Series: Book 2 in the Goblin Wars series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fantasy, YA, Fiction
Summary
The battle against goblinkind continues . . . but which
side will Teagan be on? Teagan, Finn, and Aiden have made it out of Mag Mell
alive, but the Dark Man’s forces are hot on their
heels. Back in Chicago, Tea’s goblin cousins show up at
her school, sure she will come back to Mag Mell, as goblin
blood is never passive once awoken. Soon she will belong to
Fear Doirich and join them. In the meantime, they are happy
to entertain themselves by trying to seduce, kidnap, or kill
Tea’s family and friends. Tea knows she doesn’t
have much time left, and she refuses to leave Finn or her
family to be tortured and killed. A wild Stormrider, born to
rule and reign, is growing stronger inside her. But as long
as she can hold on, she’s still Teagan Wylltson, who
plans to be a veterinarian and who heals the sick and
hurting. The disease that’s destroying
her—that’s destroying them all—has a name:
Fear Doirich. And Teagan Wylltson is not going to let him
win.
Kersten Hamilton is the author of several
picture books and many middle grade novels. She has worked as
a ranch hand, a woodcutter, a lumberjack, a census taker, a
wrangler for wilderness guides, and an archeological
surveyor. Now, when she's not writing, she hunts dinosaurs in
the deserts and badlands of New Mexico. The Goblin Wars books
are her first novels for young adults. For more about
Kersten, please visit www.kerstenhamilton.com.
Part I: Lhiannon—Sídhe
One
“Come quick! Thomas is growing feathers!”
Aiden yelled again.
“The man’s shape-shifting,” Finn said.
He had taken her hand to pull her to her feet, and he
hadn’t let go. Every molecule in her was suddenly
vibrating at a higher rate, and webs of electricity spread
over her entire body. It felt good.
Really good. But it did make it hard to focus.
“Where’s Mamieo, then?” Finn asked. “She was sitting beside him when I went through the
living room,” Teagan said, dropping his hand and
stepping away. Focusing would be a good thing right now. Finn’s
grandmother hadn’t been happy when they’d dragged
a wounded shape shifter out of Mag Mell, but she’d
promised not to harm the creature—so long as he
didn’t do anything unnatural. “Do you think she’ll consider
this—” “Unnatural? I’m sure of it.” “She wouldn’t—” “Do away with the creature?” Finn rubbed his
chin with the two good fingers of his wounded hand. “I
doubt it. But I’d best go check on them just the same.
Thomas might be needing some help.” “Finn,” Teagan said, as he turned away. She
glanced over to make sure Lennie had put Aiden down. He had.
“I do love you.” Finn turned back, grinning. “I know it.” “But I’m not sure what I’m going to do
about it, either. I meant it when I said that I’m still
headed for Cornell. I’m not giving that up.” “You didn’t think I’d go along with you?
That’s why you were crying?” Teagan shook her head. “I didn’t believe you
could love me. I was going to get over it, and get on with my
plans.” “That’s just like you. Sticking to the
plan.” “Not this time. You turned my world upside down,
Finn Mac Cumhaill. If Cindy hadn’t fallen for Oscar at
first sight, I wouldn’t have been thinking
about—” “Why are you guys still talking?” Aiden
yelled. “Just one more minute, boyo,” Finn called over
the edge, then turned back to Teagan. “Cindy and Oscar? Your monkeys?”
“Chimpanzees are apes,” Teagan said
automatically. “And they don’t belong to
me—I just work with them. They shouldn’t belong
to the zoo, either. They should belong to themselves.
That’s what I’m working for. That’s why
it’s important that I go to Cornell. So maybe you and I
should wait until things settle down a
bit—”
“Tea.” Finn looked grim. “Things are not
going to settle. Your relations have come calling.” “You mean the goblins.” “And the Travelers. There’s never going to be
peace between them. And your family’s in the middle of
it.”
“Are you guys
kissing? ” Aiden shouted.
“Not yet.” Finn cocked an eyebrow and lowered
his voice so only Teagan could hear. “But I can’t
wait to get to it.” “’Cause Mamieo said to hurry!” Finn touched Teagan’s face, then turned and jumped,
catching the lamppost next to the house with his good hand.
She stepped to the roof’s edge to watch him swing
around it as he dropped. She’d been coming out onto the
porch roof since she was little, but her stomach still felt
tight if she stood too close to the edge. She would never
just throw herself off it like that. Finn landed lightly in
the patch of frost-yellowed grass between the sidewalk and
the street, then grinned up at her.
Kissing. Teagan pressed her hands into her stomach
to stop the trembling, which was threatening to spread to her
knees.
“Come on, girl.” Finn lifted his arms.
“Jump down. You’re just the right size for
catching.” “Uh-uh.” Teagan took a step back. “Not
while you have a hurt hand.” “Well, then, could you bring my duct tape down with
you?” “Sure.” Aiden started for the door. “Finn—” Teagan began, but he had already
caught her brother by the collar. “Not so fast, there,” Finn said as Aiden tried
to wiggle away. “I want to know what’s happening,” Aiden
said. “Thomas is growing feathers.” Lennie sounded
worried. “Like a bird. That’s what.” Lennie couldn’t see Lucy and the other the creatures
of Mag Mell who were only half present in this creation. But
there were some unearthly creatures that were fully present
in any of the worlds of the multiverse—angels,
Highborn, and Fir Bolg—that even people without second
sight could see. And watching a shape shifter transform would
give Lennie nightmares. “I’ll take care of it,” Finn assured
him. “But I’ll be needing two brave men to stand
guard out here. Do you know where I might find
them?” “We’re brave.” Aiden stopped wiggling,
and tipped his head as if he were listening.
“Yep,” he said. “There are bad guys coming.
We’ll fight them!” Finn glanced up at Teagan, and she shrugged. Aiden had
been saving the world from imaginary bad guys daily since
they escaped from Mag Mell, sometimes by singing them away,
and sometimes defeating them with stick swords and rocks. “We will?” Lennie looked worried. “I fought bad guys before,” Aiden assured him.
“I’ll show you how.” Lucy had decided the
show was over and had settled into his hair again. She always
played along with Aiden’s imaginary battles. “All right,” Lennie agreed. Finn looked at Teagan again, and she nodded. “You two stay right here, then,” he said,
“until Teagan can walk you across the street to
Lennie’s house. Got it?” Finn disappeared onto the porch beneath her, leaving both
Aiden and Lennie looking up at her expectantly. “Jump, Tea-gan,” Lennie said. “I can
catch you. I don’t have a hurt hand.” “Thank you, Lennie,” Teagan said. “But
I’m going back in through the window. You wait there
like Finn said.” She wiped her tears on the back of her
sleeve. Her eyes were swollen, and her nose felt like a blob.
She picked up the roll of tape.
“Aiden. Come to us.”
Teagan froze. She knew that voice, and it made her hair
stand on end. She stepped as close to the edge of the roof as
she dared.
“Lennie!” Aiden said. “The
cat-sídhe are here!”
“What’s a
cat-sídhe?” Lennie looked around.
“Are they the bad guys?”
“Yep,” Aiden said. “They’re the
kind you can’t see.” “I hate that kind.” Lennie picked up a stick
and swung at the air.
Teagan was glad Lennie couldn’t see the creatures on
the far side of the street. He would have had nightmares for
months. At first glance, they looked like large housecats.
Dirty, diseased housecats that stood upright. But if you
looked closer, you’d notice that their mouths and hands
were almost human. Bare skin showed in mangy patches through
their filthy fur. The bigger one’s ears hung in
tatters. Maggot Cat. The last time she’d seen him
he’d flicked maggots picked from his rotting flesh at
her. The wound on his stomach didn’t seem to be open,
but even from this distance his bare abdomen still looked
swollen. The
cat-sídhe beside him was younger, and Teagan
had seen it before, too. It looked like it had been sleeping
in an oil pan. Both of them had hunted Teagan, Aiden, and
Finn through the streets of Chicago. The cat goblins were
always causing the Irish Travelers trouble and grief.
“Aiden, is Finn already inside?” Teagan
asked.
“Ah, ah!” The smaller
cat-sídhe pointed up at her.
“Teagan!”
“Teagan!” Maggot Cat commanded. “Step
down.” Her left foot moved a half an inch closer to the
roof’s edge. “No!” Teagan said, as much to her own leg as
to the goblin. “Yessssss!” Maggot Cat said.
They can do that, Finn had told her, the first time
the goblin creatures had tried to control her body. The
cat-sídhe could move some people’s
muscles just for a second—long enough for a car to
swerve into a pedestrian if you were driving, or for you to
step in front of a train. Long enough to ruin your life. But
you could learn to resist them, if you focused.
“Bones,” the smaller
cat-sídhe yowled. “Marr-ow!
Marr-ow!”
“I heard something scary,” Lennie said.
“Like a whisper in my head.”
“That’s their voices,” Aiden explained.
“Don’t listen.”
Cat-sídhe voices had never had any effect at
all on Aiden, but Lennie was a different matter.
“Lennie.” Maggot Cat tipped his head, looking
at Lennie. “We know your name.” “Shut up!” Aiden said.
Teagan flinched.
Sídhe creatures had m...
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights
reserved.
Teagan Wylltson blinked and tried to focus on her
five-year-old brother, Aiden. His best friend, Lennie—a
pudgy, pimpled eighteen-year-old—was holding him up so
that he could see Teagan’s perch on the roof of the
porch. Lucy, the sprite who had taken up residence in her
brother’s hair, was zipping excitedly around his
head.