Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 31
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
hey hurried through the wood, dusk on their heels. Above, crows cawed, their wings darkening the gaps between trees. Ravyn recalled what Hesis had said about her magic.
Jespyr glanced skyward. âWolves, now crows. Just once, Iâd like not to be stalked through these wretched woods.â
The Nightmare led them. He broke his pace to tap his sword thrice upon the earth, then placed a hand upon a gnarled aspen tree. He shut his eyes. Whispered.
Eyes shut like that, it could have so easily been Elspeth. Ravynâs insides wrenched. âWhat are you doing?â
âAsking for the way.â
A great stillness came over the wood. No breeze touched them, no leaves crunched beneath their boots. The mist held them in its arms, salt and sting and a chill that went so deep, it reminded Ravyn of the dungeon at Stone.
Then, one by one, the aspen branches began to turn. Crooked, they bent, but never snapped.
All of them pointed east.
When the Nightmare opened his yellow eyes, they were bleary. âWeâre almost there.â
The mist thickened, and the sky became dark. The Nightmareâs sword gleamed in the dim light as he led them through bramble and dense underbrush. There was no path. But his gait was fast, sure.
A pulsing pain cut across Ravynâs face, radiating from his nose, which had begun to bleed again. When blood dripped into his mouth, he coughedâspat it out.
The Nightmare turned.
âIâm fine,â Ravyn snapped. âKeep going.â
The ground began to slope downward into a shallow valley, the mist so dense and the sky so dark Ravyn could hardly see an armâs length ahead. A thud sounded behind him, followed by a flurry of curses. Ravyn found Petyr caught in a dogwoodâfreed him with a firm wrench to his collar.
âWe need to stop,â Petyr said. âWeâll snap our ankles wading through bramble like this.â He made a face. âYour nose is a mess, lad.â
âThis whole journey is a mess,â Jespyr muttered. One glance at Ravynâs face made her stop short. âHeâs right. We should break for the night.â
âHere,â came the Nightmareâs slippery voice from ahead. When they met him at the bottom of the valley, he was standing stone-still at the edge of a new wood.
The trees in front of him did not merely stand close to one another. They were a . Just like the lake, the wood stretched farther than the horizon. There were hundredsâthousandsâof trees, all woven together.
Ravynâs pulse thickened. He stepped forward, putting a calloused hand on a crooked trunk. âTheyâre alder trees.â
The Nightmareâs voice slipped between his teeth. âThe second begins at the neck of a wood, where you cannot turn back, though truly, you should. Those here that enter are neither wary, clever, nor good. You know nothing of hellâ
âTill youâve crossed the alderwood.â
Wind whispered through the trees and on it, the biting scent of salt.
âThe Twin Alders Card,â Jespyr said, her eyes cast skeptically down the endless row of trees. âItâs inside?â
âYes.â
âHow do we get in?â
âThat is for tomorrow. For nowââ The Nightmare turned, facing back the way theyâd come. âAspen,â he murmured.
The aspen trees began to move into the valley. Dirt upturned, and the ground rolled. Petyr lost his balance and fell, and Jespyr braced herself on Ravyn before she, too, caught a mouthful of dirt.
The Nightmare swung his sword in low, circular patterns, and the aspens followed in accordance. When the trees were finished rearranging themselves, they stood in a circle around the party.
The Nightmare clicked his blade thrice more, and the trees went still, so close together a child couldnât slip through the gaps in their trunks.
âWe should be safe from any manner of beast in here,â the Nightmare said. He turnedâaimed the tip of his sword at Ravynâs face. âSit down, Ravyn Yew. Iâm going to fix your broken beak.â
Ravynâs broad back pressed against an aspen trunk. He didnât like it. It felt too much like the pole heâd been tethered to in that fort, where heâd forfeited all his composure.
Where heâd killed Gorse.
Petyr lowered himself next to him with a grunt. âWikââ He exhaled, voice uneven. âHe broke my nose when we were kids. Hurt like hell.â
âIâm fine.â
The Nightmareâs chuckle sounded from a few paces away. He poured water from Petyrâs canteen over his hands, washing away grime.
Jespyr crouched on the farthest side of the aspen circle, all of them looking away while she relieved herself behind a shrub. When she finished she stoodâran a hand over her cheek. Winced. âIâve not sure those bitches didnât break something in my face, too.â
It was too dark to see much of her. The moon was but a pale smudge in the night sky, swathed in mist. Still, the swell of Jespyrâs left cheek was unmistakable.
Ravyn hadnât noticed it during their fight in the courtyard. Othoâs magicâthat terrible smokeâhad limned his vision in red. He hadnât known anything but rage and hate.
Guilt clutched him by the throat. He dug in his pocketâsquinting in the dim light to discern which Card was pink. âHere,â he said, holding out the Maiden Card to the Nightmare. âHand this to her.â
The Nightmareâs nostrils flared, his gaze passing over the Maiden. âI canât touch it.â
Ravyn raised his brows.
âBelieve me, I wish I could. Iâd have saved myself the aggravation of traveling with you were I capable of taking back the Twin Alders myself. But this is still Elspethâs body. Any Card I touchâshe will absorb the object I paid to forge it.â
Jespyr rounded him, plucking the Maiden out of Ravynâs hands. âWhat did you pay for this one, Shepherd King?â
âHis hair, shorn off with a blade,â Petyr answered. There was a pause. âWhat? Itâs not like I havenât read .â
Ravyn touched his nose. Winced. âDidnât know you could read at all.â
Petyrâs elbow met his bruised ribs. âLaugh while you can. We all know that pretty pink Card wonât do a thing to heal .â
Jespyr tapped the Maiden. Closed her eyes. Let out a long breath. âTrees,â she said, her voice reverent. âIt feels so good not to be in pain.â She pressed a hand to her healed cheek, then tapped the Maiden thrice more. âSay Elspeth touched this Card instead of the Nightmare all those years ago. She would have absorbedâ¦your hair?â
âYes,â the Nightmare replied. âI had long hair. Dark.â His eyes raised over Ravynâs head. âLike yours. Perhaps it would have clogged her throat. Strung itself around her heart. Made a nest in her lungs.â
Jespyr took her seat next to Ravyn. âJust when I think youâre getting tolerable, you go and open your mouth.â
The Nightmare approached on silent step. He loomed above them. Clicked his teethâthen gripped Ravynâs nose.
There was a terrible grinding sound, pain biting over the mask of Ravynâs face. â
â
âAs I suspected,â the Nightmare said, indifferent. âDecidedly broken.â
Ravyn jerked his head back. âYouâre hardly a Physician.â
âNo. But Iâve mended my share of nosesâmy own in particular.â
âI hope whoever broke it enjoyed the feeling.â
âIâm sure he did.â His voice caught in the mist. âHe had an exacting hand, Brutus Rowan, when it came to pain.â
They all went still.
Slowly, Jespyr leaned forward. âDid you know him well? The first Rowan King?â
âPiss on that,â Petyr said. âTell us what everyoneâs spent five hundred years guessing. Was he the one who killed you?â
The Nightmare didnât answer. His mouth was a tight line, and his eyes were on the trees. He had that faraway look he got when he was talking to Elspeth.
Ravyn rolled his jaw. âWell?â
Yellow eyes snapped onto him. âYes. I knew him well.â He leaned over Ravyn. âThis is going to hurt. You may wish to distract yourself.â
âHow do you propose I do that?â
âReach into your pocket.â
Ravynâs brow knit, and the Nightmare blew out a breath. âNot stupid indeed,â he muttered. âThe Nightmare Card, Ravyn Yew. Thatâs as good as an invitation to enter my mind as youâll ever get.â
Seams groaning, Ravyn shoved his hand into his pocketâwrenched out the Mirror, then Gorseâs Black Horse.
His stomach turned. When he pulled out the Nightmare Card, his hands were shaking.
Three taps. Salt. Thenâ
He shut his eyes.
âA sharp, angry sound fluttered through Ravynâs mind.
A knot corded in Ravynâs throat.
The Nightmare reached forward. Gripped Ravynâs nose between both hands. There was another terrible grinding sound, cartilage and bone, and then Ravyn was reeling. Petyr and Jespyr pressed his arms down on both sides.
âStay still, you bucking horse,â Jespyr grunted.
Pain painted him. His face twisted, and he screwed his eyes shut tighter still, trying to hide it. But he couldnâtânot this time.
He jerked his headâspoke to Elspethâto himselfâin a ragged voice. âI donât want anyone to see me like this.â
Jespyr caught his left hand, then Petyr his right. And Elspethâher voice was everywhere. A thousand rose petals falling over him.
Pressure built behind his eyes. âWhat I did in that courtyardâwhat I saidââ
Jespyrâs held his arm, bracing it against tremors. âI know. It was terrible. What I said was terrible, too. Iâm sorry.â
There was one more flash of white-hot pain, and then the Nightmare let go of Ravynâs nose. âKeep it elevated.â
Ravyn pressed the back of his head against the aspen tree. The Nightmare bent over him. âDonât you understand?â he whispered. âThere can be no stony facadeâno pretendingâafter this. Death demands to be felt. It wasnât just Gorse who died in that courtyard today.â His yellow gaze reached into the darkest parts of Ravyn. âBut the Captain of the Destriers as well.â
It was late. Ravyn and Jespyr and the Nightmare were still awakeâbarely. Petyr was snoring, curled around himself.
Ravynâs nose hurt a speck less. He kept it elevated, his eyes cast up the long trunks of the aspen trees, all of them reaching toward the sky like swaying arms, grasping at the moon.
Jespyr had the Nightmare Card. She was speaking to Elspethâher face more relaxed than Ravyn had seen it in days. When she was done, she ran a listless finger over the Cardâs edge. Handed it back to Ravyn.
He tapped it.
, Elspeth whispered, her voice covering his mind like a blanket.
His eyelids drooped.
She paused.
Muscles feathered in the corners of Ravynâs mouth.
He tapped the Nightmare Card and put it in his pocket.
âThere it is,â Jespyr said through a yawn. âA hint of that elusive grin.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
She poked his shoulder. âStubborn till the end.â
âSomeone has to defuse your optimism.â
âThatâs what Elmâs for. But youâyouâre not a pessimist at all, brother.â She smiled. âAnd it kills you.â
The Nightmareâs gaze shifted between them. Silken and slow, he said, âI had a sister as well, not two years younger than me. My father used to say we were as branches of our namesake tree. Twisted, and intrepid, Ayris and I.â
He pulled away before Ravyn could ask more, retreating to the far side of the aspen circle.
âHe frightens me,â Jespyr said, settling close. âI spend most of the time hoping he doesnât look at me with those yellow eyes. He seems so sinister, so inhuman, but thenââ
âHe reminds us who he was,â Ravyn murmured. âBefore he became the monster.â
They pressed their backs together, their gazes lifting to the sky. Theyâd sat like that as childrenâas Destriers on patrolâas highwaymen in the wood.
âI canât see any stars,â Jespyr said.
âToo much mist.â Ravynâs eyelids fell. âI donât know whatâs on the other side of those alder trees, Jes. When we find a way in, stay close.â
When he drifted off to sleep, his sisterâs voice was in his ear. âI always do.â