Footsteps sound from around the bend. “Who goes there?”
My heart stutters at the sight of guards rounding the corner. Their armor is a cacophony of jewel-tones, helms wrought with sharp spikes. The opaque visors hide any glimpse of their true intentions.
“Who are they?” I whisper.
“The Dreadknights. Soldiers of the Below.” Ezryn leans Kel against the wall, then steps in front of us, hand casually resting on the hilt of his sword.
Behind us, Dayton has taken off his necklace, desperately trying to get the mirror to catch the light. “These never work down here,” he hisses.
I inhale a shaky breath. “We’re guests of the Prince of Thorns.”
“Oh, really?” a husky feminine voice purrs. “I don’t see him. Do you?”
The female glides forth from the cluster of soldiers like an encroaching shadow. For a moment, I am spellbound by her presence. Her black cape flicks behind, resembling a tail of raven feathers. A large hood shrouds her features, and a mask conceals the bottom half of her face, leaving only her blue eyes visible.
She was the one arguing with Caspian below the staircase of thorns.
“Do I know you?” Ezryn asks, venom lacing his words.
She moves closer with a haunting grace, each step fluid and silent. Her armor is adorned with intricate plates of jewel-toned metal, each one a glittering gemstone of a different hue. Blades are strapped to her waist and around her legs.
“They call me the Nightingale,” she says. “Commander of the Dreadknights, and the one who will finally deliver the useless fae princes and their human pet to the Queen of the Below.”
“We are guests. Detaining us will have dire consequences,” Ezryn says, though I think it’s more a stalling tactic at this point. His helm moves ever so slightly. He’s taking count of the soldiers.
Dayton abandons working on his necklace and rushes forward. “What the fuck have you done with Farron?”
Where’s Caspian? I grip the wall, and something pulses beneath my hand—
The heartbeat of the Below.
I kneel on the ground, pretending to check on Keldarion. The Nightingale and her soldiers move closer to my princes.
I press my palm to the hard earth. Your princes have their little mirrors to take them to Castletree. I, however, can travel anywhere my thorns are.
Caspian can leave the Below as he wishes. He doesn’t need mirrors or portals. He has everything at his fingertips.
And so do I.
Beneath my hands sprouts a vine of thorns.
62
Rosalina
You are mine . A possessive fierceness radiates through me as I bury my hands in the earth. Thorns rise around me. I’ve controlled these briars before. Even Caspian admitted I could do it.
But I’ve never summoned them like this.
A well of magic courses deep within me, my connection to the thorns stronger than I’ve ever felt it before. There must be some tie to the Below, some vicinity to this underworld that fuels this link between me and the magic. Whatever the case, I need it now more than ever.
Caspian uses the thorns as transport, appearing and disappearing wherever his thorns have grown. And there are thorns in the Autumn Realm: the ones we planted.
Take me to the surface, I roar inside my mind. Take me to Caspian.
The thorns trickle over to us. Kel immediately kicks out, breaking one apart as it nears him. Pain flicks through me as if they are an extension of my nervous system. They wrap up my legs and around my waist, and I will them to do the same to the princes.
Kel rips them off as soon as they touch his skin, and even Ezryn backs away defensively.
“Are you idiots?” Dayton snaps. His arms are outstretched, head up toward the surface. “There’s no time for your fear. Farron needs us. Rosalina’s going to get us to him.”
I offer an appreciative smile while Ez and Kel exchange looks. Mercifully, they stay still, and the thorns wind tight around each of us.
I catch one final glance at the Nightingale, her blue eyes wide with surprise.
Let’s give this a go.
Picturing the thorns that grew from the seed we planted in the burned library, I allow my energy to pulse out of me, lacing through the vines. I am both here and everywhere, my consciousness spreading like light scattered through a prism. Up, up, up.
We rocket through the earth.
A network of briars rushes past, and we’re like fish caught in the net. The underground thicket opens into a tunnel and we whip through, thorns snagging at my skin and hair. My stomach loops at our speed, only briars dashing by in my peripheral. Up, then left, then right, then down, and up again, the briars shoot us through tunnels I never knew existed.
The thorns twist away from us, responding with a violent surge of energy. But silvery moonlight gleams in a pinprick on the horizon. The surface.
My head spins as we’re shot out of the thicket, landing in a heap upon hard, charcoal-drenched ground.
“Is everyone alright?” Ezryn asks, voice slightly queasy.
I lift my hands up. Black. Ash everywhere. We’re at the burned library, where we planted the seed to allow us to travel to the Below.
“Farron?” Dayton cries, staggering to his feet.
We all clamber up. My knees shake, my body completely spent from the rush of magic. A bone-deep weariness fills me, and even standing is an effort.
Dayton’s voice cracks. “Fare…”
A massive brown wolf lopes out of the hidden door in the sacred alder tree. And in his mouth, he carries a grimoire, one of the books containing dark magic.
“This shouldn’t be happening. It’s the full moon—” I begin before a gasp takes over, and my hands cover my mouth. Through the open entrance into the hidden library, I see… destruction. All the precious books that had been saved from the first disaster—the family histories, the diaries, the grimoires—are ripped apart, destroyed by fang and claw. Papers fly in the breeze, and tears spring to my eyes.
“Prince of Thorns!” Dayton roars. “What did you do to him?”
Then I see him, sitting in a branch of the alder tree, swinging one leg down, looking perfectly nonchalant. He picks at a nail. “It was such a lovely birthday party. Farron thought he’d give me one last present.”
Farron sits at the base of the tree, eyes glazed. The thorn collar weaves tightly through his fur. A vine erupts from the ground and wraps around the book in his mouth before rising to Caspian.
A sharp metallic ring sounds through the night as Ezryn unsheathes his sword. “Another betrayal, Caspian? You’re getting predictable.”
The Prince of Thorns smiles. “I wouldn’t count on it.”
Keldarion falls to his knees, ash billowing up around him.
“You’ve got your stupid book,” Dayton says. “Let him go.”
“Oh, you really wouldn’t want me to do that.”
The princes banter back and forth, and I creep toward the tree, willing my heart to slow. Farron’s wolf seems like a statue, sitting so still. “Farron, are you in there? It’s me. Rosalina. Can you hear me?”
But the wolf doesn’t even blink.
“Release him or I’ll tear your fucking face off!” Dayton yells.
Caspian clicks his tongue. “Perhaps you’re upset because you didn’t receive a party favor. Don’t worry, I have a present for all of you as well.”
The portal to the Below flickers with purple light, and then a pungent, acrid smell wafts from its bellows.
“No,” I whisper. “No, no, no—”
Goblins pour out. Emerging in a chaotic, writhing mass, they run toward us, their movements frenzied and wild. Ten, twenty, more and more keep coming, their skin in sickly shades of green or white, their hair tangled messes of oily strands that point out in each direction. Moonlight gleams off their crude weapons.
“Rosalina!” My name is shouted over and over again, but I can barely comprehend. I must help Farron. If he’s trapped by the Prince of Thorns—
Dayton shoots a blast of wind at the monsters. They stampede toward us with a primal rage, snarling and snapping at each other as they jostle for position.