: Part 2 – Chapter 23
One Dark Window
Miss? Miss Spindle?â
I woke with a start, my wrist stiff and painful, violent shivers ripping up and down my spine.
Mourning doves called above my head. I sat up in a daze, startled to see the cool morning sky, my bedroom ceiling and walls vanished. My skin hurt, pricked by gooseflesh. I was in my nightgown, dirty and damp from the flattened grass beneath me. I looked around, recognizing tall yew trees, the bramble of unkempt foliage growing, unbidden, around me.
In the distance stood the stone chamber Iâd left only hours ago, surrounded by mist.
Filick Willow stared down at me, his hood damp and his eyes wide. âAre you all right, Miss Spindle?â he asked.
I pulled myself up, my body stiff with cold. Still wary of Physicians, even one in the Captain of the Destriersâ pocket, I took a step back.
I could not recall drifting off to sleep, nor taking an impromptu walk back to the meadow. Probing the darkness in my head, I found the Nightmare curled up, quiet in his respite, perfectly content not to offer up an explanation.
âIâI must have walked in my sleep,â I said.
Filick unfastened his cloak and handed it to me. âCome, Iâll make you a cup of tea. Youâre cold as death.â
I did not stop shivering until Iâd sat by Filickâs hearth a full ten minutes. He called for tea and I drank it in three gulps, hardly noticing when the water singed my tongue. Filick sat next to me, unwrapping my swollen wrist.
âDoes that happen often?â he asked after Iâd regained a whit of color. âWalking in your sleep?â
I shook my head. âNo.â
âHad you ever been to the ruins before?â
âYes.â I shivered. âWhat is that chamber? The one with the magic stone?â
Filick took a sip of tea. âRavyn showed you, then?â
Memory of last night flooded my senses. I faced the fire, a blush rushing into my cheeks.
If the Physician saw, he made no mention of it. âI canât say for certain. Castle Yew is old, full of artifacts,â he said. âThere is strange, ancient magic in that chamber. I walk there often, in the mornings.â
I eyed him with a healthy dose of distrust. âYou seem to place a lot of value in old magic,â I said. âFor a Physician.â
Filick smiled, retrieving fresh linen from his shelves. âWe Willows have been Physicians for hundreds of years. Ages ago,â he said, âwe knew the mist was full of saltâfull of magic. But we did not fear it. We venerated the Spirit of the Wood and the gifts she gave. Those who suffered the fever and the degeneration that followed were treatedânot hunted.â
âWhat changed?â I asked.
He wrapped the linen around my wrist. âThere are no surviving records. But stories remainâa chain of events.â He rewrapped my wrist with the dexterity of someone long acquainted with injuries. âTo her own detriment, the Spirit of the Wood granted the Shepherd King magic so great, he created the Providence Cards. He shared them with his kingdom, and people stopped going to the woods to ask the Spirit for magical gifts. Instead, they vied for the Cards, greedy for magic that would not degenerate.â
I nodded. My aunt had told me this story. âAnd so, the Spirit created the mist, to draw people back to her. By force.â
âPrecisely.â Filickâs brow furrowed. âWhen the mist locked Blunder away from the rest of the world, the Shepherd King went to bargain with the Spirit. When he returned, he wrote The Old Book of Alders, that the people of Blunder might ward themselves with charms. But all bargains bear a price.â
âThe Twin Alders.â
âThe Twin Alders.â Filick shook his head. âA foolâs bargain.â
âWhy do you say that?â
âThe Spirit is cunning, âneither kin, foe, nor friend.ââ Filick leaned back in his chair. âIt takes the entire Deck to lift the mist, no? So then why would a King, who sought to save his kingdom from the mist, give up the Twin Alders, the only Card of its kind?â
A latch in my mind lifted. âThe Spirit tricked him,â I whispered, recalling what my aunt had told me years ago. âHe didnât know he needed the Twin Alders to lift the mist until heâd already bargained it away.â
Filick nodded. âItâs a common theory among those of us who like to look into the past. And, to the Shepherd Kingâs credit, it wasnât an entirely empty bargain. We got The Old Book of Alders and learned to be wary of magic, to carry charms in the mist.â He took a long drink of tea. âYou ask what changed, Miss Spindle? Brutus Rowan, the first Rowan King. Thatâs what changed. He took The Old Book of Alders and made it doctrine, twisting the words until theyâd become weapons against anyone infected.â
CloserâI was getting closer to knowingâunderstandingâsomething that, for years, had lived in the dark corners of my mind, obscured but ever present. I leaned forward. âWhy should Brutus Rowan hate the infection?â
Filick tapped his finger on his cup. âPerhaps he feared old magicâmagic he could not control.â His brow darkened, his eyes distant. âOr perhaps in a kingdom where balance is the only constant, he simply sought to cheat the scales. He stole the throne from an infected King. And now his lineage strives to kill anyone with enough magic to take it back.â
A chill crept over me. âIs that what happened? Rowan stole the throne from the Shepherd King?â
Filickâs eyes found me again, his furrow easing. âOf course, this is all just theory, Miss Spindle. A story.â
But it wasnât. Not for me. âWhat happened to the Shepherd King?â
âHe died. How, I cannot say.â
Darkness overtook my eyes. For a moment, I lost vision, the sound of the Nightmareâs laugh, hollow and cruel, blotting out all noise.
A moment later it was gone, my vision returned. Filick must have seen the disquiet behind my eyes because when he patted my hand, my new bandage perfectly knotted, his voice was soft. âItâs easy to get lost in the past in a strange, old castle like this. Have no worry, Miss Spindle. A wrong done five hundred years ago has no bearing on today. You and Ravyn will find the Twin Alders Card and unite the Deck. Of that, I am certain.â
He was trying to reassure me. And while I was sure Filick Willow was one of the cleverest men in Blunder, there was one thing he was terribly, terribly wrong about.
What happened five hundred years ago mattered. Far more than I had ever realized.
I pushed out of my chair. âThank you. Iâm sorry if I disturbed your morning walk.â
âNot at all,â he said, escorting me to the door.
I might have gone back to my chamberâhurried through the castle, my hem still soaked with morning dew. But I lingered at the Physicianâs threshold.
âThere is something I still donât understand,â I said.
âWhatâs that?â
âDegeneration.â I searched for the words. âRavynâs degeneration does not allow him to use Cards. Emoryâs is slowly killing him, body and mind.â I paused. âBut I⦠I canât seem to understand what mine is.â
Pity washed over Filickâs aged face. âNo two infections are the same, Miss Spindle. Emoryâs degeneration is widespread, while Ravynâs doesnât seem to affect his health at all. What is certain for the Yew brothers may just be a whisper of truth for you.â He shook his head. âI wish I could offer more comfort. But I simply do not know.â
Lost for words, I gave the Physician a simple nod and stepped into the corridor.
I waited until Iâd turned the corner before barking into the blackness. Sleepwalking? I demanded. Really?
He stretched lazily across my mind. What of it?
You canât do thatânot here, not anywhereâbut especially not here!
Who says I did anything?
Donât play me for a fool, Nightmare! My voice was blade sharp. Or should I call you Shepherd King instead?
He slithered through the darkness, his voice ricocheting in the din, as if there were many voices, not his alone. Call me what you will, Elspeth. It changes nothing.
I gritted my teeth, eleven years of his gamesâhis secretsâboiling in me. All I felt was rage, the desire to banish him from my mind so violent I might have struck the wall had it not been made of stone. If itâs your soul I absorbed when I touched my uncleâs Nightmare Card, I said, then I absorbed a King. But youâyou are not a King. Youâre a monster.
He laughed at me again. I am both. There was a pause. Donât you remember the story, Elspeth? Our story?
My stomach dropped. The story. Whispers, near and far, always as I was drifting off to sleep. The haunting lullaby of the maiden, the King.
The monster.
I leaned into the wall, my legs suddenly unsteady. I pressed the heel of my palm to my brow. But that only made the darkness behind my eyes more oppressive. Why, now, am I seeing your memories?
You donât need me, or that Physician, to tell you why. You have your own theory regarding that.
I shook my head. Well? I demanded. Is it true?
You tell me.
Iâm ASKING you.
But you already know. Deep down, youâve always known.
I felt cold again, a profound, unbidden frost emanating from the center of my chest. Youâre becoming stronger, I whispered, my voice hardly audible in the dark din. Thatâs why Iâm seeing your memories. I may not be getting weaker like Emory, but Iâm⦠fading. A lump rose in my throat. Thatâs my degeneration, isnât it?
He said nothing, his jagged teeth clicking as he clamped and unclamped his jaw. Click. Click. Click.
Itâs my payment, I said, filled with biting clarity. Every time I ask for your help, you grow stronger. And IâmâIâm losing control.
I told you, child, he said, nothing is free. Nothing is safe. Magic always comes at a cost.
Yes, but I didnât realize that meant you were taking control of my bodyâmy mind!
Iâm not TAKING anything, Elspeth Spindle. He hissed, claws flashing, suddenly vicious. I cannot TAKE. I am capable only of what I am willfully given. He slinked into the darkness, hasty to be away from me. Remember that, when you finally have the courage to admit it. In the end, I took nothing you had not already given me.
I was not sorry to feel him go. I felt cold again, afraid and hollow.
But that hollowness soon gave way to a scorching anger. I would not succumb to my own annihilation, victim to degeneration or the Nightmare. I would free myselfâcure myselfâand go back to the life Iâd abandoned eleven years ago.
Only two more Providence Cards stood in my way.
I hurried through the galley on my way to my room, but stopped when I heard the clamor below.
Dozens of voices melded together in loud discord from Castle Yewâs great hall. I heard the clank of steelâarmor and swords and chainmail. The Destriers milled below, their Black Horses glowing ominously from their cloaks. Some were eating, others examining their weapons. Hauth Rowan stood among the fray, his broad back covered in a black cloak. He spoke to the others in a curt voice, his demeanor characteristically dominant.
The corner of my lips curled when I saw his wounded left hand wrapped heavily in linen.
âLike what you see?â
I jumped so violently I nearly flew off the banister.
Elm watched me, a small, satisfied grin on his face. âSorry,â he said. âI thought youâd heard me.â
âWell, I didnât.â When the Prince eyed me up and down, I cringed, still draped in Filick Willowâs cloak, the hem of my nightdress soaked by morning dew. âI got lost,â I lied.
âStill canât find your way around?â
âSomething like that.â
The Prince rolled his eyes and pointed a sharp finger back behind us. âThat corridor will take you back up through the galley and into the guest hall. Your room should be somewhere along that corridor. Or should I call Ravyn to take you? Iâm sure heâd be delightedââ
âNo,â I said quickly. âIâll find it.â
âHurry,â Elm said, moving down the stairwell. âWeâre heading out soon.â
âHeading out where?â I called.
But he was already halfway gone.
âElm,â I hissed. âWhatâs going on?â
âMarket Day,â he called without stopping. âWear your colors. That is, if your father ever condescended to give you any.â