In 1968 Jennifer was caught up in a military experiment that propelled her 50 years into the future. In 2018 she met and fell in love with Finn Corrigan and became fast friends with his Aunt Cynthia, a 68-year-old woman remarkably dedicated to the young man. Jennifer was informed that the technology that brought her to the future would return to take her back to 1968 and she only had 180 days with Finn. She was told of this by Cynthia who claimed that she was Jennifer, only 50 years older. She had been sent back in time and had lived through the subsequent five decades.
The two women both loved Finn beyond reason and concocted a plan to thwart Jennifer's return. They were successful, and the machinations of the experiment took Cynthia back to 1968 instead of Jennifer, who remained in 2018, married Finn and had a little boy that they adored. (see "180 Days in Montauk") Jennifer and Cynthia met again when Jennifer traveled to Uluru in Australia, a place where the barrier between our world and the dream world was at its thinnest and all time was now. Jennifer passed through that barrier and did battle with an entity that wished to enter our reality and feed off all living things on Earth. (see "A Montauk Nightmare")
Living in the 1970s, Cynthia had made friends with mystics, sensitives, and dabblers in esoterica. One of her new allies felt the link between Jennifer and Cynthia and sensed the danger Jennifer was in. Cynthia's friends sent her into the dreamworld where she helped kill the threat to Jennifer. Eight months later, Jennifer gave birth to the daughter she was carrying when she entered the dreamworld.
This little girl, named for Cynthia, carried with her the power of Dream.
An Unseelie Court
Mab reclined on a throne of onyx that shimmered and roiled as grey and green liquid slowly flowed in waves below its surface. Her long dress of deep dark red matched her lips and overly long and sharp fingernails. A wooden platter on a table beside her held rock-candy and she occasionally popped one in her mouth, crunching with her sharpened teeth as she stared at the child before her.
Eventually, she spoke.
"Well, aren't you a tasty morsel. Tell me, my lost lovely, what is your name?"
The girl looked around the room and then at Mab. She spoke in a distracted tone, as if her concern wasn't with the creature of myth. "I'm not lost. My name is Cynthia Corrigan, and I'm here for the other children."
Arching an eyebrow, the woman gazed down at her. "Has no one told you to never reveal a True Name, child? They have the power to bind and compel."
Mab's long index finger tapped the top of the table as she contemplated this fascinating new wrinkle. Her nail seemed to slip into the black stone a millimeter or two and a red liquid dripped from the fingertip as she pulled it up.
Tap, tap, tap. Pause. Tap, tap, tap
The girl wasn't cowed and fawning. It was a novelty that Mab found she enjoyed. Licking the tip of her nail and savoring the red substance, she appraised her guest and found herself smiling. There was power here in this tiny package, power that she could use. Reclining back into her throne, swirling green mists within the stone appeared to flow away from wherever she made contact.
"You are a delight. The other children. Hmmm... Not too much left of the boys. Skin and..." She picked another piece of rock-candy and studied it for a moment, twisting it to and fro. "Not so many bones anymore. The girls? They have joined my Court. They are handmaids to Mab and there they shall remain. Care for a piece of candy, child?"
She extended the bowl down and towards Cynthia who stood six feet from the throne.
The child looked at the crystalline candy with the faint speckles of red. "Are you offering me guest-rite? That's the phrase, right?"
Mab recoiled slightly, pulled back the bowl and leaned into her throne. "Where would you hear of such a disgusting thing?"
"My brother, first, I guess. He's really smart. Then stories we read. Samurais and knights and sultans and stuff. "
The mistress of this realm waved a dismissive hand. "Reading. A filthy habit. Words cannot be caged like an animal. They are free to be twisted and molded and given different life. Your brother is a bore. You are lucky to be here with me. What position should we bestow upon you? Certainly, something grander than handmaiden."
Still looking around, seemingly a bit confused, she stopped and concentrated on Mab. "I'm sorry, I can't take a position with you. I'm just here for the lost children. I won't be staying. Where... I can tell, they're here, but... where are they?"
The room slowly darkened and the swirling under the surface of the throne coalesced into silently screaming faces. Mab's visage grew pale and she grew in size. The shadow on the wall behind Mab grew distinct and Cynthia could see the nine legs that seemed to sprout from the shadow's back. She looked at Mab and saw normal appendages, looked back at the shadow and saw the elongated legs.
Mab's voice grated, like gargantuan shelves of ice being shoved across one another. "Oh, you will be staying. I am Mab, Queen of the Unseelie Court, Mistress of Dreams and when you come to my realm, bidden or unbidden, there you remain."
"Sorry, got to go."
Cynthia disappeared and Mab was too stunned to scream her rage.
*****
"William! I've found the place the kids went to!"
Not looking up from his copy of "The Book of Five Rings", William answered absently. "Really? Where?"
"You know near the lighthouse, in the park by the big trees, the ones with all the black spiders? In there. Sort of. Not really, but almost. It's sort of there but not there."
Eyebrows furrowed; he lowered the book. "That doesn't make any sense."
"I know. It's hard to explain. It's almost like if you sort of squint and tilt your head you can sort of see it, I think. Like it's there and not there. Or something."
"Wait, how do you know this? Did you go to the park by yourself?"
Cynthia spoke slowly and seemed to be trying to find the right words. "No, well, yes, but not really. I... sometimes I go places when I'm sleeping. I mean, I'm still in bed, but I go places."
"You mean, in your dreams?"
"Yeah, but I really go there, sort of. It's not like some made-up thing. Like, I could tell you where Dink and Buttercup were sleeping, or what Pete was watching on TV and stuff like that."
William ran his hand through his hair and leaned back in his seat. After pausing, he responded. "Are you serious about all of this?"
"For reals."