kitchen and ignoring the telepathic question.
I follow him out, waving once more at Juniper who blows a kiss at me before I step around the corner. Caz pulls the front door open and leads the way out. The air is salty and cool, and the wind nips at my cheeks. The leaves of the trees sway with the breeze, and as I take a few more steps out, Silvera runs across the field to me.
I smile as I drop to one knee and rub her head. âYouâll look after her?â I ask, pointing my gaze to Caz.
âYes.â
I look back down at her and sigh. âI wish I could get to know you more.â
She pants, sitting on her hind. I donât expect her to understand, so I give her one more rub on her head, a scratch behind the ears, and then follow Caz down the rocky path leading to the forest.
Once he passes the gates, he stops and says, âThis is as far as I go.â
Killian is ahead, leaning against the trunk of a tree, using a knife to slice into a piece of bumpy-looking fruit. He pushes off the tree and walks off, and I assume Iâm meant to follow him, so I turn to Caz and say, âThank you forâ¦getting me a way back home.â
Caz steps back and nods, his hands clasping behind him. âTake care of yourself, Willow Woman.â He looks me over twice, gaze lingering, before his throat bobs and he turns away, focusing on his house instead.
Itâs all Iâll get, and I wonât ever see him again. Itâs like our kiss didnât even happen. None of the time we spent together ever happened. Itâs all a wrap, and I get to go home.
I donât know why that thought pains me, but I accept his cold farewell and follow Killian into the forest. I fight every urge to look back, but something deep inside me begs me to turn back and go to him. I wonât go running, but I do look.
Before a line of trees can cut off my view of him, I peer over my shoulder, and Caz is standing in the same spot, only heâs not looking at the mansion anymore; heâs looking at me.
Before the trees officially cut us off, he drops his head and clenches his jaw, and the sharpness in my chest intensifies.