How, after years of plotting and planning, everything she’d worked for threatened to slip from the Black Bride’s grasp. Though she’d schemed and marshaled her resources so she might yet play on, she had failed to get what her heart most desired: healing. It was tricky, balancing the time she had left between revenge and recovery, but she refused to relinquish one for the chance of the other. No matter how it taxed her, she could be— would be—whole once more, and all scores settled with her sister and the king.
Emer listened and watched, watched and listened, although no one spoke to her but the Black Bride. She paid attention to the comings and goings of the shadowed woman’s pilfered court, noting the frequency and severity of the woman’s wet cough, the sweet-sour dying scent of her breath. There were suitors—for her wealth, though stolen, though dusty, was not insubstantial, and the strength of her sorcery was of great value. Aside from these charms, in certain lights, the ravages of her punishment were not so obvious. So, the willing grooms came, though none of them ever left.
? 200 ?
? Angela Slatter ?
In the cold hours, after the woman had talked herself out, after she’d muttered at the windows when wil she come, when wil she come? , then gone to bed, Emer would work with her sharp beak at the deceptively fragile-looking chain, more out of habit than hope, but inexorably, insistently.
Peck-peck-peck.
Peck-peck-peck.
Peck-peck-peck.
“About time.”
Emer, perched on the padded armrest of the throne, was enduring the Black Bride’s caress, staring out the only unshuttered window.
Normally, she divided her time between eyeing the roiling mass of canine domestics, the fluttering carpet of ravens who came and went at the Bride’s bidding, and the hopping, kicking sea of fur that had once been the courting princes—all now transformed to fine, fat hares. This day, though, the sky had her undivided attention. She ignored the dark woman, assuming the remark was addressed to someone else. But the Black Bride’s next words—and her tone, so soft and sad—dragged the raven-girl’s gaze back to the room.
“Did you think yourself forgotten?”
Emer was startled—it was precisely what she was beginning to think. She had lost track of the days, weeks, months, but the turning of the season outside told her winter was arriving for what seemed the second time. She wasn’t sure—speculations about bugs and beetles had occupied her mind of late. A tentative movement at the entrance of the chamber made her head tilt in curiosity.
The figure was willowy, dressed in white furs, a hood of silver fox framing her pale face. She moved with all the grace of a bird on the surface of a lake, effortless. She hesitated as if, unable to find whom she sought, she was unwilling to commit deeper to the room.
“You should know,” continued the Black Bride, her touch stilled, “that she raised an army to find you. Your father failed and wept, wasted away—trust me, my girl, I have my spies. But she, oh she ? 201 ?
? Flight ?
mobilized their vassals, rode at their head, slept in the saddle, scoured all the lands that could be covered by foot and sea. I’ll warrant she’d have given her very soul to take to the skies if it meant she might find you that way.”
Her hand slid to the black chain. She toyed with the liquid length, unconsciously worrying at the dent Emer’s beak had made. She stared at the woman hovering in the doorway and seemed to realize that there would be no further progress without some kind of carrot.
Once Upon a Time: New Fairy Tales Paperback
Tanith Lee's books
- A Coven of Vampires
- Vampire World 1 Blood Brothers
- Invaders
- The City: A Novel
- Sea Sick: A Horror Novel
- Reaper's Legacy: Book Two (Toxic City)
- Ravage: An Apocalyptic Horror Novel
- Property of a Lady
- Monster Planet
- Monster Nation
- Monster Island
- Lineage
- Kill the Dead
- Just Another Day at the Office: A Walking Dead Short
- Imaginary Girls
- His Sugar Baby
- Hellboy: Unnatural Selection
- Fourteen Days