Two Twisted Crowns: Part 3 – Chapter 48
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
one had told him, the two of them sprinting to the stone chamber, what must come next. Elm stood opposite Hauth, the two of them leveled. One the hunter, and the other the fox who had grown so tired of being hunted, heâd forged his own snare.
The Shepherd Kingâs blade fit perfectly in Elmâs hand, the engraved hilt stamping itself into the grooves of his palm. It was forged for a tall man, its reach longer than Elmâs Destrier blade. He held it outâthe tip hovering over the stone that stood between him and his brother. âHeâs a clever man, the Shepherd King,â he murmured. âStrange, but clever. Far more than I.â His gaze narrowed over Hauth. âAnd certainly more than you.â
Hauth said nothing, unreadable, untouchable.
Elm took a step forward. Rolled his shoulders. âI wasnât ready before,â he said. âIâm ready now.â
âFor what?â
âTo be King of Blunder.â
âTo change things,â Ione said at his side.
Eyes the color of emeralds measured Elm and Ione. Hauth glanced at the Providence Cards in Ioneâs hand, then the rest, spread upon the chamber floor. A low, unfeeling laugh bubbled from his throat. âYou think you can unite the Deck? Itâll be midnight in momentsâif it hasnât already passed. For someone so clever, the Shepherd King missed one rather important detail. No one in this room is .â
Ione bent, picking up the fallen Providence Cards. Elm stood over her, keeping his sword pointed at his brotherâs throat. One by one, Ione placed the Cards on the stone in the heart of the chamber near the gold crown that rested there. âYet.â
When she placed the Scythe upon the Deck, the muscles in her jaw tightened. âYou used this Card for many terrible things, Hauth. And not just for me or Elm.â She lay a finger over it. âThe first time I truly understood who you were was when you used your Scythe to send people into the mist without their charms.â
Hauth sneered. âWhatever plot that monster has fed youâhe was wrong.â He touched the crown atop his head. âI will die before I give this up. And I will not, brother, for I have the Maiden.
â
He lunged toward Elm. Caught the Shepherd Kingâs sword by its blade. Blood seeped through Hauthâs fingers as he held the sword still. With his other hand, he reachedâreachedâuntil his fingers wrapped around Elmâs throat.
Elm felt the familiar strength of his brotherâs brutish hand. It was the first time in his life he did not tense against it. He held the sword still with one hand and caught Hauthâs wrist with the other, feeling for the horsehair bracelet he knew was there. Elm looked into his brotherâs green eyes. Smiled.
And ripped his charm loose.
Hauthâs gaze went wide. He opened his mouth to swearâto screamâ
Mist rushed into him.
So strong it burned, the salt in the chamber quickened, cloistering around Hauth. He shook himself, running his hands over his faceâhis nose and mouthâas if he could drag the mist out of him. He was still beautifulâthe mist had done nothing to erase the Maidenâs hold over his bodyâ
But his mind, the Spirit laid claim to. Sunk her teeth into. Hauthâs eyes went glassy, then bloodshot. He fell over himself, hunching upon the stone in the heart of the chamber, twisting and wailing and pinning his ears with his hands, as if he didnât wish to listen to something wretched only he could hear.
When he reached for his armsâtore at his sleevesâhis veins were the color of ink. The infection crept into him on a salt tide, unbidden. Dark, magical, and final.
Elm backed away. When his spine hit Ioneâs chest, she wrapped her arms around his middle. Elm watched his brother writhe in the mist. His stylus would never forge this image. But he wanted to watch. Needed to remember.
âHelp me,â he whispered to Ione.
She put her hand over his, the two of them bearing the weight of the Shepherd Kingâs sword. They pulled in a breath at the same time. Then, over the Deck of Cards, they held the tip of the sword against Hauthâs chestâthe same place heâd stabbed Ione.
And pressed.
He hardly seemed to notice when the blade pierced his heart. The mist, the Maidenâand an education in painâhad stolen something vital from Hauth Rowan. When his blood spilled, first slow, then in earnest upon the Deck of Providence Cards, saturating the ancient velvet trims, Elm clamped his teeth. Held his breath.
For a terrible moment, nothing happened. Then, one by one, the Providence Cards disappeared.
Hauth kept on thrashing. The Maiden was beginning to heal him, his flesh closing around the blade in his chest. But he was still lost. âNo!â he shouted. âNo, I will not go!â
Ione began to shake. But her grip on the swordâon Elmâheld firm.
On a wretched gasp, Hauth went eerily still, his eyes rolling until they were not green any longer but white, parceled by angry red veins.
When the mist began to pull out of the chamber, it dragged Hauth with it. He ripped his body off the sword and stumbled past Elm and Ioneâflung himself out the chamber window. Without a sound, without a final word, the King of Blunder was gone, disappearedâthe last casualty to the mist and the Spirit of the Woodâs ravenous snare.
All that was left of him was the crown heâd dropped, a gilded ring of twisted rowan branches, fallen upon the Shepherd Kingâs grave.
When Elm and Ione looked back at the blood-soaked stone in the heart of the chamber, the Deck of Cards was gone. A chasm had opened in their place. In it, a single, unfamiliar Providence Card, remained.
Ioneâs voice broke, tears falling down her face. âWe did it.â
Moonlight filled the chamber through the rotted-out ceiling. Elm looked up. Felt his heart expand. The night winter sky, bereft of mist, was a color he didnât know the name of. Moon, starsâall of them so bright it stole the breath from him, the world around them without tarnish.
Ione wrapped her arms around his middleâtilted her head skyward. âItâs beautiful.â
Elm pulled her hand to his mouth. He was sure the Spirit of the Wood didnât attend to the meager lives of men. But in that moment, when, after five hundred years, the mist did finally lift and he became King of Blunder, Elm looked up into the night sky. Held Ione Hawthorn close. He knew, in all the rotten, broken pieces of himself, that everything in his life had led to that moment, as if written in the lines of the trees. A crooked, wonderful circle, with his name in the heart of it.
He picked up the Card in the center of the stone. Placed it in his pocketâclimbed with Ione out of the chamber. When they stepped into the meadow, the pyres had all burned out. Everything was quiet, the world around them gentle and unmarred.
All but for a trail of crimson blood, leading back toward the castle.