the waves, opened whirlpools, and buried the monsters as deep as they
could. There were three Sea Kings once, and each had a separate piece
of the trident. The fork, the staff, and the crystal spike. Each king
fought against the others, the sea folk dying as the battles waged. We
slaughtered dragons, gorgons, and the fair folk who would have us
cower to their wicked games. Our magics ebbed like the tides. Our
numbers were depleted. Until one king united us all. He merged the
trident. He tamed the giants. He made us all one.”
“Was that you?”
The king laughs, and the sound echoes off the walls. He stands the
trident up so the tip of the crystal hits the floor and leaves a tiny
dimple in the rock. “That was my great-great-grandfather. His blood is
mine, just as it is yours. If you don’t do this, then our line dies
with me. You can go back to your human life. You might even lead the
same life as your mother. But you will always get called back to the
ocean, to us. You are ancient, and you are of my blood, the way I am
of the sea. And that, that is why I have chosen you to be my champion.
My blood, my grandson, my young Tristan Hart.”
•••
I leave my grandfather in his chamber and return to the court,
where the sky has burst with sunset colors.
Silks are draped over the tent openings, and lamps are turned on.
Some merfolk dive back into the water and go below wherever it is they
go. Others curl up on their boulders and sleep. In the distance
someone is strumming a small guitar. I don’t know the tune, but I find
myself humming. My entire body is humming. I’ve never even touched the
trident, and I can still feel its power.
Marty is sprawled on a bed of spade-shaped leaves. He’s made a
pillow out of a bunch of silk, his cap covering most of his face.
I find Layla and Thalia with their toes dipped in the pool. They
stare up at me with sleepy eyes. “Where have you been, Tristan?”
“Yeah, you missed Marty trying to synchronize swim with his
merteenies.”
Sorry, guys, but I was busy learning my family tree and being told
officially that I was going to be a champion. I reach down to the lake
and wash my face.
“I met Atticus,” I say.
Thalia squeals, then covers her mouth when she realizes she’s
about to wake the whole island. “Did you find your chambers? Kurt
already went to his. You can stay in mine, Layla.”
“Do you snore?” she jokes.
Thalia leads us back through the passageway, the mini-firelights
hovering over our heads. Layla reaches for my hand, and I take it
eagerly. She’s my rock, and I’m a balloon getting carried away in the
wind.
Thalia runs into an opening to the left, forgetting about us and
jumping into the pool with her recently well-fed sea horse. I don’t
exactly know where I’m going. All the tunnels look the same. The
cluster of lights gets frantic in front of my face. I try to flick
them away, but Layla stops me. “I think they want us to follow,” she
says.
Oh, I knew that.
The light leads us right and then left again. There’s only one
opening here. I part the silky sheer curtains and walk in. It’s a
room, like any other room. The bed is made of more shipwreck parts,
and when I touch the mattress, it is the softest thing in the world.
Layla hits the bed first. The last time we slept in the same bed was
when we were little. Before I knew we had matching parts, but maybe
even then I sort of got the idea. She stretches her body, and the arch
of her back lifts from the mattress and then sinks back down. I sit
carefully. I’m afraid she’s going to banish me to the floor. Then, her
eyes flutter, barely awake, and she reaches her hands out.
“I thought you’d left me,” she says.
I lie down beside her. I trace her face lightly with my finger.
The slope of her nose, the dip of her lips. I stop at her jaw and then
let myself trace her neck. She whispers something, and I wish it were
my name. Her eyes open suddenly, bright against the hazy light of the
stone walls.
“What are you doing?” She doesn’t move. Neither do I.
“You had something on your face.”
She smacks her cheek. “Is it gone? What was it?”
“This poisonous fly that you can only find on Toliss Island.
Really, I killed it for you.”
Just then she smirks. She’s caught me. She presses a hand on my
chest and pushes me away, but grips my T-shirt at the same time.
“Tristan.” I don’t like the way she says this. No, let’s just smile
and stay in this moment, because whatever she’s going to say, I’m not
going to like it. “What’s going to happen tomorrow?” She lies flat on
her back, and I do the same. I follow the grooves of the ceiling with
my eyes, trying to count the tiny chips that sparkle.
“I’m supposed to be a champion .”
“So it’s not just a feast in your honor?”
I shake my head hard. “Nope. I’m going to be introduced as the
king’s heir. Apparently he has no living sons.”
“That’s so sexist. Why can’t there be a girl Sea Queen? Why-”
“Relax, it’s not like that. He has daughters, but it’d be like
making Hannah Montana president, you know? My mom was supposed to be
queen. But she chose to stay with my dad.”
Layla gets on her side. Even though the room is cool, I can feel
the heat of her body “So, what? You’re going to be this king? You’re
not going to graduate? You’re-” she chokes. You’re never going to see
me again.
I didn’t think of that. I mean, I didn’t exactly get on one knee
and accept, but when your grandfather is wielding a trident that
crackles with lightning in your presence, you don’t exactly want to
disagree. “I can’t exactly go back to the way everything was, can I?
Now that I know what I am. How do I just sit in class and joke with
the boys?”
“How are you supposed to be a champion? The only time you’ve ever
fought is when Angelo and Jerry want to reenact WWF.” She’s sitting up
now. Her voice goes up a few octaves when she’s stressed.
“Come here.” I pull her close to me so her head is on my chest and
her hand is over my heart. I’m not as sure as I sound. Can she tell?
“Tristan,” she whispers. “The day of the storm, I cried from the
moment the wave hit you till the moment I found you. Please don’t
leave me like that again.”
I hold my breath, because it’s what I’ve wanted to hear from her
since the moment I came back. My Layla, my girl. She’s always been
there; I just never saw her the way I do now. I kiss her forehead and
feel her body soften against mine as she sinks into sleep.
•••
First I think it’s a trick of the light. There are so many moving
shadows in this room that I can’t tell. But then I see it moving. A
hooded figure past the entrance to my room.
As gently as I can, I pull myself off the bed without waking
Layla. I part the curtain, my eyes adjusting to the low light. I take
slow steps and listen. The figure is walking quickly, and I can tell
it’s a girl-her hood swishes in the wind. Maybe she’s trying to hide
from something. Maybe she needs my help.
The tunnel makes a break to the right into a room covered with
floating orbs of lights. There’s a pool like the one in my
grandfather’s chamber, but bigger. The rock around it forms a perfect
circle. Leaning over the pool is the hooded girl. Her slender hand
holds something silver and dips it in the water.
She sees me and gasps, jerks her hand back, and covers her face
with her cloak. She runs to an opening to the left.