I had a sister once. She was a beautiful baby, eyes silver as moonlight off the river at night. From the hour of her birth she was long-limbed and graceful, faerie-pale hair clear as glass from before, so pale you could almost see through to the soft skin beneath.
My father was a sensible man. He set her out on the hillside that very night, though my mother wept and even old jayce argued against it. "If the faerie folk want her, let them take her" father said. "If not , the faults theirs for not claiming one of their own" he left my sister, and he never looked back. I did I crept out before dawn to see whether the faeries had really come. They hadn't, but some wild creature had. Once glance was all I could take. I turned and ran for home, telling no one where I'd been.
We were lucky that time, I knew. I'd heated tales of a woman who bore a child with a voice high and sweet as a birds song -- and with the sharp claws to match. No one questioned that baby's father when he set the child out to die. Far from our town, far from where his wife lay dying, her insides torn and bleeding.
Magic was never meant for our world, father said, and of course i agreed, though the war had ended and the faerie folk returned to their own places before I was born. If only they'd never stirred from those places -- but it was no use thinking that way.
Besides, I'd heated often enough that our town did better then most. We knew the rules. Don't touch stone that glows with faerie light, or that light will burn you fiercer then any fire. Don't venture out alone into the dark, or the darkness with swallow you whole. And cast out magic born amount you, before it can turn on its parents.
Towns had died for not understanding that much. My father was a sensible man.
But the memory of my sisters bones, cracked and bloody in the moonlight, haunts me still.
YOU ARE READING
The one they took away
ParanormalMagic was never meant for our world, father said, and of course I agreed, through the war had ended and the faerie folk returned to their own places before I was born. We knew the rules. Don't Touch Any stone that glows with faerie light. Don't vent...