Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 22
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
he quest to reclaim the final Providence Card was afforded no clamorous send-off. There was no applause, no musicâno roses petals or handkerchiefs thrown when Ravyn quit Castle Yew.
The morning was eerily quiet. A cold snap had passed over Blunder, leaving frost in its wake. No one was there to bid him goodbye at dawn, save his parentsâwho watched him now from Emoryâs window.
Theyâd hugged him, graciously accepting his loss for words like they always did. Heâd managed the same meager farewell heâd tended Elm.
âIâll see you soon.â
When he entered the meadow, the others were already waiting by the chamber.
Jespyr and Gorse appeared to have claimed as little sleep as Ravyn. The Ivy brothers, too. They were all bleary eyed in the dim morning light, bent under their travel satchels. Jespyr slung a bow and a quiver full of goose-fletched arrows over her shoulder and fought back a yawn.
Petyr tossed a copper coin between his hands. He elbowed Jespyr in the ribs. âRise and shine, princess.â
âI see the lucky coinâs along for the trip.â She poked a finger into Petyrâs dark, curly hair. âYou know luck is all in your head, donât you?â
âThereâs nothing in his head,â Wik said, biting into a piece of dried venison.
Gorseâs gaze shifted over the Ivy brothers. âWho the hell are you two?â
âCourtesans, here to make your journey a little sweeter,â Petyr said, puckering his lips. âHow about a morning kiss, Destrier?â
Ravyn rubbed his eyes. âI asked them to join. Best practice is to ignore them.â His eyes traced the meadow. âAnyone seen our ?â
âYou mean Spindle?â Gorse jerked his head west. âShe was in the armory.â
Ravyn kept his face guarded behind a crumbling facade of indifference. âThatâs not Elspeth.â
On silent step, the Nightmare emerged out of the mist. Eyes wide with intent, he was the only member of their party who seemed fully awake. Only, instead of its usual malicious grin, his mouth wore a grimace.
âWhy the sour face?â Jespyr called.
The Nightmare said nothing. His sword was noticeably sharper and had been meticulously cleanedâand so had his crown. It shone, a vibrant gold against the gray morning light. Ravyn traced its design, noting that the crown was carved to depict twisting branches.
It was not so different from his uncleâs crown. Only the branches hewn of gold were not rowan, but another. More gnarledâmore bent and awry.
The Nightmare tightened his hand in a clawlike grip around the crown, saying nothing as he pushed through the party to the stone chamber. He slid like a shadow through its darkened window. When he returned, the crown was gone.
Ravynâs voice was clipped. âYou donât want to wear it into the wood?â
Yellow eyes narrowed over him. âItâs not for me to wear anymore.â
Ravyn turned to the group, salt brushing his nose. âEveryone have their charms?â
Jespyr wore a small femur bone on a string around her neck. The Ivy brothers had identical hawk feathers fastened on their belts. Gorse, like most Destriers, kept a horsehair charm around his wrist.
âGuard them well.â Ravyn patted the extra charm he kept in his pocketâthe head of a viper. âWeâll be in the mist some while.â
Gorse shifted his weight. âHow long?â
âAs long as it takes to find the Twin Alders Card. If that does not suit youââRavyn gestured back toward the meadowââreturn to Stone. Or does the King expect a full report on my actions?â
Gorse snapped his mouth shut and glowered.
Ravyn was used to being glared at by a Destrier. He had none of Hauthâs or even Elmâs Rowan charmânever knew how to motivate men with words. His coldness, and his infection, had always made him an exacting, albeit unpopular Captain of the Destriers.
So be it. Ravyn didnât give a damn what esteem Gorse held him in, so long as it was coated in fear. He held the Destrierâs gaze long enough for Gorse to drop his eyes, then turned to the Nightmare. âLead the way.â
A low hiss slid out of the monsterâs lips. He pushed off the yew tree and turned east. When they entered the mouth of the wood, the mist swallowed them whole.
There was no path. Even had there been one, Ravyn could tell by the Nightmareâs erratic steps that he would not have taken it. Sword gripped in a vise, he weaved between trees, lithe and silent, stopping only on occasion to look up at the tangled canopy of branches. An hour they spent, chasing him in crooked lines through the wood.
All the while, the ire etched onto the Nightmareâs face deepened.
âDo you even know where youâre going?â Gorse hollered, bringing up the rear. âWeâve changed directions five times over.â
The Nightmare stopped abruptly, bent to one knee beneath a gnarled yew tree, and pressed his bare fingers against the trunk. He closed his eyes, his mouth forming words Ravyn could not hear.
The sounds of rustling leaves stopped. Birdsongs and the lilt of the wind through branches died to nothingness. Ravynâs skin prickled, silence washing over him. It was as if the Nightmare had called out in the language of the wood.
And the wood had stopped to listen.
Jespyr came up from behind. â
,â she murmured, watching the Nightmare run his fingers over the yew trunk, âis about the barters the Shepherd King made for Providence Cards. But he was born with magic.â Her brown eyes widened, her mouth a thin line. âWhat was it?â
The Nightmare closed his eyes and tapped his sword on the yew tree three times.
From his mouth, Ravyn distinguished a single word. âTaxus.â
The answer to Jespyrâs question came ripping through the earth. The whole wood shookâquaking from deep beneath its soil. The ground rolled, knocking Ravyn and Jespyr into each other. They fell in a heap next to Petyr and Wik and Gorse, who stared up from the ground, wide-eyed.
The forest was , yew trees rearranging themselves. Roots wrenched from the earth, clouding the air with dirt. Branches snapped and leaves whirled all around them, caught in the windstorm of shifting trees.
The Nightmare centered himself in the tumult, crouched on his haunches, untouched by root or branch. He tapped his sword once moreâthis time on the groundâthe sound distinct in the ripping din.
The yew trees stopped moving. At the Nightmareâs feet, beneath the litter of upturned soil and leaves and broken branches, was a path though the wood.
Cold sweat pooled in Ravynâs palms. Heâd read his entire life.
But this was his first true glimpse at the man whoâd written it.
The Nightmare stood to full height. He looked over his shoulder at the party where they lay in the dirt.
âWhat,â Jespyr called, incredulous, âis a ?â
âAn old name, for an old, twisted tree.â When he caught Ravynâs gaze lingering at his sword, he traced a pale finger over the hilt. âSurely you didnât think it was sheep I shepherded.â
The furrows in the Nightmareâs brow deepened as they walked through the wood.
Ravyn didnât ask what was bothering him, and the monster offered no explanation. He hadnât said a word since the trees had rearranged themselves, making a path through the previously impenetrable wood. That had been hours ago.
So be it. The furrow between dark browsâthe cold, permanent snarlâwas a face Ravyn had never seen Elspeth wear. It was easier to hold the Nightmare in his periphery and not, a thousand times over, think it was Elspeth next to him. It kept him grounded. Miserable, but grounded.
And aware enough to see the wolves.
The first watched from the tree line, a beast with black fur and unblinking silver eyes.
âHurry up,â Jespyr called to Gorse, her bow fitted with an arrow.
Gorse pointed the tip of his sword to the tree line. âThere are two of them.â
âThree,â Wik corrected. âPoor little pony canât count.â
âDonât teach much arithmetic in Destrier school, do they?â Petyr chimed.
Ravyn keep his gaze forward. There were wolves, actually, stalking them down the darkening path. He quickened his step until his mouth was in the Nightmareâs ear. âWe need to find higher ground.â
The Nightmare said nothing.
âNightmare.â
The monster kept his eyes forward.
Ravyn shoved his hand into his pocket and tapped his burgundy Card. Salt shot up his nose into his mouth. He pushed it outward on a fiery breath.
Before sheâd disappeared, entering Elspethâs mind had felt like slipping into a storm. Chaotic, windblown. But the Nightmareâs mind was smooth, controlled, silent but for that strange, oily voice.
Only now, that voice was screaming.
Ravyn lost a step and knocked into the Nightmareâs shoulder.
The monster reeled, yellow eyes flashing. His hand came to Ravynâs throat, fingers flexing.
It had never made sense how Hauth and Linden had been maimed, their bodies cleaved. Elspeth never wielded a weapon. Fingers should not make the lacerations hers had made, clawlike the way theyâd torn through flesh.
But now, with the Nightmareâs fingertips pressed into his throat, Ravyn was beginning to understand. They might look like fingers. But under the surface, there was something distinctly jagged.
The Nightmare blinked, his gaze coming into sharp focus. His grip on Ravynâs throat eased, but he didnât drop his hand.
His mouth curled in a snarl.
Blood drained from Ravynâs face. âElspeth. Youâyou canât find Elspeth?â
The Nightmare said nothing. But for a sliver of a moment, his ire shifted to an expression Ravyn had not yet seen on the monsterâs face.
Despair.
Panic reached its fingers into Ravynâs chest.
Jespyr shoved them apart. âIf you two idiots canât focus, Iâll be happy to lead this party. There are at our backs.â
The Nightmares eyes drifted over her shoulder. When they landed on the wolf with silver eyes, the ire in his face vanished behind a smile. âGood,â he said. âWeâre close.â
The lake did indeed look like a silver mirror. It reflected the sky, the treesâtheir facesâupon its smooth, indifferent surface. Gorse touched the water and pulled back with a shiver. Jespyr secured her bow over her shoulder. The Ivy brothers passed bread between themselves.
Ravyn watched the wolves, now seven in number, line up fifty yards behind them. âThey stalked us here. Why?â
The Nightmare crouched next to him, dipping the tip of his sword into the lake. âWhy risk their lives when the water would happily kill us for them?â
Ravynâs gaze whipped back to the lake. It didnât look deadly. âPoison?â
The Nightmareâs laugh hummed in his throat. âMagic.â
The lake stretched on for miles. It would take them hours to go around. âWe must swim to the other side?â Ravyn asked.
A nod.
âWhat kind of magic?â
âThe kind the Spirit likes so well. A barter.â The Nightmareâs hand tightened around the hilt of his sword. âA drop of blood. Then the water will make of us what it will. If we survive the crossing, she will grant us safe passage to the next barter.â
Ravyn kept his gaze on the water. Like Castle Yewâlike the woodâthe lake seemed to go eerily still in the Nightmareâs presence. As if it had been waiting for him.
They drew blood. Ravyn dragged the edge of his dagger across his thumb, then squeezed the calloused tip over the lakeâs surface. He watched oneâtwoâthree droplets fall, staining the waterâs surface a fleeting crimson.
Jespyr and Gorse and the Ivy brothers did the same, cutting thin lines along the insides of their hands and bleeding into the water. When the Nightmare held the edge of his sword to his open palm, Ravyn stopped him.
âKeep your cut shallow,â he said. âDonât give her a scar.â
There it was againâthat pained expression that crossed the monsterâs face. The one that looked like despair. More than wolves or the lake, that look terrified Ravyn. He stepped closer, lowering his voice so only the Nightmare could hear. âTell me whatâs happening.â A lump rose in his throat. âYou canât reach Elspeth?â
The Nightmare looked out over the water. So quick Ravyn hardly saw it happen, he dragged his thumb across the edge of his sword and shoved it into the water. âSwim fast, Ravyn Yew.â
He dove headfirst into the lake, shattering the smooth visage of the mirror.
Ravyn and Jespyr exchanged a tight glance. Gorse looked back at the wolves, whoâd snuck twenty yards closer. He swore under his breath and dove into the lake, leaving short, choppy waves. Wik followed. Petyr kissed his lucky coin and joined them.
Ravyn looked at his reflection in the water. And maybe he was scaredâmaybe he was imagining things. Because the man who looked back up at him was not him. Not fully. He wasnât wearing the same clothesâhis head was covered by a hood, a cloth mask obscuring his face. He wasnât the Captain of the Destriers, but the other Ravyn. The one who stalked the forest road.
The highwayman.
âAre you with me, Jes?â
His sisterâs voice was close, just as it always was. âIâm right behind you.â
Ravyn bent his knees. To the sound of howling wolves, he dove off the embankment.
In stories, sirens were beautiful women whose songs pulled men into the deep. They were not dressed in black cloaks with masks fastened to their faces. They were not highwaymen.
But the creature that reached from the depths of the lake and took Ravyn by the ankle was.
His fingers were icy, piercing through Ravynâs boot and into his skin. He spoke with Ravynâs voiceâwore Ravynâs face, his gray eyes bright. âSwim no farther,â he said. âThe freedom you seek has always been here, behind the mask. Be who you like. Love the infected woman. Steal, betray. Flout the Kingâs law. Stay.â
It was a test, honed by his bloodâa trick of the Spirit of the Wood. To fortify himâ
Or to drown him.
Ravyn flailed in the water. Lungs burning, he aimed a kick at the highwaymanâs face and wrenched away.
The weight of his clothes, his blades, was enormous. But he was strong. Heâd never had a choice but to be strong. Ravyn breached the lakeâs surface and took a deep, gasping breath, searching frantically for the others. He saw Wik ten strokes ahead, then Petyr, struggling to keep up. âThere are fucking demons in the water,â he screamed.
âGet off me!â Gorse shouted somewhere nearby, his voice clogged with water.
Jespyr came into view. She was swimming fast, sucking in frantic gulps of air. Ahead of all of them was the Nightmare. Heâd almost reached the embankment at the other side of the lake. Whatever monster chased him beneath the water, the bastard was outswimming it.
Ravynâs voice boomed over the lake. âBlack Horse, Jes!â Icy water slipped into his mouth. â
â
She didnât need telling twice. Jespyr disappeared a second under the water. When she reemerged, her pace quickened tenfold. Ahead, Gorse did the same. He tapped his Black Horse Card and then the two of them were identical streamsâcurrents pushing through the silver waterâkicking with unearthly speed toward the shore.
Ravyn and the Ivy brothers were still in the center of the lake. And the monsters beneath the surface were catching up.
Legs pounding, Ravyn broke his pace to pull a knife from his belt. This time, when a hand found his ankle, he was ready.
The highwayman beneath the water yanked him back. âStay, Ravyn Yew,â he said once more. âThe man beneath the maskâthat is who you are meant to be.â
Ravyn took in a gulping breath and let himself be pulled beneath the water until he was eye to eye with the highwayman, then plunged his knife into the monsterâs shoulder. A shattering scream shook the water. The monster flailed and disappeared into the deep.
Ravyn returned to the surface just in time to see Petyr get dragged under.
He dove, following the stream of bubbles that fled Petyrâs open mouth. The lake monster beneath them had Petyrâs body and face, but it was cloaked as a Destrier, and its fingers were longâtipped by claws that latched into Petyrâs leg. Even when Ravyn levied the monster with a kick, those claws held on.
Ravyn wrapped an arm around Petyrâs middle and pulled with all his strength against the monsterâs might. When they breached the surface, water blinded himâchoked him. All he could think to do was drag in the occasional breathâjust enough to keep himself conscious as he pulled Petyr toward the shore. He couldnât see, couldnât breatheâ
His legs tangled in mud. The water shallowed, and then Ravyn was flinging himself onto the shore, crawling over the embankment out of the lake, dragging Petyrâand the monster fastened to his legâwith him.
Voices shouted, feet squelched through the mud. Jespyr, then Wik, grabbed Ravyn and Petyr by their shoulders.
Petyr wailed, kicking. The monster at his leg opened its mouth, letting out a shriek that echoed over the lake. Its claws flexed, tearing into flesh and muscle.
A ring of steelâa flash of light. The Shepherd Kingâs sword cleaved the air.
There was another wrenching scream. Ravyn watched as the monster with Petyrâs face staggered back. Its eyes rolled and its head fell from its shoulders onto the lakeâs muddy lip.
Ravyn tried to pull himself upâ
And saw the blood.
Petyrâs left pant leg was in tatters. So was the skin beneath it. His calf was open in long, red seams where the monsterâs claws had found purchase. Even through a wince, Ravyn could see there was something wrong with the wound. It wasnât bleeding freely as it should have been. The blood was coagulating too fast, slow as sludge as it slid from Petyr.
The odor came nextâputrid as an animal carcass left to rot.
âWhat the hell is that smell?â Gorse said, his pallor going a sickly green.
âItâs his leg,â Jespyr whispered, hand covering her nose as she leaned over Petyr.
Two boots squelched in the mud at Ravynâs side. The Nightmare lowered himself to a crouch, peered at the woundâthe sludging, fetid blood. âHow unfortunate,â he said with a sigh. âThere poison in the water.â