The effect was immediate. The tiny creature began glowing, brighter and brighter, as if she were a tiny star. The raindrops falling on her fizzed like drops of fat in a frying pan as they struck her. Brendan had to shield his eyes from the intense glare.
“Yesssssss!” The Lesser Faerie began zipping around erratically, shooting here and there at random. “Sugarrrrrrr!” she shouted. She divebombed Brendan’s head and then whirled around his ears in tighter and tighter circles.
“Hey! Calm down!” Brendan cried in alarm.
Then, as suddenly as the fit began, it ended. Her light winked out, and she fell with a soft plop face-down in the mud.
“Sugar…” she mumbled. Snores, impossibly loud for such a minute creature, rose to Brendan’s ears. He bent down and picked the tiny woman up in the palm of his hand.
“Great,” Brendan snorted. “I’m stuck in the rain with homicidal Orcadia after me, and all I have to defend myself with is a miniature sugar junkie.”
“That’s not all you have,” Mr. Greenleaf said, stepping out from under the trees. “You have your wits and your luck.”
Brendan almost dropped the Lesser Faerie in surprise. “Do you people enjoy scaring the crap out of me?”
“Sorry to startle you,” Greenleaf said with a smile. Titi zipped out of the darkness to land on his shoulder. After a wink at Brendan she began preening her coat of colourful feathers. “I forget that you can’t sense us yet. When you become fully fledged, you will be very difficult to surprise. But to the matter at hand… You must be off. Time is wasting. My sister texted me that you might need some help.”
“I thought cellphones weren’t allowed in there,” Brendan said.
“Rules must be bent when the situation demands it.”
“Does that mean you’re gonna help me find this amulet?” Brendan’s heart lifted.
“No.” Greenleaf shook his head decisively. “Even I can’t flout the Law to that extent. As it stands, my even talking to you could be misconstrued. If anyone asks me, I will say that I wasn’t aware of your status.” Greenleaf looked at the lingering cloud bank. “I will try to give you a little breathing room, that’s all. I’ve been keeping an eye on Orcadia. She is waiting for you to leave the island.”
“If I leave this place, I won’t be protected, will I? This… shield-thingy…”
“The Ward of the Island.”
“Whatever, it only assures my safety on the Island. As soon as I leave here, I’m toast.”
Greenleaf shook his head. “If she sees you leave. I can do something about that.”
“I thought no one could help me.”
“I wouldn’t be helping you directly. If asked, I would say that I was just trying to vex Orcadia, which has become something of a hobby of mine, of late.”
“Fine. So how are you going to hide me?”
“I won’t hide you.” Greenleaf’s smile showed a hint of mischief. “I will be you.”
Greenleaf reached out and touched Brendan’s shoulder. There was a tingling sensation where the hand contacted him. Then, as Brendan watched in astonishment, Mr. Greenleaf shimmered. His features smeared. He shrank slightly in stature. In a matter of seconds, his appearance had completely changed. Brendan stood open mouthed, staring at an exact replica of himself. “What do you think? Neat, huh?” Even Greenleaf’s voice and manner of speaking had changed to sound like Brendan’s.
“How did you do that?”
Greenleaf laughed. “A glamour. Now I will leave the Island, and Orcadia, thinking I am you, will chase me. I will lead her on a wild goose chase.”
Brendan stared in disbelief. “I can’t get over how creepy it is looking at another me.”
“Get over it, dude. Now!” Greenleaf struck a very “Brendan” pose. Brendan had to admit, Greenleaf was good.
“Okay.”
“I will go and lead her away. I don’t know how long I can give you, but you must use the time wisely.” Titi waggled a hand at Brendan, then crawled into Greenleaf’s shirt pocket, out of sight. Greenleaf turned to go.
“Wait,” Brendan called. “Where do I even begin?”
“Remember,” Greenleaf said, “you have friends.”
“Friends? What friends?” Brendan cried but Greenleaf was already moving. He sped off across the grass and disappeared down the path. Brendan watched himself run away and shook his head. “That is weird.”
Recovering his composure, Brendan set off after him at a slower pace. The first item of business was to get off Ward’s Island.
He tucked the Lesser Faerie into the pocket of his school blazer and trotted along the paved path to the ferry terminal. He knew it would be too late for the ferry, but he had to start somewhere.
He arrived at the pier to find the ferry docks in darkness. A chain hung across the entrance to the dock.
“Now what?” he said aloud.
“The Faerie Terminal,” a tiny groggy voice said.
“Huh?” He looked down to see the Lesser Faerie had recovered enough to haul herself up and was hanging out of his pocket. She was looking slightly green.
“We go to the Faerie Terminal.”
“We’re at the ferry terminal. It’s closed.”
“Not the ferry terminal, you idiot,” she snapped. She pointed off down a path that Brendan hadn’t seen before. The path was paved with white stones that shone faintly in the moonlight. A sign stood at the top of the path. In elegant painted letters it read TO FAERIE TERMINAL.
“I’ve never seen that before.”
“Your Faerie Sight is not very reliable, is it?” the Lesser Faerie teased. “There’s a whole world that you’ve been missing, friend. Now let’s haul some butt, please.”
Brendan had no choice but to do what she asked. He jogged down the path in the direction that the sign indicated.
“Do you mind not bouncing me around too much? I may puke.”
“I’ll do my best. What’s your name, anyway?”
“Basra La Tir.”
“Huh.” Brendan snorted a laugh.
“What’s so funny?”
“I found you in a sandwich, and your initials are B.L.T.”
“I don’t get it,” Basra said.
“Bacon, lettuce, and tomato. It’s a sandwich.”
“Oh. Sounds awful.”
They came around a bend, and the lake spread out before them. Down by the shore a light was shining. Brendan saw movement, people shuffling in the pool of illumination. A flash of lightning erupted out of the water to the north. Thunder rolled across the grey waves. “I guess Greenleaf is doing his part.”
Brendan came to the light and discovered a small wooden dock. The waiting Faeries gave him a cursory glance and went back to shuffling from foot to foot in the steady downpour.
“Bloody late again,” one said.
“Probably the weather,” another offered.
“Bah,” the first replied. “What do we pay taxes for?”
“We don’t pay taxes,” 75 another observed.
A bell rang out on the water. Brendan peered through the rain and saw a boat looming in the darkness. At its prow stood a tall thin man who wore a bright yellow rain suit topped with a drooping yellow hat.
The boat came up to the dock and bumped against it.
“’Bout time, Ferryman!” the grumpy Faerie grumbled.
The Ferryman didn’t say a word. He merely bent and looped a painter 76 around the nearest post. That done, he stood up and held out his hand. One by one, the would-be passengers stepped onto the precariously rocking boat, dropping a gleaming coin into the Ferryman’s hand. 77
Brendan didn’t know what to do. He stepped up to the Ferryman and said, “I haven’t got any money.”
A gasp came from the other passengers. Brendan couldn’t see the face under the shadow of the rain hat. Up close, Brendan realized how tall the Ferryman actually was. He towered over everyone. Water dripped from the brim of his hat as the Ferryman stood eerily still despite the rocking of the boat beneath his feet.
Brendan fished in his pocket and pulled out his useless braces. He held them up and said hopefully, “Will you accept these?”