Wintersong

The goblin girls exchanged looks.

“Is that what you wish?” Twig asked.

“Yes,” I said firmly. “I wish for you to take me before the Goblin King.”

“All right.” Identical pointed grins spread over their faces. “As you wish, mortal,” they said. “As you wish.”

*

I blinked.

I was in an entirely different room, naked but for the bedsheet draped about me. This room was much larger than my barrow, its packed-dirt ceilings supported by the great roots of a spreading tree, like the buttresses of a cathedral. An audience chamber, I thought.

Despite the spaciousness, the chamber was cozy: the furnishings simple, the decorations spare. No tapestries, no statuaries; the only thing that dominated the room was the enormous bed at its center, wrought of roots and rock.

Then I realized I wasn’t in the Goblin King’s audience chamber. I was in his bedroom.

Thistle and Twig had granted me my wish. They had taken me before the Goblin King the exact moment I demanded it. I had wished and now I was here.

Constanze always told me to never play games with the goblin folk. Never say I wish, never give them an opening.

Panicking, I scrambled for a way out. I had to leave before he awoke, before he saw me.

A moan from the bed stopped me, a disconcertingly familiar sound. It was the sound of Papa trying to make it through the day. The sound of Mother’s disappointment in her husband’s failures. The sound of Josef after a long day of practice. The sound of K?the during her monthly courses. The sound of pain.

I should have left. I should have run. This was Der Erlk?nig. This was the Lord of Mischief, the Ruler Underground. This was the creature who had abducted my sister, who made me sacrifice my music to his capricious whims. This was the stranger who lured me Underground for the sake of his wagers and games.

But I thought of the soft-eyed young man with whom I had danced at the ball, the man who had called himself my friend. I hesitated.

Well, I thought. Today we go back to being enemies.

I approached the bed. All that was visible was a shock of messy, pale hair, a pile of rumpled sheets, and the curve of a bare shoulder. I tucked the edges of my bedsheet more securely about me. Gathering my courage, I grabbed the silken linens wrapped around the Goblin King, and pulled.

The force of my pulling hurled him out of bed. He awoke with a volley of curses, his voice roughened by wine and lack of sleep. The Goblin King swore at Heaven, at Hell, at God, and the Devil. I was amused.

A disheveled head peered over the edge of the bed, eyes bleary, cheeks creased with sleep. He looked surprisingly young. I had always thought of Der Erlk?nig as ageless, neither young nor old, but seeing him like this—he seemed near to me in age.

The Goblin King shot me a glare before realizing just who it was in his chambers, alone and undressed.

“Elisabeth!” Unbelievably, his voice cracked, like a schoolboy’s.

I crossed my arms. “Good morning, mein Herr.”

He scrambled for the covers. He wrapped the sheets about his slim hips, leaving his chest bare. The Goblin King was tall and slim, but well-muscled. I had seen other men bare-chested before—tan, broad-shouldered, well-worked—but their half-naked bodies did not stir me like the Goblin King’s. There was a grace to every line of his body; elegance was not only in his air, but in the way he moved. Even when he was awkward. Even when he was unsure.

“I—I—” He was flustered. I relished this bit of power over him, this ability to unsettle him as much as he unsettled me.

“Is that all you have to say to me?” I asked, struggling to keep a straight face. “After all we shared?”

“What did we share?” There was definite panic to his voice now. Suddenly the game was not so fun anymore; if we had indeed taken a tumble in his bed, would he truly be so horrified? I was not K?the, with her inviting walk and her smile that promised indulgence. Despite my plainness, I thought that the Goblin King and I had shared a spark, but perhaps it was only I who was ready to blaze into flames.

“Nothing, nothing.” I was done playing.

“Elisabeth.” His wolf’s eyes demanded answers. “What did I do to you?”

“Nothing,” I said. “You did nothing. I woke alone in my own chamber.”

“Where are your clothes?”

“In a pile of ashes, I’ve been told. On your orders, I might add, mein Herr.”

He ran a sheepish hand through his tangled locks. “Ah. Yes. I will send the tailors to you to take your measurements. Is that why you are here?”

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