Two Twisted Crowns: Part 1 – Chapter 4
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
he Mirror Cardâs chill no longer lingered on Ravynâs skin. He was back at Stone, but he was not warm. The cold of the dungeon clawed its way up dark, icy stairs, seeking purchase in his chest.
He held two skeleton keys in his hand. When he paused at the top of the stairs, peering down, his grip on the keys tightened. He didnât hear his sister approach. But what kind of Destrier would she be, if he had?
âRavyn.â
He turned, hiding his startle behind a scowl. âJes.â
Jespyr leaned against the corridor wall, blended well enough into shadow to almost render a Mirror Card unnecessary. Her gaze lowered to the skeleton keys in Ravynâs clutch. âYouâll need another pair of hands to open that door.â
âI was going to find a guard.â
Something shifted in her brown eyes. âIâm capable enough.â
There was an accusation somewhere in the firm notes of Jespyrâs voice. Ravyn ignored it. âThe King wants to see Elsââ He flinched. âHe wants to know about the Twin Alders Card. In private.â
Jespyr folded her hands in a net. âIs that wise?â
âProbably not.â
The sound of the gong echoed through the castle. Its toll announced early afternoon. Midday, midnightâthe hour meant little to Ravyn. All he knew of time was that he always seemed to be running out of it.
Jespyr dragged her boot over a wrinkle in the corridor rug. âAre you well enough to do this? Youâve hardly spoken about what happened. About Elspeth.â
The muscles along Ravynâs jaw tightened. âIâm fine.â
She shook her head. âI can always tell when youâre lying. Your eyes get this vacant look.â
âMaybe thatâs because they vacant.â
âYouâd like everyone to think that, wouldnât you?â Jespyr approachedâpulled the second key from his grip. âYou can talk to me, you know. Iâm always here, Ravyn.â The corner of Jespyrâs lip quirked. âIâm always right behind you.â
They made it to the bottom of the stairs without slipping on ice. In the antechamber, the dungeon door waited. It was twice as wide as Ravynâs wingspan. Forged of wood from rowan trees and fortified with iron, it took both skeleton keys to unlock.
Facing their respective locks on opposite sides of the door, Ravyn and Jespyr slid their keys into place. Ravyn made sure to turn his back, lest Jespyr see his trembling fingers.
The mechanisms embedded in the stone wall released the latches. Ravyn pressed his fingers in the holds and pushed the door open just wide enough to slip through, the weight of the ancient wood great.
âLeave it open,â he said, taking both keys. âDestriers will be here soon enough to collect Erik Spindle and Tyrn Hawthorn for their inquest.â He stepped through the door.
âDo you want me to come with you?â
âNo. Get a Chalice Card from the armory. Meet me at the Kingâs chamber.â
âAre you sure youâre all right to do this?â Jespyr asked again.
Ravyn had been a liar always out of necessity, never a fondness for the craft. It was one of the many masks he wore. And heâd worn it so long that, even when he should take it off, he didnât always know how.
He stole into darkness. âIâm fine.â
The air grew thinner the farther north he trod. The dungeon walk sloped, falling deeper into the earth. Ravyn wrapped his arms in his cloak and kept his eyes forward, afraid if he looked too closely at the empty cells, the ghosts of all the infected children who had died there might emerge from shadow and claim him.
The walk was littered with blackened torches, this part of the dungeon rarely patrolled. Ravyn continued until he was at the endâthe last cell.
The monster waited.
Flat on the floor, eyes on the ceilingâas if stargazingâwhat had once been Elspeth Spindleâs body lay still. Air plumed out of herânow the Shepherd Kingâsâmouth like dragon smoke. When Ravynâs footsteps stilled at the foot of the cell, the Shepherd King did not turn to look, the sound of his teeth clicking together the only greeting he tendered.
A knot in Ravynâs throat swelled. Before he could stop himself, his eyes traveled the length of Elspethâs body.
What had once been Elspethâs body.
âAre you awake?â
There was no answer.
Ravyn stepped forward, the cellâs iron bars like icicles beneath his hands. âI know you can hear me.â
Laughter echoed in the dark. The figure in the cell sat up slowly and turned. It took all of Ravyn not to wince. Elspethâs black eyes were gone. In their place, catlike irises, vivid and yellow, lit by a man five hundred years dead.
The Shepherd King did not move but for his eyes. âYouâre alone, Captain,â he said. It was still Elspethâs voice. Only now, it sounded slick, oily.
âIs that wise?â
Ravyn stiffened. âWould you hurt me?â
His answer was a twisted, jagged smile. âIâd be a liar if I said I hadnât played with the idea.â
There was no one there to overhear them. Still, Ravyn pulled his Nightmare Card from his pocket and tapped it three times.
Salt burned up his throat into his nose. Closing his eyes, Ravyn let the salt swallow him, then pushed it outward, entering the Shepherd Kingâs mind. He combed through darkness, searching for any hint of Elspeth.
He did not find her.
When he opened his eyes, the Shepherd King was watching him. A voice, masculine, slipperyâpoisonousâspoke into Ravynâs mind.
Ravyn ran the back of his hand over his mouth, hiding his flinch. He was still looking at Elspethâs body. It was skinâlipsâhands. Her tangled hair, long and black, that spilled over her shoulder. Her chest that rose with the swell of her lungs.
But just like her voice, there was something undeniably about Elspethâs body. Her fingers were rigid, curled like talons, and her posture was twistedâher shoulders too high, her back too curved.
âThe King wishes to see you,â Ravyn said. âBut before I bring you to him, I want two things.â
The Shepherd King unfolded himself from the ground and stood in the center of the cell. Thenâtoo fastâhe crept in front of Ravyn. âIâm listening.â
Ravynâs grip on the bars tightened. âI want the truth. No riddles, no games. Are you truly the Shepherd King?â
Yellow eyes roved over his handsâhis broken fingernails, dirt still embedded in the dry cracks of Ravynâs skin. Elspethâs body bent, vulturelike. âThey called me that name, once.â
âWhat did call you?â
For a moment, there was nothing. No movement. Not even air turned to steam from the Shepherd Kingâs nostrils. Then, when he seemed to have frosted over entirely, his pale fingers began to trill, as if plucking the strings of an invisible harp. âShe saw me for what I truly am.â He drew the word out, whispering it into Ravynâs mind.
âAnd you know where the Twin Alders Card is, Nightmare?â
âI do.â
âWill you take me to it?â
His voice was near and far. âI will.â
âHow far is the journey?â
The Nightmare lowered his head and smiled. âNot far. Yet it is farther than youâve ever gone before.â
Ravyn slammed his hand on the bars. âI said no goddamn games.â
âYou asked for the truth. Truth bends, Ravyn Yew. We must all bend along with it. If we do not, wellâ¦â His yellow eyes flared. âThen we will break.â
He spoke with his own voice into Ravynâs mind once more.
, he said, His smile fell away.
âIâm familiar with .â
âGood. For youâre about to step into it.â
Ravyn drew in a breath, the ice in the air nesting in his lungs.
âThe Twin Alders is the only Card of its kind,â the Nightmare continued. âIt gives its user the power to speak to our deity, the Spirit of the Wood. And it is who guards it. She will have a price for the last Card of the Deck. Nothing comes free.â
âIâm prepared to pay whatever price she asks.â Ravyn pressed against the bars, his voice lowering. âAnd when I do pay, Nightmare, the Twin Alders Card will be mine. Not the Kingâs, not yours.
â
Something shifted in those yellow eyes. âWhat is the second thing you wish of me, Ravyn Yew?â the Nightmare murmured.
Even with frost all around them, Ravyn could smell blood on Elspethâs clothes. He took a step back, but it was too late. A light tremor had begun in his left hand. He knotted it into a fist. âWhen I bring you to the Kingâs chamber, you are not to harm him. You are not to do anything that might jeopardize me taking you out of Stone in search of the Twin Alders Card.â
âRowan has agreed to my offer, then? To trade my life for young Emoryâs?â
âNot fully. Which is why you need to be on your best behavior.â
The Nightmare laughed. The sound shifted through the dungeon, as if carried on dark wings. âMy best behavior.â His fingers curled at his side. âBy all means. Take me to your Rowan King.â
Along the dungeon wall were hooks with varying weapons and restraints. Ravyn retrieved a pair of iron cuffs fixed to a chain and opened the cell door. The Nightmare held out his wrists.
Pale, bruised skin peeked out from beneath tattered sleeves.
Ravyn bit down. âPull your sleeves down so the iron doesnât sit directly on your wrists. I donât want to give Elspeth any more bruises.â
âShe canât feel them now.â
Muscles bunching in his jaw, Ravyn took care not to touch the Nightmareâs skin when he locked the cuffs in place. âLetâs go.â
Even with chains, the Nightmareâs movements were eerily quiet. It took all of Ravynâs control not to look over his shoulder. The only reason he was certain the monster was behind him at all was because he could him there, wraithlike, as the two of them crept out of Stoneâs frozen underbelly.
They climbed the stairs. Ravyn shook his hands, the dungeonâs icy numbness shifting into prickles along his fingertips. He was still wielding the Nightmare Cardâhe used it to call for Elm. His cousin did not answer.
But another voice did.
, came a familiar, derisive tone from the depths of his mind.
A low, rumbling laugh.
Ravyn ripped the burgundy Card out of his pocket and tapped it three times, quelling the magic. His pulse roared in his ears. It hadnât been the Nightmareâs voice, but anotherâone that mocked him, uttering his worst fears every time he used the Nightmare Card too long.
His own.
The clicking sound of teeth ricocheted off stone walls. âThere was no need for your Nightmare Card, Ravyn Yew. I am the only one for a hundred cells.â He paused. âUnless you were hoping to hear another voice when you reached into my mind.â
Ravyn stopped in his tracks. âWere you there,â he said, keeping his eyes forward, forcing ice into his thinning voice, âwhen Elspeth and I were alone together?â
âWhatâs the matter, highwayman? All your rosy memories beginning to rot?â
Ravyn turnedâpushed the Nightmare against the wall, his hand closing around the monsterâs pale throat.
But it felt too much like her throat. It her throat.
He ripped his hand back. âEverything was a lie.â He hadnât let himself think it until now. And now that he was thinking itâ
Heâd taken knife wounds that hurt less. âEvery look. Every word. You lived eleven years in Elspethâs mind. Thereâs no knowing where she ended and you began.â
A smile snaked across the Nightmareâs mouth. âNo knowing at all.â
Ravyn was going to be sick.
âIf it is any consolation, her admiration for you was entirely one-sided. I find your stony facade excruciatingly tedious.â
Eyes closed, Ravyn turned away. âAnd yet you were there. When we were together.â
There was a long pause. Then, quieter than before, the Nightmare spoke. âThere is a place in the darkness she and I share. Think of it as a secluded shore along dark waters. A place I forged to hide things Iâd rather forget. I went there from time to time in our eleven years together. To give Elspeth reprieve. And, most recently,â he added, tapping his fingernails on the wall, âto spare myself the particulars of her rather incomprehensible attachment to you.â
Ravyn opened his eyes. âThis place exists in your mind?â
Silence. Then, âFor five hundred years, I fractured in the dark. A man, slowly twisting into something terrible. I saw no sun, no moon. All I could do was remember the terrible things that had happened. So I forged a place to put away the King who once livedâall his painâall his memories. A place of rest.â
Ravyn turned. When his eyes caught the Nightmareâs yellow gaze, he knew. âThatâs where she is. Itâs why I canât hear her with the Nightmare Card. You have Elspeth hidden away.â His throat burned. âAlone, in the dark.â
The Nightmare cocked his head. âI am not a dragon hording gold. The moment Elspeth touched that Nightmare Card and I slipped into her mind, her days were marked.
was her degeneration.â
No. Ravyn wouldnât accept it. âTell me how to reach her.â
âWhy would I when it is such a delight, watching you unravel?â
Ravynâs hand fell to his belt and the ivory hilt upon it. âYou will. When we leave this wretched castle, you will tell me how to reach Elspeth.â
The Nightmareâs smile was a thinly veiled threat. âI know what I know. My secrets are deep. But long have I kept them. And long will they keep.â
King Rowan was not in his chamber.
Ravyn swore under his breath. âWait here,â he told the Nightmare. He left the monster, shackled and bloodstained, standing in the center of the Kingâs pelted rugs, and headed down the royal corridor to Hauthâs room. When he stepped inside, it took all his restraintâand sheer luck for the meagerness of his lunchâthat he didnât vomit for the smell.
The High Princeâs room was overwarm, amplifying the putrid odors of blood and sickly body odor. Filick Willow stood in a line of three other Physicians at Hauthâs bedside. The King was there too, standing next to Jespyr near the hearth. He was drunk. Heâd drunk at Hauthâs bedside for three days now, tapping and untapping his own Nightmare Card, trying to reach his sonâs mind.
But wherever Hauth lingered, if he lingered at all, the King could not reach him. Nor could a Scythe command life into his unseeing green eyes. The skin that peeked out from bandages and blankets was cut and scabbed. And beneath the bandagesâ
Hauth had been destroyed. In a way Ravyn had not seen in twenty-six years of life. Not even wolves tore their meat like that. Animals rarely killed for sport. And thisâwhat had been done to Hauth, ripping and breaking and sloughingâwent beyond sport.
It suddenly felt a terrible idea, bringing the King to face the monster who had broken his son.
Jespyr caught Ravynâs gaze. Her jaw tensed, and she spoke into their uncleâs ear. It took the King a moment to focus. When his eyes finally honed in on Ravyn, they were dark under a furrowed brow.
âWell?â he barked when they were in the corridor. âIs she here?â
Ravyn drew in a breath of fresh air. âIn your chamber, sire.â
The Kingâs crude fist curled around the glass neck of a decanter. âA Chalice?â
âI have one here,â Jespyr said, a sea-green Providence Card in her hand.
âLetâs see the bitch try to lie about the Twin Alders now.â
When the King wrenched his chamber door open, the Nightmare was perched like a gargoyle in an ornate high-back chair. They stared at one another, two Kings with murder behind their eyes. Rowan green, Nightmare yellowâand five hundred years of imbalance between them.
The Nightmare opened his clawlike hand in greeting. In the other, he held a silver goblet already filled with wine. âWell, then,â he said. âLet the inquest begin.â
Jespyr eyed the shackles around his wrist skeptically. She exhaled, then tapped the Chalice Card three times.
King Rowan kept the distance between him and the Nightmareâs chair wide enough a carriage could drive through. He might have been drunk, but he wasnât stupid. Heâd seen in horrid detail exactly what this monster was capable of doing when provoked. âTell me, Elspeth Spindle, how is it you know where the Twin Alders Card is hidden?â
The Nightmare twisted a finger in the ends of Elspethâs black hair. Ravyn watched, scorched by memory. Heâd had his own hands in that hair. Run his fingers through itâsighed into it.
He jerked his eyes to the wall.
âSimple,â the Nightmare murmured. âI was there when the Card disappeared.â
The Kingâs gaze ripped to the Chalice in Jespyrâs hands, then back to the Nightmare, as if he could not decide whichâhis eyes or his earsâto distrust more. âThatâs impossible.â
The Nightmare merely grinned. âIs it? Magic is a strange, fickle thing.â
âSo it is magic that gives you thisâthisââ The Kingâs tongue tripped over his words. âOld knowledge of the Twin Alders?â
The corners of the Nightmareâs mouth tipped. âYou could say that.â
âWhere exactly is the Card hidden?â Jespyr cut in, shoulders bunching with tension.
The Nightmare gave her an indifferent glance. âDeep within a wood. A wood with no road. But to those who smell the saltââ A flash of teeth. âIt beckons.â
The King regained himself with a deep, unsteady breath. His gaze flickered to Ravyn. âWas my nephew aware of your infection?â
Ravyn went cold, a thousand alarm bells ringing in his ears.
The Nightmareâs oily timbre cut through them. âYour Captain is not the all-seeing bird you imagine him to be. He knew nothing of my magic until it was too late.â
It was the truthâonly slightly twisted.
A furrow broke the stone mask of Ravynâs expression. The Nightmare noticed it and smiled, as if he knew what Ravyn had only just realized.
Providence Cards did not affect the Shepherd King. It was written in .
But they did affect Elspeth. Hauth had used a Chalice against her. Ravyn had spoken into her mind with the Nightmare Card.
And the monster in front of him was both Elspeth the Shepherd King. The Nightmare could succumb to the Cardsâand also void their magic.
It was not so different from Ravynâs own magic. He, who could use only the Mirror, the Nightmare, and presumably the Twin Alders Providence Cards. The other nine Cards, he could not useâbut neither could they be used against him. He could deny the Scytheâs compulsion, lie against Chalice.
Just as the Nightmare was doing now.
âWho knew of your infection?â the King snapped when the silence drew out too long.
âMy magic was always a secret.â
âEven from your father?â
The Nightmare rolled his jaw. âThat is a question for him. I do not own anything that Erik Spindle, with his callous indifference, has ever done.â
âCan you truly see Providence Cards with your magic?â
âI can.â
âAnd you will use it to find the final Card for me?â
The Nightmareâs expression remained unreadable. âI will. So long as you honor your side of our bargain, Rowan. Have you released Emory Yew to his parents?â
The Kingâs hands knotted at his sides. âTell me where the Twin Alders is, and I will release him tonight.â
The Nightmare perked a brow. âVery well.â He drew air into his nose. âListen closely. The journey to the twelfth Card will three barters take. The first comes at waterâa dark, mirrored lake. The second begins at the neck of a wood, where you cannot turn back, though truly, you should.â
The Nightmareâs gaze shifted to Ravyn. His words came out sharp, as if to draw blood. âThe last barter waits in a place with no time. A place of great sorrow and bloodshed and crime. No sword there can save you, no mask hide your face. Youâll return with the Twin Aldersâ¦
âBut youâll never leave that place.â