Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 18

“I really don’t trust him.”

I nodded to her. “I don’t, either.” I pulled my phone out. “Okay, so how do we get you to Hampton Roads.”

“I don’t think there’s a way without a car.”

I growled. “You’re right. Transit not available. And I don’t have a vehicle, there’s no room in the van, and I’m stuck here three more days anyway.”

I had money, but you couldn’t buy what nobody could sell. A taxi that long a distance would cost a fortune. It was, I recalled, close to two hours. But there was no other alternative.

“So…”

“So, we’re going to have to hire a car and driver.”

“You have that kind of money?”
A pause. “No, but…the alternative is to rent a car on his credit cards, which with a one-way rental will…”

“I could dump the car and leave him with the bill.”

“He’d still find you too easily.” Of course, the same was true with a car. If I was a few years older. Well, legally older. “Unless…okay. You need to meet some people. Let’s go join them for dinner.”

“Do you think that’s safe?”

“I don’t think we have a choice.”

And with an entire group of women… So, we headed for the restaurant we were meeting at.

“I’m paying for this one too.”

Sarita looked at her. “Is this the lady who needs some help?”

I nodded. “Can you think of a good way to get her to Hampton Roads?”

“We have a half day tomorrow. I’ll take her.” A simple offer. A simple solution.

“I can…”

“No, you don’t need to cover my gas,” she told me, firmly.

“I think I want to come along. Three is better than two if he manages to track us down.”

She nodded. Then she looked at Eden. “We’ll get you away from him. Assuming you’re really determined to leave.”

“I’m pregnant,” she said, finally.

I glanced at Sarita. Then back to Eden. “Should have told that cop that.”

“I would if I thought it would help. He’ll probably tell Carlton where we’re going.”

I shuddered. “If he does, then…”

Then he might have signed Carlton’s death warrant. I wasn’t about to be nice to the guy, after all.

Or let him hurt Eden or her child.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 17

The police station wasn’t far from the beach and it was small. “If he sees me here.”

“He won’t.”

I had to drop the glamor, of course, once we were inside. Couldn’t risk the desk sergeant not noticing us either.

“Can I help you ladies?”

She took a deep breath, looked at me, looked at him. “I…” A pause. “My husband…he’s been…”

“I don’t see any bruises.”

I gave him a look. “First of all, abuse isn’t always physical.”

“Not much we can do if it isn’t.”

Okay, this was already going badly. I thought painfully of Mike, then gave her a reassuring look.

“He didn’t beat me today. But he does. Regularly. I’m leaving him, but I need help.”

I relaxed a little. She seemed determined to get out, she seemed like she wouldn’t run right back to him as too many abused spouses did.

“Not sure what we can do.”

“You can tell her how to get a restraining order and I’m sure somebody here knows where the nearest women’s shelter is.”

“Isn’t one closer than Hampton Roads.”

And me without any kind of a vehicle.

“Then I need help getting to Hampton Roads.”

He seemed to consider this. “I’d still need some…”

“You don’t need evidence to help her find a way to get to Hampton Roads easily.”

“Would be easy if I had money.”

I glanced at her. “I can help with that. Just tell her how she can get a restraining order.”

Finally, he nodded. “I have some forms and a leaflet. Let me find them.”

She whispered, “Unhelpful.”

“Typical,” I whispered back. “I don’t have a car with me, so I can’t drive you up to Hampton Roads, and I don’t think there’s room in the van, but I do have money.”

“Are you rich?”

I considered that. “Not yet, but I have enough to help with this.”

He was handing her some papers. “I’d personally wait until you get to Hampton Roads, mind.”

She nodded. “But I can read through this.”

“It won’t be that different.” Then he looked at me. Tilted his head, but said nothing more.

I felt, almost, as if he’d recognized me. Or recognized something like me. Knew the type, as it were.

It did not make me comfortable.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 16

We hid her in our room. Kanesha stayed with her while I went to work.

“You seem distracted,” Sarita said.

“There was a woman on the beach earlier trying to get away from an abusive husband or boyfriend.” I still wasn’t sure which.

“Ugh. Does she need a posse?”

I considered. “Maybe. I mean, the guy might have a gun.”

“Point. Has she talked to the police yet?”

“Not yet. And you know how well restraining orders work if the guy’s determined.”

“Don’t I just.” Sarita glanced around.

“But one would be a good idea anyway.” I had a feeling I’d still end up beating on the guy. No. This wouldn’t be resolved until after I left.

I had to find local help for her. It would be a challenge, but there had to be a coven of white witches or somebody who would assist.

Or maybe the selkie would, once she understood why the girl had tried to steal her cloak.

But a coven of witches would be better. They might be able to teach her to protect herself. Or get her out of town. This place was probably too small to have a women’s shelter.

Then it occurred to me she might not be local either. After the shoot I went back to our room.

“So, where are you from?”

“Maine,” she admitted.

“Is he from there to?”

“Yes.” A pause. “I’m not going back with him.”

“Maybe we can hide you until he runs out of money or time off.”
She shook her head. “He’d quit his job first.”

“Okay, then you need to talk to the police. Kanesha…” I tailed off. “No, I’ll go with you. Kanesha, find the local magic shop.”

It was a small town. It wasn’t that small. There had to be one somewhere. I’d rather send her to the cops, but this was the south. And heck, even in the north, you didn’t send the black person to talk to the cops.

Stupidity, but there it was. Kanesha sighed a bit, then nodded. “Alright.”

She knew it didn’t make sense either. I offered my hand. “What’s your name, even?” I hadn’t even asked.

“Eden.”

Pretty, unusual. “Can your parents help?”

She shook her head. “They…died in a car crash, three years ago. My aunt, though. But he’d know I was going there.”
And possibly kill both of them. I nodded. “Stay with me. If he tries anything…”

“You’ll get arrested for assault.”

I grinned. “No I won’t. I’ll make sure he hits first.”
At that, she managed a weak smile. “Can magic help?”

“It already has.”

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 15

“She really wants it, doesn’t she,” the selkie said right before I took off in a run after the thief.

Maybe she thought the cloak would work for her…heck, she was running for the water. I could tell she wasn’t a fairy, though.

Just an idiot thief. And she was plunging into the water. “It won’t work!” I called after her. “It only works for its owner!”

“I need to…I need to…”

Escape? Maybe that was it. Had she been another fairy maybe…but she sensed to me as entirely mortal. No, not quite. There was a bit of magic there. A trace.

And then a wave knocked her off her feet. Fortunately, that was all it did, it didn’t start sweeping her out to sea.

But she let go of the cloak and the water took it. I didn’t go after it. I trusted its owner could do so faster than I could.

Instead, I plunged towards her, glad I was dressed for the beach. I had her wrists in a moment. “Look at me. It wouldn’t have worked for you.”

“Please.”

“What are you running away from?” I realized after a moment, it was a who.

“I…” She spread her hands. She had webbing, the mark of somebody who had a selkie ancestor.

“You don’t have enough of the magic,” I told her, softly. “But there are other ways to escape. I can help you.”

The selkie had retrieved her cloak. She looked at me, smiled, and then swung it around herself as she plunged into the water. What surfaced was a seal, swimming rapidly out to sea.

I had a feeling it wasn’t the last I’d ever see of her.

“He’ll kill me. He’ll kill you.”

“Look at me. Use the Sight, if you have it.”

Her eyes widened, seal-like in that moment. “You…” she whispered.

“I can help you.”

“He’s coming,” she whispered.

Partner, boyfriend, husband, father? Kanesha knew about abusive fathers.

“Are you sure you want to leave him?” I asked her.

“Yes.”

“Then stay close to me. Walk next to me. Pretend nothing’s wrong.”

Kanesha had heard. She moved to the other side.

“When he sees me with anyone…”

I smiled. “He won’t.”

Her eyes widened. “Glamorie?”

“Something akin.” I strengthened the ‘nothing to see here’ field, wrapping it around all three of us. There were lots of people on the beach.

He wouldn’t see us. I was determined of that. Of course, it was only the first step. And the future steps would likely involve beating him up.

Or the police. Restraining orders, though, seldom worked. At least not in the stories I’d heard.

And I was a long way from my own turf.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 14

Kanesha returned empty-handed, to my disappointment, before I’d finished explaining my plan to the selkie.

“It all assumes whoever took it has no idea what they have.”

“If they knew, they’d already have called me to them.” The selkie considered. “But that doesn’t mean they won’t be seen with somebody who knew.”

“And the fact that they haven’t turned it in means they probably don’t intend to. I think they just stole it.”

She laughed.

“What happens?” Kanesha asked, “If a mortal puts on a selkie’s cloak.”

“Oh, nothing. Same with a swanmay’s. They just look kind of silly.”

I grinned. “So, we look for somebody looking kind of silly.”

Maybe, too, it was somebody who did know and was just holding it for safekeeping. No. If they knew, they’d use it to call her, even if their intent was to give it back.

“And then tease them until they hand it over.”

“We could try just asking,” Kanesha noted. “Or even threatening to call the cops.”

“The cops won’t bother with somebody stealing a beach wrap or whatever they think it is.” I shook my head. “They’re busy arresting drunks.”

The selkie laughed, albeit a little nervously, “I saw a couple of things worse than drunkenness for them to deal with.”

Then she tilted her head. “I think I spotted them.”

They were a red-haired woman wrapped in…I’d always figured the sealskin cloak would be like, sealskin. It wasn’t, it was almost translucent, marked with the patterns of a harbor seal. But it still looked silly.

I wandered over to her. “Nice wrap,” I said, sarcastically. “Where did you find it?”

She looked startled, and then a little bit guilty. Maybe I wouldn’t need to tease her into dropping it after all.

“Where did you find it?” I repeated, with a smile.

“Uh, in…uh…” She clutched it. “It’s pretty.”

“No, it isn’t. It makes you look silly and it isn’t yours.”

“I…”

“There are plenty of places to buy something cheap. Hand it over.”

Now I was close to it I could feel a sort of buzz from it. Enough to tell me it really was what it claimed.

“No!” she said, abruptly, and ran. As if…as if in desperation. Or as if she thought it would protect her.

Maybe she wasn’t as oblivious as we thought.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 13

Kanesha joined me after a few. “What’s wrong?”

“She’s a selkie. And somebody grabbed her cloak.” The fact that whoever it was hadn’t already come to claim his prize led me more towards thinking this was ignorance rather than somebody who knew what was going on.

Kanesha apparently know what that meant. She swore.

“I’m thinking whoever picked it up has no clue, so there’s a chance we can trick it back out of them.”

“Trick?” the selkie asked.

I grinned. “Trick. You’re a fairy, you know about tricks.”

“I do, but…”

I grinned more. “Trickster’s daughter. I know what I’m doing.” I glanced at Kanesha. “If he’s ignorant, he probably thinks it’s just a weird wrap.”

“I’ll…” Kanesha laughed. “I’ll check lost and found.”

“I don’t think there is one formally, but try the lifeguard station.”

She nodded and set off at a jog up the beach.

I turned to the selkie. “Okay. On the assumption whoever it was didn’t turn it in…”

“…and that if they did the lifeguards don’t know…”

“If they did, then we can go get it. If not…” I scanned the crowd again. At least I wasn’t sensing any other supernaturals.

Then again, I thought the cloak thing only worked with mortals. “And you can trust Kanesha, too.”

“She wouldn’t want me when she has you.” A bit of a teasing note to that.

I grinned. “Nope, even if you are hot.”

“You don’t want me when you have her,” the selkie pointed out.

I didn’t ask her name. Fairy names are almost as powerful as demon names. She’d probably give a false one anyway.

But she was bound to the cloak and bound to promises. Right now, I could sense her aura flickering, off, but I knew it was anxiety and fear, not anything magical.

I would be anxious and afraid too. “Wish I had a witch.”

“Because a witch could track it.”

I nodded. “Yeah. I can’t. I can sense you, but I can’t sense the cloak at all.”

I closed my eyes, to see if that would help, but it didn’t.

“Not many can.” She paused. “But…I can trust you, because I can tell you’re in love with somebody else.”

I nodded. “You can. If I was single it might be a question, though.”

She laughed. “You also aren’t mortal.”

I nodded again. “Emphatically not. So…this is what we’re going to do.”

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 12

Or she might be harmless and just enjoying the beach. I finished lunch and got up and headed across the beach.

Hopefully Kanesha could distract anyone else from following me, anyone who might be more vulnerable to her charms.

She turned and smiled. “Oh, this is interesting. A godling.”

“A sea fairy,” I responded.

“Are you here to chase me back into the water?”

I gave her the honest response. “Only if you’re up to no good.”

She laughed. “Does looking for a no strings roll in the hay count?”

I considered that. “If that’s really what you’re looking for.”

The laughter again, ringing, merry. “You’d be…”

“I’m taken.” Which was perhaps unfortunate. If I could distract her, she couldn’t trick me into Faerie, but…

“Oh, that’s unfortunate.” She glanced at the restaurant. “Oh, but there’s…”

“The black one’s mine,” I quipped.

Another laugh. “But what about the redhead?”

“Hrm. I think she’s single, but if you try and trick her into joining you for a hundred years I will find cold iron.”

She grinned at the threat. “I’m just bored and lonely.”

“Exactly.”

Her lips turned into a pout. “You don’t trust me.”

“Don’t worry. I don’t trust myself either, so don’t take it personal.” I found that I liked her.

Then, abruptly, she tensed, turned. “Oh no.” And she ran for the fishing pier.

I hesitated, then followed. Whatever she’d sensed I’d missed, but it was probably something important. Or something personal to her.

Maybe personal to her. She reached the pier and then just started looking around frantically.

“Did you lose something?” I asked gently.

“My…my cloak.”

Oh dear.
She was a selkie. Whoever had taken her sealskin cloak could control her. If they understood the legends.

I cast around with my eyes, but I really needed a witch for this. Or to watch for a smug face.

Or a confused one, if they didn’t know what they had. I hoped they didn’t know what they had.

I really did. I might not know this woman, and selkies might not exactly be in my jurisdiction, but the idea of her being forced to marry whoever had her cloak sat ill. Even if it was selkie tradition.

Even if I might face an arranged match myself. Or maybe especially. I kept looking around, trying to work out who had it.

But I didn’t see anyone with the right look on their face for any scenario I could imagine.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 11

And it even turned into a quiet morning. Which was good, because I was shooting early. In a bikini. It was actually even a bit cold, although we did get wraps while waiting for our turn.

Kanesha was still in bed when I left. I let her sleep. She probably needed it. There was a lot of laughing, talking, even a bit of splashing. No mermaids, though.

The shoot, in fact, went without interruption. We all headed to a nearby restaurant for lunch, more seafood. I called Kanesha and she joined us.

Nobody argued with it. I wasn’t the only person who’d brought a tagalong for this. We’d be here a few days.

I sensed trouble before anyone saw anything, as usual. Actually, what I sensed was the fyrhund, who had apparently followed me and was curled up on the grill.

But now he was alert, hopping off it and pointing at the ocean. I looked out there, and thought with a shudder of world serpents.

And of smaller sea monsters and dragons, of course.

“What is it?” Kanesha murmured.

“Upset dog.” If anyone heard that they’d think I was talking about a terrier that was, thankfully, yipping away on the beach.

“I hear it.”

But she knew I didn’t mean that dog. She knew I meant the one that wasn’t letting anyone see him right now. Except me. And perhaps her.

Then I saw the trouble. It was, indeed, a sea nymph, but she was walking along the beach looking gorgeous. “And her.”

Kanesha drew a breath. “I need to remember I’m taken.”

“She is something, isn’t she.”

Several of the other girls were now watching, most with jealousy and one with jealousy mixed with lust.

“She’s probably hunting hearts to break.” Or something. She was some kind of fae, I realized, which meant…

“She’s not a sea nymph,” I added.

“Mermaid?”

“Fairy.” I kept my voice really quiet at this point, hoping nobody would hear me. Of course, everyone was distracted by the very object of our conversation.

“Dangerous?”
“I think so. I’ll talk to her. Help me remember I’m taken?”

Because, well, a fairy like that could be dangerous at some levels even to me. To Kanesha…far more so.

She might well be looking for somebody to take to her undersea country for a hundred years.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 10

I definitely wanted a motorbike. No, I wanted a rather special motorbike. It would have been easier to rent a car, except for our age.

So, the easiest way to get there? Crib a ride. We piled into a van with several of the older girls. I95 south to Richmond was a mess – a mess of traffic and trucks and maniacs with New York plates that made us glad to get there and turn off onto I64.

Which was a mess of traffic and trucks and people driving RVs who didn’t know how to drive RVs. Down through Newport News and into Norfolk, then south onto smaller roads through Harbinger, Point Harbor and, of course, Kitty Hawk. The hotel they’d arranged for us was in a place called, poetically, Whalebone.

“You know I’ve never been out here,” Kanesha said once we were on our own and looking for a place for dinner.

“Neither have I. Any bets we’ll be interrupted?”

She looked sour. “Not taking that. I’m not sure which of us is the worst weirdness magnet.”

“Oh, me. You’re just one from contagion.” Which was probably true. We found a homely seafood place not far from the hotel. Expensive, but delicious. I got crabcakes and Kanesha went for the marinated tuna steak. The place was full of people who were apparently planning on adding to the available seafood.

Thus, we stood out slightly. And this was also the south. Not the deep south, but the south nonetheless. If it hadn’t been a tourist trap, I’d have worried about our safety.

As it was, I decided it was wisest to avoid any PDAs while we were here. Just in case. But the food was good and the breeze off the sea was cool. After dinner, we went out onto the beach.

“I hope there aren’t any sea serpents,” I quipped.

“Mermaids. I want to see a mermaid.”

I looked out at the waves. “I don’t think there are likely to be any sea spirits at a beach this crowded. The tourists probably scare them off.”

In fact, the only thing resembling a mermaid I saw was a gorgeous woman in a bikini that I studiously kept my gaze away from. I didn’t want to be in trouble, after all. But there was some pretty nice looking people out here.

I still had the best looking, of course. “Maybe we should take fishing lessons,” Kanesha suggested, pointing to one of the fishing piers.

There was indeed a sign offering equipment rental, supplies and lessons. “Let’s see how busy they keep me.”

Which was likely to be very…although a beach shoot would be fun. It was going to be swimwear, of course. And probably on a quieter beach than this one. Even as the sun descended inland, there were still a lot of people out here.
And every one of them seemed to be completely ordinary. I let out a breath of relief.

Not that I expected it to last, but a quiet night was worth appreciating.

Episode Twenty-Nine: Ocean: Scene 9

Kanesha showed up when we were well into the drunkenness part. She had a very, very small amount of the ale.

It was enough to allow her to catch up pretty quickly. And enough for us both to be regretting it the next morning.

“Remind me…” Kanesha said. “…no more dwarven ale.”

“I’m going to find some way to make it so you can drink it.”

Her lips quirked. “I don’t…think there’s a way.”

Well…and I shook my head. “It was pretty strong stuff.”

“What were we even celebrating?”

“Rescuing dwarves.”

“No bears this time.”

Well, except the one apparently trying to claw its way out from my skull. I put myself back together, though, glad I didn’t have to be anywhere until lunch time.

When I did, though, I was meeting with the agency.

“You look like you partied too hard last night.”

“A friend came around with an interesting bottle, so we killed it.”

The older woman laughed. “Should be careful with interesting bottles.”

I knew that. But I didn’t seem to be particularly good at actually learning it. Maybe getting drunk was going to be one of the issues I’d have to work on.

Although I’d definitely had more tolerance than when Angrboda took me for a girls’ night out. Or maybe dwarven ale wasn’t quite as bad as giant ale.

“I…know.”

“Are you interested in…would you be willing to go out of town for a few days?”

I considered. “Would depend on where and for what?”

“Beach shoot, North Carolina outer banks.”

I nodded. “Can I take a plus one?” Kanesha didn’t have class right now.

She grinned. “Your boyfriend…”

I cut her off. “My girlfriend would love some beach time.”

A bit of embarrassed color. “I’m sorry. I…”

“…can’t keep track of everyone’s relationships. Don’t worry about it.” I just wanted the record straight. Or, well, not straight.

“You can sneak her into your room.”

I grinned. Getting out of town for a few days was appealing. As long as I didn’t run into water nymphs or something.

No, who was I kidding? It was me. I’d run into something.