Two Twisted Crowns: Part 1 – Chapter 15
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
hadows in the corridor loomed, only to scurry away. They seemed taller in the witching hour, dawn mere hours away. Elm rubbed his eyes and blinked. He needed sleepâbadly. He opened his mouth to ask Ione if the Maiden kept her from feeling tired when footsteps sounded down the corridor.
Ione shoved him into a doorway. Elmâs ribs collided with an iron doorknob, and he let out an abrupt breath. âThat,â he seethed, âhurt.â
The echoing footsteps grew softer. Whoever it was, Physician or guard or servant, they were not coming their way. Ione stood rigid, waiting. Torchlight caught the bridge of her nose, the heart-shaped curve of her lips, the soft line of her throat and the shadow where it hollowed.
Elm looked away.
Only when the corridor was quiet again did Ione acknowledge him. âSorry. I forgot. Youâre .â
âYes I am. I should be abed, resting by delicate body.â He waved his bruised knuckles in front of her face. âNot all of us have a Maiden Card to heal our mortal carcasses into perfection.â He looked at her hands. âThat cut. Did you feel pain?â
Every part of Ioneâs face was closed to him. âYes. It takes a moment for the Maiden to heal me. When it does, it feels good, euphoric even, not to be in pain.â
âSounds nice.â
âYou could have a Maiden if you wanted.â She slipped out of the doorway, her steps silent as she continued down the corridor. âYouâre a Rowan. Donât you take whatever you fancy?â
âClearly not, when all I fancy is a proper nightâs sleep.â
âIt was your idea to go to the dungeon.â
âAnd a brilliant one, considering Elspeth has the happy ability to see Providence Cards by colorâeven at a distance.â
Ione skittered to a halt. âShe does?â
âIndeed.â Elm picked at his fingernail. âRather handy. Especially for you.â
âHow so?â
Elm shot her a pointed look. âYou asked for free rein of the castle, yet failed on numerous occasions to specify where in Stone your Maiden Card resides. Which has led me to one rather interesting conclusion.â He cocked his head to the side. âYou donât know where your Maiden is, do you, Hawthorn?â
Ione drew in a breath, then continued down the corridor. âHow exhausting it must be, wanting everyone to know how clever you are, Prince.â
Elm caught up with her in two strides. âBut youâre still using the Maidenâs magic. If anyone else had touched it, your connection would be severed.â He leaned over her, his voice tipped with satisfaction. âWhich means the one who misplaced it.â
A frown ghosted over Ioneâs brow. She didnât look at him. Not in the way she normally didnât look at himâtoo indifferent to bother. This time, she seemed intent not to meet his eye.
âWhat happened? Celebrate a little too hard on Equinox? Put your Maiden Card in a flowerpot and waltz away?â
âSomething like that.â
Elm chuckled to himself. âNo shame in it. Spirit knows I havenât spent an Equinox sober inââhe counted on his fingersââsome years.â
Ione kept her eyes forward. âJust get us to the dungeon. After that, you can go back to being the cantankerous, wayward Prince you were born to be. Trees know Iâll be pleased to be rid of you.â
Elm trailed her down the corridor to the stairs. He didnât have to tell her which turns to make. All they had to do was go down. âIs that what people call me? Wayward?â
âIâve heard the word thrown around.â
âNaturally.â
Ioneâs shoulders rose, half the effort of a shrug. âItâs said you like your freedom too wellâthat youâre an unruly, rotten Prince. Unmatched with the Scythe, but a poor Destrier. Thatâs what the men say, at least.â
Elm shoved the word down and schooled his features to a lazy smirk. âWhat do the women say about me?â
Ione kept her gaze decidedly upon the stairs. âNothing of note.â
âBut with far less disappointment in their voices, I should think.â
A faint blush rose up her neck into her cheeks. âPerhaps.â
Elmâs smirk budded to a smile. He traced Ioneâs blush with a curiosity he decided was purely scientific. It felt like a game of discovery, watching her face, seeing what sliver of emotion the Maiden would allow her to showânoting what had brought it on. Elm loved games. The playing, the cheating, the winning. Mostly, he loved the measuring of his opponent, the unearthing of their limitations.
Only now, he wasnât sure who his opponent was. Ione Hawthornâor the Maiden Card.
He quickened his pace, matching Ioneâs step as they took the east stairs. âAnd what do you think of that, Hawthorn? My reputation with women?â
âI donât think of it.â
He laughed, a low, rumbling timbre, and Ione turned at the sound. Her eyes narrowed. âYou said you didnât have time for women.â
âWhen?â
âIn your chamber. When I was getting dressed.â
Heâd been paying attention to other things, in that moment. âI used to have time.â Elm cleared his throat. âIâve been busy of late.â
Ioneâs voice hummed in her chest. âFor a Prince who doesnât mind the King, and a piss-poor Destrier at that, one would think you had all the time in the world. Only, whenever I see you, you look as if you havenât stopped to catch your breath. Which begs the questionââ Her eyes were dark in the dim light. âWhat, Prince Renelm, have you been doing with all your time?â
âYou should know. Youâve taken up every moment of my time today.â Elm leaned down, his mouth close to Ioneâs earâtesting to see if her blush would return. âAnd I canât say it hasnât beenâ¦interesting.â
She pulled away, her expression a stone wall. âDonât.â
There it was again. Even in the dim light of the stairwellâpink in her cheeks. âDonât what?â
âPretend to flatter me.â
âWhoâs pretending?â
Ione shook her head. A quick, dispassionate dismissal.
âWhy, Ione Hawthorn.â Elm scraped his teeth over his bottom lip. âDonât tell me it makes you something when I flatter you.â
âIt doesnât.â Her face was unreadable. Unreachable. âI canât feel anything anymore.â
The dungeon stairs had always been deadly. Now that it was autumn, frost already making its home across Blunderâs fields, the steps were nigh unnavigable, slick with ice. Twice, Elm had to brace himself against the wall. When Ione slipped and crashed into him, her fingers flexed like cat claws, digging into the muscles along his abdomen. Elm wrapped an arm around her shoulders, steadying her.
âHow far down does this go?â she said into his chest.
He gripped her tighter. âFar.â
By the time they got to the bottom, Elm was stiff all over. Given the tension in her shoulders, the fine line of her mouth, Ione was no better. She released him with a breath, stepping into the antechamber. Only then did Elm realize, with a bitter curse, that heâd forgotten the dungeon keys.
It didnât matter. The door was already open.
A giant mouth of darkness greeted them, a bitter wind from deep within the dungeon snapping at their faces. âWhere are my father and uncle kept?â
âOn the south side. Your cousin is on the north.â
Ioneâs back straightened, as if she was trying to force the shivers that racked up her spine into submission. She pushed into the dungeon on silent step, darkness swallowing her whole.
Elm groaned and hurried after her, catching her at the shoulder and spinning her toward the first of many passages north.
They walked in silence down rows of empty cells.
A chill sank into Elm. This wretched castle. He hated it to its last scrap of mortar, of stone, of wood and iron. He kept his eyes forward the way Ravyn always did, determined not to look into the cells, knowing they were emptyâand had not always been so.
He didnât realize Ione had spoken until her hand grazed his arm.
He jumped. âTreesâwhat?â
âAnxious, are we?â
âJust cold.â
âI might have thought you didnât mind the cold. What with you freezing us all into statues with your Scythe, back in the throne room.â
âWhatâs the matter, Hawthorn? Dis ened I cut the violence short?â
She ignored the quip. âEnding violence isnât exactly a Rowan thing to do, is it?â
Elm didnât bother masking his annoyance at being compared to his father and brother. âI try not to use the Scythe for violence.â
âWhy not?â
âTo disappoint the hell out of them.â
Ione, who often seemed to give her attention only by half, was watching him. She searched his face like she had in his chamber, still looking for something she couldnât seem to find.
A noise, like the snapping of teeth, echoed down the corridor. Elm jerked to a halt, catching Ioneâs arm, stopping her. They were near the end of the corridor. Ahead was the last cell. Elspeth Spindleâs cell.
Or what used to be Elspeth Spindle.
âListen,â he said. âI should tell youââ
The noise echoed again, this time with the low, oily notes of a laugh. Elm swallowed. âYour cousin. Sheâs not the same.â
Ione said nothing. Her brows lowered. She pulled away from Elm, marching toward the cell. âBecause of Hauth?â
âNot Hauth. Not this time.â
When Ione reached the iron bars, Elm stepped behind her, close enough that he could pull her back. There was just enough light to see a shadow shift, and then the Shepherd King was there, fingers curling around the iron bars, his yellow eyes wide and his jaw clicking a chilling rhythm.
Elspeth. Shepherd King.
He did not shiver, seemingly untouched by the oppressive chill of his cell. His spine stooped, black hair falling like curtains over his face. He jerked his chin to the side and looked up, his gaze catching Ione.
For a moment, all was silent. Ione stared at what had once been her cousin. They looked like mirrors of each otherâif one of the two had been dipped in ink.
Ioneâs voice drifted away from her. âElspeth?â
âSweet Ione.â
Ione reached a hand through the bars. Elm tensed. âDonât,â he warned.
She didnât listen. Her fingers grazed the skin along what had once been Elspethâs cheek, and she drew in a gasp.
A smile crept across the Shepherd Kingâs face. âDo you finally see me, yellow girl?â
For the first time since heâd come upon her at Hawthorn House, Elm discerned unmistakable emotion on Ioneâs face. Her pallor turned gray. Her eyes widened, and her lips drew into a fine line. Her fingers trembled as they traced the Shepherd Kingâs cheek. When she spoke, her voice was so thin it threatened to snap. âYouâre not Elspeth.â
The Shepherd Kingâs smile widened. âNor am I a stranger. I was the shadow that moved just beyond the corner of your eye. I spoke in murmurs, hummed songs you did not know. The hounds brayed, warning you of the intruder in your midst. The horses shied away and the birds grew quiet. But your parents did not heed them. And you, yellow girl, were afraid to look too closely.â His eyes dragged over her face. âBut youâre not afraid anymore, are you?â
Ione pressed against the bars. âYouâElspethâshe kept so many secrets from me.â
The Shepherd King reached out, cupping her chin with a dirty, bloodstained hand. âShe was wary. Clever. Good.â He rubbed his thumb along Ioneâs cheek. âYou and I are all that is left of her.â
âWho are you?â
âBlunderâs reckoning.â The Shepherd Kingâs grin was worse than any snarl. âI am the root the tree. I am balance.â
Ione reached out in a flash, her fingers wrapping around his wrist. âI want to speak to Elspeth.â
âYou cannot have her. She is with me. And I am letting her rest.â
âI donât care. Give her back to me.â
The Shepherd Kingâs teeth scraped over his lip. For a moment, Elm thought he might tear into Ioneâs soft, unblemished cheek. But his grip on her face loosened, his brow easing. âShe will be free. But not until my work is finished.â His eyes flashed to Elm. âAnd old debts settled.â
It was the first time heâd looked at Elm directly, those strange eyes so piercing, so monstrous, so .
âElm,â the Shepherd King murmured. âA pleasure to see you again.â
Not Renelm or Prince, like every other stranger called him.
As if this man, this thing, already knew him.
And, of course, he did. For every conversation Elm had had with Elspeth Spindleâevery treason sheâd committed alongside himâevery secret sheâd heardâso, too, had the monster in her mind. Waiting, just behind her eyes. Listening. Learning.
Elm felt sick.
âYou look pale, Princeling.â
âIt hasnât been easy, cleaning up after you.â
âYes. Your cousin intimated as much.â
Ravyn hadnât said anything about going into the dungeon. He hadnât said anything of the Shepherd King at all, save digging up his grave. Elm brushed away the sting, his gaze flickering to Ione. âSheâs missing something. A Maiden Card. Itâs hereâsomewhere in the castle. Can you see it?â
Ioneâs eyes jumped between the two of them, and the Shepherd King stepped closer, his voice slithering between the bars. âDo you truly need it back, my dear?â he whispered. âIsnât it better this way, your body safe from harm? Your soft, sentimental heart, finally guarded?â
Ioneâs eyes narrowed. But the Shepherd King kept going. âElspeth envied itâyour heart. The ease of your laughter, the careless sincerity in everything you did. But I knew better. You were good, but never wary. It is why you hardly blinked when your father caged you like a canary on Equinox and left you in this cold, cavernous cage.â He stroked her hair with a listless finger. âThe only reason you have not lost yourself to the despair of being shackled to is because the Maiden Card has kept you from feeling it.â
Ione was quiet a long moment. âI may not feel despair,â she finally said. âBut I am still lost. I have disappeared into the Maiden, just as Elspeth has into you. And I want to be freed.â
Her words wove through Elmâs ribs, pressing into his chest.
The Shepherd Kingâs smile faltered. âI cannot free you.â
âBut you can see Providence Cards by color,â Elm cut in.
He cocked his head to the side, predatory. âOne of my many gifts.â
âMy father keeps a Maiden Card in the vaults with the rest of his collection. Are there others in the castle?â
The Shepherd King shut his eyesâstayed silent a long momentâthen laughed. A horrid, biting discord that echoed down the corridor. âYes, dear boy. There are three Maiden Cards in Stone.â
âWhere are they?â
He stepped back into shadow. âThat, I cannot say. The castle is vast, the pink Cards scattered. You and my yellow girl must find the Maidens yourselves.â
Ioneâs hands balled into fists. âTell me where to look.
me.â
But the monster was gone, retreated back into shadow.
Ione screamed against closed lips, then ripped away from the cell back down the corridor. Elm followed a pace behind.
âI look forward to when we meet again, Princeling,â the Shepherd King called after him. âI have plans for you yet.â
Elm turned, but he was gone, his farewell the same eerie knell as his greeting.
The journey back to the antechamber felt even colder. When they reached it, Elm caught Ione by the arm. The ire sheâd displayed at the Shepherd Kingâs cell was gone now. There was nothing on her face.
âItâs important to you?â Elm murmured. âGetting your Card back?â
She hardly seemed to hear him. âIf you think this is about beautyâthat I am opposed to what the Maiden has doneâyou are wrong. If I could still feel what it is to like something, I would tell you that I like being beautiful. I like being healed by magic and having no pain. I like who I was and how I looked before the Maiden Card as well. What I aim to get back, Prince, is my .â
When all Elm could do is stare at her, she sighed. âGo to bedâback to whatever it is you do with your time. I donât want your help.â
âBut youâll need it, given that the castle is full of locks and Iâm the one with the ring of keys.â He ran a hand down the back of his neck. âActually Ravyn has the keys, but technically theyâre mineââ
âIf this is about what happened on the forest road, our debt is settled.â
âItâs not.â
âWhat, then?â
Elm bit the inside of his cheek. âI was a to Elspeth. Ravyn was falling in love with her, and Iââ His eyes fell, his mouth turning with derision. âLetâs just say Iâve never had anything like that. I was too concerned with losing him to note that Elspeth was losing herself until it was far too late.â
He finally looked back at Ione. âI aim to be better. If you are disappearing like Elspeth didâand have little in the matterâI would like to help you.â
The lines and muscles of her face gave nothing away. But she startled Elm, raising herself to her toes to meet his eye. She hooked his chin with her thumb, and though Ione Hawthorn was so cold in all her expressions, her touch warmed him. âWhy?â she asked. âWhy do you aim to be better?â
âBecause I have to be,â Elm said in one breath. âI care not what they say about me at court, even if it is that Iâm a rotten Prince and a piss-poor Destrier.â He leaned closer. âBut I do want it said, loud enough so everyone hears, that I am like Hauth.â