Two Twisted Crowns: Part 3 – Chapter 42
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
f all the people in the great hall, the monster was the most pleasing to look at.
Hauth sat in his rightful chair in a gold doublet trimmed with white fox fur. He played with the horsehair charm on his wrist and didnât smile, but his laughter echoed as he accepted compliments from courtiers. He didnât mention the Maiden Card heâd taken back from Ioneâdidnât attribute his sudden recovery to anything but himself. But he was undeniably using it. His face was too perfectâhis features too steady.
He held his goblet up for the fifth time, a false toast to Rowan stamina and health, and drank.
All the while, he kept Elm tight under his Scytheâs leash.
Shoved into the corner of the dais, no one paid Elm any mind. Now that Hauth was back, he was of little interest to Blunderâs court, the fresh bruises on his face just another reason for them not to look at him.
Hauth sat next to the red-eyed King, Ione in her customary chair on his other side. Linden hovered nearby, arms clasped behind his back, satisfaction in the newly unblemished lines of his face.
Elmâs pulse pounded in his head. He could not hear what Hauth told the King in a low voice. But by the way the Kingâs eyes widened, it was clear he was riveted. Tales of the pink Cardâs unforetold magic, perhaps.
Elm didnât glace at them long. His eyes belonged to Ione. She was in one of those horrid gray dresses again. This time, it had been Hauth whoâd compelled her to wear it. He hadnât given her time to fully wash away the blood from the wound heâd dealt her, and the gownâs collar was the only one high enough to conceal the red stain upon her skin.
Ione sat rigid in her chair, her hazel eyes clouded by whatever command Hauth had bade her with his Scythe. To sit still and keep silent, most likely. No one asked after her, or why she was so paleâwhy some of the yellow hair knotted at the nape of her neck had blood in it. Like Elm, Ione received few looks at all.
When the line of well-wishers along the dais eased, Hauth took his goblet and stood. Baldwynâs voice boomed. âHis Second Royalty, Hauth Rowan, High Prince, Heir to Blunder, Destrier, and Keeper of Laws.â
The echo of scraping chairs filled the hall, and then the court was on its feet, eyes trained on their perfect Rowan Prince.
Hauthâs smile did not touch his eyes. âAs your High Prince and Destrier, my days are parceled by duty. I am proud to say I protect Blunder well from the infection. I uphold my fatherâs laws, his commands.â He put a hand on the back of Ioneâs chair. âI even agreed to marry, so that my father could add the elusive Nightmare Card to his collection. That he, one day, might be the Rowan King to finally collect the Deck and lift the mist.â
Hauth drew a finger along the back of Ioneâs neck. It looked like a gesture of affection, but Elm saw it for what it was.
A threat.
âBut I was injured,â Hauth continued. âGravely. I didnât know how full my life was until Iâd nearly lost it.â He turned to the King, who was watching his son with captivated focus. âAnd now that I am healed, there are things besides duty and honor I no longer wish to take for granted.â He put a hand on his fatherâs shoulder. âThe bonds of family, for one.â
An appreciative murmur sounded in the hall.
âIt makes me glad,â Hauth said, something darker hiding in the low notes of his voice, âto hear how well you accepted my brother in my absence.â His eyes jutted to Elm. When blood hinted beneath his nostril, he wiped it away before anyone could see. âCome join us, Renelm. Refill our goblets. Drink with us.â
Salt stung Elm anew. Linden came beside him, thrusting a cup and a flagon of wine into his hands. Elm tried to look at Ione, but the Scythe kept him rigid, compelling him forward, marching him onto the center of the dais.
Hauth pulled his own goblet close and looked down at the Kingâs empty one. âFill it.â
Elm tipped the flagon, and wine flowed into his fatherâs cup. Hauthâs mouth quirked. âTo family,â he called, raising his goblet.
The great hall answered in kind. âTo family.â
Elm didnât drink, helpless to do anything but stand still and breathe. When the King drained his cup, the smile teasing Hauthâs mouth widened. He turned his back to the hall, facing Elm and the King. âOn the subject of family,â he said in a low voice only they could hear, âI understand Ravyn and his party will return shortly. Along with the woman who attacked me.â His eyes lowered to the King. âA woman who should be dead. Or rotting in a cell.â
King Rowan straightened in his chair, a flush coloring his neck. âElspeth Spindle has old knowledge. I need her to find the Twin Alders.â
âOld knowledge indeed,â Hauth murmured into the rim of his cup. âYouâre a brute and a drunk, Father. But I never took you for a fool.â
The Kingâs flush crawled into his face. His voice was a growlâa warning. âHauth.â
He kept going, quiet at he leaned forward. âAll your life, youâve fretted over the Twin Alders Card, lifting the mist, healing the infection. When in truth, it is the mistâthe infectionâthat feeds the throne. People the mist. They fear the Physicians and Destriers who come to their doors to root out the infection. No one has challenged a Rowan in five hundred years because of . And now youâve gone and given Ravyn Yew a way to undo all of that. Whatâs more, your beloved, infected Captain is coming back with more than the Twin Alders Card.â Hauthâs mouth drew into a tight line. âHeâs coming back with the goddamn Shepherd King.â
The Kingâs cough was a loud, barking strangle.
âAnd it will be you, ,â Elm said through his teeth, âwho will have to face them when they return.â
âThatâs why youâre here, Renelm. You and Ione Hawthorn. I never wanted either of youâbut youâll make fine bargaining chips all the same.â Hauth laughed to himself. âLetâs hope the fire of your budding romance doesnât snuff out in the dungeon.â
The Kingâs tumbler crashed onto the dais. He made a choking noise, his thick, brutish fingers clawing at his own throat. His face had gone red, mottled. Blood spiked over his eyes. He grasped for Hauthâs sleeve, his words wet and garbled. âH-helpââ
âWhatâs wrong?â Elm regarded the flagon Linden had shoved into his hands, then the Kingâs empty gobletâdrained of the wine poured. His gaze shot to Hauth. âWhat have you done?â
Heads turned. A few courtiers stood from their seats, while others remained arrested in stillness, their attention fixed upon the dais.
Hauth pulled in a deep breath. âIgnore the King,â he said beneath his breath.
King Rowan hacked. His eyes were bulging now, the spit on his purple lips turning to froth. No one moved to help him. Not his servants or Destriersânot Baldwyn or the lords and ladies of Blunder whoâd hurried to Stone to partake in his feasts. Their opinion of him, of his Rowan legacy, had made him into the King that he was. And now that he was choking, dying before themâ
They would not even look at him. All of them, compelled by Hauthâs Scythe to deny him their notice.
Hauth watched his father struggle to breath with cold indifference, his nostrils laden with blood.
Elm was shouting. âDonât do this!â
âIt was not I,â Hauth said, nodding at the flagon in Elmâs hand, âwho poisoned the King.â
Elm looked down at his father, that unfeeling, ungiving manâand felt a terrible, wrenching pity. The Kingâs mouth dripped blood, the great bear of a man passing through the veil.
But even with the death hounds stalking him, the bear had teeth. The King lunged forward, knocking Hauth to the ground. With blunt fingers, he tore at Hauthâs gold tunic, ripping free his Scythe Cardâthrowing it to the floor.
Salt fled Elmâs senses. He dropped the flagon.
Hauth flailed beneath the Kingâs weight, shoving and kicking himâtrying to free himself. Quercus Rowan looked up one last time. His swollen hand fumbled along his own clothes now. He pulled something free from his doublet. Red as the rowan berryâas poisoned wine. The Kingâs Scythe Card.
He thrust it at Elm. âTake it.â His eyes rolled back and he dragged in a final, halting breath, then went still. His gilded crown of twisted rowan branches slipped from his brow.
The King of Blunder was dead.
Everyone moved at once. Screams filled the room, a surge of noise. Free of Hauthâs Scythe, half the courtiers tripped over one another to get out of the great hall while the other half pressed forward for a better look. Destriers lunged from shadow, caught in the tumult as they hurried toward the dais.
Hauth shouted above the bedlam, struggling yet to get out from beneath his fatherâs weight. âArrest Prince Renelmâheâs used his Scythe on usâheâs poisoned the King!â
More screams. Fearful gazes turned on Elm.
Footsteps thundered behind him. Fingers shaking, Elm tapped his fatherâs Scythe three times and shut his eyes. The statuary of ice was waiting in the darkness. He pushed it out on a salt tide, just as he had in the throne room. Ice. Stone. Stillness. Silence. âBe still,â he said, homing in on everyone in the great hallâcastle guards, courtiers, Destriersâeveryone.
When he opened his eyes, the great hall was unmoving. Hundreds of people, frozen in place.
Needle-thin, a pain began in the corner of his mind.
He found Lindenâripped his stolen Scythe from the Destrierâs pocketâand shoved him on the floor. Ione was still at the table, frozen, half out of her chair. Elm rushed to her, pressed his forehead into her shoulder, breathed her. âCome with me.â
The bailey was empty. Even the stable boys, the guards in the tower, were frozen. Elm found his horse. âCan you ride without a saddle?â
Ione nodded. She reached up under his nose. When she pulled her hand back, his blood was on it.
They cantered into the night. And with every clack of hooves upon the road, the Scythe dragged a knife across Elmâs mind. His vision blurred, his hands shaking on his horseâs mane. âWeâre far enough,â Ione said. âLet go of the Scythe, Elm.â
âThe Destriers will catch up. We need to get you farther.â But a high-pitched whining sounded somewhere in his head, pain drilling into him until he couldnât see.
He sucked in a breath, slumped, and fell off the horse.
Gravel flew, flashing past Elmâs face as he lay in the road. His horse whickered, and then Ione was there, kneeling next to him.
Elm reached for her neck, checking she still had her charm. âDonât take the main roads,â he managed. âFind the others. Ravyn. Jespyr. The Shepherd King. If you cannot, keep to the mistâout of sight.â He kept his hand caged around his fatherâs Scythe. But the otherâhis own heâd reclaimed from Lindenâhe held out to her. âIf anyone so much as looks at you wrong, use this.â
Ione didnât move. âYouâre not coming with me?â
With every breath, pain, like glass, cut deeper into Elmâs mind. âHauth needs someone to barter with when Ravyn returns. And I cannot let it be you.â His voice hardened. âIâm not going to run away from him this time.â
He laced his fingers in Ioneâs, pushing his Scythe into her hand. âI wish we could have had those hundred years, Hawthorn. I wish you could have been Queen.â
âI donât care about being Queen.â She pulled him closeâpressed quivering lips to his mouth. âYou are not Hauth, and you are not the boy he tormented. It would be terribly unclever to die, just to prove it. Please, Elm. Come with me.â
Her kiss tasted like tears. Elm was lost to it. He pulled back. âGet on the horse and ride away, Ione.â
When her hazel eyes went blurry under his Scytheâs command, it took all of Elm not to look away. Ione got on his horse, spurred it, her hair catching moonlight, a dreamy yellow ribbon in the wind. She cried out, calling his name, ripping the last whole piece of his rotted-out heart to tatters.
, he commanded.
She fought it. Damn her, she fought to look back. Tears burned Elmâs eyes. âSee you in the woods,â he murmured. âMud on my ankles.â
Blood slid from his nostrils, dripping into his mouth. He sat down on the road and bore the pain like he always had. Twenty minutes later, he finally tapped his fatherâs Scythe.
When the Destriers found him, Elm was looking up at the moon, bright and indifferent, worrying its way across the sky.