The Fae Princes: Chapter 2
The Fae Princes (Vicious Lost Boys Book 4)
Smee finds me at the bar, pouring a shot of the Captainâs best rum. As the dark liquor fills up the glass, it perfumes the air with spice and smoke.
âYouâre awake,â she says.
âAnd you sound positively excited to see me.â I meet her eyes in the reflection in the mirror over the bar. There is dried blood still smeared across my face, covering my tattered shirt. The Captain didnât bother to give me a fresh set of clothes.
I have a solid guess as to why he let me lie in a mess of my own making.
âYou told him, didnât you?â I say to Smee. âAnd he left for Everland.â
One perk of the beast gorging itself is that afterward, my intuition is especially good, my senses especially heightened. And I donât sense the Captain now. When I search for him in my sphere of awareness, there is nothing but a void.
Smee doesnât answer so I goad her some more.
âHe left and he didnât take you with him?â I tsk-tsk.
She crosses her arms over her chest. Sunlight pours in through the leaded glass windows over her shoulder, rimming her in sharp golden light. I donât know what time it isâHookâs house is absent timepieces and I seem to have misplaced my pocket watch. But Iâd guess itâs a little after nine a.m. When did I feed last? How long have I been out? For someone of my kind, a typical feast could render one unconscious for days. But this wasnât a typical feast and I am not a typical man.
âYes, I told Jas,â Smee says. âHe went after her and I chose to stay.â
She and I both know thereâs more to that story, but I donât really give a fuck what petty squabbles they have going on between them. I just need to know how it affects me. And there is only one part of that statement that has any bearing on my future.
Wendy Darling.
If he finds her first, I will strip the flesh from his bones.
I sling the glass back and drink down the liquor. The burn of the alcohol helps hold the spark of anger at bay. The Captain is gone and now I need a plan. No sense losing my goddamn mind like a stupid little shit.
âHow long ago?â I ask Smee.
She cocks out a hip, arms still crossed. âTell me what youâd do to him if you found him first?â
âDoes it really matter if I tell you the truth or a lie? I donât know if youâd believe either.â
âIâll know.â
âAll right.â I pour another shot and turn around to face her. âThe truth is, Iâm not sure yet. Circumstance changes the answer. But Iâll probably stab him just for fun.â
Smeeâs expression does not change for several long seconds. I love this womanâs ability to give nothing away. Iâve never used the word to describe a woman, but Smee could be a marble statue if she just put a little more effort into it.
After a beat, she approaches and takes the glass from my hand and sets it down on the bar, even though Iâve barely had my fill.
âYou want to know what I think about you?â she asks.
âNot particularly.â
âI think that you care very little for most things.â
I gaze down at her, trying to gauge her angle. I sense pity, and pity I do not like.
âI think you care very little,â she goes on, âbecause you think that keeps you safe. If you care for very little, you have very little to lose.â
A knot forms between my shoulder blades, making me shift again.
âBut you know what?â Smee says. âCaring for so little means that when you actually do care, losing it has a much higher cost.â
The knot tightens until I can feel it in my chest. Instinct is trying to get me to dance out of her reach, but I will show no weakness to a pirate such as Smee.
âSo go on,â she says. âThreaten Jasâs life to the one person who nearly killed the one thing you actually care about.â
We stare at one another for several long seconds. The house is silent, and we are silent, but our silence says a great many things.
âI like you, Smee,â I tell her. âBut you threaten my brother again and itâll be the last. Iâm no artist, but Iâm an expert at violence and I will paint a fucking masterpiece with your blood.â I smile and pick up the glass, emptying the drink into my mouth, keeping my gaze on her the entire time.
When I return the glass to the bar top, it clunks loudly. Smeeâs right eye flinches, but itâs the only tell sheâs got.
âDo us both a favor and leave Vane out of it.â
âDo us both a favor and donât stab Jas.â
âI donât know why you care. He abandoned you.â
âI donât know why you care about a Darling girl who you havenât seen in years and years and years.â
The knot in my chest tightens, crowding out my heart.
âBecause Iâm a possessive prick,â I tell her. âI donât even have to like the thing. Or the girl, as the case may be. Whatâs mine is mine, and once itâs mine, it cannot be someone elseâs.â
âItâs almost sad, this story youâre telling yourself,â she says. âAnd I pity Wendy Darling for it.â
Dark clouds roll in, blotting out the sun. The air turns frigid. An odd thing, for Neverland.
Smee glances at the shift in weather and then quickly back at me. âTime for you to go, Crocodile. Have fun on your quest for destroying everything you touch. When youâre done, I suspect youâll be standing on nothing but a pile of bones and ash. I hope itâs worth it.â She tips her head toward the door, indicating my dismissal.
âDo you know where she is?â I keep my voice level, give nothing away.
âSo you can destroy her too?â
I pull in a deep breath, nostrils flaring. âWould you like a play by play? Do you want to know where Iâll stick my cock, how Iâll make her scream my name? Destroying something can feel good, Smee. I promise you that.â
âYou are hopeless,â she says.
âArenât we all in this godforsaken island chain?â I may be a little drunk now. Sometimes after a gorging, my insides donât work quite the same way. Liquor can go straight to my head. Iâm not usually so pessimistic.
Smee sighs. âI lost track of Wendy Darling a long time ago. Jas has no more information than you do.â She walks back to the door and pulls it open. Thereâs dirt crusted on the wood frame, the door handle rubbed clean of its gold plating. Why would the Captain let it go when he is so fucking anal about appearances?
Because he never came in and out this door, I realize. This door was for the pirates, the degenerates.
But if thereâs one thing I know, itâs how to be whatever someone wants me to be long enough to let their guard down.
And then I eat them.
âGoodbye, Smee.â
Her farewell is the hard slam of the door in my face.
I start off down the path.
Time for plan B.