The Prince of Hearts took a final bite of his apple before it dropped to the floor and spattered everything with red. âPeople who donât like me call me Jacks.â
Evangeline wanted to say that she didnât dislike him, that heâd always been her favorite Fate. But this was not the lovesick Prince of Hearts sheâd imagined. Jacks didnât look like heartbreak come to life.
Was this all a nasty joke? The Fates had supposedly disappeared from the world centuries ago. Yet everything Jacks woreâfrom his untied cravat to his tall leather bootsâwere of the latest fashion.
Her eyes darted around the white church as if Lucâs friends might jump out at any moment to have a laugh. Luc was the only son of a gentleman, and though he never acted as if that mattered with Evangeline, the young men he kept company with considered her beneath them. Evangelineâs father had owned several shops across Valenda, so sheâd never been poor. But she wasnât from the upper tier of society like Luc.
âIf youâre searching for the way out because youâve come to your senses, I wonât stop you.â Jacks folded his hands behind his golden head, leaned back against the statue of himself, and grinned.
Her stomach dipped in warning, telling her not to be deceived by his dimpled smile or the torn clothes. This was the most dangerous being sheâd ever met.
Evangeline didnât imagine he would kill herâshe would never be foolish enough to let the Prince of Hearts kiss her. But she knew that if she stayed and made a deal with Jacks, he would forever destroy some other part of her. And yet, if she left, there would be no saving Luc.
âWhat will your help cost me?â
âDid I say I would help you?â His eyes went to the cream ribbons trailing up from her shoes to wrap around her ankles until they disappeared under the hem of her eyelet dress. It was one of her motherâs old gowns, covered in a stitched pattern of pale purple thistles, tiny yellow flowers, and little foxes.
The corner of Jacksâs mouth twisted distastefully and stayed that way as his gaze continued up to the ringlets of hair sheâd carefully curled with hot tongs that morning.
Evangeline tried not to feel insulted. From the brief experience she had with this Fate, she didnât imagine most things found his approval.
âWhat color is that?â He waved vaguely toward her curls.
âItâs rose gold,â she answered brightly. Evangeline never let anyone make her feel bad about her unusual hair. Her stepmother was always trying to get her to color it brown. But Evangelineâs hair, with its waves of soft pink streaked through with pale gold, was the thing she liked best about her appearance.
Jacks cocked his head to the side, still observing her with a scowl. âWere you born in the Meridian Empire or in the North?â
âWhy does that matter?â
âCall it curiosity.â
Evangeline resisted the urge to return his scowl. Normally, she loved answering this question. Her father, whoâd liked to make Evangeline feel as if her whole life were a fairytale, had always teased that heâd found her packed up in a crate along with other oddities that had been delivered to his shopâthatâs why her hair was pixie pink, heâd always said. And her mother had always nodded with a wink.
She missed the way her mother winked and her father teased. She missed everything about them, but she didnât want to share any of their pieces with Jacks.
She managed a shrug instead of a verbal reply.
Jacksâs brows slashed down. âYou donât know where you were born?â
âIs it a requirement to get your help?â
He looked her over again, eyes lingering on her lips this time. Yet he didnât regard her as if he wanted to kiss her. His appraisal was too clinical. He looked at her mouth the way someone might study wares in one of her fatherâs shops, as if her lips were a thing that could be purchasedâa thing that could belong to him.
âHow many people have you kissed?â he asked.
A tiny bolt of heat struck Evangelineâs neck. Sheâd worked in her fatherâs curiosity shop since she was twelve. She hadnât exactly been raised like a proper young lady; she wasnât like her stepsister, who was taught to always keep three feet away from a gentleman and to never talk about anything more controversial than the weather. Her parents had encouraged Evangeline to be curious and adventurous and friendly, but she wasnât bold in every way. Certain things made her nervous, and the way the Prince of Hearts kept staring at her mouth was one of those things. âIâve only kissed Luc.â
âThat is pathetic.â
âLuc is the only person I want to kiss.â
Jacks scratched his sharp jaw, looking doubtful. âIâm almost tempted to believe you.â
âWhy would I lie?â
âEveryone liesâpeople think Iâm more likely to help if theyâre after something noble like true love.â A hint of derision crept into his voice, chipping away a little more at the Prince of Hearts sheâd imagined. âBut even if you do really love this boy, youâre better off without him. If he loved you back, he wouldnât be marrying someone else. End of story.â
âYouâre wrong.â Her voice held the same conviction as her heart. Evangeline had questioned her relationship with Luc after his abrupt engagement to Marisol, but the question was always answered with months of meaningful memories. The night Evangelineâs father had diedâthe night her heart wouldnât stop pounding or hurtingâLuc had found her wandering the aisles of the curiosity shop, looking for a cure for broken hearts. Her cheeks had been tear-stained, and her eyes were red. She feared her crying would scare him away, but instead heâd pulled her into his arms and said, âI donât know if I can fix your broken heart, but you can take mine because itâs already yours.â
Sheâd known she loved him for a while, but that was when she knew Luc loved her. His words might have been borrowed from a popular story, but he backed them up with heartfelt actions. Heâd helped her hold her heart together that night, and so many of the nights that followed. And now she was determined to help him. Proposals and engagements didnât always mean love, but she knew that moments like the ones sheâd shared with Luc did.
He had to be cursed. As extreme or as silly as it might have made her sound to others, this was the only explanation she could believe. It didnât make sense that he wouldnât at least speak to her, or that every time Evangeline tried telling Marisol the truth, she would open her mouth and the words wouldnât come out.
âPlease.â Begging wasnât beneath her. âHelp me.â
âI donât think what you want will help you. But I do appreciate a good lost cause. Iâll stop the wedding in exchange for three kisses.â Jacksâs eyes took on an entertained gleam as they returned to her mouth.
A fresh surge of heat rose to Evangelineâs cheeks. Sheâd been wrong about him not wanting to kiss her. But if the stories were true, one kiss from him and sheâd be dead.
Jacks laughed, harsh and short. âRelax, pet, I donât wish to kiss you. It would kill you, and then youâd be no use to me. I want you to kiss three others. Who I choose. When I choose.â
âWhat sort of kisses? Little pecks ⦠or more?â
âIf you think that counts, maybe you havenât been kissed.â Jacks shoved off the statue and stalked closer, towering over her once again. âItâs not a real kiss if there isnât any tongue.â
The blush sheâd been fighting burned hotter until her neck and her cheeks and her lips all caught fire.
âWhy the hesitation, pet? Theyâre only kisses.â Jacks sounded as if he were holding back another laugh. âEither this Luc is horrible at using his mouth, or youâre afraid to say yes too quickly because you secretly like the idea.â
âI do not like the ideaââ
âSo, your Luc is a hideous kisser?â
âLuc is an excellent kisser!â
âHow do you know if you have nothing to compare it with? If you end up with Luc, you might even wish that Iâd asked you to kiss more than three people.â
âI donât want to kiss any strangersâthe only person I want is Luc.â
âThen this should be a small price to pay,â Jacks said flatly.
He was right, but Evangeline couldnât simply agree. Her father had taught her that Fates didnât determine oneâs future as their name suggested. Instead they opened doors into new futures. But doors opened by Fates didnât always lead where people expected; instead they often led people to new desperate deals to fix their first bad bargains. It happened in countless stories, and Evangeline didnât want it to happen in hers.
âI donât want anyone to die,â she said. âYou canât stop the wedding by kissing anyone there.â
Jacks looked disappointed. âNot even your stepsister?â
âNo!â
He brought his fingers to his mouth and toyed with his lower lip, covering half of an expression that could have either been irritation or amusement. âYouâre not really in a position to bargain.â
âI thought Fates liked bargains,â she challenged.
âOnly when we make the rules. Still, Iâm in a good mood, so Iâll grant you this request. I just want to know one more thing. How did you get the door to let you in?â
âI asked it politely.â
Jacks rubbed the corner of his jaw. âThatâs all? You didnât find a key?â
âI didnât even see a keyhole,â she answered honestly.
Something like victory glimmered in Jacksâs eyes, then he captured her wrist and brought it up to his cold mouth.
âWhat are you doing?â she gasped.
âDonât worry, Iâm still not going to kiss you.â His lips brushed over the delicate underside of her wrist. Once. Twice. Three times. It was barely a touch, and yet there was something incredibly intimate about it. It made her think of the other stories that said his kisses might have been fatal, but they were worth dying for. Jacksâs cool mouth dragged intentionally back and forth over her racing pulse, velvety and gentle andâhis sharp teeth dug into her skin.
She cried out, âYou bit me!â
âRelax, pet, I didnât draw any blood.â His eyes shone brighter as he dropped her arm.
She ran a finger over the tender skin heâd just sunk his teeth into. Three thin white scars, shaped like tiny broken hearts, lined the underside of her wrist. One for each kiss.
âWhen doââ Evangeline looked up.
But the Prince of Hearts was already gone. She didnât even see him leave; she just heard the door to the church slam shut.
Sheâd gotten what she wanted.
So then why didnât she feel better?
Sheâd done the right thing. Luc loved her. She couldnât believe he was marrying Marisol of his own free will. It wasnât that Evangeline disliked Marisol. Truthfully, she barely knew her stepsister. About a year after her mother had died, Evangelineâs father had gotten it into his head that he must marry again, that he needed a wife to look after Evangeline in case anything ever happened to him. She could still remember the worry that had replaced the light in his eyes, as if he had known he didnât have much time left.
Her father had only been married to Agnes six months before he died. During that time, Marisol never stepped inside the curiosity shop where Evangeline spent most of her time. Marisol said she was allergic to the dust, but she was so skittish around anything slightly strange, Evangeline always suspected her stepsister was really afraid of curses and the uncanny. Whereas Evangeline and Luc used to joke that if they were ever cursed, it would just prove that magic existed.
It was laughably sad that Evangeline now had that proof, but she didnât have him.
Even if Jacks returned and allowed Evangeline to change her mind, she wouldnât have. Jacks had said heâd stop the wedding, and heâd promised not to kill anyone.
Yet ⦠Evangeline couldnât shake the sense sheâd made a mistake. She didnât think sheâd agreed too quickly, but all she could see was the gleam dancing in Jacksâs eyes as heâd taken her wrist.
Evangeline started running.
She didnât know what she was going to do or why she felt suddenly sick inside. She just knew she needed to talk to Jacks again before he stopped the wedding.
If sheâd been in an ordinary church, she might have caught up with him quickly. But this was a Fated church, protected by a magicked door that seemed to possess a mind of its own. When she opened it, the door did not return her to the Temple District. It spat her out in a musty old apothecary full of floating dust, empty bottles, and ticking clocks.
Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock.
Seconds had never passed so fast. Between one tick and one tock, the magicked door sheâd just stepped through disappeared and was replaced by a barred window that looked down on a row of streets as crooked as teeth. She was in the Spice Quarterâacross the city from where Luc and Marisol were supposed to be wed.
Evangeline cursed as she fled.
By the time she crossed the city and reached her house, she feared that she was already too late.
Marisol and Luc were going to say their vows in her motherâs garden, inside the gazebo that her father had built. Crickets filled it with music at night, and birds chirped during the day. Evangeline could hear all their little songs as she entered the garden now, but there werenât any voices. There were just the delicate birds, flapping merrily through the gazebo before landing on a group of granite statues.
Evangelineâs knees went weak.
There had never been statues in this garden before. But there were nine of them now, all holding goblets as if theyâd just finished a toast. Each face was disturbingly lifelike and terrifyingly familiar.
Evangeline watched in revulsion as a buzzing fly landed on the face of a statue that looked just like Agnes before flitting off and alighting on one of Marisolâs granite eyes.
Jacks had stopped the wedding by turning everyone to stone.