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336 pages, Hardcover
First published August 25, 2020
"Who are ye and why did Gordie imprison ye here?"There is good discussion of the realities of human trafficking throughout the book, almost a public service and much less obtrusive than, say, Tolstoy's discussions in War and Peace, but by page 27 we know that the usual purposes of human trafficking aren't what this story is about. Saxon Codpiece (remember him?) finds an email exchange between Gordie and his buyer, code-named Bastille. Gordie asks what the "subjects" are being used for and Bastille replies, "Science. Glorious, lifesaving science."
"Said he was gonnay sell me. He's a trafficker in Fae folk, so he is. Or was."
"Nonsense." I stamped my cane on the floor. "Tell me the truth!"
The hobgoblin...placed his right hand over his heart, deploying the phrase that the Fae always used when they were swearing the truth... "I tell ye three times, man. He's got a buyer. I'm s'posed tae be delivered tonight. And I'm no the first he's sold. There was a pixie in here a couple of days ago, didnae stay long." ...
This information was more of a shock to me than Gordie's death. ...Trafficking Fae? I didn't know such traffic existed.