Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 25
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
ouâll have to forgive an old man.â
Midday light flickered through the library. Elm sat sideways in a satin chair, his legs thrown over its cushioned arm, a sketchbook splayed in his lap. Next to him was a stack of unread tomes. He drank broth from a cup and ran the tip of his stylus over blank pages, listless and irritated.
He was drawing a horse, mid-runâand was deeply dissatisfied with it. âI donât have to forgive you a thing,â he said to Filick Willow, ripping the paper from the binding and balling it into his fist. âI live off of my grudges.â
The paper hit the Physician square in the jaw. Filickâs gray whiskers twitched, hiding his smile. âIâll knock louder next time.â He levied a pointed glance. âAnd that, in no way, should be taken as encouragement.â
Elm started a new drawing. âYou disapprove, old man?â
âThere are many beautiful women in the castle these days. Your father has seen to that.â
âAnd?â
Filick returned his gaze to his book of plants, as if he were lecturing one of them, and not the Prince of Blunder. âWhy not choose a woman lessâ¦lessâ¦â
Elm kept his wrist light as he swung his stylus over the paper. âLess like Ione Hawthorn?â
âSheâs betrothed to your brother.â
The smooth line of the horseâs midsection wobbled. âIâm aware.â
Filick forfeited with a grunt, sipping his tea. âI suppose, if your brother never wakes, the matter will resolve itself.â
Elm paused. âWill he wake?â
âI donât know.â Filickâs blue eyes lifted. âHave you gone to see him?â
âYou know I havenât.â
âYou should. If only for appearances.â
Elm ripped the paper, balled it, and threw it to the ground. He stared at the next blank sheet. His drawing began with a shape, two sweeping arches. âWhen do you think theyâll get back?â he said quietly. âRavyn and Jespyr andâ¦
.â
Filick leaned back in his chair. âItâs difficult to say. I donât think either Ravyn or your father expects a long absence. Though the Shepherd King may have different plans.â His voice softened. âIâm sure Ravyn will do everything in his power to unite the Deck and cure Emory by Solstice.â
Elmâs throat tightened at Emoryâs name. âWhat of the Shepherd King?â He added to his sketch, drawing a large shadowed circle between the arches. âDo you think he will honor his bargain and give his blood to unite the Deck?â
âItâs not his blood to give,â Filick said, hard enough to make Elm look up. âItâs Miss Spindleâs, isnât it?â
Elspeth. If the Shepherd King was telling the truthâand that was a big âthe blood that would unite the Deck would be Elspethâs.
Elm signed. âRavyn must be in hell.â
There was nothing to say after that, because saying the truth would hurt too much. Ravyn was in love with Elspeth Spindle. And by Solstice, she, if she wasnât already, would surely be dead.
Filick pored over his book and Elm his sketchbook, the afternoon slipping away. Elmâs drawing became more detailed. The arches became an eye. Next to it he drew a contoured nose, then another eye. A face. A mouth. Shadows and highlights.
Deep within the castle, the gong sounded five times.
âItâll be dinner soon.â Filick peered over his spectacles at Elmâs black tunic. âI believe the traditional Rowan color is gold.â
âSo it is,â Elm said to his sketchbook. âBut Iâm not going to dinner.â
âAnother drunken appointment in the cellar?â
His stylus stilled. Heâd been tipsy, not drunk. Certainly not drunk enough to forget a single moment of last night. His skinâhis fingers and mouthâhad kept the score of it. When heâd woken that morning, hard and sore and so bloody , it had taken ten minutes in a frigid bath just to make use of his own limbs. And still, he could not forget.
Heâd wanted to go straight to Ioneâs room and finish what theyâd started, to obey her command and rip her out of her dress. But pride had stopped him. Heâd laid his darkest truths before her in the cellarâpractically pleaded with her to toy with him.
And nowânow Elm had no idea what to do. Sheâd run off without a backward glance, leaving him reeling. So heâd spent the day in the library, the only place in Stone he didnât hate. The only place heâd be free of reminders of Ione Hawthorn.
But that wasnât exactly true. Because, when Elm looked down at his sketchbook, he realized the face heâs spent half an hour drawing was hers.
His fingers flexed along his stylus. It wasnât a true likeness. She looked too much at ease on paper, not frozen by the Maiden like she was in real life. But her eyes, heâd gotten right. Clear and unreadable. Cold, and just a little wicked.
He ripped her portrait out of the sketchbook, balling it in his fist. âMy father is a fool if he thinks dangling Blunderâs daughters under my nose will entice me to choose a wife. Taking Hauthâs place is wretched enough without adding a strange woman to my everyday existence.â
When Elm had told Filick that the King had thrust the throne upon him, the Physician had sighed in the way those whoâd lived a great many years sighed at those whoâd only clocked a few. âI know you well enough to keep my opinions to myself, Elm.â
âA small mercy.â
âBut, if youâd humor an old man just once more,â he said, âyouâd let me tell you what a fine King youâd makeâwhat a blessing youâd be to those of us who still hope to see a better future for this cold, unfeeling place.â
Elmâs chest tugged. He looked back at his sketchbook. âYouâre getting soft, Physician.â
Filickâs laugh was a low, steady rumble. âI am. And that changes nothing of what Iâve said.â
A quarter of an hour later, when Elm was alone and staring at nothing, Filickâs words stayed with him. And the irony, the bitter truth of it all, came crashing down. Ione. The Maiden Card. Hauth. The throne.
He could free himself from marryingâfrom becoming heir. Ione had all but handed him the means. All it would take was a Maiden Card and Hauth would be healed. The line of succession would return to normal. Elm could get his life back.
But that freedom had a cost. A terrible, violent cost. And Hauthâs wrath, should he be healed, was a darkness rivaled only by the five-hundred-year-old monster who had maimed him in the first place.
Elm couldnât risk waking his brother. Which left only one loathsome alternative. He, Prince Renelm Rowan, would marry and become the next King of Blunder.
The sound of rustling fabric and a small cough pulled him from his thoughts. His eyes shot up. Maribeth Larch, daughter of Ode Larch, whose estate yielded most of Blunderâs wine supply, stood in front of Elmâs chair, fingers inching along a nearby shelf. âBeg your pardon, Highness,â she said. âI didnât intend to disturb you.â
Elm snapped his sketchbook shut and fixed his mouth with an unfeeling smile. To disturb him was exactly what sheâd intended. He could tell by the plant of her feetâthe expectant look in her eyesâthat sheâd been standing there some time.
He didnât stand, didnât bow or offer her his hand. Which was rude and the opposite of what the future King should do. But he was comfortable, deep in his chair, and sheâd intruded upon a rare moment of gentle solitude. âMiss Larch,â he said. âHave you lost your way?â
She hadnât. The small smile fixed across her painted lips made that perfectly clear. âA Prince of many talents,â she said, not answering his question, her eyes flickering to the sketchbook in his lap. âWhat are you drawing?â
âNothing.â Elm had seen Maribeth at court. He knew her fatherâher brothers. She was pretty, tall, with a warm presence and thick brown hair she often wore in a coronet. But now her hair was down, swept over her shoulder. âIâm waiting for inspiration.â
Maribeth bent to peer at a low shelf, the rounded tops of her breasts swelling over her neckline. âDo you draw from reference or memory?â
The smell of wine. Heat from the hearth. The shape of Ioneâs mouth when she parted her lipsâher eyes, clear and sharp and honed entirely on him.
âMemory,â Elm said in a low voice, running his thumb along the balled-up portrait in his hand. âWhy? Are you offering to pose for me, Miss Larch?â
She smiled, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear as she stepped forward. But the blush of red in her cheeksâthe way her eyes flickered from his to the floorâgave her away. She was nervous. She took the chair Willow had occupied and lowered herself into it. Without meeting Elmâs eyes, she inched her dress up her leg until it was almost at her knee, revealing smooth, olive skin.
She wasnât wearing leggings. âIf youâd like to draw me, Prince Renelm, Iâd be more than happy to oblige.â
Elm sat deeper into his chair. He knew enough of life at court to know when he was being propositioned. It felt familiar, like a book heâd read many times. Which was why heâd been taking the contraceptive tonic since he was seventeen. They were alone, and unlikely to be interrupted. There didnât have to be a bed, but if she wanted one, there were plenty of empty guest roomsâso long as it wasnât his bed. If she wasnât already wet, he would get her there before heâd let her touch him. And even when he did let her touch him, he wouldnât let her take his clothes off. Heâd do that himself. Or heâd leave them on, loosening only his belt and trousers. He felt safer that way.
Heâd put his mouth against her ear and ask what she liked. Sheâd be reticent to sayâor maybe notâbut she wouldnât look him in the eye. Heâd please her with his fingers or mouth. Maybe heâd give all of himself, working on her until she met her release, finding his own somewhere along the way or not at all, all the while knowing, behind the swell of his desireâthe tight, rising exhilarationâan empty feeling waited. An aloneness.
After, despite the emptiness, Elm would help her dress. Cheeks red, mouth swollen from kissing, sheâd finally meet his gaze. When he was younger, he fancied thatâs when women saw him. Not the Prince, not Renelmâbut Elm. Elm, who wanted to be liked, to be seen. Petulant, reticent Elm.
But he knew better now. And it humiliated him that heâd ever thought the women heâd bedded had seen the real him. They hadnât. Mostly because he hadnât let them. Heâd reached into the deepest part of a woman to find himself, when all he really wanted was for someone to look at him. To admit they knew what had happened to him as a boy and still hold him, unflinching, in their gaze.
The way Ione had last night.
His grip tightened on the crumpled portrait in his hand. âYou donât have to do this, Miss Larch.â He rested his face against his palm, keeping his eyes on Maribethâs face, away from her bare leg. âItâll come to no good.â
Her smile faded.
Elm might have dismissed her outright, but the nervousness stamped across her face made him wonder if this had even been her idea. Perhaps she had a meddling mother. Or a grasping father, like Tyrn Hawthorn. âYouâre very beautiful.â He forced lightness into his voice. âBut you should know, these feasts are the Kingâs doing. Not mine.â
Maribethâs grip loosened on her dress, the fabric slipping back over her leg. She tried to smile. âAnd if I merely wanted my picture drawn?â
Elm offered his own smile. âDid you?â
âNo, I suppose not.â She cleared her throat. âA folly on several accounts, for I imagine the King has picked someone out for you already, just as he chose Miss Hawthorn for the High Prince.â She gave a rushed bow, then quit the library. âGood afternoon, Majesty.â
The stylus slipped through Elmâs fingers. He sat up too quickly, his sketchbook spilling onto the floor. He didnât remember his father choosing Ione for Hauthâbecause the King chosen her. Thereâd been an agreement with Tyrn. A Nightmare Card for a marriage contract.
A barter.
Elm rose from his chair, tucking Ioneâs portrait into his pocket, and headed for the stairs.
He found the man he was looking for on the first landing, announcing families on their way to the great hall for dinner. âBaldwyn.â
The Kingâs steward jumped, his rounded spectacles falling askew. Baldwyn Viburnum had always reminded Elm of a kitchen rat, with his coarse, thinning black hair. His nose was short and narrow, and the spectacles that sat on its bridge were often smudged. Snide, without a whit of humor, Baldwyn was as pleasant to speak to as the inside of a chamber pot. Heâd always been cruel to Emory.
Elm despised him.
Baldwyn straightened his spectacles and ran a hand over his hair. âPrince Renelm. Are you going down to dinner? Itâs the first feast in your honor.â
âNo, listenââ
Behind them, families waited to be announced. Which was utter nonsense. These fools had attended dozens of dinners together. If they didnât know each otherâs names by now, another screech from Baldwyn wasnât going to do the trick.
But it was tradition. And Elm was fairly certain Baldwyn would rather throw himself down the stairs than offend tradition. âAnnouncing,â he boomed, âLord and Lady Juniper and their daughter, Miss Isla Juniper.â
The Junipers bowed to Elm, the daughter taking an extended glance, and went down the stairs.
âI need to look at the Kingâs contracts,â he said to Baldwyn, keeping his voice low. âHis marriage contracts in the last month.â
âAny particular reason, sire?â
Elm fixed his mouth with a false smile. âIf Iâm expected to wed, Iâd like to understand the business end of things.â
Baldwyn opened his mouth to respond, but another family came up behind Elm. âAnnouncing Sir Chestnut and his son, Harold.â
The Chestnuts bowed. Elm greeted them with a flick of his wrist and kept his eyes on Baldwyn. âWell, little man? Where can I find the contracts?â
âI keep them in the record chamber off the library, sire.â
âBrilliant.â Elm turned to leaveâ
âItâs locked, Prince Renelm.â
Elm heaved a sigh. âAs to that. What did Ravyn do with the keys when he left?â
âYou mean keys, Highness?â
âYes. My bloody keys.â
Baldwyn cleared his throat as another family came up. âAnnouncingââ
Elm put a finger in his face. âThe keys.â
Baldwyn blinked down at his finger, momentarily cross-eyed. âIâthe Captain left them with Physician Willow. But thatâs not a Physicianâs job, and Captain Yew had no businessââ
âYouâre testing me, steward.â
Baldwyn reached for his belt, brass clanging. Elm held out his hand, clamping his fingers around the iron ring that housed dozens of keys. âMuch obliged.â
He pushed through the families crowding the landing, never minding that they were all watching him. But the glee of embarrassing Baldwyn dissipated the moment Elm got to the record chamber. He hadnât thought to ask key opened it.
Ten minutes later, he was still locked out. âClever indeed,â he muttered though his teeth. Ravyn would have known which key was right.
A small brass key slid into place, and the lock clicked open. Elm kissed the key and immediately regretted it, remembering too late the ring had been fastened to Baldwynâs belt.
He crept into the chamber. There were cabinetsâstacks of drawersâfilled with parchment bearing the Kingâs seal. He discovered property deeds and knighthoods. Detailed histories of Providence Cards and who owned them.
Then, finally, marriage contracts. Something Elm hadnât spent five minutes of his entire life considering.
There were so many of them. Hundreds. Which shouldnât have been a surprise. People got married all the time. But a Princeâa High Princeâwasnât .
And neither was Hauth. It took Elm all of two minutes to spot the Kingâs seal in the pile. He dug with hurried fingers, the smell of parchment filling his nose. He pulled the contract free, his eyes stilling on a name.
He read the contract, his gaze running over repeated words.
He froze and read it again. Then again. For every time he read it, the corners of Elmâs mouth lifted until a smile unfurled.
He didnât put the contract back with the others. He slipped it under his tunic and left the room, keys jingling. And because he was a rotten Prince, and a piss-poor Destrier at that, Elm didnât lock the door behind him.