I asked Alisa about the will. I half expected her to look at me like I'd lost my
marbles, but the second I said the word red, her expression shifted. She informed
me that a viewing of the Red Will could be arranged, but first I had to do
something for her.
That something ended up involving a brother-sister stylist team carting what appeared to be the entire inventory of Saks Fifth Avenue into my bedroom. The female stylist was tiny and said next to nothing.
The man was six foot six and kept up a steady stream of observations. "You
can't wear yellow, and I would encourage you to banish the words orange and cream
from your vocabulary, but most every other colour is an option."
The three of us were in my room now, along with Libby, thirteen racks of clothing, dozens
of trays of jewellery, and what appeared to be an entire salon set up in the bathroom.
"Brights, pastels, earth tones in moderation. You gravitate toward
solids?"
I looked down at my current outfit: a grey T-shirt and my second-most-
comfortable pair of jeans. "I like simple."
"Simple is a lie," the woman murmured. "But a beautiful one sometimes."
Beside me, Libby snorted and bit back a grin. I glared at her. "You're
enjoying this, aren't you?" I asked darkly. Then I took in the outfit she was
wearing. The dress was black, which was Libby enough, but the style would
have fit right in at a country club.
I'd told Alisa not to pressure her. "You don't have to change how you—" I started to say, but Libby cut me off.
"They bribed me. With boots." She gestured toward the back wall, which was
lined with boots, all of them leather, in shades of purple, black, and blue. Ankle-
length, calf-length, even one pair of thigh-highs.
"Also," Libby added serenely, "creepy lockets." If a piece of jewellery looked
like it might be haunted, Libby was there.
"You let them make you over in exchange for fifteen pairs of boots and some
creepy lockets?" I said, feeling mildly betrayed.
"And some incredibly soft leather pants," Libby added. "Totally worth it. I'm
still me, just... fancy." Her hair was still blue. Her nail polish was still black.
And she wasn't the one the style team was focused on now.
"We should start with the hair," the male stylist declared beside me, eyeing
my offending tresses. "Don't you think?" he asked his sister.
There was no reply as the woman disappeared behind one of the racks. I
could hear her thumbing through another, rearranging the order of the clothing.
"Thick. Not quite wavy, not quite straight. You could go either way."
This giant man looked and sounded like he should be playing tight end, not advising
YOU ARE READING
The Glass Ballerina Who Danced On Knives
Hayran Kurgu"Which one is she?" I ask as Trinity leaps gracefully through the air, ornamental knives strapped to her feet. "The Glass Ballerina or the Knife?" Nash cracks a smile. "Both of 'em and neither. Shes the glass ballerina, the knife, the player, and t...