Two Twisted Crowns: Part 3 – Chapter 44
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
he knobs of Ravynâs spine collided with tree roots. He wheezed and spat out a curse, his vision blurring. When it focused, the twin alders loomed above him. He turned on bruised ribs, scanning the hilltop for Jespyr.
She lay several feet away, caged in the Nightmareâs arms.
âAre you all right?â
The Nightmare didnât reply. He was dragging the tip of his boot over the groundâover a fresh layer of white, powdery snow. Only then did Ravyn note how cold it was. Far colder than it had been when theyâd entered the alderwood.
The Nightmare set Jespyr on the groundâdrew his sword. He slid his palm over the edge of the blade. When the cut bled, he swiped it over both alder trees. âWhat day is it?â
, came their horrid, dissonant reply.
The Nightmareâs yellow gaze crashed into Ravyn. âHow long were you using the Twin Alders Card?â
âI donât know.â Ravyn looked up at the sky, snowflakes brushing his face. It was night. But the hour, he could not tell. He rose to his feet, panic thinning his voice. âItâs notâit be Solstice.â
, said the pale alder.
, said the other.
Ravyn felt sick. âHow long were we on that shore?â
, said the dark alder.
The Nightmare gnashed his teeth. On a crashing rumble, he reached for Jespyrâflung her over his shoulderâand fled the hill.
Ravyn tore after them.
His descent was reckless. Twice he tripped on the rocky hillside and caught himself with bruising effort. When he got to the bottom and the valley that waited, the mist bloomed with bones and corpses.
Forward, always forward.
Out of the rotting valley, into the ravenous wood. Trees swung at them and thorns hungered for a bite, the song of the wood a discordant call of wind, screeching through branches. Animals stalked and lunged. They clambered over rootsâswung their swords at beasts of prey. The Nightmare kept Jespyr in his arms and Ravyn shielded them, taking the brunt of the branches that managed to land their blows.
Ravyn had not eaten for what felt like an age, but he was not hungry. Heâd been afforded centuriesâwalked with the Spirit of the Wood through time. And now that he was back, he knew only one urge.
To outrun the clock.
The wood hunted them through the night. Then, like a candle in the darkest room, a pale light shone ahead. The Nightmare saw it, too, and his pace quickened. The light came from a small gap in the trees. It beckoned Ravyn just as strongly as the mist had beckoned Jespyr into the alderwood.
Dawn.
, the trees called after them.
âFor mercyâs sake.â The Nightmare spat phlegm onto roots. âShut the fuck up.â
They shot out of the alderwood into pale gray light. When Ravyn looked back, the gap in the trees had closed. He took in a full breath, the air bereft of rot. It washed down his lungs, so pure it made him cough. They stood in the aspen grove theyâd slept in last night. Only, it hadnât been last night. It had been nearly a ago.
Then Ravyn remembered Petyr.
His gaze darted left, then right. He called his friendâs name. âPetyr. Petyr!â
âHe wouldnât have waited this long.â The Nightmare panted, his arms still wrapped firmly around Jespyr. âA clever manâwhich is giving him a deal too much creditâwould have returned to Castle Yew.â He hurried west. âAs must we. And fast.â
Ravynâs stomach plummeted into his boots. âThe Cards,â he gasped. âEven if we get to Castle Yew before midnight, we canât unite the Deck. IâI donât have all the Cards.â
The Nightmare stopped so abruptly Jespyr fell from his shoulder. He caught her before her head could hit soil. She groaned, eyelids flickering.
Ravyn staggered forward, put his hand on his sisterâs overwarm forehead. âJes?â
Bleary brown eyes opened. Jespyr reached for Ravyn, her fingers grazing over his face, his swollen nose. âWhat happened?â
It hurt, the place her fingers trailed. A sharp, consuming pain touched Ravynâs face. He drew back. âIâll explain everything soon. But weâve got to get home.â
âHome,â Jespyr said, eyelids dropping once more. She rested her head against the Nightmareâs chest. âTell the Shepherd Kingâ¦he needs a bath.â
She slipped unconscious, and the Nightmare pressed her over his shoulder once more. When he glanced back at Ravynâs face, his yellow eyes widened.
By instinct, Ravyn touched where the Nightmare was looking. His nose.
âWhat do you mean you donât have all the Cards?â the Nightmare demanded.
Ravyn kept running his hand over his face, looking for injury. He felt nothingâno swelling, no pain, just a lingering tingle where Jespyrâs fingers had grazed his skin. âThe Deck is divided between the Cards hidden in the stone in your chamber and those I have in my pocket. We have all but the Scythe, which is withââ
âThe Princeling.â Sounding of a serpentâs hiss, the Nightmareâs breath came fast. âThen we must find him. This is the only chance we have. Emory will not live to see another Solstice.â
âI know that well enough.â Ravyn reached for Jespyr. âHere, let meââ
â
,â he snarled. âI will carry her.â
Crows cawed overhead. Ravyn and the Nightmare continued west. They found a small stream and drank deeply, only for Ravyn to spit most of the water back up on a sprint through a glen.
The Nightmare never let go of Jespyr. Even when he spoke to the trees, asking for the way, he never set her down. Never let her go.
Dawn slipped into day, then dusk. The path wasnât easy. At times, there was no path at all, just rocks and thorns and dense underbrush.
Ravyn tripped, panting. âNeedâto stop.â
The Nightmare kept going, pulling in rasping breaths. âElspeth says if you do not get up, sheâll never kiss you again.â
âThatâsânotâwhat sheâsaid.â
âGet up, Ravyn.â The Nightmareâs oily voice echoed through the wood. â
â
Ravyn dragged himself off his knees and followed. Heâd never pushed this hard, not in a decade of training. Not even when his opponents were fitted with Black Horses and he had only his strength to rely upon. Heâd never needed so badly to keepâgoingâforward.
The underbrush was gone, and suddenly his boots were clogging with mud. Ravyn looked up.
The lake.
Night had fallen, darkness pressing down onto the waterâs eerily still surface. The last time theyâd crossed, the lake had been a pale silver. Now, it bore the color of the blackest of inks.
Ravyn stood next to the Nightmare on the shoreâs muddy lip and put a hand into his pocket. His fingers brushed the velvet of five Providence CardsâBlack Horse, Maiden, Mirror, Nightmare, Twin Alders. If he drowned, the Cards would be lost at the bottom of the lake.
âWill there be more monsters in the water?â
âNo. That barter was already paid.â The Nightmare tightened his grip on Jespyr. He waded up to his knees into the lake. âHurry.â
Water filled Ravynâs boots. But before either of them could diveâ
Salt filled his nose, only to retreat a moment later. Ravyn knew that feeling. Someone had tried to use a Providence Card he was immune to against him.
His hand fell to his dagger. A moment later he heard it: the thunderous sound of a cantering horse.
It came from the path behind them, bearing two riders. The horse, white with gray speckles, Ravyn recognized at once. It was Elmâs horse.
The first rider dismounted with a booming curse before the animal could reach a full stop. âWhere the have you lot been?â
Petyr ran full speed at Ravyn. âIâve never been so happy to see your ugly face.â
Wind soared from his lungs, his friendâs arms a vise around his chest. âLikewise,â Ravyn managed. He looked over Petyrâs shoulder, eyes widening.
Ione Hawthorn wore a tattered gray dress and stood next to Elmâs horse. Her chest heaved, eyes darting between Ravyn to Jespyr to the Nightmareâlingering upon the latter. âElspeth?â
âSheâs with me.â The Nightmare rolled his eyes. âAnd she is very loud in her enthusiasm to see you, yellow girl.â
Petyr pulled back. âWhat the hell happenedâis Jes all right?â He tripped over himself, getting to the Nightmare. He reached for Jespyr.
â
carrying herââ
âShove off, you ancient windbag.â In one impressive maneuver, Jespyr was in Petyrâs arms. âYou still with us, princess? Want to hold my lucky coin?â
She stirred in his arms. Grimaced. Her brown eyes opened a sliver. âYou smell worse than he did.â
Petyr barked a laugh. âI havenât wanted to go near strange bodies of water for some reason.â He glanced up at Ravyn. âYouâve been gone an age.â His nodded at Ione, lines drawing across his weathered face. âMuch has happened.â
Ravynâs eyes were still on the horse. For every breath he took, dread twisted his stomach. âWhereâs Elm?â
Ioneâs face crumpled. Ravyn forgot his exhaustion. â
â
Ione opened her hand. Nestled in the folds of her palm was a Scythe Card. âHeâs at Stone.â Her hazel eyes rose to Ravynâs face, laden with fury. âWith Hauth.â
It had happened weeks ago.
Hauth, healed by the Maiden Card.
The King, murdered.
Elm, framed and presumably kept alive so Hauth might trade him for the Twin Alders. But as to the condition he was kept inâ
Ravyn could only guess.
Fingers wrapped into fists, his mind went somewhere so dark and terrible he had to look away as Ione explained to them what had happened. All he really heard was .
Ioneâs skin was red all over, tears and rage marking her face. She told them how Elm had compelled her to flee and remained behind to confront his brother. Sheâd ridden to Castle Yew, pounded upon on the door at midnightâbegged to know where Ravyn and Jespyr and the Shepherd King had gone.
Fenir had readied himself to go with her into the wood, but Ione hadnât waited for him. âI shot into the wood behind Castle Yew like an arrowâand was immediately lost,â she said, looking out over the lake. âAll night and into the morning I rode, calling out. No one was there. But then, I found a path. It was as if the treesââ Her brow knit. âAs if the trees had moved. I know that sounds strange.â
âIt doesnât,â Ravyn said, urging her on.
âI rode to the lake, then crossed. The horse was frightened and hurried through the water, like he was afraid of it. We reached the other side, but I had no idea where to go. I got lost again. Only this time, it cost me days.â A faint smile touched her mouth. âWhen the crows found me, I thought they were going to eat me. Or that I might try to eat them, I was so hungry. But not an hour later women wearing masks of bone came out of the trees.â Her eyes went glassy. âMy mother and brothers were with them.â
âShe found me two days later,â Petyr finished. âIâd gone back toââ His voice clogged. âTo bury Wik. I was wandering, waiting for you all to come out of that wood. And now that you haveââ He swallowed. âDo you know what day it is?â
âSolstice.â The Nightmare cocked his head to the side, his eyes dropping to the Scythe in Ioneâs hand. âI am very pleased youâre here, yellow girl. For now we have all twelve Cards.â
âNot yet,â Ravyn reminded him. âSix await in the chamber. We need to get back before midnightâthen we can unite the Deck.â He set his jaw, and did not say the words haunting his tongue.
The Nightmareâs knowing gaze swept over his face. They looked at each other, two liars struggling with the truth. âRegarding that, and the PrincelingâI have a plan. But timeââ
âIs short.â Ravyn looked out over the lake. âWeâll speak on your plan. But first, we swim.â
They put Jespyr on Elmâs horse and waded into the water. It was so much colder than when they swam last. The Nightmare pushed ahead, and Ione held the horseâs faceâspoke into its earâand led it through the water, breath pluming out of her mouth. Petyr was pale as death, muttering to himself about never leaving home again.
Ravyn swam last. Not even his burning fury for what had happened to Elm could keep him warm against the waterâs bite.
No lake monster came to claim him. The only things that fought Ravyn now were his own straining muscles. Somewhere near the middle of the lake, his left leg cramped. He compensated with his right and kept going. But just as he neared the shore, his right leg seized as well. Ravyn dipped into darkness, a path of bubbles fleeing his mouth.
No. Heâd gone to hell and back. Found a Providence Card five hundred years lost. Destroyed parts of himself to get it. He wasnât going to drown on Solstice, mere miles from home.
Heâd pretended so long to be strongâbut he wasnât pretending now. On powerful arms, Ravyn breached the waterâs surface and sucked in a breath. His legs met slippery mud and he hauled himself onto the shore, heaving heavy breaths until the war drum in his chest quieted to a rhythmic march.
It was night. There was no light to see their way home. But Ravyn had entered the wood a Destrier, a highwayman. He was used to traveling in the dark. On trembling foot, he stepped with the others into the forest.
The wood was just as the Nightmare had left itâcleaved. The path was open to them, swaddled by mist.
When moonlight cut through the edge of the wood, Ravyn let out a shaky breath. It wasnât trees on the horizon, but Castle Yewâs towers.
Home.
He pushed ahead of the others, stepped out from the wood into the meadowâ
And smelled smoke.
The Nightmare wrenched him back, clasping a hand over Ravynâs mouth. He put a finger in the air, gesturing for the others to halt.
Ahead, just on the other side of the trees, voices sounded in the meadow. One was louder than the others, echoing with harsh clarity, both brutish and cold. Ravynâs skin went clammy, then fiery hot. He knew that voice.
It belonged to his cousin Hauth.
A smile haunted the Nightmareâs silken timbre. âHow poetic. I couldnât have asked for a better Solstice.â He put his mouth to Ravynâs ear. âNow, stupid bird, will you listen to my plan?â