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Chapter no 18 – Elm

Two Twisted Crowns (The Shepherd King, 2)

Elm watched the party ride away, Ravynโ€™s note crumpling in his hand.ย Iโ€™ll see you soon.

He pushed his hair out of his eyes and turned, keeping the gap between himself and his father wide. โ€œWas this your doing?โ€

The Kingโ€™s gaze was fixed on the road ahead, his cloak billowing in the chill autumn air. โ€œYouโ€™re my son. You belong here.โ€

โ€œYou never cared where I was or what I did before.โ€

โ€œI had little reason to until now.โ€ The King shot him a sidelong glance. โ€œIโ€™m told you sent the guards away from Ione Hawthornโ€™s door last night. And that you spoke with her.โ€

Elm clenched his jaw.

The Kingโ€™s timbre resembled the bark of one of his hounds. โ€œHer family are vile, treasonous vultures.โ€

โ€œWhat Tyrn said at the inquest was true enough.โ€ Elm weighed his words. โ€œKill her, and people will talk. Theyโ€™ll find out about Hauth. And about who you put him in bed with for a Nightmare Card. Perhaps your court will take a harder look at you, Father. Theyโ€™ll see, for a man so wholly condemning of the infection, that you sure keep interesting company. Orithe Willow. Ravyn. Infected.โ€

Displeasure deepened the lines in the Kingโ€™s face. โ€œWhat,โ€ he said, wine on his bitter breath, โ€œwould you have me do?โ€

It began to rain. Elm winced against it, shrouding his voice in disinterest. โ€œKeep Ione Hawthorn close. She can give your excuses for

Hauthโ€™s absence. A symbol that all is as it ever was. For now.โ€

In the distance, thunder rolled. The Kingโ€™s hand was ungloved, swollen and calloused, brutalized with age and years of swordplay. With it, he took the crown from his head. Examined it. โ€œIt rattles me to the bone, seeing your brother,โ€ he said in a low voice. โ€œEven with his Black Horse and Scythe, he broke so easilyโ€”โ€ He winced against the wind. โ€œLife is fragile. The line of kings, fragile.โ€

Elm had never spoken to his father like this, just the two of them, trading quiet wordsโ€”not ever. It made his skin crawl. โ€œIs that why Ravyn goes and I must remain? A pretense of strength?โ€

โ€œUse your brain,โ€ the King snapped. โ€œWe may pretend at it, but nothing is as it was. Even should Hauth wake and face the kingdom once more, his spine is in tatters. He will never sire an heirโ€”the Physicians are certain.โ€ He took Elm by the shoulder, his fingers prodding into weary, aching muscle. โ€œI have Blunder to think of. Five hundred years of rule to think of.โ€

Elm stared into his fatherโ€™s eyes, the words burning in his throat. โ€œAnd so you reach deep into your pile of shit and pull the second Prince back into the light.โ€

The Kingโ€™s grip tightened. โ€œThe throne of Blunder is Rowan. It is under our namesake tree that the Deck will be united. The mist will be lifted, the infection cured. When I die, I will be buried with my father and grandfather and their grandfathers in the rowan grove.โ€ His gaze dropped to the crown in his other hand. โ€œAnd you, Renelm, will be the one to take my place.โ€

Elm jerked out of his fatherโ€™s grasp. His body was screamingโ€”denying. Bile churned, escaping up his throat into his mouth. โ€œI donโ€™t want your throne. Hauth may yetโ€”he mayโ€”โ€

โ€œNo. He will not.โ€ The King placed the crown back onto his head. He looked weathered, the wind and rain washing all pretense from him. He was just a drunk old man, grieving.

And somehow, that made it so much worse. Anger, Elm had come to expect. His father had always been a man of wrath and an abrupt, exacting temper. But this resignationโ€”Elm did not know it. Could not stomach it.

He pulled away from the King. โ€œWhere are you going?โ€

โ€œTo see Jespyr.โ€

โ€œShe left with Emory this morning for Castle Yew.โ€

Ravyn, Jespyr, now Emory, gone. Elm bit the inside of his cheek and kept going, hail pelting him as he crossed back into the bailey.

โ€œIโ€™ll expect you at court tonight,โ€ his father called into the wind. โ€œI wonโ€™t be there.โ€

โ€œYou will, Renelm. Youโ€™ll resign as Destrier. And you and Ione Hawthorn will pretend all is as it ever was, until I am ready to announce your succession. And her execution.โ€

 

 

Elm slept the day away. He might have rolled over onto his stomach and slept through the night as well, but the echoing clamor of dinner in the great hall swept up the stairs. He woke with a start, heart pounding, sweat on his brow and chest, certain there was something he must doโ€”something heโ€™d forgotten.

Hawthorn.ย He ripped the blankets off. Ravyn and Jespyr and Emory might be gone, but Elm was far from aimless. Heโ€™d no desire to twiddle his thumbs and wait for his father to christen him heirโ€”he had a promise to keep. A Maiden Card to find.

He stripped and scrubbed himself clean with cold water, wondering with a shiver what would happen if the King sought to kill Ione Hawthorn before they found her Maiden Card. Would she die? Or would the Maidenโ€™s magic heal her, even from a fatal blow?

His stomach knotted at the thought.

He left his chamber in a fresh black tunic and hurried down the corridor, gnashing his teeth against the raucous sound of court wafting through the castle. He knew what he would find in the great hall. Men, slipping Providence Cards between their fingers, talking too loudly of magic and money and Card trade. Mothers, ready to thrust their daughters onto his arm. His own father, grunting into his goblet, surveying his court, as if everything he held in his pitiless green eyes was owed to him.

โ€œYou look like youโ€™re about to hurl yourself down those stairs, Prince,โ€ a voice called from behind.

Elmโ€™s hand crashed into his pocket. He tapped velvet only twice before his brain caught up with his fingers. โ€œSpirit and trees, Hawthorn, you have

to stop doing that.โ€

Ione stood half in shadow, half in light. โ€œSorry,โ€ she said, not sounding sorry at all. โ€œIโ€™d thought youโ€™d heard me.โ€

Her hair was fastened in a tight knot at the nape of her neck, and someone had given her a new dress. It was dark, grayish blue, the color of deep, icy water. It hugged her poorly, marring the shape of her curved body. The fabric bunched at her neck, secured by a gray ribbon just below her jaw, collar-like.

Two figures emerged out of shadow behind Ione. They werenโ€™t the same sentries from her chamber door last night. They stood too tallโ€”too broadโ€” to be castle guards. And, unlike the castle guards, when they beheld Elm, they didnโ€™t cower.

Destriers. Allyn Moss and, to Elmโ€™s bottomless chagrin, Royce Linden. โ€œGents,โ€ Elm said, offering them a mocking bow.

They lowered their heads in reply. Mossโ€™s eyes dropped. Lindenโ€™s didnโ€™t. โ€œTheyโ€™ve moved you to the royal wing, I see,โ€ Elm said to Ione. His

gaze returned to the Destriers. โ€œAnd you areโ€”โ€ โ€œMiss Hawthornโ€™s guards,โ€ Linden replied. โ€œNot anymore. Iโ€™ll see to that.โ€

The Destriers exchanged a glance, and Lindenโ€™s voice hardened. โ€œThe King wants a keen eye kept on her, lest she try to escape.โ€

โ€œI have two eyes, and theyโ€™re keen enough.โ€ Elm pulled his Scythe out of his pocket, a quiet threat. โ€œYouโ€™re dismissed, Destriers. Enjoy your evening.โ€

Moss hurried down the hall. Lindenโ€™s pace was slower. He muttered something that sounded likeย bloody gitย as he passed, his eyes narrow as they darted between Elm and Ione.

Ione watched him go. Her face conveyed little, but Elm searched it anyway. When she caught him looking, he fixed his mouth with a lazy smile and offered her his arm. โ€œI should warn you, Iโ€™m a horrid dinner companion.โ€

Ioneโ€™s hand pressed into his sleeve. The smell of her hairโ€”floral, sweet

โ€”filled his nose. โ€œThat makes us a pair.โ€

They walked in silence to the grand stairwell. The steward opened his mouth to announce them, but was quieted by a flick of Elmโ€™s wrist. Still, heads turned in their wake. Conversations went quiet as Elm and Ioneโ€”

whom they all still assumed to be the future Queenโ€”strode down the stairs. There were smiles, bows. Elm returned none of them.

Neither did Ione.

Elm peered down at her dark, shapeless dress. โ€œInsulted the tailor, have we?โ€

โ€œThe tailor?โ€

โ€œYour attire.โ€ His gaze swept down her body. โ€œItโ€™sโ€ฆ itโ€™s a bitโ€ฆโ€

Ioneโ€™s voice went flat. โ€œPlease, continue. I live and breathe to hear your opinion of my gown, Prince Renelm.โ€

โ€œIf you could even call it that.โ€ Elm plucked at the ribbon along her neck, his finger grazing the underside of her jaw. โ€œItโ€™s the worst thing Iโ€™ve ever seen.โ€

โ€œAll my dresses are back at Hawthorn House. Your father sent this one to my room.โ€

โ€œWith his two dimmest Destriers in tow, I see.โ€

Ahead, music swelled in the great hall, the climax of a jig. โ€œThen your ploy during the inquest was a success.โ€

โ€œTo a point.โ€ Elm leaned down, his voice in her ear. โ€œMy father wishes to keep everything under his thumb. Including you.โ€ He grimaced. โ€œAnd, more effectively, me. Weโ€™re to pretend nothing happenedโ€”speak nothing of your cousin or uncle or fatherโ€”and certainly nothing of Hauth.โ€

Ione raised her brows. โ€œWhat excuse am I to give for myย betrothedโ€™s

absence?โ€

โ€œHauth is ill, but recovering.โ€

The great hall was loud, the Kingโ€™s court well into their cups. Some remained seated while others gathered in groups, swaying to the music. Voices clamored against stone walls. Cheeks flushed and clothes shifted from dancing, the hall rife with forfeit sobriety.

The Kingโ€™s table was lifted on a dais similar to the one in the throne room. From it, green eyes watched. When Elm faced them, he noted the demand, expectancy, and annoyance stamped across his fatherโ€™s face. He knew what the King wanted. On his right side, in the seat that had only ever been Hauthโ€™s, there was a vacancy. An empty chair.

The High Princeโ€™s chair.

Elm pinned Ioneโ€™s hand against his arm. There was no way in hell he was going up there alone.

She scowled down at his hand. โ€œWhat are youโ€”โ€

โ€œOne last stipulation, Hawthorn,โ€ he said through tight lips. He shot his father a void smile, pulling Ione with him to the dais. โ€œIf you want free rein of the castle, I am to be your chaperone.โ€

Her exhale was a hiss. When they stood before the King, chins tilting in stiff reverence, Ioneโ€™s eyes were so cold Elm felt a pinch of guilt for dragging her up there.

The Kingโ€™s displeasure was poorly masked. Still, he offered a curt nod, eyes flickering to his court, aware he was being watched. His gaze returned to Ione, bleary yet narrow, lingering a moment too long over her bodyโ€”her poorly fitting dress. The corner of his lip twitched.

In that moment, he looked all the world like Hauth.

Elm slammed his hand into his pocket. Only this time, the Scytheโ€™s velvet edge did nothing to soothe him. But three tapsโ€”three taps and he could make his father roll his eyes so far back into his head heโ€™d stop seeing straight. His finger twitched against the red Cardโ€™s velvet edge, the idea headier than any wine.

Ione merely held the Kingโ€™s gaze, the frost in her eyes shifting to disinterest. She yawned.

โ€œSit,โ€ the King barked at them.

The only empty chair was Hauthโ€™s. On its right sat Aldys Beech, the Kingโ€™s treasurer, along with his wife and son.

Elm didnโ€™t bother to glance at them. โ€œShove over.โ€

Beechโ€™s eyes, already too large for his head, bulged. โ€œBut, sire, the King has gifted us these seatsโ€”โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t give a flying fโ€”โ€

โ€œWhat Prince Renelm means,โ€ Ione said, her voice easy, โ€œis that, while he merely warms Prince Hauthโ€™s seat,ย thatย seat,โ€ she said, gesturing to the chair under Beechโ€™s narrow bottom, โ€œbelongs to me, your future Queen.โ€ She threw her gaze over her shoulder at Elm. โ€œUnless youโ€™d like to see me take my seat atop the Princeโ€™s lap.โ€

Beechโ€™s eyes widened furtherโ€”as did his wifeโ€™s and sonโ€™s. They attempted no further argument. Fleeing either her beauty or wrath, the Beech family vacated not only Ioneโ€™s seat, but the dais altogether.

 

 

There was no getting comfortable. Elm half expected spikes to shoot out of Hauthโ€™s chair and impale him, the wood sensing his masterโ€™s absence, conscious that theย spareย had taken his place.

What Ione had said about sitting in his lap hadnโ€™t helped him settle.

Elm ate quickly, waiting for his father to be distracted so that he and Ione might slip away from the wretched dais and continue their search for her Maiden Card.

But his fatherโ€™s focus was never long spent. King Rowan spoke to courtiers in grunts and nods, his gaze forwardโ€”but Elm was certain he was watching him. He was like a schoolmaster, waiting for his least-favorite pupil to step out of line.

When the gong chimed ten times, Elm let out a groan. โ€œWhat a waste of time.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re in a mood,โ€ Ione said into her goblet, her heart-shaped mouth stained red along the inside of her lips.

โ€œIโ€™m always in a mood.โ€ โ€œA family trait, perhaps.โ€

That set his teeth on edge. โ€œYouโ€™re not half as funny as you think you are, Hawthorn.โ€

She took another drink. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t know where to start, making a Rowan laugh.โ€

Elm pressed the heels of his palms into his eyes. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. Iโ€™m being an ass.โ€ He flung a hand toward the great hall. โ€œIt comes easy, in this place.โ€

โ€œSo your terrible mood has nothing to do with the party that left the castle this morning? The one with Elspeth and Ravyn Yew?โ€

Elm lifted his head from his hands, his eyes slow to focus. He ran his thumb along the rim of his goblet. โ€œWho told you that?โ€

โ€œThe Destrier with marks on his faceโ€”Linden.โ€ She touched the high collar of her dress. โ€œI think he thought it might hurt me, knowing my cousin was free of the castle and I wasnโ€™t.โ€

โ€œDid it?โ€

โ€œIt might have, once. I might have cried for the loneliness of it all.โ€ Her

voice frosted over. โ€œBut I donโ€™t cry anymore.โ€

The pinch of guilt Elm had felt for dragging her up to the dais wrenched. He looked out over the great hall. Most of the court was still seated at the long table, their goblets ever full, tended by servants who expertly wove through the hall. Those who stood came in a slow line to the dais, offering words of praise to his father and his council or asking after Hauth.

They should have been looking for Ioneโ€™s Maiden Card, not wasting the evening on pageantry.

Once, heโ€™d thought it necessary. Heโ€™d told Elspeth Spindle as much on Market Day.ย Itโ€™s pageantry that keeps us looking like everyone else.

Elm drained his goblet, then reached for Ioneโ€™s, using the opportunity to speak into her ear. โ€œI have another idea how we might find your Card.โ€ His breath stirred a loose strand of hair that framed her face. โ€œBut you may not care for it.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t care for anything anymore, Prince. Thatโ€™s entirely the problem.โ€ It was loud in the great hall. No one would find it strange that Elm might speak so near her ear. Whatย wasย strange was Ioneโ€™s quick intake of breath when heโ€™d leaned close. The brush of pink in her cheeks. The gooseflesh

along the nape of her neck.

Elm noted them all. It seemed, despite her many protestations, Ione Hawthorn could feelย someย things.

He hadnโ€™t heard the shuffling of feet. Shadows danced in Elmโ€™s periphery. He was still looking at Ioneโ€™s neck when a feminine voice from below the dais said, โ€œGood evening, Prince Renelm.โ€

Elm pulled backโ€”dragged his eyes forward. Wayland Pine, with his wife and their three daughters, stood before the King, the eldest slightly ahead of the rest. It was she who had spoken.

Elm couldnโ€™t for the life of him remember her name.

Like the Pines, the King was waiting for Elm to respond, wearing a glower that conveyed just how little effort it would take to reach over and throttle his son in front of them.

Pageantry.

Elm winked at his father, fixing his face with his custom brand of petulant, courtly charm. โ€œThe Pine family. How delightful.โ€ He turned to Wayland. โ€œI was sorry to hear about your Iron Gate Card.โ€ His bruised hand flexed beneath the table. โ€œNasty things, highwaymen.โ€

Wayland Pine, the poor bastard, looked close to tears at the mention of the Providence Card Ravyn had rid him of several weeks ago. โ€œThank you, my Prince.โ€ He bowed, his hand on his eldest daughterโ€™s back, pushing her slightly forward. โ€œYou remember Farrah, my eldest.โ€

Elm hardly did. โ€œOf course. Are you long at Stone, Miss Pine?โ€

Farrahโ€™s eyes flickered to the King. โ€œFor a week, Your Grace. For the feasts.โ€

โ€œFor which we are most grateful to be invited,โ€ Wayland chimed, another bow.

The King raised a hand, acceptance and dismissal in a single gesture.

The Pines shuffled away, Farrah bidding Elm a backward glance. โ€œWhat feasts?โ€ he said to his father, watching the Pines disappear into the crowd.

The King leaned back in his chair. โ€œBeginning tomorrow night, there will be six feasts. On the sixth, you will choose a wife.โ€

It came quickly, Elmโ€™s rage. Like flames licking through a grate, he felt heat all over him. He tried to swallow it, but the pain of it was already there. His palms hurt. His eyes burned. His molars pressed so hard into each other they felt fused. For an instant, he considered flipping the table over.

If the King felt his fury, he made no note of it. โ€œYour time under Ravynโ€™s wing has ended. I should have married you off years ago.โ€

With that, the King severed the discussion. He stood from his seat, everyone on the dais besides Elm and Ione standing in reverence as they watched the King and the two Destriers who shadowed him quit the great hall.

Elm felt reckless. He opened his mouth to call after his father, to unleash some of the venom pooling on his tongue, but a hand on his arm stopped him.

โ€œYou have the look of someone whoโ€™s about to break something,โ€ Ione said in an even voice.

He wanted to. Elm didnโ€™t know what, but he vowed something would shatter.

Ioneโ€™s grip on his arm tightened. So tight that when she stood, she pulled Elm with her. โ€œCome, Prince. Letโ€™s get drunk.โ€

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