Two Twisted Crowns: Part 3 – Chapter 41
Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King #2)
Ravyn heard the crack of bones. The Spirit of the Wood rolled her jagged shoulders, whipped her tail through the air, dug her claws into sand. Her ears were long and pointed, and when she smiled, short, jagged fang-like teeth peeked out from behind her lips.
She was not human or beast, but something in between, like the monster depicted on the Nightmare Cardâonly her eyes were silver. She marked Ravyn with them, unblinking. Then she aimed the tips of her claws at her own torsoâ
And buried them in her stomach.
Silver blood poured down her fur and fell into sand. The sea lapped it up, ravenous.
Ravyn stared, wide-eyed in horror.
The Spirit heaved a sigh and the bleeding stopped. She dug into her own stomach, as if all that blood had dislodged something deep within her. When her hand came back, coated in silver, something was wrapped in her claws. Small, rectangular, with an emerald-green trim.
The twelfth Providence Card. The Twin Alders.
The Spiritâs talons unfurled.
âShe wants you to use it,â the Nightmare said behind Ravyn.
Ravyn set Jespyr, who had not stirred, into the sand and dragged himself to his feet. âWhat will happen when I tap it?â
âA meeting of minds.â
âLike the Nightmare Card?â
âI cannot say. I have never used the Twin Alders.â
âAnd if I use it too long?â
The Nightmareâs voice quieted. âYou will lose all sense of time.â
Ravyn met the Spiritâs eyes. Silver, unblinking, and without pupils. He shivered, reaching forward, grasping the velvet edge of the Twin Alders Card. But when he tried to pull it out of her clutch, the Spiritâs claws closed in a vise over his hand.
Ravyn cried out. When he met that eerie silver gaze again, he understood. She hadnât been offering it for him to takeâonly to use.
There was still a final barter to make.
Ravyn relaxed his grip on the velvet edge. âI wonât steal it.â
Her claws retracted, Ravynâs skin scored red. When he reached into her hand a second time, it was only with a single, trembling finger. It hovered over the Providence Card five hundred years lost. He closed his eyes, took in a breath of salt, and tapped the Twin Alders.
Once.
Twice.
âMeasure your words carefully with her,â the Nightmare warned. âThey may be your last.â
Thrice.
Wind ripped over the seaâs salted lip. It blew into Ravynâs face, blinding him. The Spirit spoke once more in her vast, stormy voice. âI watched you in the mist, Ravyn Yew. Tasted your blood. Stripped away your stony armor.â Her gaze shifted between him and the Nightmare. âYou have traveled to the heart of my wood at the edge of Taxusâs crook, like a lamb to slaughter.â
Ravynâs jaw set. âIâm not a lamb.â
Her silver eyes traced himâknew him. âYet you are determined to die like one, come Solstice.â
Behind them, the Nightmare let out a sharp hiss. âWhat does she mean?â
When Ravyn looked back into the Nightmareâs yellow eyes, he knew, somehow, he was looking into Elspethâs as well. âYou must know,â he said, âthat I was never going to allow the King to spill her blood to unite the Deck.â
The Nightmare was still a long while. Then, so quiet it might have been waves upon the shore, he said, âYou would bleed in Elspethâs place? In place?â
Ravyn straightened his shoulders and spoke with enough conviction to reach every one of the Nightmareâs five hundred years. âYes.â
He turned to the Spirit of the Wood. âBlood is the price to unite the Deck. To lift the mist and heal the infection.
price. And I will gladly pay it. Gladly die. Iâve been dying piece by piece since Emory grew sick.â His throat constricted. âI have died tenfold since Elspeth disappeared. And now your mist has claimed my sister. So do not speak to me of cost, Spirit.â His eyes fell to the Twin Alders in her claw. âI am leaving here with that Card. Or I am not leaving at all.â
Her lips peeled over jagged teeth. She breathed in, and the sound of water upon the shore disappeared, as if sucked into her mouth.
All was silent.
The Spirit held Ravyn in her unblinking silver gaze, then lunged forward, her claw catching his hand. With incredible strength, she pulled him off the shore into the frigid sea. Ravyn was afforded only a brief glance back at the Nightmare and Jespyr before the Sprint plunged him beneath water, the salty tide slipping over his head.
When Ravyn opened his eyes, he wasnât underwaterâhe wasnât even wet. He was standing in a field of snow. Jespyr and the Nightmare were gone. It was just him, alone, with the Spirit of the Wood.
Birds called overhead. Not the caw of ravens or crows, but songbirds. The sweet tune of larks. Wings fluttered above a meadow coated in snow. When Ravyn looked up, his breath caught.
It was clearly winter. But heâd never seen the sky so blue, the light so strongâentirely unencumbered by mist. It stole the breath from him, the beauty of it.
âWhere are we?â
âEight hundred years in the past,â came the Spiritâs dissonant reply.
âWhy?
She let go of his hand and stalked through the snow. âMagic has little use for time. I walk through centuries like they were my own garden.â Her eyes fixed on Ravyn over her shoulder. âHuman life is short. You are not as a tree, stoic and unyielding, but a butterfly. Delicate, fleeting. Inconsequential.â
Ravyn shook his head. Lamb, butterfly. The Shepherd King had described the Spirit of the Wood in as neither kin, foe, nor friend. He might have saved ink and called her what she truly was. A proper asshole.
Her tail flicked, as if she knew his thoughts. She opened her claws. Beside the Twin Alders, eleven other Providence Cards appeared in her palm. They floated in front of Ravyn, suspended in air, turning with the slow flourishes of the Spiritâs finger. âThe Cards. The mist. The blood,â she said. âThey are all woven together, their balance delicate, like a silken web.â
âWhich makes you the spider.â
She smiled at that. âThe Shepherd King was clever, imaginative. No ordinary soul could have made such a varying, intricate Deck. He knew neither virtue, nor love, greater than his want for these Cards.â She snapped her fingers, and the Cards came rushing back into her claws. âAre you the same, Ravyn Yew?â
Ravyn took a deep breath. âIâm a thief. A liar. Most would find my virtue lacking.â
âAnd your love?â
Ravynâs chest tightened. If he were to close his eyes, he knew what he would see. His parentsâ faces, bent as they read books in silence by the library fire. Elm and Jespyr and Emory, riding on horseback down the forest road. Elspeth, sitting across from him at Castle Yewâs table, pink in her cheeks as she smiled at him from behind a teacup. âI have something of love in me.â
With another snap of the Spiritâs fingers, the Deck was gone, leaving only the Twin Alders in her claws. âThen I will make you an offer. Leave this Card with me, and I will save the people you love. Your siblings shall be free of the infection. Elspeth Spindle will be released from the Shepherd King, body and mind.â She drew a claw through snow. âAnd the Rowan Prince shall be saved from his almost certain, ruinous fate.â
Birds were still chirpingâthe sun still on Ravynâs face. But he was cold all over, the only sound to reach him the thrum of his unsteady pulse. âWhat fate should Elm need saving from?â
The Spirit did nothing but watch him through unblinking silver eyes.
âI should know what Iâm agreeing to.â
Silence was her only reply.
The ever-present tremor in Ravynâs hands quickened. When he spoke, his words clung to the back of his neck. âThen I have no choice but to save them myself come Solstice.
the Twin Alders Card.â
Dark fur and wide, unyielding eyes made it difficult to discern emotion upon the Spirit of the Woodâs face. But by the momentary twitch of her earsâthe flick of her tailâRavyn was certain she was displeased with his answer.
âYou spoke of me, once,â she murmured. âYou were walking through the Black Forest on your way to steal Wayland Pineâs Iron Gate Card. You led the party, but your gaze was cast back. To Elspeth Spindle.â
Ravyn pressed his lips together. âI remember. â
âYou said to her, âMagic sways, like salt water on a tide. I believe the Spirit is the moon, commanding the tide. She pulls us in, but also sets us free. She is neither good nor evil. She is magicâbalance. Eternal.ââ
The wind in the meadow picked up. The Spiritâs voice grew louder. âI would have all of Blunder believe the same. And so, Ravyn Yew, my second offer to you is the throne.â
When Ravyn did not speak, a snarl touched the edge of her voice. âYou have the makings of a great King. Measured, careful. Wary of balance. You need not go back to Stone and bow before your uncleâno more lying or stealing or pretending. Find your own virtue, keep your own rules.â She nodded at the Card in her claws. âLeave the Twin Alders Card with me, and I shall make you Blunderâs King in Quercus Rowanâs stead.â
âYou do not have the power to do that.â
She was paces away, then suddenlyâtoo close. Her silver eyes filled Ravynâs vision, her claws pressing into his chest.
âYou stand here, hundreds of years in the past, and speak to me of power?â The smell of salt was everywhere. âThe Shepherd King was born with the fever because deemed it so. His children were gifted magic by . Brutus Rowan took the throne because did not intervene. Kings and monsters can be made, and butterflies can be crushed. All that you know, I have created. I am Blunderâher infection, her trees, her mist. I am with magic.â
âAnd yet you barter with a liar and thief, just to remain so.â Ravyn leaned forward, letting the tips of her claws press harder against his chest. âYou are eternal. And you are magic. But I know as well as you that magic is the oldest paradox. The more power it gives you, the weaker you become. The Shepherd King taught me that.â
A low, scraping sound resonated in her throat. She pulled back. âYou are determined, then, to overlook my generosity and take back the Twin Alders Card?â
âI have no ambition for the throne.â
Her voice held an edge. âPerhaps you should.â
Ravyn bit down. âTime is precious to me, Spirit. Name your price for the Twin Alders. I would like to go home.â
Her silver eyes narrowed, her dark tongue dragging over the tips of her teeth. âThen answer me this.â She drew in a rasping breath. âThe dark bird has three heads. Highwayman, 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
A memory tugged at Ravyn. Heâd heard those words before.
Emory had whispered them back at Stone.
âThat is my price,â the Spirit continued, a smile snaking over her lips. âMy barterâmy cost. If you answer correctly, I shall grant you the final Providence Card. If you cannot, it remains with me.â Her claw tightened around the Twin Alders. âYour name, Ravyn Yew. Tell me your name.â
The riddle cantered forward in Ravynâs mind, leaving behind a sense of dread. He felt like he was sitting down to a game of chess with Elm. That, by simply being there, he had already been utterly outmaneuvered.
âYou offered me two things,â he said slowly. âI denied them both. For my restraintâand for the sake of balanceâI ask for two clues.â
âIâll tell you what I told the Shepherd King when he visited long ago.â The wind picked up, and her voice grew louder. âThe twelve call for each other when the shadows grow longâwhen the days are cut short and the Spirit is strong. They call for the Deck, and the Deck calls them back. Unite us, they say, and weâll cast out the black. At the Kingâs namesake tree, with the black blood of salt. All twelve shall, together, bring sickness to halt. Theyâll lighten the mist from mountain to sea. New beginningsânew endsâ¦â
âBut nothing comes free,â Ravyn finished.
âUpon Solstice,â the Spirit said, her silver gaze unrelenting, âthe Deck of Cards will unite under the Kingâs namesake tree. That tree is not a rowan.
is your first clue.â
Her words played in Ravynâs ears, unharmonious. He tapped his fingers along the ivory hilt on his belt. âAnd the second?â
âThat, I will not tell you.â Her smile was all teeth. âI will show you.â
The world tilted. When it righted, they were still in the meadowâsnow all around them. Only now, they stood under the shadow of yew trees.
At the meadowâs cusp was a stone chamber, fixed with one, dark window.
Ravyn whirled, searching the tree line for Castle Yewâs towers. They were not there. A different castle loomed ahead of him.
One he had only ever seen in ruins.
âHow far in the past are we now?â
âFive hundred years. We shall be neither seen, nor heard.â The Spirit of the Wood gestured a gnarled claw toward the castle. âShall we go inside?â
The castle was bustling. Musicians tightened the strings of their instruments. Servants hurried down corridors and up stairs with silver trays stacked with food, children with dark hair weaving between them, snagging pieces of sweet bread and spiced fruits. Holly and mistletoe garnished every door. Red and green and yellow velvet cords were strung between the iron arms of chandeliers.
Solstice, Ravyn realized.
Five long tables parceled the great hall, their benches full of courtiers, laughing and drinking. There was no dais at the end of the hall, but there was a throne. Wooden, fashioned of thick, interlocked branches.
Upon it sat a man.
He was not caught up in the revelry around him. He spoke to no one, his face downturned over a book splayed open in his lap.
There were lines in his copper skin, his face angularâmouth drawn. He had a long, hooked nose. When he lifted his gaze, Ravyn caught a glimpse of his eyes.
Yellow.
âIs thatââ
âThe Shepherd King, in the flesh,â the Spirit whispered.
A crown rested upon his head, tangling in his dark, wavy hair. A gilt circle of gnarled, twisting branches and greenery.
Ravyn had seen that crown before. It waited in the stone chamber at the edge of the meadow, five hundred years in the future.
He kept his eyes on the Shepherd King. It seemed like a dream, seeing the face behind the voice. The slippery whispers, the grating snarls and hisses. Those were the embellishments of a monster. But thisâthis was undoubtably a man.
There was something strangely familiar about his face. But before Ravyn could put his finger on what it wasâ
Smoke filled the air.
It came from every doorway, dark and oppressive. Courtiers bolted from their seats, cries filling the great hall as they trampled over one another to get out. Castle guards peeled themselves off walls, guiding frantic men and women and children out of the castle.
fell from the Shepherd Kingâs lap. He stoodâ
But a gloved hand held him back.
A man came from behind the throne. His body was broad and his face sharp with angles, frown lines carved deep into his brow. In his other hand, he held two Providence Cards. The Black Horse, and the Scythe.
There was blood on his upper lip, dripping slowly from his left nostril. But Ravyn was focused only on his eyes. Green, like his uncleâs. Like Hauthâs and Elmâs.
Brutus Rowan.
He put his Cards into his pocket, leaned over the throne, and spoke words Ravyn could not hear to his King. He reached for his belt, withdrew a daggerâ
And drove it in the Shepherd Kingâs ribs.
Men in black cloaks stepped into the smoke, their eyes unfocused, fixed on Brutus Rowan. âFind his daughter,â he commanded them. âDonât let her heal him. Then bring me the other children.â
The Shepherd King reared. The back of his head collided with Brutusâs jaw, and loud, ugly shouts filled the room.
Ravyn coughed for the smokeârubbed his eyes. When he opened them, the Shepherd King and Brutus Rowan were gone.
âCome,â the Spirit of the Wood said, taking his hand in her claws. âItâs almost finished.â
She led him outside. It was night now. The sky was black, the crescent moon masked by smoke. Orange flames licked up the castle towers, the last of the screaming courtiers fleeing into the night.
Ravynâs entire body tensed as the Spirit of the Wood brought him through the meadow. He knew where they were going. Heâd walked these steps a thousand times. The Shepherd Kingâs chamber.
And his grave.
âI donât know if I can stomach this.â
Her tail flicked through smoky air. âWould you like it to stop?â
Figures darted past them, hurrying through the snow. The Shepherd Kingâfollowed by four boys. Tilly was in his arms. Ravyn could tell by the way her neck and limbs floppedâher eyes open and unseeingâthat she was dead.
They left a trail of blood in the snow as they ran toward the stone chamber.
Ravynâs hands shook. âTheyâre all going to die, arenât they?â
The Spirit of the Woodâs voice held no love, no hateâno pity. âYes.â
When the Shepherd King and his children reached the stone chamber, disappearing into its window, the Spirit urged Ravyn forward. âGo inside.â
The chamber was dark. But the flames from the burning castle flickered in through the window, revealing a shape in the corner of the room. A man.
Brutus Rowan. Waiting.
Heâd donned a cloak. Gold, with the rowan insignia embroidered upon it. With a swift, brutal blow, he knocked the Shepherd Kingâs sword from his graspâkicked it away.
âThe trees canât help you now.â
The Shepherd King planted himself between Brutus and the children. âI didnât know the Spirit would take Ayris. I didnât mean for her to die.â
âI donât believe you. You are a liar, my old friend. Magic has made a soulless wretch of youâtwisted you beyond all recognition.â He pointed his sword at the Shepherd Kingâs chest. âYou are no longer fit to rule.â
âSo you would take my throne? Kill my children?â
Brutusâs jaw set. âIt will pain me. Losing your friendship pained me. Losing Ayris me. But what was it you once said to me?â His grip tightened upon his hilt. âTo command the Scythe is to command pain. What is commanding a kingdom to that?â
Men spilled into the chamber. Eleven of themâeach gripping a Black Horse.
âTell me where to find the Twin Alders Card,â Brutus said, his voice louder now with the men at his back. âI will do what you could not and lift this vile mist.â
The Shepherd King put his hand to where heâd been stabbed. When he pulled it back, it was covered in blood. He swayed, a laugh slithering out of his mouth. âNo.â
Like a hunter, Brutus stalked forward. When the Shepherd King did not acquiesce, Brutus took him by the throatâslammed him upon the stone.
And buried his sword in his chest.
The children cried out, but the Shepherd King made not a sound, save a long, low hiss. He fell from the stone to the earth beneath it, his crown slipping from his head. He held out a bloodied hand to his children.
âI will find you on the other side of the veil,â he murmured. His gaze turned back to Brutus. Yellow, wickedâ
Infinite.
âFor even dead, I will not die. I am the shepherd of shadow. The phantom of the fright. The demon in the daydream. The nightmare in the night.â
He lay upon soil at the foot of the stone. Bled his lifeâs blood. Did not stir.
Brutus looked down upon him, teeth bared, tears dropping from his eyes. When he wiped them away, his gaze was cold. He tapped his Scythe three times. âKill them,â he said to the men at his back.
Ravyn lunged at him. Fell right through him.
âWait,â came the Spiritâs stormy voice. âWatch.â
When the screams filled the air, Brutus threw himself out of the chamber. The burning castle was set before him, an inferno of orange and black.
A boy stood in the meadow, framed by fire and smoke.
He looked like his father. Dark hair, tall, angular. A distinct, beak-like nose. The only difference was his eyes. They were not yellowâ
They were gray.
âTraitor,â came his snarling voice. He pulled a sword from his belt. âIâll kill you for what youâve done.â
âYou wonât,â Brutus said, holding the red Card out between them. âYouâre going to walk toward me, Bennett. And, just like your father, youâre going to feel my blade in your gut.â
The boy paled. But he did not move.
Brutusâs voice grew louder. âCome here.â
Bennett tilted his head to the side. His eyes fell to the Scythe. âNo.â
Brutus began to shout. He came closer. They parried, and in three blows, the much larger man knocked the sword from the boyâs hand. He lifted his blade for a final strike.
Bennett closed the distance between them and ripped the Scythe from Brutusâs hand. Then, as if it were truly no more than paper and velvet, he took the indomitable red Card, smiled up at Brutusâ
And tore the Scythe in half.
Brutusâs eyes went wide. He took a faltering step back, then lifted his sword once more. But before the blade could find Bennett, the boy reached into his pocket. Extracted a Mirror Cardâ
Disappeared.
The world shifted.
Ravyn and the Spirit were on a dirty street in town. They watched Bennett, hood up, begging for food. Watched him on the forest road band together with a party of highwaymen to rob a caravan. Watched as Destriers hunted the streets, posters with crude portraits of Bennettâs face decorating hitching posts throughout Blunder.
Bennett, now a man of middle age, wrapped his arms around a woman with wavy black hair and brown eyes. Stood with her under tall, twisting trees. Said marriage vows.
The vision ended where it beganâin the meadow.
The yew trees surrounding the Shepherd Kingâs stone chamber were tall. They, along with the chamber they guarded, were the only things left unscathed by the fire. Bennett walked, now stooped with age, through the ruins. He climbed into the chamberâbled into the stone.
The chasm opened up, and he dropped his Nightmare and Mirror Cards into it. âBe wary, Father,â he whispered. âBe clever. Be good.â
Then he was gone.
Ravyn and the Spirit of the Wood were alone in the meadow once more, snow at their feet.
For the first time since the Shepherd King had taken command of Elspethâs body, Ravynâs hands did not shake. He stood perfectly still, five hundred years washing over him.
âThat boy,â he murmured. âBennett. The Scythe. He destroyed it?â
âFour Scythe Cards were made,â the Spirit replied. âYet no one has seen the Rowans use more than three.â
âBut Providence Cards are ageless. Their magic does not fade. They do not decay with time. They be destroyed. The Shepherd King declared it so.â
âAnd he, like you, is certainly a liar.â The wind whispered through branches. âYour time is up, Ravyn Yew,â the Spirit said. âI will have your answer now. Tell meâwhat is your name?â
His throat tightened. His eyes rushed over the meadow, the tips of trees. Trees he and Jespyr and Emory had swung from as children.
Just like Tilly did, waiting for her father.
Breath bloomed out of Ravynâs mouth in the cool air. So often was he fixed on going forwardâalways forwardâthat he hadnât let himself look back. But the past had been shown to him. Written out for him. Laid bare at his feet.
The branches carved into the Shepherd Kingâs crownâhis hilt. The blade, swinging through the air, rearranging the wood. A name, whispered against a yewâs gnarled trunk.
The Shepherd Kingâs face. His son Bennettâs gray eyes.
The Scythe had not worked on Bennett. Just as it did not work on Ravyn.
Ravyn met the Spirit of the Woodâs silver gaze. When he finally said the words, he knew, with every piece of himself, that they were true. âTaxus. My name is Taxus.â