Just then, Titania and Mustardseed appeared. Mustardseed stood close to his mother, holding her hand. Titania's heartbreak was plain on her face. She said hello to everyone, then turned her attention to Moth. "How is my son?"
Moth stepped forward with the cocoon. Titania took it in her hands and held it close to her face. "Get well, my son. You are needed." She handed the cocoon back to the small fairy and said, "Keep him safe."
"Oz said you needed to speak to us," Mustardseed prompted. He was so serious and mature. Sabrina studied his face, looking for signs that he was truly Puck's brother. They shared the same mouth and nose-that was about it.
"Yes, and this is difficult to say, but we can no longer help you solve Oberon's murder," Granny Relda said.
"What?" Daphne cried. Even Sabrina was surprised by her grandmother's words.
"Why?" Titania demanded.
"We were told that Cobweb killed your husband," Granny said. "But Cobweb claims he is innocent."
"Cobweb is lying!" Titania said.
"Maybe so," the old woman replied. "But he also says he cannot turn himself in because he would be executed immediately." Mustardseed lowered his eyes. "So it's true," Granny said.
"Of course it's true!" Titania screamed. "Murderers reap what they sow. That is the way of Faerie."
"So he will not be given a trial?" Granny Relda said.
Titania raged. "You are just like Veronica! She was always forcing her beliefs about justice on the rest of us. Cobweb killed my husband and I will oversee his execution myself!"
"Then you can find him without our help," Granny said.
"Veronica and I obviously share the same sense of right and wrong."
"I have never heard such treachery," Moth cried. "Who are you to tell us how to behave?"
"We will give him a trial," Mustardseed said quietly.
"You are overstepping your authority!" Titania raged at her son. "I am still Queen of Faerie."
"There is no Faerie, Mother. It has been gone for ten years," Mustardseed said. "We're living here, now. It's time to embrace our new home."
"You would throw away thousands of years of our history?" Titania argued.
"No, there is room for tradition," Mustardseed said. "But not traditions that oppress and create mistrust. Sentencing a man to die because that has always been the way of things is wrong. My father struggled for too long trying to rebuild that way of life. I will not allow you or anyone else to do the same. You will fail as he did."
"Mustardseed!"
"Mother, the humans have traditions of their own. Adopting a few of them might do us all a world of good. We will allow Cobweb to defend himself," Mustardseed said, and then turned to Granny Relda. "You have my word."
"Do we have hers?" Mr. Hamstead said, pointing at Titania.
Titania got up and stormed out of the room.
"I will make her understand," Mustardseed said.
Granny regarded the young fairy for a moment and then nodded. "And we will do our best to find Cobweb."
Mustardseed returned the nod, then turned and exited the room.
"So, I guess we're back to the subway," Daphne said.
"It's a place to start," said Granny. "Someone may have seen where he went."
"Or he may still be down there," said Momma. "It's a good place to hide from other fairies since they're technically forbidden to be in the tunnels."
"Great," Sabrina said. "Anyone got a flashlight and two years? Do you know how many miles of subway track there are? Six hundred and fifty six!" She recalled the report she had done in the fourth grade after a trip to the Transit Museum.
"It's the realm of the six dwarfs," Momma said. "They control the underground. If he's down there they'll help you find him."
Granny smiled. "And where would we find these dwarfs?"
Everyone agreed to continue the search for Cobweb in the morning. The sun had set long ago and it had grown bitterly cold, plus they were exhausted.
The group returned to the hotel to find Mr. Hamstead's room had been destroyed. His bed had been torn apart and his drawers rifled through. There was a note on the bathroom door that read, "You can go back to Ferryport Landing dead or alive. Your choice." Hamstead snatched the note and crumbled it into a ball.
"At least he gave me a choice," he said with a forced smile. "Maybe I'm too much trouble for you," Bess said. Hamstead shook his head. "I've dealt with bigger threats than Tony Fats."
Bess gave him a big hug and a kiss on the cheek. "You take care, doll face. I'll see you bright and early in the morning."
"I hope we get invited to the wedding," Daphne sang after the blonde beauty was gone.
Mr. Hamstead rolled his eyes but grinned from ear to ear. "I'm going to have the hotel put me in another room. You folks go get some rest. We've got a big day tomorrow."
Granny led Sabrina, Moth, and Daphne back to their room. Moth propped Puck's cocoon on the bed next to her and crawled under the covers. Sabrina lay next to her grandmother and sister in the other bed. She fell asleep listening to her sister plan Bess and Mr. Hamstead's wedding. That night, Sabrina dreamed of doves flying out of the top of a wedding cake.
When Sabrina woke the next morning, she crawled out of bed and went into the bathroom in hopes of finding a glass of water to get rid of her morning breath. She quietly shut the door so that her family and Moth could sleep. She gargled, washed her face, and checked herself in the mirror. Then she screamed.
Hovering several feet off the ground behind her was Puck's cocoon. She turned to find that the top of it had split open and something was gurgling inside. When she craned her neck to get a better look, a thick, green gas seeped out. It had the foulest smell Sabrina had ever experienced-like rotten cabbage, dirty laundry, and string cheese. Sabrina instinctively leaped back but the cocoon followed her, like a smelly puppy.
"Get this thing away from me!" Sabrina cried, but no one came. She tried to maneuver around it, but every step she took the cocoon mimicked. She faked to the left and then to the right, only to have the cocoon block the bathroom door, trapping her inside. Then the real nightmare started.
A sound like a steam whistle filled Sabrina's ears and green gas blasted out of the top of the cocoon, filling the bathroom with a funky fog. It seeped into Sabrina. It was in her hair, in her socks-she could even taste it. She pinched her nose tightly but it didn't help.
"Sabrina, are you okay in there?" her grandmother said as she tapped on the door. "No!" Sabrina cried.
"It sounds as if your dinner isn't agreeing with you. Is there anything I can do? The hotel might have some antacids for your belly," the old woman said.
There was another knock on the door. "Hey! Light a match in there," Daphne shouted.
Suddenly, the door burst open and Moth shrieked in rage.
"How dare you!" she cried.
"My goodness gracious," Granny Relda said. "What is going on in here?"
"This thing just blew up on me," Sabrina cried as the cocoon continued to spray her with fumes. "Make it stop!"
"What you've done is unforgivable!" Moth seethed. "You have stolen my right!"
"I didn't steal anything!" Sabrina cried. "It followed me in here."