Little Fox,
If you were attempting to write a threatening or persuasive letter, your skills need work. I donât have time to tromp through the woods with you, but you can meet me at noon tomorrow in Capricorn Alley.
âJ
Dear Jacks,
I was only trying to be polite. Itâs a shame youâre so used to conniving and deception that you cannot even recognize courtesy. Not all of us rely on manipulation to get what we want.
Sincerely,
Evangeline Fox
Of course Evangeline couldnât send that message, but it had felt good to write it before sneaking out to meet Jacks on the following day.
Sheâd been a little worried as to how sheâd manage it. After the incendiary scandal sheet article about her safety, Apollo had given her a pair of guards to make sure no one hurt her. But he also gave her absolute freedom to do as she wished, and she used that freedom to gain information about Wolf Hallâs secret passages. There was one conveniently located in her room that sheâd used to make her escape.
Evangeline didnât know if anyone would notice she was gone. But she hoped they wouldnât track her down to the narrow strip of fog and dark that was Capricorn Alley.
She huddled deeper into her fur-lined cape and rubbed her hands together, wishing sheâd worn thicker gloves. Away from all the docks and shops, this alley felt like the sort of place a person would only find if they were lost. Snow had fallen across all of Valorfell overnight, but it seemed to have missed this uninviting spot, leaving its grim gray stones untouched. The only door had a ring of skulls emblazed upon it, which made her think the business done here was not the savory sort.
An unmarked black lacquered coach pulled up.
Her heart kicked out several extra beats. She wasnât doing anything illicit or wrong. She was trying to do something right, something noble. But her heart must have felt a threat, for it continued to race as the door swung open and she slipped inside the carriage.
Jacks looked like a debauched stable boy whoâd stolen his masterâs coach. He lounged across one side of the carriage, one scuffed leather boot propped carelessly up on the cushions. A smoke-gray doublet was crumpled on the soft leather seat beside him, leaving him in a linen shirt with rolled-up sleeves and half-done buttons. Evangeline caught a hint of a rough scar on his chest, right as he set his jeweled dagger to a silver apple and began to slice.
âDo you stare at everyone like that, or just me?â Jacks looked up. Vivid blue eyes met hers.
It shouldnât have made her blood rush the way that it did. It wasnât even that much of a gaze, more of an idle glance before he went back to slicing the metallic peel off his apple, filling the air with crisp sweetness.
Evangeline decided to get straight to the point. âI need you to undo whatever youâve done to Prince Apollo.â
âWhatâs the matter?â Slice. âHas he hurt you?â
âNo, I donât think Apollo would harm me. He practically worships meâthatâs the problem. Iâm all he thinks about. He gives me bathtubs of jewels and tells me that Iâm the only thing he needs.â
âI fail to see how thatâs an issue.â Jacksâs sullen mouth settled somewhere between a frown and a laugh. âWhen you first came to my church, youâd lost your love. Now Iâve given you a new one.â
âSo this is your doing?â
Jacksâs eyes met hers, returning to ice. âLeave, Little Fox. Go back to your prince and your happily ever after, and donât ask me that question again.â
In other words: yes.
One by one, the tiny bubbles of hope inside of Evangeline broke. Pop. Pop. Pop.
She had known it was all too much to be true. She sensed that she was living in an illusion and if she looked closely, sheâd see that everything sheâd thought was stardust was really just the burning embers of a wicked spell. Apollo didnât love her; for all she knew, he didnât even like her. Heâd once said she was his dream come true, but she was really his curse.
âIâm not leaving this carriage until you fix Apollo.â
âYou want him to fall out of love with you?â
âApollo doesnât actually love me. What heâs feeling isnât real.â
âIt feels real to him,â Jacks drawled. âHeâs probably happier than heâs ever been in his life.â
âBut life is about more than happiness, Jacks!â She hadnât meant to yell, but the Fate was absolutely maddening. âDonât pretend youâve done nothing wrong.â
âWrong and right are so subjective.â Jacks sighed. âYou say what Iâve done to Apollo is wrong. I say Iâve done him a favor, and Iâm doing one for you as well. I suggest you take itâmarry the prince and let him make you a princess, and then a queen.â
âNo,â Evangeline said. This was not as bad as when Jacks had turned an entire wedding party to stone, but Apolloâs condition wasnât something she could live with. She wanted to be someoneâs love, not their curse. And if Apollo knew what had been done to him, she imagined he wouldnât want to live with it either.
She also didnât believe for a second that this was some sort of favor. Jacks wanted this wedding to happen. She still didnât know why, but heâd gone to a lot of trouble for it.
âFix Apollo, or Iâll call off the wedding.â
Jacks smirked. âYouâre not going to break an engagement with a prince.â
âTry me. You didnât believe Iâd drink from Poisonâs goblet either, but I did it.â
Jacks clenched his jaw.
She smiled, triumphant.
Then the coach started rumbling ahead.
Evangeline clutched the cushions to keep from falling forward into Jacksâs lap. âWaitâwhere are we going?â
âYour next assignment.â Jacksâs gaze landed on her wrist, and the two remaining broken heart scars started to burn. Prick. Prick. It was like hot teeth digging into her skin.
Evangeline gripped the cushions tighter, suddenly feeling queasy. She was still dealing with the consequences of her last kiss. She wasnât ready for another one. And she was engaged, at least for now.
Jacksâs blue eyes twinkled as if he found her worry amusing. âDonât fret, Little Fox. This will be a different sort of kiss. Iâm not about to ask you to do something that could put this wedding in jeopardy.â
âI already told you. Thereâs not going to be a wedding if you donât fix Apollo.â
âIf I fix Apollo, there also wonât be a wedding.â
âThen I guess Iâm canceling my engagement.â
âDo that, and youâll be the one destroying him, not me.â Jacks stabbed his apple with the knife. âIf you donât marry Apollo, heâll be more heartbroken than you can imagine. And it will never heal with time, it will only grow and fester. Unless I will it, Apollo will never get over his unrequited love for you. He will spend the rest of his life consumed by it until it eventually destroys him.â
Jacks finished with a smile that bordered on downright cheerful, as if the idea of leaving someone forever brokenhearted put him in a better mood.
He was terrible. There was no other word to describe himâexcept maybe heartless or depraved or rotten. The way Jacks seemed to enjoy pain was absolutely staggering. The apple in his hand probably possessed more sympathy than he did. This was not the same young man whoâd practically bled heartbreak all over the knave of his church. Something inside of him was broken.
LaLa had said there was a rumor that Jacks had been heartbroken by the empressâs younger sister. Evangeline hadnât believed it initially. Jacks hadnât appeared sad her first night in Valorfell, just crueler and colder. But maybe thatâs what heartbreak did to Fates? Maybe it didnât leave them hurt and lonely and horribly unhappy. Maybe broken hearts just made Fates even more inhuman. Was that what had happened to Jacks?
âAre you feeling sorry for me?â Jacks laughed, harsh and mocking. âDonât, Little Fox. It would be a mistake for you to tell yourself that Iâm not a monster. Iâm a Fate, and you are nothing but a tool to me.â He brought the tip of his dagger to his mouth and toyed with his lips until he drew several drops of blood.
âIf youâre trying to scare meââ
âCareful with your threats.â Jacks shot across the carriage and pressed the bloody tip of the dagger to the center of her mouth.
Evangeline might have gasped if sheâd not feared heâd slip the blade between her lips. His blue eyes were back to bright as he taunted her with the blade, pressing it to her closed mouth until she could taste the disturbing sweetness of his blood.
âThe only reason Iâm entertaining this conversation is because, as youâve realized, I need you to marry Apollo. So, I will give you a wedding gift. I promise to restore the prince and erase all his artificial feelings for you after you marry him.â
The coach rocked to a sudden halt. But Jacks didnât move, and neither did Evangeline. She didnât even look out the window to see where theyâd stopped. She just kept her gaze on him.
Jacks had backed her into a corner. She had to marry Apollo to save him. And if she saved himâif Jacks erased Apolloâs feelings for her after they were marriedâApollo would surely hate her almost as deeply as he thought he loved her right now.
The only person whoâd truly win would be Jacks.
Cautiously, she leaned back until Jacksâs knife was no longer at her lips. But she could still taste the sharp of his blade, the cold of the metal, and the sweet of his blood still staining her lips. She felt as if sheâd taste it forever. âAt least tell me why you want this wedding.â
âJust accept the gift. What I want isnât going to hurt anyone.â
She eyed the jeweled dagger heâd just pressed to her lips. âI donât think you and I have the same definition of hurt.â
âBe thankful for that, Little Fox.â Jacks gave her a smile that was all sharp edges. A drop of blood fell from the corner of his mouth, and something godforsaken washed over his expression. âHurt is what made me.â