Two Twisted Crowns: Part 2 – Chapter 29
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
avynâs pulse was a barbarous rhythm, each beat hammering inside his head like a pike.
Heâd had hangovers and head injuries. Twice, before his magic had made him immune to it, heâd been poisoned trying to lie against a Chalice Card. But thisâcoming out from the fog of the sweet, sudden smoke that had rendered him unconsciousâwas worse than all three.
Heâd lost consciousness near midday. And now the light in the sky was new, the dawn pale. Theyâd lost half a dayâand an entire night.
Wincing, Ravyn took in his surroundings. He was in a dirt courtyard. Around it was a crude wall of earth and wood that stood twenty hands high. When he tried to turn and see how far the wall went, his body didnât heed him. Pain cut into his wrists, and he felt a stiff surface press into back.
He realized he was tethered to a wide wooden post. Arms, torso, legsâall bound.
Panic flooded Ravynâs throat like bile. Heâd never been restrained. It was always him that had done the restraining. He called his sisterâs name and immediately regretted it, his headache responding with a punch.
A low groan sounded somewhere behind him. âIâm here,â came Jespyrâs voice.
She was tied to the post next to him. Ravyn couldnât see her, but his left wrist was tethered to her right. On his other side, the Nightmare was talking to himself in slow, slippery whispers.
Ravyn pressed his eyes shut and slowed his breathing. âEveryone all right?â
âIâm tied to a post with a grating headache and the dimmest Yews in five centuries,â the Nightmare muttered. âNever been better.â
The next voice was Petyrâs. It was lifeless. âWikâs dead.â
Ravynâs stomach dropped. He shut his eyesâlet out a shaking breathâsearched his mind for the right thing to say. Came up with nothing.
Jespyr said it for him, her voice coated with pain. âIâm so sorry, Petyr.â
They remained quiet a long time.
âElspeth,â Ravyn finally managed. âIs she well?â
The Nightmare made a familiar clicking sound with his teeth. âYes. But the more she ,â he said pointedly, âthe less I can focus. Which is exactly how we got into this mess in the first place.â
Elspethâs voice, that sharp, feminine timbre, untouched by the Nightmareâs oil or spiteâRavyn had wanted to drown in it. Sheâd sounded so real. Real enough to make him think they might be together again after they dragged themselves out of hell.
But first, he had to discern where was, and who had tethered them there.
âI thought you said weâd have safe passage to the next barter if we made it across that bloody lake,â Jespyr gritted out.
âThe Spirit of the Wood has no need for crude walls or rope restraints, you little twit. Our captors are decidedly human.â
Ravyn craned his neck, scanning as much of the courtyard as he could glimpse. âDid anyone get a look at them?â
âAll I saw were their boots,â Jespyr answered. âTwo pairs, worn laces and soles. Hunting boots.â
âWomen,â said the Nightmare. âThey were women.â
It hurt to think. But Ravyn knew for certain they were miles from Blunder. And those miles had been hard-earned. A stronghold this far from town would be of little use to the King. And as Captain, he knew Blunderâs strongholds like the back of his hand.
So who the hell had built this one?
âI can see our weapons,â Petyr said from the other side of the post. âTheyâre in a heap against the wall.â He shifted. Laughed. âThey missed the knife in my boot.â Then, as if it had injured him to laugh without his brother, the temper of his voice leached away. âI canât get to it.â
âSomeone is coming,â the Nightmare hissed. âBright with color.â He clicked his teeth. âTheyâve availed themselves of your Cards, Captain.â
A figure appeared out of nothingness, Ravynâs Mirror Card held in a dirty hand. âFinally awake,â came a womanâs voice.
She was tall, adorned in clothes similar to what Ravyn might wear guised as a highwayman. Leather and wool and trousers that tucked into tall, worn-in boots. Her cloak was the color of peat moss. She wore the hood up, covering her hair save a few brown plaits that dangled near her ears.
Her face was obscured entirely by a mask. Not a highwaymanâs mask, but one of bone. A ramâs skull.
âYou have some quality Cards, Destriers,â she said, twirling the Mirror between her fingers. âThis one, plus the Black Horse and Nightmare, will come in handy. Though I doubt weâll have much use for a Maiden out here.â Her head tilted as she surveyed Ravyn through the ramâs empty eye sockets. âHowâs your head? I hear the smoke causes a brutal headache.â
âShe knows it does,â came another female voice, somewhere near Jespyr. âWhich is why she delights in making it. Too strong a dose this time, sisterâtheyâve been out for ages.â A pause. âYouâre a Destrier?â
Jespyrâs voice was even. âDonât I look like one?â
âNot really. Your face is missing that boorish, murderous quality.â
âCome closer. Youâll see it.â
When the second woman came into view, Ravyn noted the same make of clothes. Her mask was bone as wellâa wolf skull. She was just as tall as the other woman, just as broad in the shoulders.
âWho are you?â
The one in the ram mask opened her arms wide, a false welcoming. âBlunderâs blight. Her vile outcasts. Her . Welcome to our hold, Destriers. It wonât be a long stay. But I can promise your last hours on this earth will be full of wonder.â
It wasnât a well-guarded fort. There were no sentries, and though dozens of men, women, and children passed through the courtyard, none of them bore weapons save a few bows and hunting knives. All were civilians, save the two women in charge. The one in the ram mask was called Otho, and her sister, with the wolf skull, Hesis.
The sisters moved around the post in tight, predatory circles. They didnât, for a single moment, believe that Ravyn, too, carried the infection.
âI know who you are,â Hesis said. âNephew to our vile King. You want me to believe that a would appoint an infected man as Captain of his Destriers?â
âIt doesnât matter what you believe,â Jespyr seethed. âItâs true.â
âAnd yet we found a charm on him. A viperâs head in his tunic pocket.â
Ravyn twisted against the ropes. âThatâs a spare.â
Hesis laughed. She hit Ravyn across the face with a closed fist. The back of his head slammed against the poleâhis headache so fierce his vision winked.
The Nightmare let out a low hiss.
âSay we suspend all disbelief,â Otho hedged. âIf youâre infected, whatâs your magic?â
An easy question. And a long, complicated answer. âI canât use Providence Cards,â Ravyn ground out.
âYet you travel with a veritable arsenal.â
âI canât use the Cards.â
Hesis sucked her teeth. âSounds like another lie, Destrier.â She hit him again.
âAnd your magic?â Jespyr demanded. âSo we might know the merit of our kidnappers?â
Hesis disappeared out of Ravynâs view, her voice close to Jespyrâs. âI can see through the eyes of crows,â she said. âThey speak to me, whispers and notions. Itâs how we found you lot. You made quite a lot of noise in the wood. Nests were upturned. I saw a hunting party in black cloaks cross Murmur Lake, coming our way.â Her voice went slick with amusement. âMy sister is an alchemist. That smoke that knocked you out? That pretty little headache, pounding in your skull? She made it. With magic.â
âYouâre giving me a headache just fine on your own,â Jespyr muttered.
A thud sounded on the pole. Jespyr groanedâthen two more thuds as Hesis struck her.
Petyr swore, thrashing against the ropes. Ravyn bit downâhard.
The Nightmareâs warning was but a whisper. âCareful.â
The women turned, their focus finally landing on the Nightmare. âWho the hell are you?â Hesis said. âThatâs no Destrier sword we pulled from your hands.â
A smile crept into his voice. âI was born with the fever, my blood dark as night. Perhaps youâve heard of me.â
âYou must know of another stronghold,â Ravyn offered. After so many years of lying, the truth was fragile upon his tongue. âDeep in the Black Forest, near the dried-out creek bed that runs northeast. A place children are brought when the Destriers and Physicians come sniffing too close.â
The womenâs spines stiffened. Hesis let out a sharp exhale. âThe children are brought there by highwaymen, not Destriers.â
âAll you know is that they wear masks.â
Othoâs laugh came out a bark. âYou expect me to believe it was who saved infected children all these years?â
âAnd I.â Petyrâs voice snagged. âMy brother Wik as well. And youâyou shot him. A man who lived outside the law for people like you.â
Otho paused, watching Ravyn through the holes of her mask. âYet your Captain still does the Kingâs bidding. Still arrests infected folk and their kin. Still does unspeakable things to them.â
Jespyr exhaled. âHe doesnâtââ
Hesis hit Ravyn square on the nose. He heard a all the way in the back of his head. Twin streams of blood fell from his nostrils over his mouth.
The Nightmare clicked his jaw. Once. Twice. Thrice.
âThe Twin Alders Card,â Ravyn managed, his words thick with blood, âthatâs why weâre in the wood. We seek to unite the Deckâto heal the infection. We wonât breathe a word of this place.â His voice quickened, his control slipping. âAfter Solstice, when the mist is lifted, come to Castle Yew. Weâll heal your degeneratingâcure anyone who wishes to be cured. But you must let us go.â
When they said nothing, utterly still, Jespyrâs voice sounded from the other side of the post. âOur brother is infected. Heâs degeneratingâdying. Please.
â
A ring of steel, then Otho and her ramâs skull were an inch from Ravynâs face, a cold knife pressed against his throat. âEven if what you say is true,â she seethed, âthere are people here who have lost loved ones to Destriers. Parents, children. Our own motherâs charm was destroyed, and a Rowan Scythe sent her to her death in the mist. There is payment due to the people of this fort. And a will pay it.â She stepped back, nodding at her sister. âItâs time.â
Hesis disappeared into the fort. Clamoring voices sounded, growing louder. Doors banged open and the fort emptied itself, a crowd forming. Everyone wore skull masksâsave one. A man, led by a rope. His face was bloody, his eyes wide, teeth flashing. He was tethered, but still he thrashed, fought.
Just as Ravyn had trained him to.
Gorse.
âWe will have our payment, Captain,â Otho said. âNow.â
The Nightmare remained tied to the post next to Petyr, fingers curling like claws.
The DestriersâRavyn and Jespyr and Gorseâwere unleashed in the dirt courtyard, rough instruments shoved into their hands. A club with rusted nails driven into it for Jespyr, a riding crop with rocks tied to its tassels for Gorse.
And for Ravyn, the dull, rusted blade of a scythe.
âFor the kin of a Rowan,â Hesis said behind her mask. She pushed him toward the others, and the crowd closed in around them.
It was clear what was meant to happen. The three of them hemmed into a circle, armed with poor weaponryâthis was a blood sport. The kind without winners.
A man wearing an ewe skull called out to the crowd. âAre we ready to smell Destrier blood?â
A roar clashed against the walls of the courtyard. It rose up over the jagged fence into the forest, a long, devastating cry. Bile crawled up Ravynâs throat. He forced it back down.
Gorse shook and Jespyrâs copper skin went the color of ash. At the post, Petyr tugged against his restraints.
The Nightmare stood eerily still.
The crowd went quiet as Otho came forward. Her arms were bare, her veins black as ink. She stepped to Ravyn, held a closed fist to her mouthâ
And blew smoke into his face.
Salt cut across Ravynâs senses. He coughed, eyes rolling back a moment. The smoke burned down his throatânot sweet like the smoke that had rendered him unconscious, but hot and cold and acidic all at once.
Otho did the same to Jespyrâblowing smoke in her face. When she came to Gorse, he swung his whip at her.
Otho dodged itâdispelling her smoke a final time.
Gorse made a retching sound, his eyes rolling. âWhat the hell is that?â
Otho stepped back to the rim of the crowd next to her sister, her voice cutting through the courtyard. âMagic, alchemized by two things. Rage, and hate. Bones of the enraged infectedâand your cloak, hateful Destrier. They make a wretched pairing, do they not?â
Ravyn felt his entire body go hot, his well-honed restraint snapping. He ran the back of his hand over his mouthâwiping away blood from his nose. He turned to the Nightmare. âIs this what it was like, when Hauth beat Elspethâs head in? Did you sit by then, just as you do now, enjoying the show?â
He hadnât meant to say it. The words had pried themselves out of him, acrid on his tongue. Only, no one seemed shocked to hear them. The crowd was expectant, as if theyâd been waiting for him to say something vile. Some even cheered.
It was the smoke, he realized. Othoâs smokeâher magicâhad washed his mind clean, leaving but two things.
, and .
Ravyn shifted the rusty scythe between calloused fingers, his headache replaced by bloodlust. âYou said you cared for Elspeth. That you protected her. And you didâjust as well as you protected your own children, it seems.â
The Nightmareâs yellow eyes burned, his voice sharpened by malice. âYou are, without a doubt, the greatest disappointment in five hundred years, Ravyn Yew. Every time I glance your way, I find myself wishing Iâd spent another century in the darkâthat Iâd spared myself the agony of your stony, witless incompetency.â
âAnother century would have been too soon,â Ravyn bit back. âAt least then I might have had more than a single moment with the woman you stole from me.â
Across the circle from him, Gorse sneered.
Jespyr turned on him, knuckles flexing around the club in her hand. âSomething to say, coward?â
Gorseâs bloody face went redder still. âWhat did you call me?â
âUgly stupid.â Jespyr raised her voice. âI called you a coward, runaway Destrier.â
Gorseâs crop whipped through the air, the rocks at the ends so close to Jespyrâs face they stirred her hair. âBetter a coward than a thief and a liar,â he spat, turning the crop toward Ravyn. âOur two-faced Captain stole the Kingâs Nightmare Card. Worse, heâs been fucking an infected womanââ
Jespyrâs club slammed into Gorseâs shoulder.
The crowd erupted in a hollering jeer. âAnd with that,â Hesis called, âwe begin.â
Jespyr looked at her bat, then at to Gorse, her gaze wideâlike she hadnât meant to hit him. A moment later, her eyes narrowed. âYou donât deserve to wear the Destrierâs cloak.â She turned to Ravyn. âNeither do you.â
Vitriol poured out of him. âYou think you could be a better Captain, Jes? Take it from me. Hell, Iâll even waive the challenge. Because you couldnât beat me, not without your Black Horseâyour precious little crutch.â Ravynâs voice went dangerously low. âGo on, take my place. Be Uncleâs puppet. Bow and scrape and swallow the bit he shoves in your mouth. Youâve always been better at those things than me.â
Jespyr lunged.
Ravyn pivoted, but not before the nails in his sisterâs club took a bite out of his cloak.
âYou want to talk about crutches, brother?â she seethed. âLetâs talk about yours.â
Ravyn held his arms open wide. âDo your worst.â
Jespyr pushed left and the circle shifted. She, Ravyn, and Gorse moved in a slow rotation, never taking their eyes off of each other.
âYou tell yourself the Destriers hate you because youâre infected. They donâtânot all of them.â Jespyr spat the words. âThey hate you because you think youâre better than them.â
âI am better than them.â
Gorse opened his mouth but Jespyr cut him off. âBig, strong Ravyn Yew. The Captain who never smiled, never fell, never flinchedâwho lies to his King, his men, and most of all, to himself.â Her eyes went cold. âYouâre not better than anyone, brother. And youâre not stronger than me. Youâre just better at pretending.â
âYou want to know what Iâve been pretending at all these years? Iâll tell you.â Ravyn went still, breaking the circleâs rotation. âI pretend that I donât spend every moment of every day myself for being Captain of the Destriers.â
âYouâre a traitor,â Gorse spat. âAnd youâll bleed for it.â
âLikely.â Ravyn fixed his stanceâaimed with both eyes open. âBut not yet.â
The scythe flew. Without his Black Horse, Gorseâs reflexes were slow. The scythe caught him along the shoulder, the dull edge finding purchase over his breastbone.
Deep. But not, with such an aged, rusted blade, deep enough to kill.
The crowd roared. Ravyn was across the yard in a breath. Vision limned in red, he knocked Gorse to the ground, hand on the Destrierâs throat. Gorse looked up at him with wide, bloodshot eyes. Heâd dropped his whip. But his fists met Ravyn ribs over and over again.
Air shot out of Ravynâs lungs. He kept his hand on Gorseâs throat and thought about blood and whips and the smell of smoke, clawing its way up the dungeon stairs. Of terrible things heâd had to watch, had to do, as Captain of the Destriers.
Ravyn leaned close to Gorseâs mottling face. âBe wary, Destrier,â he ground out, âBe clever. Be good.â Then, with a final, brutal pushâ
He crushed Gorseâs windpipe.
A slow, hungry cheer raked over the courtyard. Theyâd wanted Destrier blood. And Gorse, taken by the great, final sleep, was a crimson canvas. Red spilled from the scythe wound, trickling into the dirt, feeding the soil, burrowing its way into the cracks in Ravynâs hands.
The smokeâs magic slipped away, taking and with it.
Ravyn stared down at Gorse, hands shaking. This time, the bile refused to be forced down. Ravyn leaned over and was sick in the dirt, his ribs screaming pain as he heaved.
The courtyard went eerily quiet.
Ravyn looked up. Someone had breached the circle and was standing between him and Jespyr. An unmasked woman, shadowed by two young boys. She wore a green dress and a cloak of the same color with a white tree embroidered near the collar. Her graying gold hair was loose, her hazel eyes wide. Wide, familiarâ
And trained on the Nightmare.
Opal Hawthorn put a hand to her mouth. âElspeth,â she said, tears in her eyes. âYouâre alive.â
With a few booming commands from Otho, the courtyard clearedâspectators filing into the fort, the dark sockets of their bone masks trained on Ravyn as they went. They dragged Gorseâs body with them, a bloody trail the Destrierâs last mark upon the kingdom heâd served.
Ravyn locked his hands into fists. Even then, they shook.
Opal stood at the post opposite the Nightmare, staring at what used to be her niece, tears in her eyes. Ravyn knew her pain by heart. Sheâd seen a maiden with black hair and thought it was Elspethâonly to be met by terrifying yellow eyes.
Just as Ione had in the dungeon, Opal placed a hand on the Nightmareâs cheek and lost the color in her own. âWhatâs happened to you?â she whispered. âYouâreâdifferent.â
The Nightmareâs expression was smooth. âI am.â
âYouâreâyouâre not Elspeth.â
The Nightmare said nothing. Opalâs hand fell. She stepped back from the post and began to weep. Her boys stood next to her, their young eyes wide as they stared at the Nightmare. But when Ravyn moved to approachâto explainâHesis pulled a rapier from her belt. âStay back.â
âI donât understand,â Opal said, scrubbing tears from her cheeks. âWhy have they been imprisoned?â Her eyes moved to Jespyr. âSheâs the one who warned me the Destriers were coming.â
Othoâs posture stiffened.
Jespyr reached for Opalâs hand. Spoke in a gentle voice. âHow did you and your boys end up here?â
âI brought her,â Hesis said through her mask of bone. âThe stronghold your Captain spoke of is full. But we have plenty of room here, far beyond the Kingâs reach. Or so we thought.â
Jespyr explained to Opal, Otho and Hesis leaning in to listen, what had happened to Elspeth that night at Spindle House. That Tyrn and Erik and Ione were at Stone. Why they had journeyed into the wood.
Ravyn withdrew to the post.
âAll right, lad?â Petyr grunted.
Ravyn could still feel the pillar of Gorseâs hitching throat in the center of his palm. âFine.â
Petyr lowered his voice. âThe knife they overlooked is in my left boot.â
When the hollows of Othoâs and Hesisâs masks were turned on Jespyr and Opal, Ravyn planted his foot next to Petyrâsâmade like he was tying his lacesâand slipped his hand into Petyrâs boot. When he withdrew it, his fingers were wrapped around a slender leather sheath.
The blade was small, its hilt a hook. Ravyn stoodârounded the post until he was near the Nightmare. âDonât move.â
But when he pressed the blade against the rope, his hand shook so hard the rope quivered. He paused. Tried again.
Had they been soldiers under his command, Ravyn would have dismissed Otho and Hesis for their ineptitudeâhe was making a boarâs ass of cutting a simple tether. But their focus was so tight on Jespyr, lost to her story of the Shepherd King, that they didnât notice the rope shake for a full minute before it finally cleaved.
The Nightmare held Ravyn in his yellow gaze the entire time. âMessy business, killing.â The corner of his lip twitched. âElspeth says you look terrible.â
Ravynâs gaze shot up. âShe didnât say that.â
âNo. She didnât.â He cleared his throat. âIt seems I owe you an apology.â
âYou mean Elspeth wants you to apologize.â
âAnnoyingly, yes.â His mouth grew strained. âWitless though you are, you are not a disappointment.â
Had it been a different day or week or month, Ravyn might have laughed, watching the monster squirm. But he was far too tired for that now. âDoes it cost youâshowing a fraction of remorse, Shepherd King?â
âYes. And I require recompense.â Those yellow eyes turned hard. âItâs taking me centuries of restraint not rip your head from your body after that outburst about Elspeth.â A flash of teeth. âAbout my children.â
âI didnât mean to say it. That smokeâthat magicââ
âRage and hate. Two things I know well enough.â
Ravyn bit down. âI donât know what happened to your children. But I know you would not want to see Elspeth harmed. It is perhaps the only thing I understand about you.â
Neither of them had apologizedânot really. But an airing of truths, after so much malice, was the best they could do.
The Nightmareâs gaze drifted up the fort walls. âIâve had enough of this wretched place. Give me the knife.â
âNo. I donât want blood on Elspethâs hands.â
The Nightmareâs gaze lingered over Ravynâs nose. It had begun to ache, his noseâa hot, constant agony ever since Hesis had struck it. Broken, he guessed.
When the Nightmare spoke again, the smoothness in his voice was gone. âThe knife. Now.â
Ravyn faced those terrible yellow eyes. Looked for Elspeth. Could not see her. âDonât kill anyone,â he growled.
When Hesis approached, Ravynâs hands were at his sides. Shaking, but empty.
âOpal Hawthorns is a good woman. Though her wits may have abandoned her, because sheâs insisting you and your sister possess .â Hesis heaved a sigh, alternating her rapier between her hands. âEven if that were trueâwe cannot let you leave. You would inevitably return to Stone. I hear the King is fond of his inquests. Sooner or later, the truth of what happened and who you saw on your journey to the Twin Alders Card will out. I cannot allowââ
There was a tearing sound, a flash of movement in Ravynâs periphery. Hesis had but a moment to shift her blade from Ravyn to the Nightmare.
It wasnât enough.
The Nightmare sprung off the post. He struck the snout of Hesisâs mask with the heel of his palm, an ugly echoing in the yard. She screamed, dropped her rapier.
Otho bolted toward her sister, but Ravyn surged forwardâcaught her with a broad armâslammed her onto the dirt. When she tried to reach for her blade, Jespyr pressed a boot onto her arm.
âPocket,â Ravyn gritted out. âOur Cards. Hurry.â
Jespyr reached into Othoâs jerkin. She pulled out their CardsâNightmare and Mirror and Maiden, then two Black Horses. Hers, and Gorseâs.
Otho glared up at them through the empty sockets of her mask. âIf the King uses a Chalice on you, it will be the death of every soul in this place. Their blood will be on hands.â
âIt wonât come to that,â the Nightmare called, he and Petyr aiming toward their pile of weapons. âI have plans for the Rowans.â
Petyr handed Ravyn his belt of knivesâhis satchel and sword.
Opal Hawthorn had retreated to the courtyard doors, wide-eyed, with her sons. âCastle Yew,â Ravyn said as he approached. âIf this place ever proves unsafe, go to Castle Yew. My family will protect you.â
Opal nodded, but her gaze was lost over his shoulder. There were tears in her eyes once more. âAnd Elspeth?â
Ravynâs voice was ragged. âIâm going to get her back. No matter the cost.â
The fort door groaned, and Petyr and Jespyr hurried through. Ravyn offered Opal his hand. He didnât think her the sort of woman who would mind that his fingers were trembling.
She shook his hand. Squeezed it tightly. âGood luck.â
When Ravyn cast his eyes back into the courtyard, Otho was hurrying toward her sister. Hesis lay in the dirt, unmoving. Her mask was broken, shards of bone scattered around her. Blood trickled down her face.
âNightmare,â he said through his teeth.
The monster laughed as he slipped out of the fort. âSheâll live. All I did was pay her back for breaking your nose.â
âI didnât ask you to do that.â
âNo. But Elspeth did.â