Free Read Novels Online Home

Incorrect Spelling by Candace Sams (4)

Chapter Four

Lists were made, duties assigned, and all the work would begin bright and early the next day. Sky even had a list of newspapers, village circulars, and magazines where she would personally design and place small advertisements when the time came to sell some of their home-produced goods. Late into the night, she sat talking with Eartha and Windy until the two women decided to get some rest. That left her and Rowan alone, sitting in the kitchen, drinking tea.

“I’ll need to go into town and place some resumes with advertising agencies. Just in case this doesn’t work. It was foolish of me to have quit my job, but I couldn’t stay with people who’d put gender over accomplishment. It wasn’t fair.”

“I agree,” Rowan asserted. “Besides, as you say, staying there wouldn’t have helped your situation. Perhaps this was meant to happen. Maybe you needed a change, and this incident was meant to show you that.”

“I don’t know. I’m still scared.”

Rowan took her hand. “Come into the garden with me. I think it’s time I showed you that surprise I promised.”

Sky did as he requested and left her lists of things to do sitting on the kitchen table. Intrigued by Rowan’s secretive demeanor, she followed him deep into the garden, near the edge of the woods.

“How much do you know about Fauns?” Rowan asked.

She shrugged. “I know they’re vegetarians, which was proven by your eating only salad and vegetables tonight. And I know they love animals and nature, and are their caretakers.”

“True enough.” He shed Eartha’s borrowed robe. “But do you know what we really look like? What we change into when we’re in our own reality?”

Sky took a deep breath and shook her head. “I-I wasn’t aware you might be a shapeshifter.”

“Sit down on that rock over there. Watch, Sky Pyewackett. I’ll show you something few in your world will ever see.”

Mesmerized by his words and what she might witness, Sky did as he told her.

Rowan turned toward the woods and stretched out his hands.

She heard distant rustling. After a few moments, the sounds of animals moving in the bushes became more pronounced.

She stared into the darkness, straining to see. The area surrounding them was suddenly lit by the green, soft glow of thousands of fireflies. In the midst of all the glowing, tiny insect bodies, several deer moved forward. One of them was a fawn that looked as if it couldn’t be more than a day or two old. The doe accompanying the fawn stood very near her baby, but reached out her soft brown muzzle to Rowan. As the doe did so, Rowan changed.

But what a change!

The indescribably sexy man before her took on a shimmering, ethereal aura as his skin transformed to a light, glowing blue. His long hair became even longer, the already huge muscles of his body became even more pronounced, and when he turned to look at her, there were two short horns jutting out, just to the inside of each temple and over his eyes.

Sky stood, and felt her eyes widen in surprise. He approached. She remained quite still. The old stories of shapeshifters were part of her heritage. Still, she’d never imagined actually seeing an entity who could change his appearance.

“This…this is how you really look?”

He nodded. “Blue skin, horns, pointed ears and all.”

She reached forward to lift the heavy fall of hair from around his left ear. The delicate point at the top of that appendage protruded upward.

“It’s amazing. Simply fantastic. Incredible,” she babbled.

“And here is the fawn your aunts would have summoned had they not misspelled their enchantment.” Rowan held out his hand, and the tiny baby deer walked forward on spindly legs.

Sky slowly knelt down and held out her hand. “It’s lovely. Simply perfect,” she whispered.

“It’s very rare and precious that a wild animal will trust a human this way. As does its mother. And for their gift of trust, I’ll extract a promise from you.”

Sky gazed up at his glowing green eyes. “What promise?”

“Never allow the deer to be hunted on your property. Keep your woods as a sanctuary where the animals can come for safety. Grow plants that deer love, and secure shelter in the woods where they can hide, even in the worst weather.”

She swallowed hard. It wasn’t a hard promise to make. “I swear it,” she readily agreed.

“Will Eartha and Windy agree to this as well?”

By the light of a thousand fireflies, Sky smiled at the gentle fawn before her; awed by its wide-eyed, innocent gaze. “Of course. We all will. Willingly.”

“And what do you think of me other than my being amazing, fantastic and incredible?” he jokingly asked.

Sky stood and looked him over again. “I think your race must be the most wonderful in all of the Fairy Realm. How marvelous you are. How positively ethereal.”

He briefly dropped his head back as he laughed. “You’ll swell my already excessive ego.”

“Perhaps there’s a reason it’s so large,” Sky quietly admitted. “You’re quite breathtaking.” Then, she changed subjects. Her next thoughts were much more serious. “Rowan…what will your queen do if you stay too long?”

“Just as your aunts opened the door between our worlds and allowed me to come through, she can do the same thing from the other side. She could summon me back.”

“What happens if you don’t go? It’s still up to you to come or go, isn’t it?”

He stepped closer and pushed back a strand of her hair. “You’ve insisted often enough that I go back.”

She chewed on her lower lip and ran her fingertips over his blue shoulders. “I-I was just wondering.”

“Don’t worry, little witch. The queen won’t do anything to harm you, your family or your property. I’ll make sure of that.”

“How? And…why would she?”

“Why don’t you go inside now? I think you’ve been exposed to magic from the Fairy Realm, quite long enough.”

She frowned at the disregarded question, but took one last, long look at the Faun before her. She gazed at the gentle deer grazing the wild herbs near her garden. “Thank you for letting me see you as you really are. And for bringing the fawn for me.”

“Happy birthday, Sky.”

As she turned to leave, she looked at him over her shoulder. “It’s been the most wonderful birthday of my life. Job or nor job. I thank you from the bottom of my heart, and I will keep my promise about the woods.”

“Good night, little witch.”

Perplexed that he hadn’t asked her to stay with him, and even more confused by her need to leave him alone in the garden, Sky slowly walked away.

* * *

Feeling more at peace in his Faun form, Rowan found a soft, fern-filled spot under an oak. He settled down, even as the deer around him did the same. Still, he stayed awake a long time thinking. It was deep into the night before he turned on his side, intending to rest. As he settled in, he noticed it was about the same time the light in Sky’s room finally went out.

* * *

With her notice delivered. Now came the time to part from her company.

Sky emptied the contents of her desk into a small box, even as her coworkers and immediate supervisor begged her to reconsider her position. But she still felt, as Rowan had said, that this was the time to leave Fitsby, Sotherland and Sotherland. It was two o’clock when she stopped her packing, finished signing termination papers, and rechecked her computer queries as to openings in other firms. The responses were all very polite and professional, but there was nothing currently open. Perhaps in a few months’ time there would be, but not now.

Her anxiety over leaving her only source of income grew, but Mr. Fitsby’s apparent lack of concern over whether she stayed or went steeled her to do what she must. She wasn’t wanted at this place any longer. With that knowledge, she left work after having dropped off her box of personal items at a nearby post office, to be mailed home. She had nothing to carry but a briefcase full of current resumes, for interviewing with other advertising companies — companies who might be interested in her if she was sitting right in front of them on an impromptu visit. She had all her recent advertising histories in print, ready to show anyone who was interested.

Much later, her concern increased tenfold. Still, she tried to see something positive in all that had happened.

“At least I’ve got my vacation pay coming and haven’t taken any sick days,” she muttered beneath her breath. After unannounced appearances at several firms, they all said the same thing. They wanted her, but there simply weren’t any vacancies.

With a heavy heart, Sky trudged to the train station early and sat thinking the entire trip home. After exiting the train, she walked toward the cottage, with a knot in her stomach. Twenty-seven years of age was too young for this kind of angst. But it was all hers to endure.

The day before, Eartha, Windy and Rowan had furiously pored over plans to turn the unused front parlor into a small shop. She’d drawn up advertisements and had dated them as to the times they should be sent, to different newspapers. At the time, all that enthusiasm seemed grand. Now, it appeared as though they were all only prolonging the inevitable.

She was engrossed in skeptical thoughts about the future while she walked down the paved road to the front door. Putting her hands over her brows to shade out the last of the afternoon sun, she scarcely believed what she saw.

The fences around the garden and the cottage itself had been repaired and were freshly whitewashed. The front gate, which had hung crookedly over the walk for years, was also painted and now seemed perfectly straight. There were piles of fresh vegetation lying on the mown lawn and even bigger piles within the garden. She picked up her pace.

As she got closer, a large figure was clearly visible in the garden. Raking the gravel of a newly placed garden path, Rowan stopped when he saw her. Sky tried not to smile at the sight of his mountainous form in the old overalls, work shirt and boots. Apparently, the rest of great grandpa’s clothing was now in use.

He shot her a brilliant smile and put his rake aside. “Hello, Sky. We weren’t expecting you until this evening.”

“I-I put out all the resumes I could. There aren’t any openings right now.”

“Bugger them!”

Sky burst out laughing. When she finally got her mirth under control, she said, “Why is it I can never stay in a bad mood around you?”

“We make the worlds we live in. Don’t let anyone depress you, Sky. They aren’t worth it. Besides, I don’t think you’re ever going to have to work someplace that doesn’t appreciate you. Not if you don’t want to.”

“Are you insane? We could never make enough money from selling a few trinkets and vegetables to maintain this land. Not for long.”

“I beg to differ. Come with me.” He quickly leaned forward, kissed her soundly then led her deeper into the garden.

As he held her hand, Sky felt as if she’d known him forever instead of just a couple of short days. He was both exciting and comfortable, unlike any man she’d ever known. He was boyishly charming while presenting a mature, strong front to which she could cling if necessary. Part of his charm, however, was that Rowan never made her feel like she needed anything but her own ingenuity. He was both supportive and intelligent enough to let her make up her own mind, without demanding his needs be constantly met. He wasn’t vain but understood his attractions. He seemed to understand her deepest needs.

As she followed him and mused over her sudden urge to have him in her life, she finally took stock of her surroundings. She felt her jaw drop as she viewed all the work that had been done in a single day.

All the vegetation lying around was weeds. They’d been culled from every flower bed, every fence line and border. The gravel paths had been cleaned and smoothed to perfection. Someone had even hauled in some old stone slabs from the back of the old carriage house, and carefully placed them to make a new path from the cottage.

“We can’t have anyone falling when they tour the gardens,” Rowan told her.

Sky spun around and stared at him. “Tours? What tours?”

“I was thinking about how you might draw people to your home when they could easily go to another village or farmer’s market for their goods. But you have something right here, in your own cottage garden, that none of your competitors has. At least, that’s what Windy and Eartha say. And I think they’re quite ingenious.”

“What are you talking about?”

Witches! The three of you should let people know you’re practicing witches and that you’ll share your goods, and maybe a bit of your knowledge, with the world. In that way, others might see your products as being different from what they can get in nearby villages. They’ll come to your farm to tour the gardens, and maybe even hear Eartha and Windy talk about what it’s like to be Wiccan. This could accomplish two things.” He held up one finger each as he counted down. “First, they draw paying customers. Second, they educate people about your lifestyle. It seems to me that this is something your world desperately needs…more open minds. You can do all this without letting the world know of the real magic you possess.”

Down to the last comma, period and crossed t, Sky couldn’t fault his logic or her aunts’ perceptive ingenuity. “I had no idea my aunts were so…”

“Far thinking? Capable? Intelligent?” he chided.

She hung her head in shame and tucked her hair behind her ears.

“Just because they’re older doesn’t make them incompetent, Sky. It makes them richer in knowledge, and the wisdom to use it tactfully. True, they did open the gate to the Fairy Realm with a mistaken spell, but they’re far more enterprising than you can imagine. It’s just that no one has ever bothered to ask them their opinions before. Someone has always been there to look after them, and those people have not allowed them to make certain decisions on their own.”

“They told you that?” she meekly asked.

“They told me how your parents died in a ferry crossing from Scotland, and how they, and everyone else, always assumed that two older women couldn’t manage for themselves. I was informed that it was your parents’ wish that you stay on here and look after Eartha and Windy. Your aunts are aware that you love them, but they want you to have a life of your own, and not worry so much on their account. Do you understand?”

Sky’s lower lip trembled. “They’ve told you all that?” she repeated. “And they wouldn’t come to me with their concerns?”

He smiled and placed one palm against her cheek. “They love you so very, very much. They’re two of the most innocently sweet creatures that have ever walked this earth, and they would never dream of hurting you in any way. They only told me these things because a stranger can often listen better than someone close. And I’m told I’m a very good listener.” He winked. “They have plans for this old place; plans that would amaze you. And those plans will work, though they do need your help for much of the business end.”

She blinked back tears. “I’ve been treating them like my parents did. As if they weren’t able to look after themselves,” she absently reiterated his very thoughts.

“Listen to them and put faith in them and yourself. You are needed here. Not to support them, but to support yourself. While you worry over selling the goods of others, you can do far better staying here and using your brilliant mind to sell your own crafts.” He kissed her cheek. “Wouldn’t it be better to work for yourself instead of someone else? To be master of your own destiny instead of having to depend upon others? You’ve been gifted with that opportunity. Few have it.”

She suddenly saw light where there were only gloomy shadows before. Rowan had a knack for making her really look at how blessed she was. “You’re saying that if I worked as hard to make this place a success, as I do for other people, we could make this a paying proposition.”

“Exactly!”

Sky looked around her. “If we mowed that meadow over there, and put in a border of wildflowers, it would make a perfect place for picnics.”

“There! That’s the spirit,” he told her.

A new strength formed in Sky’s core, and she didn’t discount Rowan’s part in its origin. “I’ll need to go to town, secure the proper permits, and get papers from the health authorities. We might even be able to sell food, homemade products with a special label depicting witches or something. We’ll need a website…”

Now you’re thinking!” he encouraged, as he took her hand. “Come see what else we’ve already done.”

Sky’s anticipation grew with each step they took. The old chicken coop had been completely repaired, painted and cleaned. Rowan had even cut out wooden shapes of moons and stars, painted them blue and silver, then nailed them to the white coop. She believed they could easily sell fresh eggs with such a nice cage attracting a tourist’s attention, instead of the unpainted, innocuous shed that had been there before.

In his own way, Rowan perceived that a prettier environment would attract better revenue. She found his insight uncanny.

As she continued her survey of the work done, she found Eartha and Windy picking up the piles of weeds that Rowan had cleared. They were also in the process of making a new compost pile behind the barn. She hugged them both, told them what a stupendous job they were doing, and was rewarded with glowing smiles.

She then let Rowan lead her around the rest of the property.

The garden had been tilled and was ready for the planting of early summer vegetables. Sky could almost see pumpkins growing, surrounded by tall sunflowers and beds of brightly colored zinnias. Daisies could fill the borders of the beds surrounding the house, and herbs would be planted near the back door, right in the sunlight, ready for kitchen use. But the biggest surprise was yet to come.

Rowan led her into the front of the house where the unused parlor was located. The furniture had been pushed aside and the beginnings of oak display cases were already lying on the wooden floor.

“Of course, everything will need a new coat of paint, the furniture will need recovering, and I’ll polish the floors. But this can be done and ready in two weeks. By three, you can open your gift shop. The gardens will be just planted by then. In three months, I can guarantee that your plants will outdo anything in Britain. Fauns are excellent gardeners. And we do love working outdoors. No adverse weather stops a Faun’s garden from looking stupendous!”

She shook her head in amazement. “How could you have possibly done all this in one day? Where did the wood for the display cases come from?”

He shrugged. “There were some old odds and ends up in the barn loft, and Eartha and Windy are terrific workers. They love this idea so much that I think they’d willingly work into the night if we didn’t stop them.”

“And…you did all this while I was in Barnsdale, bemoaning my fate and feeling sorry for myself?”

He stepped closer. “You won’t feel sorry for yourself for long. You’re a fighter. I know you are.”

She gave him what she hoped was her most brilliant smile ever. “I’m not going to let you do it all alone. I’m going up to change into some work clothes and we’ll all work together.”

“Splendid. And tonight, you can go into the garden, light some candles and use some magic to bless our efforts. Not magic to cause harm, but to benefit. You’ll know the right spell,” he told her.

She sighed. “It’s been a long, long time since I’ve conjured. And it’s about time I got back to my roots, and quit acting like I’m something I’m not. Just so long as I don’t exhibit any real magic in front of regular folk, I think this can work.”

He grabbed her up into a huge hug and spun her around.

When he suddenly stopped spinning and laughing, and put her back on her feet, Sky noticed an intensity in his gaze that hadn’t been there before. “What is it?”

“I just want you to be happy.”

She hugged him back, kissed him hard, and gazed deeply into his gorgeous green eyes. “I will be. Happier than I’ve been in a long, long time. And we’ll make the gift shop work. We will!” she firmly promised.

“Go on, now. Get changed,” he advised. “I can use some help cleaning the barn, but I can’t finish the display cases without some glass.”

“I’ll make a run into the nearest village tomorrow, and get whatever we need. Just have everyone make a list. Our funds will hold out for a little while longer.”

* * *

With that, Rowan watched her happily leave. Her smile was brighter than at any time since he’d known her. Her spirit was freer. This was the way she was meant to live. Not beholden to anyone, but relying on her skills and her love of the elements and nature around her. Still, a sudden chill went through his heart. He turned and faced a window that had opened on the landscape. It was like a hole cut between two worlds—this one, and his.

She’s calling me home.

Too high-pitched for human ears, he heard the Queen of the Fairy Realm summoning him back. She couldn’t force him to leave this reality any more than Sky could have when he first arrived. However, the queen’s wrath could be exceedingly harmful if he didn’t submit.

He’d already spoken to Eartha and Windy. As Sky had done, they promised to keep this land and the surrounding woods always free of human encroachment. No animals would be harmed. His first offering—one of a wild place in this world that no humans could ever encroach upon—would appease the queen slightly. The second promise would, in his opinion, allow him to be able to stay in this reality forever. But that promise had to be given by Sky alone. What if she wouldn’t do it?

“Please, just a little longer,” he whispered, and let the breeze carry his request back to his queen. “Let me have just a few more days, and I’ll have an offering fit for your approval. An offering that will allow me to stay. I…I love her.” Moments after the words were spoken, there was a silence that his Faun ears could only interpret as acceptance of his soft plea, albeit a guarded acceptance.

“Thank you…Grandmother,” he softly murmured.

* * *

After supper that night, Rowan made his way back to the garden wearing Eartha’s robe again. All his clothing was old, so it needed mending after a long day’s work in the garden.

He left the women making more plans, knowing that Sky would eventually come to him. As he’d vacated his place at the kitchen table, her meaningful nod had left him in no doubt. To stay near her, he’d offered to do the dishes, mop the kitchen floor, or learn to use the washer and dryer to clean his own clothing, but the two aunts had shooed him out of the house, proclaiming that he’d done more than enough work for one day.

Feeling the need for the night air on his flesh, he hung the robe over a bush and settled into the soft grass at the edge of the forest. Having worked very hard that day, he found it increasingly difficult to stay awake.

* * *

Waiting until her aunts were in their beds, Sky quietly crept out of the house so as not to disturb them. She searched for over half an hour before finding Rowan sleeping, underneath a giant oak tree. Fireflies hovered over and around him. He stirred, put one hand under his head, and carelessly draped the other on his abdomen.

For a time, she stared at the muscled perfection lying there. Her body responded quite easily to all that masculinity.

The thought came to her that he wouldn’t be there forever. That saddened her more than anything ever had, even more than losing her job. Without him, this place wouldn’t even seem like a home anymore. In these past days, his joy, his love of life, his laughter and hope were what made her world wondrous.

She settled in the grass near him, content to continue watching him sleep.

Suddenly, a small, blue light appeared from the depths of the woods. As it zoomed forward, the fireflies seemed to move aside, as if they were making way for this new glowing creature and whatever it represented.

Enthralled, Sky was about to awaken Rowan and ask him what the light could mean. Soon enough, she got her answer.

Within the glow flew an ethereal creature no more than seven inches in height. It was a nude, woman-like thing with wings that sparkled and glowed like crystal when illuminated. The tiny woman’s long hair was blue and flowed around her like waves kissing a shore. Completely enraptured by its appearance, something in Sky’s past teachings told her this was a Pixie; a smaller member of the Fairy race. She sat very still, hoping not to frighten the Pixie away, but the creature’s next actions quickly roused a sense of anger, jealousy and pettiness that she would have never believed possible.

The Pixie hovered over Rowan’s sleeping form. It flew up to his face and put out its hands, barely grazing his skin. Then it flew backwards, down his body. It hovered when it was directly over Rowan’s crotch. The Pixie’s tiny head dipped down and she kissed the tip of his penis. Her hands began to stroke him.

Infuriated by the advantage taken of a sleeping man, Sky spoke up. “Get off him, you little hussy! Is this your idea of saying hello to someone?”

As if he was under a spell of some kind, Sky watched Rowan try to wake up, but he seemed incapable of moving more than just blinking his eyes. Perhaps the man had been under some enchantment for a while, since his keen ears should have heard a mere witch walking through the grass, toward him.

“I said…get off him!” Sky angrily repeated as she swatted at the creature.

The Pixie flew up about two feet, and begin to change to a bright orange, then to a flaming red.

Awakening at last, Rowan shook his head and sat up.

“Sky, don’t move,” he warned. “you’ve royally pissed her off, and she has the power to enchant you.”

“She was touching you. Intimately. While you slept. She couldn’t keep her hands off you,” Sky angrily countered.

Rowan glared at the Pixie. “Is that true, Glacia? Were you up to your old tricks?”

The Pixie emitted an incomprehensible series of squeaks.

Sky watch as Rowan dealt with the situation. She had it in mind to cast a spell on the little Pixie. Maybe a spell that would turn her into a bug. Something small enough to be plastered across the front of a car bumper or a windshield.

Rowan’s next words placated her.

“You’re dealing with me, Glacia, not one of your lazy Satyrs. If you ever again touch me while I sleep, I’ll let Sky turn you into a horrible old wart that no man will want or love. Your wings will fall off and you’ll turn a sickening shade of puce. You’ll smell of Sulphur and be covered with puss-filled boils. Be gone!”

The Pixie screeched at the top of her lungs, lunged once at Sky, who quickly leaned out of her reach, then zipped back into the forest as a fiery little ball of flame.

As the Pixie left, Sky noticed how the fireflies resumed their bright vigil over Rowan.

She could no more harm another creature through the use of magic than she could harm herself, but Glacia didn’t know that.

“What was that all about?” Sky angrily demanded, pointing at the retreating Pixie. “What did she think she was doing to you, and who was she?”

Rowan pushed his hair back, crossed his legs and gazed at Sky. “That was Glacia. She was probably sent here by the queen, to find out if I was nearing the end of my stay. But she wasn’t supposed to have her way with me. I’m quite sure that was her own little idea. She’s done it to others.”

Sky crossed her arms over her chest. “Did she have you under some kind of spell? You wouldn’t wake up at first.”

Rowan suppressed a smile. “That’s what makes what she does so offensive. She makes sure her victims sleep quite hard.” He shook his head. “She won’t ever do it to me again. If she tries, I shall find a very large book and press her little ass right between its pages.”

The thought of that made Sky smile.

“Don’t laugh, Sky. You might break something,” he teased.

She hung her head and gave way to mirth. She was actually jealous. Of a Pixie! But then she stopped laughing, pushed her hair back and scrambled toward him. “She meant to bring you back to the Fairy Realm. That’s why she was really here.”

He gazed at her a moment before answering. “I heard the queen’s call this afternoon, and asked her for more time. She’s growing impatient. Yes, that’s why Glacia was allowed to come into your world. As I said, the Pixie was sent to remind me to get back home though there was nothing said about how she did it.”

Sky stroked his freshly shaven cheek. He now had a habit of shaving after he saw an advertisement in a magazine, and she had admired the shaven male model’s face.

“Rowan?”

“Yes?”

“Do…do you have to?”

“Go home, you mean?”

She simply nodded.

“I can do as I please. Do you want me to stay, little witch? Have I won you over at last?”

She gazed deeply into his spring green eyes. “Yes, Rowan. I want you to stay. I do. Very, very much!”

He pulled her to him and kissed her, long and deeply. Then, he broke the kiss, though he kept her close. “There’s something you should know, Sky.”

“I know. For you to stay here, there’ll have to be a sacrifice or offering of some kind. That’s what the legends say.”

“Yes, but I already made up my mind what that is to be. You see, I’ve wanted to stay since I first saw you. I think I’ve made that obvious!”

She smiled and kissed the place just under his jaw. “Tell me what we should do.”

He smiled back at her. “Part of the offering has already been made. All I have to do is consecrate this ground…your woods…to the queen. When she sees the ceremony from her side of the Fairy Realm, she’ll know for sure that you and your aunts will never allow the woods or its inhabitants to come to any harm. That will please her greatly. The next part of the offering involves you. You and me, that is.”

“I’ll do anything.” She pushed his long hair back and touched his cheek.

“Why? Why would you make such a blind promise?”

She lowered her head.

“Sky?” He lifted her chin with the tip of one finger.

“Because…I’m in love with you. I know it’s happened very fast, but I can’t imagine being without you,” she quickly added. “You…you make me happy. I smile when I’m around you, and you treat my aunts with grace and respect. I haven’t ever met a man like you. Faun or not. It’s like all this was meant to happen.”

“I love you too, little witch. What you just said was all I needed to hear.”

“Is that the offering, then? That I should promise to love you forever?” she murmured and hugged him hard.

“It involves a little more than that,” he said while extracting himself from her bear-like embrace. He took a deep breath. “Would you promise to bear my child and name it after the Fairy Queen?”

Stunned for a moment, Sky considered the request for a long moment. Finally, she gazed into his eyes again and slowly nodded. “Yes. I’d do that. If you love a man, you’d love to have his baby,” she whispered.

Rowan jumped to his feet. “Do you hear, Grandmother? She’ll gift you with a grandchild, and name the baby after you! It’s been a long, long time since any human has made such a gesture. Please, let me stay with her. Let us be one with this land and dwell here in peace.”

Grandmother?”

Sky jumped to her feet as quickly as Rowan had. “You never told me the Fairy Queen was your grandmother. You’re a Faun. How can that be? The Queen of the Fairy Realm is a Fairy.”

Rowan took her hands in his. “The Fairy Prince is my father. But my mother is a Princess of the Faun race. Her blood is of ancient lineage. When I was born, I had the same characteristics as my mother. I am a Faun.”

“The q-queen’s grandson,” Sky repeated in a trembling voice.

He shrugged. “She dotes on me terribly. That was why, when your aunts opened the doorway between the worlds, she allowed me to satisfy my curiosity, and come into your reality. She was as curious as to why someone would summon a Faun. But then, I found you here. I wanted you then, and I’ve wanted you ever since. Magic might have been used to bring us together, but it is fate that sealed the bargain. We were meant to be united, Sky. There is no other way that all this could happen.”

“I don’t know about any of that, but you could leave your world…your entire family…behind?”

“Uh…not exactly.”

Sky swallowed hard. “What does that mean?”

He took a deep breath. “You’d better sit down and listen.”

Finally understanding that she might have bitten off more than she could chew, Sky did as he requested and sat on the ground.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Tempting the Laird by Julia London

Building Billions - Part 2 by Lexy Timms

Contract Baby: An Mpreg Romance (Hellion Club Book 2) by Aiden Bates

The Unknown Royal Heir by Kimber Swan

Highland Wish by Colleen MacGregor

Hell Yeah!: Good Enough (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Maddie James

UNDRESSED: Soul Catchers MC by Zoey Parker

GYPSIES, TRAMPS, AND THIEVES by Parris Afton Bonds

Royally Ruined (Bad Boy Royals Book 2) by Nora Flite

By the Book by Julia Sonneborn

Meik&Sebastian - Obsessed #4: A Gay First Time Series by Quin Perin

Single Dad’s Mistake by Destiny, Sam

Dangerous Destiny: Romance with BITE (League of Guardians Book 1) by V.A. Dold

Lusting For Love: Workers in Paradise - 1 (McCallister's Paradise Book 6) by Chantel Rhondeau

Trailer Park Virgin by Alexa Riley

Dating a Demon by Lilwa Dexel

At the Tycoon’s Service by Maya Banks

Castiel: With Lies (Adair Empire Book 3) by KL Donn

Finding Truth (The Searchers Book 3) by Ripley Proserpina

Nanny With Benefits: A May-December Romance (Temperance Falls: Experience Counts Book 3) by London Hale