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Chapter no 21

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

Oak and Hyacinthe plunge into a storm of terrifying ferocity. The fog is so thick the prince canโ€™t even see the shore of Insmire, and the

waves have become towering things, beating against the shoreline, biting off rocks and sand.

Bogdana has sealed off Insear from aid, keeping Elfhameโ€™s military and all else who would help them at bay. And now the storm hag waits with Wren for some signal that the royal family is dead.

Thereโ€™s a problem with their plan, though. Oakย hasnโ€™tย married Wren. Perhaps Randalin thought no one would find the Ghostโ€™s or Elaineโ€™s bodyโ€” or that no one would care. Must have believed the eveningโ€™s festivities wouldnโ€™t turn into an inquest. But since things didnโ€™t happen that way, the murder of the High King and Queen wouldnโ€™t automatically give Wren the throne. She still needed him.

As he walks along the beach, soaking wet, Oak is shaking so hard itโ€™s difficult for him to tell whatโ€™s from the chill and what is from rage.

Heโ€™s become the fool heโ€™s spent so long pretending to be. If he hadnโ€™t fallen in love, then no one would be in danger. If he didnโ€™t believe in Wren, promise to be on her side, make every excuse for her, then Randalinโ€™s schemes would have come to nothing.

He loves her still, moreโ€™s the pity.

No matter, though. He owes his family his loyalty, no matter their secrets. Owes Elfhame itself. Whether or not he likes being the prince, he accepted the role with all its benefits and obligations. He cannot be the one to put his people in danger. And whatever Wren once felt for him, he cannot believe she could do all this unless that was gone. He ruined it, and he wasnโ€™t able to fix it. Some broken things stay broken.

The prince runs through the storm, the cold cutting through his thin courtierโ€™s clothes. โ€œCome on,โ€ he calls to Hyacinthe over the rumble of thunder, making a sweeping gesture with his arm to indicate a tent he wants them to duck into.

Marked with the sigil of a courtier from the Court of Rowan, itโ€™s empty.

Oak wipes some of the water off his face. โ€œNow what?โ€ Hyacinthe asks.

โ€œWe find Wren and Bogdana. Can you guess where they might go? Surely you overheard something these past few days.โ€ As the adrenaline of the fight ebbs away, Oak realizes thereโ€™s a raw line of pain down his back

where he dimly recalls being stabbed. There may also be a shallow slash at his neck. It stings.

โ€œAnd if we find them,โ€ Hyacinthe hedges. โ€œThen what?โ€

โ€œWe stop them,โ€ Oak says, pushing away pain, pushing away the thought of what stopping them will really entail. โ€œThey canโ€™t be too far. Bogdana needs to be close enough to control this storm.โ€

โ€œI owe Wren a debt,โ€ says Hyacinthe. โ€œI swore myself to her.โ€ โ€œShe has Tiernan,โ€ Oak reminds him.

The man looks away. โ€œTheyโ€™ll be on Insmoor.โ€

โ€œInsmoor?โ€ Oak echoes. The smallest isle, besides the one theyโ€™re standing on. The location of Mandrake Market and not much else.

โ€œBogdana turned the cottage back into a walnut before the hunt and tucked it away in her pocket. Told us we might have to meet her on Insmoor.โ€

So the rest of her falcons would be there with them. That makes things more complicated, but Oak wonโ€™t mind a chance to face Straun. And it isnโ€™t like Wren could unmake Oak unless she wants to unmake her plans for ruling as well.

โ€œI know how we can get to Insmoor,โ€ the prince says.

Hyacinthe meets his gaze for a long moment, seeming to understand his scheme. โ€œYou cannot be serious.โ€

โ€œNever more so,โ€ Oak says, and plunges back out into the storm.

Oakโ€™s teeth are chattering by the time he comes to the tent marked with Dainโ€™s crest. Tatterfell and Jack are inside, huddled far from the flaps, which keep blowing apart, letting the cold rain inside.

โ€œJack, Iโ€™m afraid I need your help again,โ€ Oak tells him.

โ€œAt your service, my prince,โ€ Jack says, bowing his head. โ€œI promised to be of use to you, and I shall.โ€

โ€œAfter this, your debt to me will be more than paid. You will owe me nothing. Perhaps you will even be the one with a favor to call in.โ€

โ€œI should enjoy that,โ€ Jack says with a sly smile.

โ€œI want you to take me under the waves to the shore. Do you have a way to keep me breathing while we go?โ€

Jack looks at him with wide eyes. โ€œAlas, I am no help to you there. My kind do not much worry over the lives of our riders.โ€

Hyacinthe gives Oak an incredulous look. โ€œNo, you delight in their deaths and then devour them. Can you control yourself with the prince on your back?โ€

That wasnโ€™t something Oak worried over before, but he doesnโ€™t like the flash of delight that passes across Jack of the Lakesโ€™ face at the mention of devouring.

โ€œI can keep my teeth from the princeโ€™s sweet flesh, but if you want to come along, thereโ€™s no telling what I might do to you,โ€ Jack says.

โ€œIโ€™m coming,โ€ Hyacinthe says. โ€œTheyโ€™ve got Tiernan.โ€

Oak hoped he would. Heโ€™s not sure he can do this alone. โ€œNo snacking on Hyacinthe.โ€

โ€œNot even a small bite?โ€ Jack asks petulantly. โ€œYou are making it hard to be merry, Your Highness.โ€

โ€œNonetheless,โ€ Oak says.

โ€œWhat fool thing is it that you intend to do in this storm?โ€ Tatterfell asks, poking the prince in the gut. โ€œAnd are you bleeding?โ€

โ€œMaybe,โ€ he says, touching a finger to his neck. It hurts, but his back hurts worse.

โ€œTake off your shirt,โ€ the little faerie commands, blinking up at him.

โ€œThere isnโ€™t time,โ€ he tells her. โ€œBut if you have some bindings, Iโ€™ll use them for my sword. I seem to have dropped the sheath somewhere.โ€

Tatterfell rolls her ink-drop eyes.

โ€œI will swim as swiftly as I am able,โ€ Jack says. โ€œBut it might not be swiftly enough.โ€

โ€œYou can surface partway there,โ€ Oak suggests. โ€œLet us catch a breath, then go on.โ€

Jack considers that for a long moment, as though it is not much in his nature. But after a moment, he nods. Hyacinthe frowns and keeps frowning.

Tatterfell binds up the sword and belts it to Oakโ€™s waist with torn strips of his old clothes. She sews up the wound on his back as well, threatening to press her finger into the gouge if he moves.

โ€œYouโ€™re ruthless,โ€ he tells her.

She smiles as though heโ€™s delivered an extremely charming compliment.

Then, bracing against the wind and rain, Oak, Jack, and Hyacinthe make their way to the shore.

At the beach, Jack transforms into a sharp-toothed horse. He lowers himself to his knees and waits for them to lash themselves to him. Oak wraps a rope scavenged from the tent around the kelpieโ€™s chest and then around Hyacinthe, tying him tightly to Jackโ€™s back. Then he straps himself on, looping the rope a final time around their middles so they are bound to one another.

When Oak looks at the crashing waves, he begins to doubt the wisdom of his plan. He can barely make out the lights of Insmoor in the storm. Can he really hold his breath for as long as Jack is going to believe he needs?

But thereโ€™s no going back. Nothing even to go back to, so he tries to inhale deeply and exhale slowly. Open up his lungs as much as he can.

Jack gallops toward the waves. The icy water splashes against Oakโ€™s legs. He grips the rope and takes one last breath as Jack plunges them all into the sea.

The cold of the ocean stabs the princeโ€™s chest. For a moment, it almost forces the breath from his lungs, but he manages to keep himself from gasping. Opens his eyes in the dark water. Feels the increasing, panicked pressure of Hyacintheโ€™s grip on his shoulder.

Jack swims swiftly through the water. After a minute, itโ€™s clear it isnโ€™t fast enough. Oakโ€™s lungs burn; he feels lightheaded.

Jack needs to surface. He needs to do it now.ย Now.ย The prince presses his knees hard against the kelpieโ€™s chest.

Hyacintheโ€™s hold on Oakโ€™s shoulder goes slack, his fingers drifting away. Oak concentrates on the pain of the rope cutting into his hand. Tries to stay alert. Tries not to breathe. Tries not to breathe. Tries not to breathe.

Then he canโ€™t hold on anymore, and water comes rushing in.

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