Page 16 of Dry as a Fish

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"Let's go then," she said.

Chapter

Eight

SLOANE

Iwoke up to softness and tears in my heart.

I lay there in the dark room, the only light a warm turquoise glow coming from a rock lamp on a coral table next to the bed. I gazed at the nooks and crannies of the coral, how the glass set on top of it allowed the light from the lamp to illuminate the nooks and crannies, so the entire thing looked like it was lit from within. My mind caught up with my eyes slowly, piecing together the events of the previous day, one at a time, salt rubbed in the cuts that lacerated my heart.

I sat up, a soft green blanket sliding off my shoulders and down to my waist, revealing the soft pink long-sleeved shirt I still had on. Calling it pink was generous, as the color had been worn from it over time, and it was more of a ragged-looking beige than anything else. I clutched at the blanket, feeling the squish of material that felt more like the moss that surrounded the pools than fabric. Whatever it was, it was soft.

We'd come back to Delphon's house, and he showed me to this room, and I had crashed.

I took a deep, shuddering breath.

There was a reason I applied to get into the school and snuck out to go to the interview. It had been hard to think about back when I was trapped at the school, longing for the safety of home, but going back had peeled away the scabs and reopened the wounds I hadn't been able to acknowledge while I lived there. Being at home with my family was like trying to grow under the shade of someone else's broad leaves. My life had been overcast with who and what they wanted me to be. Any time I tried to expand beyond the boundaries that they set around me, they cut me back, slicing me piece by piece with their ideas of what was right or wrong.

They never looked at me and saw a person.

They just saw a tool to serve their needs.

I pushed back the covers and swung my legs over the edge of the bed. I reached out to touch the glowing rock, and when my fingers brushed against it, it brightened, illuminating the entire room. There was no pool of water in this room. The massive bed took up one side of the room, large enough to fit six people with room to spare, but even so, the room was large enough to accommodate it with plenty of empty floor space between it and the tables on the far side of the room. Those tables were made out of the same coral-like structure as the end table next to me. On top of them were neatly stacked small drawers, like a workbench that needed containers for various small items. There was an alcove pushed back into the far wall with a small pool set down in it that had a visible bottom, letting me know it wasn't a water tunnel leading in and out of the room. I knelt down and touched the water to find itpleasantly warm.

There was a small door near the pool, within it, I found a place to take care of my bodily functions.

When I emerged back into the bedroom, the smell of something savory and sweet caused my stomach to grumble.

I was about to follow the scent when I noticed Kili was in the room. She was sitting next to the lamp, blending into it.

"Kili," I said. She wasn't the most chatty familiar, but it wasn't like I was used to having a familiar either. So far, it seemed that she was the type who preferred to blend into the wall until I asked her for something.

The other mundanes are happy,Kili said.They are healthy and are not being trapped or coerced. They seem much better off here than at the school. Their familiars said they chose to stay here rather than return to the mundane, but that others returned.

"Thank you," I told her.

She hesitated before replying. Is there anything else you need from me right now?

"No, I'm good," I said. "Is there anything you need?"

You don't have a task for me? she asked.

"Do you want a task?" I asked back. At the school, I was instructed to let her drain me of magic and give her orders every day to direct her to work. I never really thought much about it until I realized how tired she was all the time. "What do you want to do?"

I want to explore,she said.This place is interesting.

"Ok, well then your task for the day is to do what you want," I told her.

The smile that cracked across her face was sudden and unexpected. She vanished back into the wall a moment later, and as I stared at the spot where she used to be, I realized that was the first time I'd seen her smile. I'd only known her for a little while,though.

My stomach clenched with hunger, reminding me of the delicious smell in the air.

I followed the scent through the doorway and into the main living room, then over to the kitchen. When I walked into it, four sets of eyes looked at me, causing me to stop mid stride. Delphon, Orcalia, and two older people who looked quite similar to them were sitting at the kitchen table. The lines where the black backs of their bodies met the white front were more blurred on the two people I could guess were the parents. Instead of a crisp border, it looked like someone had taken a smudge brush and wiggled it down the line.

"Oh my chaos, you are so cute," the older woman gasped, putting her fork down to lift both of her palms to her cheeks. Then she abruptly shoved her chair back, standing up. "Sit down, sit down, let me get you a plate."

"Mom, don't," Delphon said, also standing up as he reached out and put a hand on his mom's arm. "I'll get it."