Reckless Cruel Heirs - Olivia Wildenstein Page 0,2

princess.” He raised a tumbler of something green to his lips. “Saved you a seat.”

I climbed onto the stool and crossed my legs. “Call me that again, and I walk out of here.”

He shot back the green stuff, then tapped his index finger against his glass.

The barmaid, whose flexible screen dress lit up with moving images of the various cocktails on York House’s menu, gave him a refill. “What can I get you, hon?”

“Just some water, please.” I stared at the patrons closest to us. Although more than a few stared back, all were strangers. Still, I regretted having dismissed my earlier disguise of a bald septuagenarian.

“You do realize you’re old enough to have alcohol. I mean, according to human standards, you are eighty-n—”

“What is it you want, Josh?”

“Straight to business, huh?”

“I agreed to meet you here because I owe you. However, I need to get back to Neverra soon, so make it quick.”

“Have you ever owed anyone a gajoï?”

Not for the first time, I regretted asking Josh to take the downfall for my little illegal dealings. “No. You should feel privileged.”

“I do. I feel very privileged.”

The barmaid came back with my water.

When she left, he said, “A person, who’d rather remain anonymous, recently told me about a supernatural prison Gregor and your grandfather Linus created centuries ago.”

My eyebrows drew together.

“Apparently, it’s only accessible in Neverra through a portal that magically relocates itself every month.”

I let out a disbelieving grunt. “I may be gullible, but come on.”

“I’m not pulling your wing, Amara.”

“I don’t have wings.”

Smiling, he spun on his stool until his broad body was angled toward me. “Figure of speech.” Josh’s shoulders, like most Daneelie shoulders, were wide, and his biceps bulged from hours spent in water. My arms weren’t as defined, but that probably had to do with the fact that my preferred means of locomotion was flight.

Josh was pure Daneelie; in other words, he couldn’t fly.

I was a mix of everything: Seelie, Unseelie, Daneelie, and human. Which meant I had blood, fire, iron, and water coursing through my veins. I was a lethal faerie cocktail who could live underwater, in the sky, and on Earth.

“I swear. No joke.” Josh’s freckled face puckered. “My source tells me the portal’s presently located in the ceiling of the Duciba, more precisely in one of the leaves of the golden circlet mural your aunt Lily painted. Since I’m locked out of Neverra, I can’t check it out myself.”

“Wait. This source of yours actually saw it?”

“Yeah.” He speared his freckled fingers through his nose-length bangs and shoved them off his forehead. The rest of his hair was buzzed close to his scalp. “If you look long enough at the leaf, the paint ripples. Like a faulty projection.”

“Okay . . . And what does this prison have to do with our gajoï?”

“I believe Kiera might be in there.”

“Kiera?”

“My sister. The one who didn’t make it into Neverra.”

Didn’t make it was putting it nicely. Kiera had tortured my aunt and uncle when they’d visited the Daneelie camp back in Michigan a little over an Earthly century ago.

“Um. You do realize that if time in this prison moves like it does around here”—I gestured to the bar but obviously meant Earth—“her chances of being alive are extremely slim.”

He shot back his drink. “Time doesn’t move the same in there as it does in the human world. ’Parently doesn’t move like in Neverra either.”

Instead of asking how it moved, I said, “So, you want me to ask my father about it?”

“Hell, no. He and Gregor will zip up the portal.”

“So what do you want me to do?”

“I want you to go check it out.”

“You want me to go through a prison portal?”

“Just to take a peek, then jump back out.”

Even though the air wasn’t cold, and I was made of fire, Joshua’s suggestion chilled me. “If it’s a real prison, I doubt I can get in.”

“All you need is a handful of salt to gain entrance. Then again, you’re the Trifecta—”

I hated that nickname even more than I hated the boy who’d come up with it.

“—you could surely get in with a drop of your potent blood.”

“Josh—”

“Or I can tell our dearest king about your little transaction.”

I pressed my lips together, ruing the day I’d struck a deal with this man whose criminal record ran the gamut of peddling Daneelie scales on the Earthly black market to arms dealing.

“Amara Wood, take one look inside, and then we’ll be fair and square.”

The use of my full name,