Two Twisted Crowns: Part 1 – Chapter 14
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
he guards that kept watch over Emoryâs door stepped into shadow. Ravyn unlocked his brotherâs chamber and lingered at the threshold. He slipped a hand into his pocket. Before he was aware of his own fingers, heâd tapped his Nightmare Card three times.
Salt pounded his senses. He pushed and pushed, looking for the familiar, comforting presence. Like leather and fire and the pages of a well-read book.
Her voice was sharp with startle.
There was a pause. Then, Ravynâs hand trembled on the latch to his brotherâs door.
, he whispered.
Salt fled his senses, Jespyr disappearing from his mind on the third tap. Ravyn heaved a breath, then opened the door.
Emory lay on his bench in the corner of the small chamber. Blanket tight under his chin, eyes shut, he almost looked asleep. But his shoulders were too tense, his thinned face too laden with furrows to be at rest. He shivered, his lips an awful gray.
Ravyn moved to his brotherâs wardrobe and flung it open, digging for the warmest cloak he could find.
Emoryâs voice was uneven, fraying at its edges. âWhat are you doing?â
âItâs time, Em.â Ravyn placed a wool cloak onto his brotherâs lap. âWeâre leaving. Now.â
Emory tried to sit up. âWhy?â
âArrangements have been made.â
âWhat arrangements?â
âWhere are your boots?â
Emory flicked his hand toward the end of the bench.
Ravyn sat at the foot of the bench, hands deft as he pulled Emoryâs leather boots over thick socks. All the while, he could feel his brotherâs eyes on him.
âWhat arrangements?â the boy said again.
Ravyn tied the laces tight, though he was fairly certain his brother was no longer strong enough to walk without help. âIâm taking you home.â
A rattling breath swept up Emoryâs fragile frame. âDid Uncleââ
âThe King is aware,â Ravyn said, harsher than he meant. He heaved a sigh and finally looked up.
It hurt to gaze at his brother. More than Ravyn imagined it would.
Emory, who had once bloomed like a garden in spring, was wilted, frozen to his depth by chill and aggressive degeneration. A boy, who not long ago had stood tall, was now stooped, as if his spineâwhich protruded up his back in harsh knobsâweighed more than the rest of his body combined. Hie copper skin was wan, his cheeks gaunt, his fingertips blue. And his eyesâhis brilliant gray eyesâwere shadowed, dim, lit only by the deathly omen of what was to come.
He was degenerating. Faster than Ravyn had feared he would. And while Ravynâs degeneration made certain Cards impossible to use and Elspethâs had strengthened the monster in her mind, Emoryâs was simplyâ¦killing him.
Ravyn reached for his brotherâs shoulder. âEverything is going to get better for you, Em,â he said. âI promise.â
Emoryâs shirt slid, Ravynâs palm grazing his brotherâs skin. The moment it did, Emoryâs eyes glassed over. He shivered from deep within, his lips drawing into a pale thread. He reached up and gripped Ravynâs hand, his eyes rolling into his skull.
Ravyn recoiled, realizing what heâd done. His handâheâd touched Emory. He tried to rip away from his brotherâs grasp, but Emory held him in a vise, nails digging into Ravynâs skin.
âThe dark bird has three heads,â Emory said, his voice strangled, an invisible rope around his neck. âHighwayman, Destrier, and another. One of age, of birthright. Tell me, Ravyn Yew, after your long walk in my woodâdo you finally know your name?â
Ravyn ripped his hand out of his brotherâs grasp. The moment their hands separated, Emoryâs magic fled his senses. His eyes returned. Glassy. Filled with tears. âWhat happened?â he asked, shaking.
It took all of Ravynâs years of practice to keep his face even. âNothing, Emory.â
âDid Iâdid I say something?â
Emoryâs magic had never been a gift. To family, it was unnerving. To strangers, terrifying. A single touch, and the boy could read a personâs deepest thoughtsâtheir fears and desiresâtheir shadow-laden secretsâtheir futures. It didnât matter how deeply it was buried, there was nothing Emory could not see.
It took the life out of him, using his magic. Whatever life that still remained.
Ravyn wrapped an arm under his brotherâs ribs and lifted him from the bench, careful not to graze his skin again. It took hardly any strength to lift him.
Emoryâs head slumped forward. His eyelids drooped, his words a raspy whisper. âIâve forgottenâ¦Where are we going?â
Ravyn clenched his jaw and kicked open the door to his brotherâs prison. Had the lantern on the table been lit, he would have smashed it onto the floor and cast the room into flame. âHome, Emory. Iâm taking you home.â
The boy weighed no more than a large saddle. But the stairs were long. By the time they met Jespyr in the east corridor, Ravyn was out of breath, a sheen of sweat upon his brow.
Emory was asleep. Jespyr gasped when she took him in her arms. âHeâs little more than a reed.â
Ravyn turned away. If he looked too long at the tears in his sisterâs eyes, his own might fall. âTake him to Castle Yew. Go now. Iâll be there shortly.â
Jespyr did not linger. She turned west, slipping through a servantsâ door. Ravyn listened to her heavy steps until they were gone, then heaved a breath and straightened his cloak. He didnât look back at the stairs to Emoryâs room. It, nor any other part of the Kingâs castle, had earned a single farewell from him.
Ravyn uttered one nonetheless. âFuck you.â