Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 35
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
avyn and Jespyr were still pressed back-to-back when a shadow moved over them. Ravynâs eyes snapped open, bleary in the dim light of dawn. âWhatâs the matter?â
The Nightmare looked down at them, his face unreadable. âItâs time.â
Three clicks of his sword upon an aspen trunk, and the trees were moving. Ravyn yanked Jespyr away from rolling roots, and Petyr awoke with a cry, stumbling out of the way as the circle of aspens the Nightmare had drawn the night before were dispelled. When they were suitably scattered across the valley floor, the Nightmare tapped his blade thrice more upon the earth, stilling them.
The party turned. Faced the alderwood.
The wood breathed no sound. No birds flew from its treetops, and no wind stirred its branches. Its silence was ancient, and it loomed over them. Watching. Waiting.
They managed a scant breakfast and water, saying little, enveloped in apprehension. The unwelcome tremor in Ravynâs hands begged to quake. When heâd finished eating, he hauled himself up and stood at the edge of the alderwood.
The others joined him.
âThe trees are too close together,â Petyr said. âHow do we get in?â
Jespyr glanced at the Nightmare. âCanât you move them with your sword?â
âNot these trees. This is the Spiritâs wood. They obey only her.â He lifted his swordâdrew a pale finger over the edge of his blade, splitting a seam of skin. The finger went red, and the Nightmare pressed it into the bark of the nearest alder tree.
A wind beganâa biting chill that chased salt up Ravynâs nose and into his eyes. He blinked it away, then blinked again.
The smear of blood was gone from the alder tree. In its place was a hole. Not a squirrelâs burrow or a hollowed-out knot, but a deep, jagged hole. As if someone had reached into the tree with claws and torn out a chunk.
The hole stared at him, waiting.
Ravyn stepped forward and peered into it. He saw nothing at firstâonly darkness. The corrosive smell of salt was everywhere. Behind it, another odor lingered. It was foul. Fetid, like rot. Then, out from the darkness within the alderwoodâ
A flash of silver eyes.
Ravyn lurched back, knocking into Jespyr. âWhat the hell was that?â
âI told you,â the Nightmare whispered. âThis wood belongs to the Spirit.â He nodded at the hole in the tree. âShe will not grant us entry unless we pay her.â
The Nightmare had always been pale.
was pale. But there had been an ever-present warmth that lingered in her cheeksâher mouthâthe tip of her nose. Only now, it was gone. The Nightmare had gone a sickly gray. Unflinching, five hundred years oldâ
Fear, painted all over his face.
The hairs on the back of Ravynâs neck prickled. âWhatâs the payment?â
âThe alderwood is changeable, fickle, violentâjust like the infection. It will have shifted a thousand times over since I was last here. We need a guide to cross it.â He turned, his yellow eyes homing in on Petyr and Jespyr. âThe payment is a charm.â
Air fled Ravynâs lungs, punching its way across his bruised ribs. He reached into his tunic, tearing the spare charmâthe viper headâout of his pocket. âGive it this.â
The Nightmare didnât look at it. âWe need a .â He spoke now only to Jespyr, his voice eerily gentle. âYou remember some weeks ago, when you dropped your charm in the Black Forest? When the mist twisted your mind? What were you running toward?â
Jespyrâs pallor had gone sallow. Her hand was knotted in a fist, a small thread peeking out. Ravyn knew was she was holding. A dog tooth on a string. Her charm. âI can hardly remember,â she managed. âAll I know was that there was a voice in the mist. Like a storm, calling out my name.â
âThat was the Spirit of the Wood, beckoning you to this place,â the Nightmare whispered. âThis is where people come, when they are lost to the mist.â He drew air into his nose. âCanât you smell them?â
As if stirred by his words, the wind picked up. Saltâ
And rot.
Bile rose into Ravynâs mouth. âNo. If Jespyr or Petyr give up their charms, the mist will infect them. Or them.â
The Nightmare nodded slowly, unblinking.
âNo,â Ravyn said again. âThere has to be another way.â
âThere is not.â
âBut youâve entered this wood before!â
âI have.â
Ravynâs mind went dark. He remembered standing near the cellar at Stone the morning their journey began. He hadnât known what the monster meant then, but now, it was so horribly clear.
His skin went cold, then burning hot. âYou knew this would happen.â
The Nightmareâs silence was confirmation enough.
âNothing to say? No clever little rhyme?â Ravyn shoved the Nightmare against the trees, hands knotting in the collar of his cloak. âYouâre the goddamn Shepherd King! Think of another way.â
The Nightmare could have killed him with a single flex of his fingers. For a moment, lips peeling back in a snarl, he looked like he wanted to. âThere another way. The Destrier. He might have been the one to give up his charm. But he is dead. The mist has no sway over you or me.â He pushed Ravyn back with incredible strength, turning his gaze once more to Jespyr and Petyr. âIt must be one of them.â
Petyrâs brown eyes were wide, color leaching from his face. âAnd if we donât?â
âThen we cannot retrieve the Twin Alders Card. The Deck will not unite on Solstice. And young Emory Yew will surely die.â
Jespyr flinched at her brotherâs name. She looked down at her charm. âIâll do it.â
âLike hell.â Ravyn didnât know if he was whispering or shouting. âThere has to be anotherââ
âSaying there must be another way does not make it so,â the Nightmare hissed.
Petyr turned to Jespyr. Swallowed laboriously. âIâit should be me, princess. Youâre too important.â
âIâm not any more important than you.â Strain pulled at Jespyrâs face. âWeâll toss your lucky coin. That is balance. That is fair.â
With a shaking hand, Petry drew his coin from his pocket. He handed it to Ravyn. Gave him a pointed look. âHeads.â
âTails,â Jespyr murmured.
The coin was small in Ravynâs hand. He stared down at it, the edifice of his life crumbling around him. It was only a scrap of copper.
But it might cost a life.
ââIâm prepared to pay whatever price she asks,ââ the Nightmare murmured in his ear. âThat is what you said when I spoke to you of retrieving the Twin Alders Card.â
âIf you think I meant my own sisterââ
âI said it once, too. That Iâd pay the Spirit anything she wanted for the Twin Alders. And I did. Once in the chamber, when she robbed me of my ability to use the very Cards Iâd lost pieces of myself to forgeâand again, here, at the edge of her wood. I paid. We all must.â
Petyr planted his feet. Shut his eyes. âGo on, lad. Toss the coin.â
Ravyn remained statue-still.
âToss it, Ravyn,â Jespyr said through her teeth.
He didnât budge. âJesââ
âToss. The. Coin.â She looked into his eyes. âFor Emory.â
Ravynâs throat closed. He flicked his wristâlet loose the coin. It caught gray light as it spun in the air.
No one blinked. No one breathed. When the coin dropped back into Ravynâs palm, it felt heavier. He glanced down, caging his fingers around it before the others could see. âHeads.â
Petyr let out a shaking breath, and so did the Nightmare.
Jespyr didnât move. Her gaze narrowed, trained on Ravynâs eyes. âYouâre lying.â
âIâm not.â
âYou are. I can always tell.â Conviction hardened the lines of her face. She marched toward the wall of trees. âJust this once, I wish you hadnât. Youâre not the only one who would do anything for Emory.â She took her charm, and before Ravyn could reach out and stop herâ
Shoved it into the hole in the alder tree.
The wood groaned in response. The wind rose in a torrent, mist gusting through branches. Then the trees began to move, a narrow path opening in the impenetrable line of alders.
Opening for Jespyr.
The mist was so dense that Ravyn could hardly see her. Jespyr sucked in a breath, and mist slipped into her mouth. She coughed on itâlooked back at him. âAre you with me, brother?â
Something inside of Ravyn shattered. âIâm right behind you.â
The light in her brown eyes faded. Jespyr turned to the narrow path between the treesâ
And ran into the alderwood.