Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 19
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
he journey from Stone to Castle Yew was a two-hour ride. They made it in nearly half the time. Better to ride fast and let the wind fill Ravynâs ears than suffer another word out of the Nightmareâs mouth.
The Yews had always said their home was haunted. That the stone figures in the statuary wandered at night and the images threaded into Castle Yewâs tapestries shifted one day to the next. That the torches flickered with no draft to shake them and the wood floors groaned out the name of whoever tread upon them.
The castle was eerie, though never terrifying. If anything, the spectral estate made Ravynâs family laugh. They joked that the ghosts had grown so bored by the houseâs current occupants that theyâd been driven to restlessness.
But if there were ghosts in Castle Yew, they werenât starved for sport now. The house seemed to freeze, unearthly still, when the creature with yellow eyes stepped through the door.
The Nightmare strolled into the castle ahead of Ravyn and Gorse. He wove his fingers together, pressing them until the joints popped. His yellow eyes drifted toward the great hall, up wood panel walls, to the vaulted ceilings. Then, with an unimpressed sigh, he slipped down a corridor and disappeared.
Gorse grunted and retreated to the east wing, where the Destriers stayed when they came for training.
Ravynâs parents and their steward, Jon Thistle, hurried out of the great hall. His mother Moretteâs gaze was wide. âWas thatââ
âYes.â Ravyn stripped his gloves and threw them onto the floor. âThe one and only Shepherd King. Save yourself the agony of speaking with him. Heâs remarkably vile.â
âI might be, too, after living five hundred years,â muttered Thistle.
Ravyn glanced to the dark stairwell. âJes and Emory? They arrived safely?â
âTheyâre resting upstairs.â
âItâs happening, then.â His father, Fenir, had eyes that were like Jespyrâsâwarm, deep brown. They searched Ravynâs face. âThe King has released Emoryâfor good? Heâll be safe on Solstice?â
Ravyn gave a curt nod.
âWhich means King Rowan has decided Elspethâs blood will unite the Deck.â
Moretteâs voice was soft. But the weight of her words slammed into Ravyn so hard he found himself biting down. He turned away from his parents, back out Castle Yewâs doors. âEmory Elspeth will be safe on Solstice,â he saidâto them, to himself. âIâll see to it.â
The short walk to the armory felt longer, quieter, without Elm at Ravynâs side.
He found Petyr and Wik Ivyâhis trusted highwaymenâarguing over a whetstone. Their eyes lit when he told them he, Jespyr, Gorse, and the Shepherd King were leaving the next morning for the Twin Alders. Wik didnât wait to be asked, he volunteered straightaway to join. âGotten fond of pinching ole Providence Cards,â he said, a few gaps in his smile for teeth lost in brawls.
âIt wonât be like stalking the forest road and ambushing caravans,â Ravyn warned. âThe wood we travel intoâno oneâs been there for centuries. I donât know what awaits us.â
âDonât worry, Captain.â Petyr patted Ravynâs back hard enough to make him cough. âWeâll hold your hand when you get scared.â
Ravyn spent the remainder of the day in Emoryâs room, reading to him, keeping the fire warmer than it needed to be just to see a flush in his brotherâs face. Only after dusk had fallen and Jespyr taken his place at their brotherâs bedside did Ravyn go looking for the Nightmare.
He was in the meadow, near the ruins tucked away behind Castle Yewâs unkempt gardens, swathed in mist and sunsetâs usual grayness. He sat in grass beneath the shadow of a yew tree, his eyes distant.
He cradled something in his lap. âYouâve been digging,â he murmured.
Ravyn glanced at the chamber at the edge of the meadow. âI found your sword.â
âSo the thief becomes a grave robber.â The Nightmareâs gaze dropped to his lap. âYou might have availed yourself of this, too. I imagine it has some value yet.â
Ravyn stepped forward, his brow lowering. He realized the thing cradled with delicate care upon the Nightmareâs lapâ
Was a crown.
A golden crown that had long lost its sheen. Caked in soil, its markings were difficult to discern, though it seemed to have the same intricate, woven design as the hilt of the sword Ravyn had pried from the chamberâs earthen floor.
As if reading his thoughts, the Nightmare looked up. âWhere is itâmy sword?â
âIn my room.â
âIâd like it back.â
Ravyn returned to the castle. When he trudged back into the meadow, he threw the Shepherd Kingâs sword onto the grass. âIâm not a bloody grave robber.â
The Nightmare unfurled a single finger and traced the bladeâs hilt. Wind whispered through the yew trees, and Ravyn looked up. If he tapped his Mirror Card and waited, he was certain heâd see Tilly, watching them. Waiting.
âI met your daughter. The one with braids in her hair and eyes like yours. Tilly.â
The Nightmareâs shoulders tightened. He kept his eyes on the sword. âYouâd be wise not to use the Mirror Card so recklessly, Ravyn Yew. To see beyond the veil is a perilous thing.â
âShe told me youâre seeking revenge for what the first Rowan King did to you.â
A smile crept over his lips.
Ravyn hated the sight of it. âYour daughterâs spirit has waited five hundred years in that tree for you. All your children wait.â
When the Nightmare turned, his smile was gone. âI, too, have waited.â
âTo kill the Rowans?â
âMy aim is vast. There are many truths to unveil in the wood. Circles that began centuries ago will finally loop.â He let out a sigh. âThough I fear, with so many idiots around me, that I must do everything myself.â
Ravynâs tongue tripped over a flood of curses. He took a steadying breath. âWhat is your plan for when we return with the Twin Alders Card?â
The Nightmare wrapped his fingers around the hilt of his sword. He cocked his head to the side, surveying Ravyn like a wolf might a sick, mewling fawn. âI told your uncle he would have my blood to unite the Deck on Solstice, did I not?â
âYou did. But you are certainly a liar. Even under a Chalice, you lie.â
âWe have that in common.â
âIâm nothing like you, parasite.â
âBut you are.â The Nightmareâs laugh echoed through the meadow. âMore than you know.â His gaze flickered over Ravynâs face. âThough undoubtably I am better rested. When was the last time you slept a night through?â
Ravyn braced himself with his arms, coating his words with spite. âWhen I was with Elspeth.â He turned. âWe meet here at dawn.â
The Nightmareâs voice held him back. âBring the Maiden Card from your collection. Weâll need it for the journey.â
âThe Maiden?â
âThe pink Providence Card with a rose upon it. You know the one. Or maybe you donât. Your observational skills have proven abysmalââ
âI know which Cardââ Ravyn pulled in a breath and counted to three. âWhy the hell would we need a Maiden?â
The Nightmare tapped his fingernails over the crown in his lap. âPray that we donât.â
Ravynâs eyes lifted to the chamber. And because every conversation with the Shepherd King seemed to drag up the past, he said, âOn the subject of Providence Cardsââ He nodded at the dark window. âI found two in there when I was a boy. I bled onto the stone, and it opened for me.â He reached into his pocket and retrieved his Mirror and the Nightmare Cards. âThese were inside.â
Those yellow eyes grew distant. âAnd?â
âDid you put them there?â
âNo.â
âWho did?â He paused. âWas it one of your children?â
The Nightmare did not speak. He had gone still. Unmoving, unblinkingâstaring into nothingness.
âHello?â
No answer.
Ravyn drew a finger over his Nightmare Card. When the monster remained unfocused, he tapped the Card three times. There was a bite of salt, then Ravyn pushed the magic outward. Not to speak to the Nightmareâbut to search the dark chamber of his mind.
The Nightmareâs stillness broke, his gaze snapping into focus. He rose to his feet and, with impressive might, shoved Ravyn to the ground.
Salt fled Ravynâs senses as his head slammed onto grass. The cold, blunt tip of the Nightmareâs sword scraped over his throat.
âI told you once before, stupid bird. You must come invited into her mind.â
âAnd I told I would find her when we were out of Stone.â Ravynâs hands were fists in the grass. âIt is injustice enough that the spirits of your children keep wait while you, monstrous, remain. But Elspeth is not a spirit you can ignore. She is not dead. Let. Her. Out.â
Even in the darkening meadow, those yellow eyes flared. They were the only part of the Nightmare not consumed by the shadow of the yew tree, as if he were the tree itselfâand the shadow. âDo you never think beyond your own selfish wants, Ravyn Yew?â he snarled. âIf I called her out of darkness into my terrible mind, it would her. You cannot imagine the rage that comes with having no control over your own thoughtsâyour own body. You, traitorous thing, who have never truly ceded authority. Liar, thiefâimmune to the Chalice and Scytheâyou know nothing of losing control.â His lips twisted, snarl letting to a smile. âBut you will. You will learn, just as I did, what it feels like to lose yourself in the wood.â