“Fin!
Fin!”
The shouts woke the young fairy from his
fitful sleep, and for a moment he was confused, wondering why his bed was
suddenly so hard, and why it was his father calling him to breakfast instead of
his mother.
Then, the previous day’s activities hit
him like a stone in his gut, and he remembered where he was, hiding and
sleeping in the hollow log at the Rock Arch while staying as close to Luna as
possible.
“Fin!”
The shout came again. Recognizing his father’s voice, he realized
that Emre had come looking for him. He
crawled toward one open end of the log, noting that the sun had barely lit the
sky, but it was enough that the bats would no longer be a danger. He also saw his father standing on the rock
Fin normally shared with Luna, a distraught expression gripping his
features. Guilt was added on to his
downbeat emotions. He’d never even
thought to alert his parents to all that had occurred.
“Dad!” he called out. “I’m over here.”
Emre turned, relief spreading over his
face as he caught sight of his son. In
moments, Fin was gripped in a hug, and his arms came up to embrace his father
as well.
“Have you been here all along?” Emre
asked, his anxiety evident. “You never
came home after your meeting, and we thought you may have already been with
your new mate, but then Jac showed up, desperate to find you and saying he was
your mate, but you had disappeared. What
happened, Fin?”
Fin, feeling very much like a young
fairy-kin, buried his face in his father’s chest as he explained with muffled
words. “Luna wasn’t the one I saw, Dad. The Bond Guard said it would be the first
fairy I saw, and it wasn’t Luna!” he mourned.
“It was Jac,” his father murmured quietly
in understanding. “Oh, Fin.” He said nothing else for a time; just let Fin
cry and shudder for a few minutes.
When Fin calmed, Emre urged him down, and
they sat side-by-side on the ground. “I
know it’s not what you hoped for, son.”
Fin sniffed loudly. “It’s not, but even the Bond Guard can be
wrong sometimes.”
Emre tensed and then gripped his son’s
shoulders. “Wrong? Fin, the Bond Guard knows….”
Fin interrupted him with a shake of his
head. “The Bond Guard could be wrong,” he insisted. “Luna goes to see the Guard in a few weeks,
so we’re going to wait and see what she is told.”
Emre was flabbergasted. “Fin, it doesn’t work like that. Jac is your mate, and he’s a good fairy. A friendship with Luna is fine, but you need
to connect to your true mate.”
“Which might still be Luna!” Fin insisted stubbornly.
“Oh no.
Is this why you ran away from Jac?”
“I didn’t run away from him. I just,” and as he tried to explain, he
realized that it really had been running away, even if it didn’t feel like it
at the time. “I just wanted to find
Luna,” he finished.
“Son, Jac was frantic when he came to our home.
Does he even know where you are now?”
Fin shrugged, his heart hurting, but now
his conscience also making him ache. “I
haven’t seen him. I didn’t mean to worry
anyone, but I was so upset.”
“I know, but you need to find Jac now,
Fin. He needs to know you’re safe, and
you need to make a connection to him.”
Fin’s eyes welled. “No. I
have to know what the Bond Guard is going to tell Luna.”
Emre looked sad, but he pulled Fin into
another tight hug. “Son, what the Bond
Guard tells her will be between them, but I can tell you what won’t be
said. She won’t be told that you’re her
mate, because you already have one.”
“But Dad….”
Emre shook his head. “It’s not a mistake, Fin. Now you have a choice to make. Are you going to accept the Bond Guard’s
guidance, or forge a harder path?”
His head hanging, Fin wasn’t sure of his
choice. “I thought it was going to be
what I wanted, Dad.”
“I know.
But Fin,” Emre tipped his son’s head up.
“What the Bond Guard told you is very likely to be better than what you
initially wanted.”
Tears welled again and slipped silently
down Fin’s cheeks. “It doesn’t feel like
that. I love her, Dad!”
“I believe you do,” Emre sympathized. “And I believe you want what is best for her,
do you not?”
“Of course! I’d do anything for her!”
Emre looked sad. “Would you give her up into the arms of her
true mate?”
For a moment Fin felt as if he’d fallen
into a snow drift. The truth he faced
was like ice trying to douse his love.
Did he love her? Yes. Did he want the very best for her? Yes.
Did he think it would kill him to let her go to the mate the Bond Guard
guided her toward? Very likely.
He tried to stop his tears and his
burrowed into his father’s arms again. “I have to talk to her,” he whispered.
Emre understood the decision being made
with those words, and he kissed the top of Fin’s head. “Yes, you do, but that won’t happen until
tonight. You should seek out Jac while you
have daylight.”
Fin knew his dad was right, but he shook
his head. “I cannot speak with him yet.”
“Why, Fin?”
“Because I may not have the courage to say
what I need to Luna, and I can’t try to connect to Jac until I’ve spoken to
her.”
Emre sighed. “I do understand that, but it is not right to
leave Jac to fear for you.”
Fin tipped his head up. “Will you go to him, Dad, and….”
“Explain?” Emre asked when Fin paused.
Fin bit his lip and shook his head. “I need to explain to him. I would be a coward to have someone else do
it. Could you just let him know that I’m
safe, and that I’ll come to him when I’ve done…what I need to?”
Emre studied Fin’s face, then nodded,
although a sigh passed his lips. “I will
seek him out, but do not delay in going to him, Fin. I know things did not happen as you hoped,
but what has happened since your Bond Guard meeting has not been fair to Jac
either.”
Fin nodded. He didn’t want to hurt Jac. The other fairy was his friend…or had
been. Truthfully, Fin didn’t know what
to consider him now. But his dad was right. Jac shouldn’t be left to worry and wait.
*****
*****
Jac was hard-pressed to remain still. Exhaustion and heartache had caused him to
sleep deeply during the night, but he’d awoken in the morning with a
restlessness he couldn’t overcome. There
was a need to find Fin, to seek him
out and beg the younger fairy to not run away, to instead come and build a life
with him.
However, he had no idea how to either find
Fin or how to make the other fairy want to match with him. So instead he sat with Crill and Sera,
picking at the morning meal Sera had made while he and Crill alternately told
her what had happened.
“I’m sure you’ll find him, Jac,” she
assured when they had finished explaining.
“And I agree with Crill, that Fin probably just needs some time to think
things through and adjust to what the Bond Guard told him.”
“I
told Jac that you might have some ideas on how he could show Fin that he cares
for him,” Crill informed his wife.
Sera’s brow furrowed at that, but it was
clear she dipped into contemplation.
Crill lasted about a minute into her silence before asking what she
thought, and she huffed at him. “I’m
thinking. I do not have an instant idea
any more than you do.”
Crill rolled his eyes, but he waited more
patiently. Jac still focused his thoughts
on where Fin might be until Sera finally spoke.
“This is an unexpected situation,” she
finally said with a sigh. “I do not know
your Fin, Jac, so I truly don’t know what appeals to him. I can only make suggestions based on what
you’ve told us. He is an Earth Reader,
correct?”
Jac nodded. “He’s an excellent one. I told you about him stopping the landslide.”
Sera and Crill both nodded. “Earth Readers and Nature Nurturers often
make good matches,” Sera commented. “I
know you’ve been purposeful in how you’ve built and decorated your home here,
Jac, but maybe something else you could do for Fin would be provide a garden, a
special patch where he chooses the type of earth, and you work with him to grow
the flowers or moss or vegetables.”
Jac nodded, liking that idea. “That’s good, but I still have to find him
and bring him here. What can I do to
convince him to come with me, to match with me?”
There was no answer forthcoming, and then
a knock at Crill and Sera’s cottage door ended the conversation. Crill went to answer it, and there was some
muffled exchange that happened before he opened the door fully and Jac saw Emre
walk in. He rose quickly from his seat,
simultaneously feeling hope, fear, and anxiety.
“What are you doing here? Is Fin okay?
Where is he?!”
Emre sped his approach and put an arm
around Jac’s shoulders. “Fin is not
harmed, Jacoby. I found him this morning
and he is safe, although…”
“Although?” Jac asked with clear worry.
“Although he is distraught.”
Jac felt his eyes well up again, and he
murmured the words he feared. “He does
not want to match with me, does he? That
is why you’re here and not him?”
Emre’s arm tightened around him. “It’s not that.” He looked to his two hosts. “I’m sorry to intrude, and now to be rude on
top of it, but could Jac and I speak privately?”
Crill hesitated for just a second, but
then nodded and held a hand out to Sera.
“We’ll take some time on the treetops.
Jac, you’ll know where to find us.”
When they were gone, Emre and Jac settled
on their hosts’ couch and Jac found he couldn’t quite look at his mate’s
father. “He ran away from me.”
“Yes,” Emre agreed soberly.
When he didn’t expand on that, Jac
tentatively looked to the older fairy.
“Why did he run?”
Emre looked somber as he explained. “Fin wasn’t expecting you, Jac, so
discovering you were his mate took him by surprise, and he didn’t handle that
well.”
“But why?
No one knows who their mate is before their meeting with the Bond
Guard. Why did discovering it was me
surprise him so? Unless…he was hoping it wouldn’t be me?”
Those words were choked out and hoarse,
and Emre quickly shook his head. “It was
nothing against you. Fin has…” Emre
paused to think about his wording. “He
has thought about what would happen during his Bond Guard meeting for a while
now. I think he had created an idea in
his head that he believed would take place when he went. Then, when it didn’t go as expected, it upset
him. He had made plans based on his
assumptions, and now he has to change those plans, and that is why I came to
find you. Fin realized he worried you
and he wanted me to tell you he was okay, and that he would come to you after
he made some necessary changes.”
“What does he have to change?” Jac asked,
feeling uncertain about what Emre was saying.
The older fairy shook his head. “That is not my information to share. It needs to come from Fin, and he said he
wants to be the one to explain to you, but he didn’t want you to worry about
him in the meantime.”
Knowing Fin was safe did help calm Jac a little,
but he was still confused and anxious about whatever Fin had to tell him. “When will Fin come to me? Will he know where to find me? How did you
find me?” he suddenly asked, realizing that Emre shouldn’t have known where he
was.
“It took some doing,” Emre admitted, a
rather cheeky grin appearing on his face.
“I asked around at some of the other Nature Nurturers, but no one knew
for sure where you were. Apparently, no
one else even knew you’d been in our part of the forest yesterday, and the only
answer I could get from them about where you’d been living was ‘somewhere
north’. I kept thinking, If I was Jacoby’s parents, I’d be concerned
if no one knew where he was. Then I
realized, maybe your parents did
know. So I called on them, and they told
me where I could find you.”
Fin nodded. “They are the only ones who knew exactly
where I was. I didn’t want to bring
anyone else here before Fin. I wanted
him to be the first.”
Emre’s grin faded somewhat. “You’ve known he was your mate?”
Jac nodded. “Uh-huh.
Ever since my meeting with the Bond Guard, but I was told I couldn’t
tell him. He wouldn’t rightfully be my
mate until his birthday and his own meeting with the Bond Guard.”
“Is that why you’ve stayed away and been
living here?”
“Partly,” Jac admitted. “I didn’t come here thinking to do that. I came to help after a fire, but made some
good friends while I was here, and it seemed like a good place to bring my mate
when the time came. We’d have our own
place, but be close enough to fly to our home forest whenever we wanted.”
“You’ve had good thoughts, Jacoby, and I’m
grateful you’ve been making plans and preparations for when you and Fin could
match.”
Jac nodded, as his thoughts swirled around
the home he had built and what else he could do to make sure Fin wanted
him. “Will he come to me soon, sir?” he
ended up asking.
Emre’s shrug wasn’t what Jac wished
for. “I do not know. I hope so.
It wouldn’t be helpful to him to delay things, and I do not think it would
benefit you either.”
Jac’s shoulders were slumped and his head
hung low. “What should I do while I
wait?” he asked Emre.
Emre patted his back rather firmly. “You continue your work as a Nature Nurturer,
and be the best fairy you know to be. No
one can ask more of you, and when the time is right, I believe Fin will come to
you.”
It wasn’t what Jac wanted to hear, but
Emre’s words were true. The rest of
Jacoby’s life couldn’t be put on hold while he waited and hoped for Fin to
appear. Still, that didn’t mean the
delay of his matching was going to be made any easier. He nodded his agreement.
Emre’s tone was considerate in his next
words. “I’ll tell Fin where you are and
how to find you,” he assured. “Unless,
perhaps you’d like to come back to your home-forest. Stay with your parents and have their support
until Fin is able to join you.”
For a moment, Jac did consider that
option, but he quickly decided against it.
“My parents don’t know what happened yesterday, and they don’t yet know
who my mate is. Crill and Sera are the
only ones I told, and I think it’s better that way, until Fin wants to be with
me. I don’t want my mom and dad to
worry.”
“Alright, then I will make sure to hold my
tongue. Will you be alright,
Jacoby? I hate to leave you sad.”
Jac tried to give a believable smile. “I will be.
I know that Fin is safe and will be coming to me soon. I’ll wait, and Crill and Sera are good
friends to me. I’ll stay here with
them.”
There was clearly still a bit of concern
in Emre’s face, but he nodded and stood.
“I should return home then. I’ll
make sure Fin knows we’ve talked, and I’ll encourage him to come to you very
soon.”
“Thank you,” Jac uttered, although his
face heated as the words came out choked, clearly showing he wasn’t as okay as
he wanted to portray.
Emre stooped and gave him one more quick
hug, and then quietly left the house.
Jac continued to sit in solitude, wondering if such a rough start to a
match could truly bring a happy mating.
*****
*****
Fin stayed, as he said he would, at the
Rock Arch all day. He filled his time by
checking on the saplings that he and the others had rescued and brought there a
few months ago, and by nurturing the health of the earth in which they were
growing. He also gathered a supply of
soft Lamb’s Ear leaves, and molted bird feathers to make a more comfortable bed
for him in the hollow log.
While he worked, he tried to focus on the
necessity to do the right thing for Luna.
His heart still wasn’t sure it agreed, but his father’s words to him
from that morning weighed on his shoulders.
Fin wanted to be the reason for Luna’s happiness, and never wanted to
prevent what was best for her. It still
hurt terribly every time he remembered that it had not been Luna who’d been
waiting for him outside the Bond Guard’s house, but he tried to convince
himself that the heartache would ease…eventually.
As soon as dusk settled into the sky, Fin
perched himself on their rock, waiting anxiously for Luna to show up. He tried to practice the words he needed to
say, but he could only get so far before it felt like a wall built itself
inside him, trying to keep out the pain of what he needed to do.
Unfortunately, dusk passed into evening,
and then into darkness, and Luna didn’t appear.
Fin should have prepared himself for this possibility. She never promised to come every night
because she had to catch the dreams that called to her and deliver them to
their recipient, and it appeared they were preventing her from coming to him
this time.
He waited and continued to watch, even
lingering on their rock a little past when he should. The bolt of adrenalin that hit his stomach proved
that was a bad idea when he saw the shadow of a bat flap across the light of
the moon. With a choked-back gasp, Fin
darted to his hollow log and buried himself under the Lamb’s Ear leaves he’d
gathered. It took several minutes for
his heart to slow down, but the aftereffects of his rush of fear made the rest
of his emotions rush to the surface. He
shed several tears, wishing he wasn’t alone, before slowly crying himself to
sleep.
When morning came, Fin’s eyes still felt
heavy, but he was once again drawn out of his log by the sound of his father’s
voice calling to him. Fin rubbed at his
eyes and joined his dad in the sunshine.
Emre’s gaze at his son was openly
affectionate and concerned. He carried a
leaf-pack on his back, and set it gently down before pulling Fin into a hug.
“You do not look rested, my son,” Emre
said honestly.
Fin sighed and let his head fall to his
dad’s shoulder. “It was not a good
night,” he confessed.
“Did you speak with Luna?”
“No,” Fin mumbled. “She did not show. Sometimes the dreams keep her away.”
Emre issued and audible sigh. “I am sorry your conversation with her has
been delayed.”
“It can’t be helped,” Fin tried to say
with pragmatism, although he was pretty sure he didn’t pull it off.
“I know.
Perhaps you can rest a bit later. For now, your mother has sent some
things to fill your belly.” Emre pulled
up a flat stone and sat down, beginning to route through the leaf-pack. “She wanted to come with me this morning, but
I asked her to let me have some time with you first. Sit, and have something to eat.”
Emre handed Fin a hollow acorn filled with
berry juice, and pulled out a pastry—still warm—of honey bread filled with
caramelized almonds and sweet plum jam.
Fin’s stomach gurgled in appreciation of the lovely scent from the
bread, and he relished the first few bites, swallowing them down the with
provided juice.
“I found Jacoby,” Emre told him before
munching on his own pastry.
Fin felt wary at those words, but looked
to his father. “What did you tell him?”
“I told him that you were safe, and that
you would come to him after you fulfilled some necessary tasks. He accepted my words, but Fin, he already
fears you do not want to be his mate. He
was quite distressed when I met with him, and I had to be very careful with
what I said, because I too think you may yet choose to decline the Bond Guard’s
guidance.”
Fin slowly ate another bite of his food as
he tried to find a way to address his father’s concerns. “I don’t wish to distress Jac, and I’m sorry
I’ve done so. I just didn’t expect him.”
“I explained that much the same way to
him,” Emre informed his son.
Fin felt grateful to know that. “It might take some time for me to see him as
my mate, Dad,” he admitted.
“But you will try to?” Emre asked. “Will you speak to Luna when you get the
chance?”
“I’m…planning to.”
“Hm,” Emre murmured. “I’m afraid you aren’t convincing me, and I
do not think you’re convincing yourself either.”
“I don’t want to just let her go, Dad,”
Fin admitted. “I love her, but you are
right that I must do what is best for her if that is true. It’s just…it’s hard to accept that I’m not
the one who is the right mate for her.”
“I know it’s hard,” Emre sympathized. “But I knew a fairy couple a long time ago
who did not abide by the Bond Guard’s guidance, and I wouldn’t wish their
struggles on you or Luna, my son.”
That statement grabbed Fin’s
attention. “You knew fairies who went
against the Guard? Who? What happened? Do I know them?”
Emre shook his head. “You don’t know them. I only knew them when I was a child. They lived very near to me and my parents. From what I was told at that age, it wasn’t
that the two of them went against the Bond Guard; it was that they bonded
themselves before their eighteenth birthdays, so neither knew who their true
mate was to be.”
“Why not?” Fin questioned.
“Because the Bond Guard would not reveal
that to them. It would have only caused
more problems.”
“What kind of problems did they have?”
“Well, while I believe there was love
between them, they greatly struggled to understand the inner core of one
another. They fought often, and even
with the help of a Cultivator, they found it hard to understand their
differences or help one another grow.
“You see, Fin, that is a reason why it is
in a fairy’s best interest to listen to the Bond Guard. That fairy is gifted in knowing who will come
together to bring out their mate’s best.
Being with your true mate doesn’t mean you won’t argue sometimes or that
you’ll always agree, but it does mean that your personalities and inner
qualities instinctively understand each other and mesh well together. Those two fairies I knew didn’t have that. And….”
Fin’s full attention was on his father,
and there was something significantly sad and almost foreboding in that
“And”.
“And what?”
“And there were no children for them,
Fin,” Emre said with sorrow. “A fairy
baby is the most vulnerable of our kind, and the most prone to taking in the
emotions of everything around them. A
couple has to have a love that is seen as a soothing and safe place for a
child, and they couldn’t offer that.”
Fin had never considered that aspect of
things, and his heart hurt for that couple, because all fairies yearned to pass
their love to another generation, and being gifted with a baby was a highlight for
every fairy marriage.
Emre’s story of this couple also brought
another thought to Fin’s head, and although he asked, he was unsure whether he
wanted to know the answer.
“Dad, do you know what happened to the two
fairies who should have been matched with that couple you knew?”
Emre placed a warm hand on the back of
Fin’s neck, a gesture of comfort his son was familiar with, as he
answered. “I was told they remained
unmated since their matches were taken from them, although I never met them
those two personally.”
The look of aghast that came over Fin
couldn’t be stopped. “They were alone forever?!”
“No, not alone,” Emre stated. “They had friends and family, and many fairies
can live very happily like that if they have a good attitude. But no, they never had a mate or children of
their own.”
The heat of tears came to Fin’s eyes. “It would be my fault if that happened. I could keep Luna from having her own
children, or make another fairy live alone because I took his mate.”
Emre, not wanting to cause his son more
distress, but feeling it was necessary to remind him of one more who could be
hurt, spoke quietly. “There is Jac to
think of too, son. Without you, he may
face a mateless life as well.”
The tears did slip silently down Fin’s
face then. “I don’t want to do that to
him, or to Luna or anyone else.”
“And I don’t want that to happen to you
either. I know right now it’s hard and
it hurts, but so much more pain and heartache could happen if you choose to
ignore those wiser than you.”
Fin nodded his understanding, and then
latched onto his dad for a long while, neither of them talking, but Fin needed
the embrace to hold him up until his heart felt a bit stronger.
*****
*****
Father and son spent most of the day
together. Fin was glad of the company,
and of the ready offer of a hug anytime he needed one. Fairies were naturally tactile creatures, and
when his emotions were high, Fin usually needed a few extra embraces.
However, just as the sun began its
descent, Fin asked his dad to return home.
“I don’t know if Luna will be able to be here tonight or not, but if she
does come, I need it to just be the two of us while we talk,” he explained.
“You don’t need anyone looking over your shoulder,”
Emre said in understanding. “Will you
come home afterward?”
“I’m not sure,” Fin admitted. “I think it will depend on how the night
goes.”
Emre nodded, but his brow furrowed with
clear concern. “Beware of the bats,
son. Your mother and I worried the past
two nights.”
“I’ll be careful,” Fin promised, although
he made sure to reveal nothing of his close call from the previous night.
Emre gave him one more hug, said he hoped
to see him at home in the morning, and then disappeared into the trees.
Fin sat on the familiar rock and waited as
the sun continued to set and the sky darkened from sunset pink to nighttime
blue. He tried not to think whether he
wished more for Luna to show or not. His
desire to not have the necessary conversation was equal with his desire to see
her.
Just as the last bit of sunset faded away,
he heard the barely audible sound of fairy wings, and moments later her petite
frame was sitting next to him. Fin was
saddened to see that for the first time in weeks she seemed nervous to be with
him. Not able to resist, he reached to
gently grip her hand.
“I missed you last night,” he said, trying
his best to sound normal.
She blushed slightly. “I’m sorry I couldn’t come. I promise I was not avoiding you, but the air
was heavy with dreams last night.”
“That’s what I assumed,” he assured, and
then took a deep breath and let it out slowly.
“I need to talk to you…about mating.”
She looked even more nervous at those
words, and Fin feared she’d hate him after this conversation, but he silently
reminded himself of his father’s wisdom. If I love her, I need to do what’s best for
her.
“My father spoke to me since the last time
we saw each other. He counselled me on
some things I hadn’t thought on.
I…” He felt his throat tighten
and had to give himself a minute for the words to come out. “I love you, but I think I am wrong to press
you to be my match when the Bond Guard has said we are not fated for each
other. I do not want to hurt you by
taking you away from your true mate. I’m
sorry,” he ended, and sniffed loudly while trying not to let any tears fall.
Luna’s hand reached out and a cool hand
cupped his cheek. “Thank you,” she said
simply but sincerely.
That response confused him. “Thank you?”
She nodded. “I wish to always have you as a friend, my
Fin, but I never believed the Bond Guard would match us as you did, and I did
not want to hurt you.” Her hand slid
down to pat his chest. “You have a
special heart, and I’m thankful you share it with me, but I wish us both to be
happy with our own true mates. It is what is best.”
“I still feel strongly for you,” Fin said
honestly, “but I know I need to try to connect with the mate the Bond Guard is
guiding me toward. I’m not sure I can do
it though.”
“You can,” Luna assured.
She said it so simply, but she clearly
believed her words. Fin’s lips lifted in
a small but sincere smile. “Can we still
be friends?”
“I hope to always be your friend,” she
replied, “but I do not think spending each evening with me is best right
now. You need to be with your mate.”
Fin’s heart twisted a little. “Will I see you at all?”
She thought about it, and then
nodded. “Send me messages through the
fireflies. I will do the same. We can arrange to meet when it is right.”
With a small sigh, Fin nodded. “May I stay tonight until the moon touches
the tree?”
“Please,” she agreed quietly.
And so they sat side by side on their rock, talking no
more, but each silently adapting to their changing friendship.