Another bookshelf reread.
I didn’t remember much about this book, but when Zootopia and then Beastars came out, I wondered separately if they were in any way related to this book, though I couldn’t remember why. I vaguely knew it had something to do with a conspiracy against predators/animals.
Set in a dark, dust-addicted fairy tale world, the story follows Henry, son of the Big Bad Wolf who killed Little Red Riding Hood and her grandma. Cindy (Cinderella) runs the juvie and is hardly relevant, and Snow White is a super tough cop who plays by her own rules.
Fairies used to come down and make dreams come true for the hominids (the non-animal-based citizens), and then they suddenly vanished. It was investigated, but their home was a ghost town, and soon hominids moved up into their vacated land and theurmaturgical companies used whatever leftover fairy dust they found to make Dust, used for medicine and drugs.
Nimbus is the primary company, and Henry’s mom was run over by one of their delivery trucks when he was young because they drive too fast and no one cares. No one cares much about the safety of wolves either. I’m not sure the laws of this land. One day after being upset about his dad being in prison, he saw a Nimbus truck drive by and threw a rock at it. It did a lot of damage and almost killed the driver, and they are tough on wolves, so he was sent to a juvenile detention facility, where he’s been for a while when the book begins.
He meets a fellow wolf prisoner’s sister, Fiona, and Siobhan, the elf girlfriend of his roommate, Jack, a thief who’s the only hominid in this facility. Soon after, Jack steals some files from the therapist and finds letters from Henry’s dad, which Doc never showed him. He also plans for them to break out, saying real magic still exists and then planting a bean, which grows from the ground. Henry is caught off guard and doesn’t escape, instead getting locked in solitary for a few days. Jack still had the letters.
After he’s let out, he’s supposed to visit Doc, but finds him hanging there dead, and a gold bar. He’s questioned, but he’s innocent. All the boys are taken to the cemetery for the funeral, and Henry sees no reason to stick around anymore, so he escapes, with some help from Fiona.
Jack gave him Siobhan’s address to meet there. She’s a good judge of people and liked Henry, so she welcomes him in even though Jack isn’t there. He stays with her on-and-off throughout the book. He likes her wacky grandma.
He reads the letters, and apparently Doc worked as therapist for both the juvie and the prison, where he met Henry’s dad and they started to suspect the dust he was given during a job he did for the city crime boss had caused him to go rabid and commit those murders. This convinces Henry to visit him, where he seems crazy and reveals he thinks the fairies are still around and that’s where the dust is coming from. He urges Henry to work for crime boss Skinner to investigate.
Henry is reluctant, but decides to do so. He gets in thanks to Roy, Fiona’s brother who’s a mean wolf from the facility who decided to escape at some point too, because he’s escaped a lot of juvies. Henry avoids dust because he hates it for being in the truck that killed his mom, but he gets forced to for the test to get the job. He loses himself and attacks Roy, but ends up winning and gets hired.
He stays at the flophouse where wolves working for dwarf Skinner are kept. Skinner controls so many who are stronger than him because he had can turn others into gold with his touch and has a factory full of gold statues of his victims. Henry gets help from his dad’s old friend Matt who still works there, and all the new wolf runners are paired up for deliveries. His partner hates him for getting the job instead of his cousin.
They do dust deliveries for a while, then an expensive client requires them to work at night. She asks for help administering the dust and Henry is curious and does so. Her goal is to bring back her dead brother since it’s her dad’s dying wish, and Skinner said the strong dust magic would work. Henry is curious if it can since his dad believed so and his fairy friend in the past suggested as much. The brother does come back to life for a few minutes, only to die again screaming.
Henry and his partner are behind schedule now and decide to take a shortcut and end up encountering a strange giant beast in the tunnels that is an amalgamation of all existing creatures. It attacks them and burst through the ground when they escape.
The beast is significant to the conspiracy, but not mentioned again in relevance to the damage and confusion it caused to the city. People should be questioning what it is and where it came from and what the heck, but I’ve seen no news reports on the matter.
The boys separate and Henry gets caught by Snow White, but Fiona saves him, having heard his belief about the fairies. Roy is in a coma and she thinks only fairies can revive him, so she joins him in sneaking into Skinner’s factory to hunt for the fairies.
(Henry later shamefully admits it’s his fault Roy is injured, but she already guessed and knows Roy put himself in the situation too and is understanding.)
They overhear Skinner meeting with a nixie crime boss and the heads of Nimbus, who further imply fairies are being used by them. Then the pair sneaks through doors and find every room filled with cages housing animals in their original animalistic forms, before they became equivalent (but not treated equal) to hominids like they are today. Henry recognizes a fox and realizes they are somehow being reverted back to these forms.
Skinner comes in and catches them, taking Fiona hostage to make Henry do a job for him to intimidate a family into moving off land he wants to own, much like what happened with his dad. Unlike he dad, he refuses the dust offered and goes to face these caribou brothers (I think that’s what they were), who are sick of these wolves visiting them and decide to teach a message by attacking him. Henry is constantly noted as being really nice, so it’s unfortunate and unfair that he’s the one they finally decide to fight against when he wasn’t even trying to be intimidating.
During the attack, he is overcome by the same viciousness that made him attack Roy, but now he can’t blame it on dust. He takes the brothers out only for the youngest to run up as he calms down and shove him into a well, where he experiences a strange magic he thinks comes from the old magic. Then he wakes up in a holding cell, where he Snow White and juvie nurse come to see him.
Later Matt comes, revealing the nixies and police sometimes collude and so the underground tunnels lead everywhere. They escape that way and go to Skinner’s factory. Matt acts as a distraction while Henry rescues Fiona, but Skinner comes and turns Matt to gold. Henry knocks a bunch of statues onto Skinner and his bodyguards and they escape, then go to Siobhan’s to hide.
Jack comes knocking on the door late at night, but half his body is gold. He reveals he was a few steps ahead of Henry the whole time and had learned all they had before being caught. He gives him his bag of beans to finish the investigation. Henry doesn’t know how much it will take, so he buries them all so the pair can get up to Eden, the fairy city.
They arrive and meet a man turning back into a frog before they sneak into the Nimbus factory, sure by this point that the brothers who run it are holding the fairies hostage. Fiona always has her camera, so she documents their journey. (Also learn the letter Roy got beat up on visitor day so he could give to her was a misspelled note thanking her for teaching him to read and saying he loves her, his first writing ever).
They end up on conveyor belts among deadwood trees. Doc had been painting a deadwood tree the last time Henry saw him, Henry noticed on in the yard of the lady who wanted to revive her brother, and a bunch got uprooted when he planted all the beans. Seeing the entire trees now, which were always angled toward Eden with roots looking like hands, he realizes this is what fairies look like when they die, so they in fact really are gone. The brothers killed them.
Then the brothers catch them and torture Henry for information by ripping out his claws, breaking his fingers in the process. He passes out from the pain of the final one they do just to prove he’s telling the truth. He wakes up in a large birdcage. Fiona is in her own, and so is the frog guy.
The brothers reveal they were using old lingering dust at first, having killed the fairies so they could become the sole best dust manufacturers and make a ton of money, but they failed to realize they would run out of fairy dust to extract from the world at some point, which I think just makes them super stupid. They’re also very arrogant because they’re sure of themselves and that they deserve all the wealth they expect to make.
There’s also this conspiracy where they look down on the animals as lesser beings and want to revert them back to their primal selves to be used as tools again, and using cruelty and torture isn’t inhumane against non-humans. I don’t think they know the meaning of humane. It’s not about who you do it to, it’s about what you do. Cruelty is cruelty no matter where it’s directed. They are stupid. An insult and embarrassment to hominids everywhere.
They sought to use fairy bodies to make their dust from instead, but there were a lot of mistakes, such as creating that chimera monster, some other mistake I forgot, and then creating bad dust which brings out your worst self (though there’s also the theory that dust just brings out your true fate, whether that’s good or bad). They then grind up part of the body of the fairy Henry had known to make dust and blow it on the frog guy, who completely turns into a frog, not the aware kind from the story’s world.
Skinner is there too, angry and wanting revenge on Henry. But then the brothers blow dust on him, blaming him for leading Henry here. I thought Skinner would turn to gold, but instead he rips himself in half, saying “not again”, which I did not understand. Supposedly it happened before and he put himself back together again, like Humpty Dumpty, and this explained the horrible ugly scars on his body. But now he’s a pile of exposed organs, so he’s dead and his death frees all his statue victims.
For whatever reason, the brothers plan to blow dust on Henry and sic him on the world. I don’t know why. But he goes to Siobhan’s house and breaks down the door, about to be a repeat of his dad for killing a girl and her grandma. But his dad did warn him that while it takes control of your actions, there is a moment where you have a choice. He had been too caught off guard to grasp it, but Henry knows in advance, so he veers off course at the last second and crashes through a window.
He wakes up in the hospital, where most the people he knows are with him, including Snow White, and tell him he’s a hero. He had a roll of Fiona’s pictures on him, and when he fell out the window and was found, it revealed all the things they found, which he had tried to tell Snow White about when he got arrested for attacking the caribou, and we don’t know if they lived or died.
Henry is a kid, but even Snow White was ready to shoot him dead in the street if he didn’t cooperate. So I really don’t understand what’s acceptable and what’s not. So many animals would disappear and get murdered. Frankly I was surprised Roy was found and rescued. Or that Fiona was a free wolf since it seems like they get arrested for anything, and she was just casually fine with helping him fight and escape Snow White as if there wouldn’t be repercussions for her.
He still has to stay in a rehabilitation place, but I think maybe that’s because he had no home. It’s mostly hominids there, and there aren’t guards or walls or anything. And he gets to visit his dad, who gets a retrial thanks to the new information but still killed people so his sentence will only be reduced. He’s proud of Henry though, and gets to claim his son killed Skinner, who most the prisoners hated, so he has clout.
Roy also woke up, and is nicer and tells Henry he saw a fairy while he was in a coma and he asked to be more like Henry and that the world would be better. Fiona thinks he’s delusional, but Henry had a similar experience when he crashed through the window and was unconscious, so in a way the fairies are still around somewhere in some form, but he believes maybe their city just wasn’t worthy of them.
Fiona thinks this has all been a jarring realization that the divide between animals and hominids was much bigger and crueler than she knew, and she wonders if they can ever get along. Henry wants to believe Roy’s wish will work out, meanwhile he notices a small pleasure boat leaving the dock where previously only shipment boats ever floated for dust related things. He wonders if there’s most to the world, and I wonder if they all think only their city exists.
Quotes:
Surprisingly, with the adrenaline draining out of me and in the relative safety of a locked broom closet, I drift off.
“You sure gave Gran a scare, but she claims she enjoyed it.”