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Chapter no 20

The Prisoner's Throne (The Stolen Heir Duology #2)

Guards and courtiers thunder up all around Oak. Did he cry out? Did Jack? The kelpie is standing beside the prince now, but he doesnโ€™t remember when Jack stopped being a horse. The noise and confusion mirror

Oakโ€™s thoughts. People are shouting at one another, making Oak dizzy.

Or maybe thatโ€™s the blusher mushroom still slowing his blood.

Jack is insisting they found the Ghost like this and someone is sayingย how horrifyingย and a lot of other meaningless words that blend together in Oakโ€™s mind.

Taryn is screaming, a high keening sound. Sheโ€™s on her knees beside the spy, shaking him. When she looks up at Oak, her gaze is so full of grief and accusation that he has to look away.

I hated him, Oak thinks. But heโ€™s not even sure thatโ€™s true. He never knew Liriope, and he knew Garrett.ย I should have hated him. I wanted to hate him.

He didnโ€™t kill him, though.

He didnโ€™t kill him, but he might have. He could have. Could he have?

Jude moves to Tarynโ€™s side, one hand going to her twinโ€™s shoulders.

Fingers pressing reassuringly.

The Roach leans down to check the body, and when one of the guards tries to stop him, itโ€™s Cardan who tells them to let him be. Oak didnโ€™t even realize the Roach wasย atย the hunt.

Taryn lies down beside Garrettโ€™s corpse, her hair shrouding his face.

One of her tears has pooled in the corner of his eye, wetting his lash.

Cardan kneels beside her, his hand going to Garrettโ€™s chest. Taryn looks up at him.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ She doesnโ€™t sound happy, but theyโ€™ve never really gotten along.

โ€œBlusher mushroom slows the body,โ€ he says, his gaze Bickering to the Roach, who almost certainly taught him that. โ€œBut it slows itย slowly.โ€

โ€œDo you mean heโ€™s not dead?โ€ she asks.

โ€œIs there something to be done?โ€ Jude asks at almost the same time. โ€œNot in the way you mean,โ€ says Cardan, answering his wifeโ€™s question

and not Tarynโ€™s. He turns to Randalin and the crowd, then waves his beringed hand exaggeratedly. โ€œDisperse. Go on.โ€

Courtiers step away, heading to their horses, a buzz of rumors in the air. The Minister of Keys remains, glowering, standing beside Oriana. A few

more Folk seem to believe this order doesnโ€™t apply to them. The Roach stays, too, but heโ€™s practically family.

Oak forces himself to scoot back, bracing against the trunk of a tree. For him, it was not much blusher mushroom, but he still feels the numbness tingling through his fingers and toes. Right now, he isnโ€™t certain whether he would fall back down if he tried to stand.

Wren crosses to his side. Bogdana stands at the edge of the clearing, half hidden by shadows.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to have to move as well,โ€ Cardan tells Taryn.

โ€œWhat are you going to do to him?โ€ she asks, shielding his body as though to protect it from the High King.

Cardan raises his eyebrows. โ€œLetโ€™s just see if it works.โ€

โ€œTaryn,โ€ Jude says, reaching for her sisterโ€™s hand and pulling her to her feet. โ€œThere isnโ€™t time.โ€

Cardan closes his gold-rimmed eyes and, for all his extravagance, right then he looks like one of the paintings of the High Kings of old, somehow moved into the realm of myth.

All around them, wildflowers sprout, uncurling from buds. Trees shiver, sending down pale leaves. Brambles coil into unlikely shapes. There is a buzz of bees in the air, and then from the earth, roots rise, turning into the sturdy trunk of a tree around Garrettโ€™s body.

Taryn makes a sharp sound. The Roach lets out a breath, awe in his eyes. Oak feels it, too.

Bark wraps around Garrett and branches unfold, budding with leaves and fragrant blossoms the lilac of Tarynโ€™s clothing. A tree, unlike all that grow in the Milkwood, rises from the ground, shrouding the Ghostโ€™s body. Its limbs reach toward the sky, petals raining down around them.

Where Garrett stood, there is only the tree.

The High King opens his eyes, letting out a ragged breath. The courtiers that remained have taken several steps back. They are slackjawed in surprise, perhaps having forgotten his command of the land beneath their feet.

โ€œWill thatโ€”โ€ Jude begins, her eyes shining.

โ€œI thought that if the poison makes every part of him slow, then I could turn him into something that could live like that,โ€ says Cardan with a shudder. โ€œBut I donโ€™t know that it will save him.โ€

โ€œWill he be like this forever?โ€ Taryn asks, her voice cracking a little. โ€œAlive but imprisoned? Dying but not dead?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™tย know,โ€ Cardan says again, in a raw way that makes Oak think of being trapped in the royal bedchamber and overhearing him and Jude together. Itโ€™s Cardanโ€™s real voice, the one he uses when heโ€™s not performing.

Taryn runs her hand over the rough bark, her tears coming on a sob. โ€œHe is still lost to me. He is still gone. And who knows if heโ€™s suffering?โ€

Oak feels Wrenโ€™s hand in his, her fingers cool. โ€œCome,โ€ she says, and at her tug, he finally rises. Heโ€™s a little unsteady on his hooves, and she narrows her eyes at him. Sheโ€™s seen him poisoned before.

โ€œWe will discover who did this,โ€ Jude is telling her twin, voice firm. โ€œWe will punish them, I promise you that.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t we know already?โ€ Taryn says through tears, her voice breaking on the words. Her gaze goes to Wren. โ€œI saw her by his horse.โ€

โ€œWren had nothing to do with this,โ€ Oak snaps, squeezing Wrenโ€™s fingers. โ€œWhat possible motive could she have?โ€

โ€œQueen Suren wants to destroy Elfhame,โ€ one of the remaining courtiers interjects. โ€œJust as her mother did.โ€

Jude does not speak, but Oak can tell she isnโ€™t unmoved by the argument that Wren may have had a hand in this. And to make it worse, Wren denies none of it. She says nothing. She just listens to their accusations.

Deny it, he wants to tell her. But what if she canโ€™t?

Just then, a cry fills the air. A vulture circles once to land heavily on Wrenโ€™s shoulder. The storm hag.

โ€œPrince?โ€ Tiernan asks Oak, eyeing the vulture with misgiving.

โ€œWe should quit this place,โ€ says Randalin. โ€œOur milling about cannot do anything in the way of helping.โ€

The Bomb glares at everyone. โ€œWhat did he eat or drink? We should isolate the poison.โ€

โ€œIt was in the mead,โ€ Oak says.

The Bomb turns toward him, white hair a nimbus around her heart- shaped face. โ€œHow do you know that?โ€

The prince doesnโ€™t want to say this part out loud, not in front of even a small crowd, but he canโ€™t see a way out, either. โ€œI drank some.โ€

There is a ripple of shock through the remaining courtiers.

โ€œYour Highness!โ€ Randalin protests.

โ€œAnd yet youโ€™re standing,โ€ says a pixie. โ€œHow is it that youโ€™re standing?โ€

โ€œHe must only have had the barest sip,โ€ Jude lies. โ€œBrother, perhaps itโ€™s time to come away and rest.โ€

Perhaps it would be better if they got out of the Milkwood. Heโ€™s feeling somewhat unsteady on his feet. Heโ€™s feeling somewhat unsteady, period.

โ€œDo you think Iโ€™m responsible?โ€ Wren whispers, her hand still in his.

No, of course not,ย Oak wants to say, but he isnโ€™t sure he can make his mouth spit out those words.

Did she poison the Ghost? Would she have done it for Hyacintheโ€™s sake, if he asked her to help? Had he found out a secret so great she would protect it, even if it cost a life?

โ€œI will believe whatever you tell me,โ€ Oak says. โ€œNor will I look for deceit in your words.โ€

She watches the shifts of his expression, almost certainly looking for deceit inย hisย words.

The vulture shifts, watching him with bead-black eyes. Bogdanaโ€™s eyes, filled with rage.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Wren says. He sees the hagโ€™s talons sink into her shoulder hard enough to pierce flesh. A trickle of blood runs down her dress. But Wrenโ€™s expression doesnโ€™t change.

Heโ€™s sure she feels the pain. This is what she must have been like back in the Court of Teeth. This is how she endures all that she does. But he doesnโ€™t understand why she allows Bogdana to hurt her this way. She has the authority and power now.

Something is very, very wrong.

โ€œYou need to tell me whatโ€™s going on,โ€ he says, keeping his voice low. โ€œI can fix it. I can help.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not the one who needs saving.โ€ Wren lets go of his hand.

โ€œIt wasย her,โ€ insists Taryn. โ€œHer or that witch she has with her or the traitorous knight who tried to kill Cardan. I want the knight arrested. I want the girl arrested. I want the witch in a cage.โ€

Randalin blinks several times in surprise. โ€œWell,โ€ he says to Wren. โ€œArenโ€™t you going to say anything? Tell them you didnโ€™t do it.โ€

But again, she is silent.

The Minister of Keys sputters a bit as he tries to digest this. โ€œMy dear girl, you must speak.โ€

Cardan turns toward Wren. โ€œIโ€™d appreciate it if you went with my knights,โ€ he says. โ€œWe have questions for you. Tiernan, show us your loyalty and accompany her. I am personally charging you with not letting her out of your sight.โ€

Tiernan looks in Oakโ€™s direction in alarm.

Wren closes her eyes, as though her doom has come upon her. โ€œAs you command.โ€

โ€œYour Majesty,โ€ Tiernan begins, frowning. โ€œI canโ€™t leave my chargeโ€”โ€ โ€œGo,โ€ Oak says. โ€œDonโ€™t let her out of your sight, as the High King said.โ€

He understands why Tiernan is concerned, however. Sending him away may mean that Cardan doesnโ€™t want Oak to have anyone to fight at his side when the High King questions him.

Randalin clears his throat. โ€œIf I may, I suggest we move to Insear. The tents are already set up and guards sent ahead. We will not be so out in the open.โ€

โ€œWhy not?โ€ says Cardan. โ€œA perfect place for a partyย orย an execution. Tiernan, take Queen Suren to her tent and wait with her there until I call on her. Keep everyone else out.โ€

The vulture on her shoulder jumps into the sky, beating black wings, but Wren makes no protest.

Oak wonders if he could stop them. He doesnโ€™t think so. Not without a lot of death.

โ€œLet me go with her,โ€ Oak says.

Jude turns toward him, raising her brows. โ€œShe didnโ€™t deny it. She isnโ€™t denying it now. Youโ€™re staying with us.โ€

โ€œFurthermore,โ€ proclaims Cardan to the rest of his knights, โ€œI want the rest of you to find Hyacinthe and bring him toย myย tent on Insear.โ€

โ€œWhy not suspect me?โ€ Oak demands, voice rising.

Taryn gives a little laugh, at odds with the tears staining her cheeks. โ€œThatโ€™s ridiculous.โ€

โ€œIs it? I found his body,โ€ the prince insists. โ€œAnd I have a motive, after all.โ€

โ€œExplain,โ€ Cardan says, mouth a grim line.

Jude seems to sense whatโ€™s coming. There are too many people around, guards, courtiers, Randalin, and Baphen. โ€œWhatever Oak has to tell us, he can tell us in private.โ€

โ€œThen by all means,โ€ says Cardan, โ€œletโ€™s depart.โ€

But Oak doesnโ€™t want to be quiet. Maybe itโ€™s the blusher mushroom in his blood, maybe itโ€™s the sheer frustration of the moment. โ€œHe murdered my first mother. Heโ€™s the reason she died, and you bothโ€”you allโ€”hid it from me.โ€

A hush goes through the courtiers like a gust of wind.

Oak feels the delirious abandon of breaking the rules. In a family of deceivers, telling the truthโ€”out loud, where anyone could hear itโ€”was a massive transgression. โ€œYou allowed me to treat him like a friend, and all the while you knew we were spitting on my motherโ€™s memory.โ€

A drawn-out silence follows his last word. Oriana has a white-fingered hand pressing against her mouth. She didnโ€™t know, either.

Finally, Cardan speaks. โ€œYou make a very good point. You had an excellent reason to try to kill him. But did you?โ€

โ€œI urge you all,โ€ interrupts Randalin, โ€œif for no other reason than discretion, let us repair to the tents at Insear. We will have some nettle tea and calm ourselves. As the High Queen says, this is not a conversation to be had in public.โ€

Jude nods. This may be the first time Randalin and Jude ever agreed on anything.

โ€œIf my family had their way,โ€ says Oak, โ€œthis isnโ€™t a conversation weโ€™d have at all.โ€

Then, from across the Milkwood, thereโ€™s a scream.

Moments later, a knight steps into the clearing, looking as though sheโ€™s run all the way there. โ€œWe found another body.โ€

Most of the remaining knot of courtiers begin to move in the direction of the scream, and Oak goes along, though he still feels unsteady. They know heโ€™s poisoned, at least. If he falls down, no one will have many questions.

โ€œWhose?โ€ Jude demands.

They donโ€™t have to go far, though, and he sees the body before she gets her answer.

Lady Elaine, lying in a heap, one of her small wings half crushed when she fell from the horse that is nuzzling the end of her skirts. Lady Elaine, her cheek stained with mud. Her eyes open. Her lips purple.

Oak shakes his head, taking a step back. Hand coming up to cover his mouth. Two people poisonedโ€”threeย people, counting himself. Because of the conspiracy?

Cardan is watching him with an unreadable expression. โ€œYour friend?โ€

The Roach moves to Oak, puts one green clawed hand against the middle of his back. โ€œLetโ€™s go ahead to Insear, as the Minister of Keys said. Youโ€™re upset. Deathโ€™s upsetting.โ€

Oak gives him a wary look, and the goblin holds up his hands in surrender, his black eyes sympathetic. โ€œI had no part in Liriopeโ€™s murder nor these,โ€ the Roach says. โ€œBut I canโ€™t claim Iโ€™ve never done anything wrong.โ€

Oak nods slowly. He canโ€™t claim that, either.

He mounts up again on Jack, who has obligingly become a horse again. The goblin rides a fat, spotted pony, low to the ground. Behind him, someone is saying that the festivities canโ€™t possibly go on as planned.

Oak thinks of Elaine, lying in the dirt. Elaine, who was dangerously ambitious and foolish. Had she told the rest of the conspirators that she was quitting and received this in answer?

His mind turns to Wren, with the vultureโ€™s talons digging into her skin. Her blank expression. He keeps trying to understand why Wren endures it without crying out or striking back.

Does it have something to do with Garrett and Elaine being poisoned? Oak was a fool to bring Wren here. When he gets to the tents on Insear,

heโ€™s going to find hers. Then he is going to get them both off the isles and out of this vipersโ€™ nest. Away from Bogdana. Away from his family. Maybe they could live in the woods outside her mortal familyโ€™s home. Sheโ€™d said, back when they were questing, that sheโ€™d like to visit her sister. What was her name? Bex. They could eat scavenged berries and look up at the stars.

Or maybe Wren wants to go back north, to the Citadel. Thatโ€™s fine, too. โ€œHow long have you known?โ€ the goblin asks.

For a moment, Oak isnโ€™t sure what he means. โ€œAbout what Garrett did? Not long.โ€ Above them, the black bees of the Milkwood buzz, carrying

nectar to their queen. Late afternoon sunlight turns the pale trees gold. He sets his jaw. โ€œSomeone should have told me.โ€

โ€œSomeone clearly did,โ€ says the Roach.

Leander, he supposes, which hardly counts. Andย Hyacinthe, although he didnโ€™t know the whole of it. Oak doesnโ€™t want to blame either of them out loud, not to someone who will carry the tale to his sister. He understands what the Roach is doing, getting him alone like this, understands it well enough to avoid the trap. He shrugs.

โ€œDid you poison him?โ€ the Roach asks.

โ€œI thought Garrett poisonedย me,โ€ the prince says, shaking his head. โ€œNever,โ€ says the goblin. โ€œHe regretted what he did to Liriope. Tried to

make it up to Locke by giving him his true name. But Lockeโ€™s not the person to trust with that sort of thing.โ€

Oak wonders if Garrett tried to make it up to him, too, in ways he never saw. Teaching him the sword, volunteering to go north when the prince was in trouble, going to Oak with information before taking it to Jude. He didnโ€™t like having a reason to be anything but angry, but that didnโ€™t mean it wasnโ€™t true.

โ€œThere was something he needed to tell me,โ€ Oak says. โ€œNot about any of that. Something else.โ€

โ€œOnce youโ€™re delivered to Insear, Iโ€™ll check out his part of the lair. If he had any sense, he wrote it down.โ€

At the edge of the Milkwood, they pass the Lake of Masks. Oakโ€™s gaze goes to the water. You never see your own face, always the face of someone else, someone from the past or future. Today he sees a blond pixie laughing as she splashes someone elseโ€”a man in black with saltwhite hair. Recognizing neither of them, he turns away.

At the coastline, several boats await them, pale, narrow boats with high prows and sterns curving upward so that they look like crescent moons floating on their backsโ€”all crewed by armored guards. As the sun dips beneath the ocean on the horizon, Oak looks across to Insear, outfitted with tents for the festivities to come, then to the sparkling lights of Mandrake Market, and beyond, to the Tower of Forgetting, stark black against the red- and-gold sky.

He and the Roach get into one of the boats, and Jack, having shifted into his bipedal form, gets in after them. A guard Oak doesnโ€™t recognize nods to

them and then puts up the sail. A few moments later, they are speeding across the short stretch of sea.

โ€œYour Majesty,โ€ says the guard. โ€œThere are tents for your refreshment.

Yours is marked with your fatherโ€™s sign.โ€ The prince nods, distracted.

The Roach stays in the boat. โ€œIโ€™ll find out what the Ghost knew, if I can,โ€ he says gruffly. โ€œYou stay out of trouble.โ€

Oak couldnโ€™t count how many times someone said that to him. He isnโ€™t sure he ever listened.

On Insear, there is a small forest of pavilions and other elaborate tents. He looks among them for Wrenโ€™s, listening in vain for the sound of her voice or Tiernanโ€™s. He doesnโ€™t hear either of them, and he doesnโ€™t see Madocโ€™s moon-and-dagger crest marking a tent for him, either.

Everything feels wrong. He can see individual threads but not make out the larger web, and there isnโ€™t much time.

It may already be too late.ย Wasnโ€™t that what Wren said? Surely, she couldnโ€™t have been referring to the poison.ย Iโ€™m not the one who needs saving.

He pushes the thought from his mind. No, she couldnโ€™t have been speaking about that. She couldnโ€™t have a hand in murdering Lady Elaine and probably killing Garrett, too, for all that turning him into a tree might help.

As Oak and Jack walk on, the prince spots a tent with the flap open and Tatterfell within. But it isnโ€™t Madocโ€™s crest thatโ€™s stamped on the outside. The prince frowns at the mark until he understands what heโ€™s looking at.ย Dainโ€™s crest.ย But people donโ€™t generally refer to Oak as Dainโ€™s son, even though at this point itโ€™s well known where his Greenbriar blood comes from. If she sees this, Oriana is going to have a fit.

Oak puzzles over who arranged things this way. Not his sister. Nor Cardan, unless this is some kind of backhanded way of reminding Oak of his place. But it seems a little too backhanded. Cardan is subtle but notย confusinglyย subtle.

He steps inside. The tent is furnished with rugs covering the rock and patches of grass. He spots a table is crowded with bottles of water and wine and the pressings of fruit. Candles burn to chase away shadows. Tatterfell looks up from spreading his change of clothes out on a low couch.

โ€œYouโ€™re early,โ€ the imp says. โ€œAnd whoโ€™s this?โ€

Jack comes forward to take Tatterfellโ€™s hand and bow deeply over it. โ€œHis steed and sometimes companion, Jack of the Lakes. It is my honor, lovely lady. Perhaps we shall dance together this evening.โ€

The little faerie blushes, looking very unlike her usual grouchy self.

Oak looks at the burgundy doublet, chosen hours earlier. He can still feel the disorientation of the blusher mushroom coursing through his system, but his movements are less stiff and more sure.

โ€œYou must dress for the festivities,โ€ she says.

He opens his mouth to tell her that theyโ€™re probably not going to happen, then remembers her calling tonight a farce. Did she know something? Did she have a part in this?

He needs to think straight, but itโ€™s so hard with blusher mushroom still addling his mind. Almost certainly, Tatterfell was not planning any assassinations. But he wonders if the poisonings had to do with stopping the ceremony.

That theory didnโ€™t withstand much scrutiny, though. If they wanted it stopped, and had some power over Wren, couldnโ€™t they pressure her to end it? Whoeverย theyย were.

As his mind runs in circles, he strips off his hunting clothes and puts on the new, more formal ones. In moments, Tatterfell is dusting him off and polishing away any mud on his hooves. As though he really is going to his wedding.

The flap of the tent opens, and two knights step inside.

โ€œThe High King and Queen request your presence in their tent before the revel begins,โ€ one says.

โ€œIs Wren there?โ€ he asks.

The knight who spoke shakes his head. He looks to be at least part redcap. The other knight has more elven features and dark eyes. He seems twitchy.

โ€œTell them I will be along presently,โ€ Oak says. โ€œIโ€™m afraid weโ€™re to escort youโ€”now.โ€

That explains the twitchiness, then. โ€œAnd if I donโ€™t comply?โ€

โ€œWe must yet bring you to them,โ€ the elven knight says, looking unhappy about it.

โ€œWell, then,โ€ Oak says, walking to them. He could, perhaps, use his charm to talk the knights out of it, but that seems hardly worth it. Jude would only send more soldiers, and these two would get in undeniable trouble.

The prince carefully does not look in the direction of Jack. Since the kelpie wasnโ€™t mentioned, he doesnโ€™t have to go and will be the safer for it.

Lightning slices across the sky, followed by a crack of thunder. No rain has started yet, though the air is thick with it. The wind is picking up, too, whipping the skirts of the tents. Oak wonders if Bogdana has something to do with this. Certainly, she is in a bad enough mood.

He thinks of Wren again, of the talons biting into her skin. Of her words in the gardens.ย Iโ€™m not safe. You canโ€™t trust me.

There is little for him to do but walk across Insear behind the knights, past where garlands of ferns and wisteria and toadstools have been slung from trees, and musicians are tuning their fiddles, while a few courtiers, arriving unfashionably early, are selecting drinks from a large table, loaded with bottles of all shapes and sizes and colors.

One of the knights pushes aside the Rap of a heavy cream-and-gold tent. Inside, two thrones sit, although neither is occupied. Jude and Cardan stand with Taryn and Madoc. Cardan has changed into clothes of white and gold while Madoc is in deep red, as though they were opposing suits in a deck of cards. Taryn still wears her hunting clothes, her eyes red and swollen, as though she hasnโ€™t stopped crying until just before this moment. Oriana sits in a corner, entertaining Leander. Oak thinks of his own childhood and how she pulled him away from so many dangerous conversations, hiding them in the back, distracting him with a toy or a

sweet.

It was a kindness, he knew. But it made him vulnerable as well.

Three members of the Living Council are in attendance. Fala, the fool; Randalin; and Nihuar, representative of the Seelie Courts. All three of them look grim. Hyacinthe is there, too, sitting on a chair, stony-faced and defiant. Oak can sense the panic he is trying to hide.

Ringed around the tent are guards, none of whom Oak knows. All of whom wear the expressions of people expecting an execution.

โ€œOak,โ€ Jude says. โ€œGood. Are you ready to talk?โ€ โ€œWhereโ€™s Wren?โ€ he asks.

โ€œWhat an excellent question,โ€ she says. โ€œI thought perhaps you knew.โ€ They stare at each other.

โ€œSheโ€™s gone?โ€ he asks.

โ€œAnd Tiernan with her.โ€ Jude nods. โ€œYou can see why we have a lot to discuss. Did you arrange her freedom?โ€

Oak takes a deep breath. There are so many things he should have told her over the years. To tell her now is going to feel like peeling off his own skin. โ€œYou may have heard some things about me and the company I was keeping before I went north with Wren. Lady Elaine, for example. My reasons were not what you might suppose. Iโ€™m notโ€”โ€

Outside, thereโ€™s a crash and a howl of wind. โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ Taryn demands.

Cardan narrows his eyes. โ€œA storm,โ€ he says.

โ€œBrother,โ€ Jude says. โ€œWhy did you bring her here? What did she promise you?โ€

Oak remembers being caught in the rain and thunder of Bogdanaโ€™s power, remembers his ragwort steed being torn out from beneath him. This portends disaster.

โ€œWhen we were on our quest, I tricked Wren,โ€ Oak says. โ€œI kept back information that wasnโ€™t mine to keep.โ€ He cannot help hearing the echo of his own complaint in those words. His family hid things from him the same way he hid things from her.

โ€œAnd?โ€ Jude frowns.

Oak tries to find the right words. โ€œAnd she was angry, so she threw me in prison. Which seems extreme, but I was handling it. And then you . . . overreacted.โ€

โ€œOverreacted?โ€ Jude echoes, clearly incensed. โ€œI was handling it!โ€ Oak repeats, louder.

Thereโ€™s movement out of the corner of his eye, and then two bolts fly across the tent toward Jude. Oak hits the floor, pulling his sword from its sheath.

Cardan whips up his cloak in front of Judeโ€”the cloak made by Mother Marrow, the one that was enchanted to turn the blades of weapons. The arrows fall to the ground as though theyโ€™ve struck a wall instead of cloth.

A moment later, the High King staggers back, bleeding. A knife juts out from his chest. Falling to his knees, he covers the wound with his hands, as

though the blood seeping through his fingers is an embarrassment.

Randalin steps back, smug and satisfied. Itโ€™s his dagger in the High Kingโ€™s chest.

โ€œPut down your weapons,โ€ a soldier shouts unsteadily, taking a step forward. For a moment, Oak isnโ€™t sure whose side theyโ€™re on. Then he sees the way theyโ€™re standing. Seven soldiers moving closer to the Minister of Keys, two of them the knights who came to Oakโ€™s tent.

Finally, the unfamiliarity of them makes horrible sense. This is a trap.

This is the conspiracy he hoped Lady Elaine would reveal. Had Oak not missed their meeting in the gardens, had he not been so willing to believe that it was over when Lady Elaine herself gave it up, had he not departed on the quest to save his father in the first place, perhaps he could have discovered this. Discovered it and foiled it.

Oak recalls the councilor extolling the wisdom of his betrothal to Wren, recalls his pushing the royal family to come immediately to Insear after the hunt. Remembers how Randalin maneuvered a conference alone with Bogdana and Wren.

The Minister of Keys was laying the groundwork while acting so pompous and irritating that he couldnโ€™t be taken seriously. And Oak fell for it. Oak underestimated Randalin in the most foolish way possibleโ€” by falling for the same trick he played on others.

Jude eases Cardan to the ground and kneels beside him, sword in her hand. โ€œI will cut your throat,โ€ she promises Randalin.

โ€œStabbity stab, knife wife,โ€ says Fala, with feeling. โ€œTraitorโ€™s blood is hot, but it still spills.โ€

Taryn has a dagger out. Madoc, dangerous enough with just his claw- tipped hands, has moved into a fighting stance. Oak rises and moves to his side.

โ€œYou should have listened to me,โ€ Randalin tells Jude from the safe distance he has put between them, behind one of his soldiers. โ€œMortals are not meant to sit on our thrones. And Cardan, the least of the Green-briar princes, pathetic. But all that will be remedied. We will have a new king and queen in your place. You see, none of your own knights are here to save you. Nor can they cross to this isle while the storm rages. And it will rage until youโ€™re dead.โ€

Oak blinks. โ€œYou made a deal with Bogdana. Thatโ€™s what the Ghost was getting proof of, thatโ€™s the thing he thought I wouldnโ€™t like.โ€

Because of Wren. Thatโ€™sย whyย the Ghost thought Oak wouldnโ€™t like it.

โ€œYou should be grateful,โ€ Randalin tells the prince. โ€œI persuaded Bogdana to spare you, though you are of the Greenbriar line and her enemy. Because of me, you will sit on the throne with a powerful faerie queen by your side.โ€

โ€œWren would never . . . ,โ€ Oak begins, but heโ€™s not sure how to finish. Would she agree to the murder of his family? Did she want to be the High Queen?

You canโ€™t trust me.

Iโ€™m not the one who needs saving.

Randalin laughs. โ€œShe didnโ€™t object. And neither did you, as I recall. Didnโ€™t you tell Lady Elaine of your resentment of the High King? Didnโ€™t you encourage her plot to get you on the throne?โ€

Oakโ€™s stomach hurts, hearing those words. Knowing a storm is raging outside because of someone he brought here. Seeing Cardanโ€™s body lying in a pool of red, no longer conscious and maybe no longer alive. Thinking of the Ghostโ€™s open, staring eyes. Seeing the way Oakโ€™s sisters are looking at him now and how his mother is looking away.

โ€œYouย poisoned Garrett,โ€ Oak says.

Randalin laughs. โ€œI gave him the wine. He didnโ€™t have to drink it. But he got too close to uncovering our plans.โ€

โ€œAnd Elaine?โ€ he asks.

โ€œWhat could I do?โ€ Randalin says. โ€œShe wanted out.โ€ And pouring her wine from the same urn as the spyโ€™s convinced him it was safe to drink.

Expressing the desire to get out was how Oak planned on getting Elaine and her friends to turn on him. The same way heโ€™d defeated other conspiraciesโ€”courting an attempted murder and exposing them for that instead of as traitors. But she hadnโ€™t known it would doom her. He should have given her a warning.

And now his family thinks he was part of this. He can see it in their faces. And worse, in bringing Wren here, maybe he was.

Maybe thisย isย what Wren wanted when she agreed to come to Elfhame. Revenge on him. Revenge on the High King and Queen, who stripped her

of her kingdom and sent her away with no help and no hope. The crown that Mellith was promised.

Wren, whom he believed he loved. Whom he believed heย knew.

He sees now that she learned the lessons of betrayal, learned them down to the marrow of her bones.

There is no apology Oak can give that could be believed, no way to explain. Not anymore.

Oak feels something snap inside him. He draws his sword.

โ€œDonโ€™t be foolish,โ€ Randalin says with a frown. โ€œThis is all forย you.โ€

There is a familiar roaring in Oakโ€™s ears, and this time he gives in to it eagerly. His limbs move, but he feels as if heโ€™s watching himself from far away.

He stabs into the stomach of the guard nearest to him, cutting up under his breastplate. The man screams. The thought that these soldiers believed he was on their side, believed he would be their High King, makes him even angrier. He turns, stabbing out. Someone else is screaming, someone he knows, urging him to stop. He doesnโ€™t even slow. Instead, he knocks a bolt aside as two more guards crowd around him. He pulls a dagger from one of their sheaths and uses it to stab the other while he parries a blow.

Oak can feel his consciousness slipping away, falling deeper into the trance of the fight. And it is such a relief to let go, the way he does when he allows the right words to fall from his tongue in the right order.

The last thing the prince feels before his awareness slides entirely away is a knife in his back. The last thing he sees is his sword biting through the throat of an enemy.

 

 

He finds himself with his blade pressed against Judeโ€™s. โ€œStop it,โ€ she shouts.

He staggers back, letting the sword fall from his hands. Thereโ€™s blood on her face, a fine spatter. Did he strike her?

โ€œOak,โ€ she says, not yelling anymore, which is when he realizes sheโ€™s scared. He never wanted her to be scared of him.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to hurt you,โ€ he says. Which is true. Or at least he believes itโ€™s probably true. His hands have started shaking, but thatโ€™s

normal. That happens a lot, after.

Does she still think heโ€™s a traitor?

Jude whirls toward Madoc.ย โ€œWhat did you do to him?โ€

The redcap looks baffied, his gaze on Oak speculative. โ€œMe?โ€

Oak scans the room, the adrenaline of battle still running through his veins. The guards are dead. All of them, and messily. Randalin too. Oak isnโ€™t the only one holding a bloody sword, either. Hyacinthe has one as well, standing near Nihuar as though they had very recently been back-to- back. Fala is bleeding. The Roach and the Bomb are beside each other, having appeared from the shadows, the Bombโ€™s fingers curled around a curved, nasty-looking knife. Even Cardan, using the throne to prop himself upright, has a dagger in his hand with red on the blade, although his other hand, holding his chest, is stained scarlet, too.

Cardanโ€™s not dead. The relief almost makes Oak sag to his knees, except that Cardan is still bleeding and pale.

โ€œWhat did you turn Oak into?โ€ Jude demands of Madoc. โ€œWhat did you do to my brother?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s good with a sword,โ€ the redcap tells her. โ€œWhat can I say?โ€

โ€œI am losing patience almost as fast as I am losing blood,โ€ says Cardan. โ€œJust because your brother killed Randalin, it doesnโ€™t mean we should forget he was at the center of this conspiracyโ€”and that he is at the center of whatever Bogdana and Wren are planning. I suggest that we lock Oak up where he wonโ€™t be so tempting to traitors.โ€

The prince spots Oriana, her arms still protectively around Leander, holding him turned toward her skirts so he canโ€™t see the slaughtered bodies. Sheโ€™s wearing an anguished expression. The prince feels the overwhelming urge to go to her, to bury his face in her neck as he might have done as a child. To see if she would push him away.

You wanted them to know you, his mind supplies unhelpfully.

Wren once described what she was afraid of, if she revealed herself to her family. How she imagined their rejecting her once they saw her true face. Oak sympathized, but until this moment he didnโ€™t understand the horror of having all the people who loved you best in the world look at you as though you were a stranger.

Charm them.ย The thought is not just unhelpful but wrong. And yet the temptation yawns in front of him.ย Make them look at you as they once did.

Fix this before it is broken forever.

A shudder goes through him. โ€œItโ€™s not Dadโ€™s fault or anyone elseโ€™s that Iโ€™m good at killing,โ€ he makes himself say, meeting Judeโ€™s gaze. โ€œI chose this. And donโ€™t you dare tell me that I shouldnโ€™t have. Not after what youโ€™ve done to yourself.โ€

Clearly, Jude was about to say something very much like that, because she chokes off the words. โ€œYou were supposed toโ€”โ€

โ€œWhat? Not make the same choices the rest of you did?โ€

โ€œTo have a childhood,โ€ she shouts at him. โ€œTo let us protect you.โ€ โ€œAh,โ€ says Cardan. โ€œBut he had loftier ambitions.โ€

Madocโ€™s gaze is impassive. Doesย heย believe Oak to be a traitor? And if so, does he applaud the ambition or scorn the failure?

โ€œI think itโ€™s time to get off this isle.โ€ Cardanโ€™s trying to sound casual, but heโ€™s unable to hide that heโ€™s in pain.

The rain is still battering the tent. Taryn walks to the flap and looks outside. She shakes her head. โ€œI am not sure we can get through the storm. The councilor was right about that, if nothing else.โ€

Jude turns to Hyacinthe. โ€œAnd what was your role in all this?โ€

โ€œAs though I would give any confidences to you,โ€ Hyacinthe says. โ€œKill him,โ€ orders Cardan.

โ€œHyacinthe fought on your side,โ€ protests Oak.

Cardan gives an exhausted sigh and waves one lace-cuffed hand. โ€œVery well, truss up Hyacinthe. Find the girl and the hag and killย them, at least. And I want the prince locked up until we sort this out. Lock up Tiernan, too, if he ever comes back.โ€

Iโ€™m sorry, Wren said before she left him in the Milkwood.

She warned him not to trust her, and then she betrayed him. She conspired with Randalin and Bogdana. She allowed Oak to delude himself into believing that someone was controlling her, when she had all the power.

It was clever, to keep him chasing shadows.

That had been the part of the puzzle he wasnโ€™t able to solveโ€”what any of them could have over her, who could unmake them all. The answer should have been obvious, only he didnโ€™t want to believe it. They hadย nothingย over her.

A mystery with a void at its center.

โ€œShoot her on sight,โ€ Jude says, as though itโ€™s going to be that simple. โ€œShoot her? Sheโ€™ll unmake the arrows,โ€ Oak says.

Jude raises her brows. โ€œAllย the arrows?โ€ โ€œPoison?โ€ his sister asks.

The prince sighs. โ€œMaybe.โ€ If he wasnโ€™t so busy drinking all the poison in sight, he might know.

โ€œWeโ€™ll find her weakness,โ€ his sister assures him. โ€œAnd we will bring her down.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ says Oak.

โ€œAnother protestation of her innocence? Or yours?โ€ asks Cardan in a silky voice, sounding like the boy Taryn and Jude used to hate, the one who Hyacinthe wouldnโ€™t believe was any different from Dain. The one who ripped the wings off pixiesโ€™ backs and made his sister cry.

โ€œI make no defense of myself,โ€ Oak says, leaning down to pick up his sword from the floor. โ€œThis is my fault. And my responsibility.โ€

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ Jude asks.

โ€œI am going to be the one to end this,โ€ Oak says. โ€œAnd you will have to kill me to stop me.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m going with you,โ€ Hyacinthe tells him. โ€œFor Tiernan.โ€

The prince nods. Hyacinthe crosses the floor to stand against the princeโ€™s back. As one, they move toward the door, blades bared.

Jude doesnโ€™t order anyone to block their way. Doesnโ€™t confront Oak herself. But in her eyes, he can tell she believes that her little brotherโ€” the one she loves and would do anything to protectโ€”is already dead.

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