Best of luck with that.
In the second note, addressed to Filick Willow, Ravyn had written—
The castle keys are in the cellar. See that Erik Spindle and Tyrn Hawthorn don’t freeze to death.
And in the third, addressed to Elm, Ravyn had penned a single, wobbly line.
I’ll see you soon.
Dawn was creeping upon them, reminding the pressure behind Ravyn’s eyes that he had been awake for far too long. It seemed like a cruel joke that only a day had passed since he’d dug up the Shepherd King’s sword. It felt like a week ago.
He brought the Nightmare to the cellar off the stairs with the stag carved above its door and waited outside for the monster to change out of Elspeth’s tattered dress. Somewhere above, the castle bell rang—five tolls.
When the Nightmare stepped out of the cellar, he was garbed head to toe in black—spare attire Jespyr had left behind. He looked as Elspeth had when they’d disguised her as a highwayman on their way to steal Wayland Pine’s Iron Gate Card.
A knot choked up Ravyn’s throat.
“Who will be joining us on our fair quest?” the Nightmare drawled.
“Jespyr and another Destrier—Gorse. But first, we go to Castle Yew. I need to know Emory is safe.” He rolled his neck, joints popping. “I aim to ask the Ivy brothers to accompany us as well.”
The knowing, mocking smile that so often snaked in the corners of the Nightmare’s mouth slipped. “Good. We’ll need at least one spare.”
“What do you mean?”
He didn’t answer. “This Destrier—Gorse. Can he be trusted?”
“No. The King bade me to bring him. The Spirit can eat him for all I care.”
The word King held an acidic note. It was not lost on the Nightmare. He pushed past Ravyn. “Careful, Captain. Your stony veneer is rubbing thin.”
Ravyn caught his arm. The Nightmare had pulled his—Elspeth’s—hair into a short plait. Ravyn blinked, tracing the plait once, twice, then a third time. “You cut her hair?”
The Nightmare jerked out of his grasp. “It was matted with blood.”
Ravyn peered back through the cellar’s open door. A pair of scissors sat upon the old wooden table. There were chunks of dark hair on the floor.
Whatever crossed his face stopped the Nightmare in his tracks. The monster peered through narrowed eyes, dropping his gaze to Ravyn’s knotted hands. “It will grow back,” he said slowly.
Ravyn pushed ahead without another word. When he passed a Black Horse tapestry, he ripped it off the wall with a violent yank, dusting his shoulders with mortar. He threw it to the ground, the iron rod striking stone with a loud clang. If he had known a way to rip the Shepherd King out of Elspeth and throw him on the floor, he’d have done that, too.
The Destriers waited for him near the castle doors, shifting like nervous horses at the sight of the Nightmare.
Gorse stood apart, arms crossed over his chest, looking less than thrilled to be selected for the journey.
“I’m off on the King’s orders,” Ravyn said, his voice echoing against the walls. He locked his hands behind his back, sure to look each Destrier in the eye. “Keep to your patrols—your training. Do as you would had I remained.”
A Destrier in the back stepped forward. Oak. “Who shall we defer to in your absence, Captain?”
“Whichever Rowan—Elm or the King—sees fit to answer you.”
The Destriers exchanged glances. Linden spoke, the scars on his neck stark in the early light. “You’re not bringing Prince Renelm with you?”
“No.” Ravyn heaved a breath. “I will return as soon as I can. Be wary, Destriers. Be clever.”
“Be good,” the Nightmare mocked from behind his back.
They left on horseback. The Nightmare chose a black palfrey from the stable. When he mounted, the horse’s nostrils went wide, its skin rippling with noticeable distress. It reared, but the Nightmare kept his seat.
They tore through the bailey and over the drawbridge, first Gorse, then the Nightmare. Ravyn rode last. He allowed himself one final look at Stone.
There were few people in the bailey—no one watched them ride away. No one, save two tall men. One wore a golden cloak that caught the wind, and the other a plain black tunic. The King, and—
Ravyn’s stomach plummeted into his boots. Elm.
The Nightmare slowed his pace. When he looked back at Elm, his voice drifted in the air, oil and honey and poison. “Neither Rowan nor Yew, but somewhere between. A pale tree in winter, neither red, gold, nor green. Black hides the bloodstain, forever his mark. Alone in the castle, Prince of the dark.”
PART TWO
To Barter
Chapter Seventeen
Elspeth
In the water, neither awake nor asleep, I drifted through memories not my own.
I was a boy in richly woven clothes, standing in a wood. There were others with me. We turned through the trees with no path, our voices raised to the treetops, each person uttering their own beseech.
“Grant me health, Spirit.”
“Bless me with good harvest.”
“I will take Beech as my namesake for a blessing, great Spirit of the Wood.”
Salt filled my nose, tickling it. I found a gnarled tree away from the crowd and put my hand on it. Pain touched my arms. When I looked down, my veins were black as ink.
I closed my eyes, magic all around me—in me. A hundred voices filled my ears. Not human voices, but another chorus. One of discord, yet harmony, that spoke almost always in rhyming words. It was my magic, my gift, to hear them. I’d been born with the fever.
I could always talk to the trees.
Your name-tree is cunning, they said, its shadow unknown. It bends without breaking, though only half-grown. The Prince becomes King, and the King takes the throne. Will you come to the wood when Blunder’s your own?
“I will,” I whispered.
What blessing do you ask, young Taxus?
“For the Spirit of the Wood to help me make Blunder a kingdom of abundance—of magic. That she might give me the tools I need to shepherd the land, and its people.”
The tree groaned beneath my hand, branches moving on their own accord until they all pointed west. The next tree did the same, and the one after it. On and on, they pointed me home.
When I reached the cusp of the meadow outside my father’s castle, I waited. Then, near the seedling tree I’d planted on my seventh nameday, something materialized in front of me.
A stone, as tall and wide as a table. Upon it was a sword. It caught the midday light, shining like a beacon. Carved intricately upon the hilt was an image.
A shepherd’s staff.
Chapter Eighteen
Elm
Elm watched the party ride away, Ravyn’s note crumpling in his hand. I’ll see you soon.
He pushed his hair out of his eyes and turned, keeping the gap between himself and his father wide. “Was this your doing?”
The King’s gaze was fixed on the road ahead, his cloak billowing in the chill autumn air. “You’re my son. You belong here.”