The girls spent the entire morning sorting and tidying up their things, reclaiming some sense of normalcy after Elsie and her entourage had practically ripped them from their old dorm.
By the time they finished, the rooms looked nothing like the disaster they had walked into and they felt a little pride at finally having things under control. For now, this was enough.
Daisy plopped down on the newly repaired wooden chair, all thanks to Lila, who had pieced together the broken scraps theyād discovered in the living room. Ivy, meanwhile, had already put in an order for a proper sofa set to be delivered as soon as the rain cleared.
"Iām hungry," Ivy complained, rubbing her stomach.
"Me too," Lila added.
Daisy eyed her curiously. "You actually eat human food?"
Lila said casually. "Of course. Though itās nowhere near as incredible as Fae cuisine. Just one taste of our dishes and youād never go back to anything else. But human food isnāt that bad, you know. You guys come up with some wild combinations."
Daisyās brow quirked up. "So you get hungry the same way we do?"
"Yes and no," Lila explained. "Unlike the average human, I can go weeks without physical meals, surviving on magical energy. But Iāve been in your realm long enough that Iāve kind of... adapted. Letās just say Iāve been conditioned to crave food like a human does."
Ivy couldnāt help but ask. "Youāve been in the human realm for how long, exactly?"
At that, Daisy and Violet both looked up with curiosity.
"Iāve been here since the day the queen sent me to find the princess," Lila said simply, leaving them to fill in the blanks.
Violet paused with suspicion, tilting her head. "How old are you, exactly?"
Lila shrugged, answering in the most casual tone, "Oh, Iām not that old, just a hundred and sixteen."
And that was the final straw.
Ivy fell off her seat with a yelp, while Daisy and Violetās jaws dropped.
What does she mean by not that old? The words stunned Daisy especially.
Her grandmother hadnāt even lived half that long. They were friends with someone they should be calling their ancestor.
After a moment of stunned silence, Violet cleared her throat to break the tension. "So... you guys said youāre hungry, right? Letās go get some food." She checked her phone. "Itās lunchtime."
Ivy and Daisy turned disbelieving stares on her, like sheād suggested leaping off a cliff. Finally, Daisy found her voice. "Where exactly do you think weāre going to eat? Please tell me itās not the dining hall."
They all remembered the morningās humiliation clearly enough. The glares, sneers, and the unfriendly vibe was enough to tell them It wouldnāt bode well for them, being Rogues now.
Violet, ever stubborn, refused to bend. "Where else if not the dining hall?"
"Youāll draw attention," Daisy warned. "Letās wait until lunch is over so we can go in."
But Violet shook her head firmly. "Sorry, but I wonāt settle for leftover crumbs."
Lila tilted her chin up. "Exactly. I like my croissants hot, and nobodyās going to stop me from enjoying them."
Daisy shot a pleading look at Ivyāwho was finally back on her chairābut Ivy merely gave a half-hearted shrug. "If weāre serious about toppling Elsie, we canāt do it hiding in this shack. She probably thinks weāre cowering by now. Letās prove weāre not so easy to break."
"Until they break us," Daisy said dryly, then sighed in surrender. "Fine. Itās not like I can talk you two out of it anyway."
A wry grin spread across Violetās face. She stood, jerking her chin at the door. "Come on, then. Letās get the hell out of here."
But the moment they cracked open the door, the pouring rain made them pause. It was a downpour, the kind that soaked you to the bone within seconds. Daisy groaned dramatically, "God, I hate Alaric."
Everyone knew this was no ordinary storm, and Ivy only shrugged.
"What did you expect? Violet broke his heart," Ivy pointed out, earning a sharp look from Lila. She hated people speaking ill of her princess.
Violet shook her head. "Thereās no point arguing. Letās focus on how weāre going to get to the Silver Court in this weather."
Daisy frowned, calculating the distance. "We wonāt make it there looking like anything other than drowned rats. Thatās not exactly the grand entrance we wanted."
She continued, "I think we should take a rain check. At least until Alaric decides to have mercy on us."
Ivyās stomach growled loudly. "But Iām starving!" she whined, clearly unaccustomed to such discomfort.
Violet steeled herself. "Iāll go," she declared abruptly.
Lila straightened at once. "No, Iāll go. Let me handle it."
Violet shook her head. "I caused all this. I need to do something about it. Iāll go to the Silver Court and bring back lunch for us."
Lila folded her arms. "Then Iām going with you. Iām your protector, donāt even start telling me to stay put, Princess."
Violet hesitated, but ultimately relented. "...Fine. Letās go."
Better two than one, anyway.
They made to leave, only for Ivy to shout after them, "Donāt worry, Iāll order umbrellas for us this time!"
Violet gave her a quick wave in acknowledgment before she and Lila dashed into the rain.
The downpour hit Violet like a barrage of icy needles, making her shiver from head to toe. Yet they moved on, and feeling Lilaās hand wrap around her own, kind of encouraged her.
They splashed through growing puddles, droplets stinging their cheeks and soaking their clothes until it felt like they weighed a thousand pounds. It was at that moment Violet realized how much trouble they were truly in.
Back at the old dorm, it had only been a five-minute or less jaunt to the Silver Court when they walked. But now, it was more than fifteen. Worse still, there were no campus transport shuttles for them to hail, no stops for them to duck under. They had been cut off, not just socially, but from every little convenience.