The Kingโs Guard wears no seal. The Black Horse is their emblem, their duty, their creed. With it, they uphold Blunderโs laws. They are the shadows in the roomโthe eyes on your
backโthe footsteps upon your streets.
The Kingโs Guard wears no seal.
Ravyn took my hands and ran them against his tunic, the black wool absorbing the blood on my fingers. When he released me, I hid my arms in my sleeves, balling my hands into fists to keep them from shaking.
Ravynโs voice was coolโhis eyes unreadable, his spine straight. Gone was the highwayman. In his place stood the Captain of the Destriers, cold and austere once more. โWho was it?โ he said, keeping his voice low.
I hardly knew. All I had truly known was rageโa rage I had never felt before, so strong it, even now, was hesitant to release me. โAnother Destrier,โ I managed, nodding back toward the wood. โLinden.โ
The muscles in Ravynโs jaw flexed. โDead?โ My stomach curled. โHurt.โ
โAnd the boy?โ
โSomewhere in the wood.โ
He gave a curt nod, his ears perked to the wind. โMore Destriers are coming,โ he said. โStay here.โ
A moment later he was gone, disappearing into the mist. I could still hear him, his voice sharp as a knife as the sound of heavy footfall echoed through the grayness, the shadow of two Black Horses darkening the mist.
I held still, listening.
โWicker,โ Ravyn called. โGet Gorse and Beech and gather the Physicians. See to anyone hurt in the mayhem.โ His voice hardened. โLarch. Head west, into the wood.โ
My stomach twisted, knowing what awaited west of us, crumpled and bleeding beneath the trees.
What did you do?ย I cried into the darkness.
He retracted his claws, his voice slow, idle.ย We did it together. Just as we always do.
I didnโt want that!
You asked for my help. And I delivered it.
I shook my head.ย Youโre a monster.
Ravyn appeared again in a gust of black, his eyes trained on my face. โElspeth?โ
I wiped old tears from my cheeks and flinched. The pain in my broken wrist teemed with a new vengeance. I felt dizzy, unable to balance the events of the past hourโHauth and his condemnation of the boyโs parents
โOritheโs brutal clawโElm and his Scytheโthe strange vision as I fled through the mistโthe look of terror in Lindenโs eyes as the Nightmareโs wrath overpowered my body.
โWhat happened, Elspeth?โ he said.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. โI couldnโt let Orithe take that boy back to Stone.โ
Ravynโs eyes flashed to my maskโmy cloak. โWere you recognized?โ โI donโt think so. It all happened so fast. Elmโhis Scytheโโ I paused,
my mind segmented, broken between the Nightmareโs thoughts and my own. I looked at the Captain of the Destriers. โI freed the boy and took him into the mist. I gave him my charm so he might save his parents. But the Destrier followed us. Iโฆ I didnโt intend toโฆโ
Ravyn waited. โWhat of the yellow that flickers through your eyes?โ he asked.
โI canโt tell you,โ I said, more forceful than before. โYou wonโt want anything to do with me if I do.โ
Ravyn exhaled. โThen your estimation of me is lower than I imagined.โ He reached into his pocket, tapping the burgundy light three times.
โWhat are you doing?โ
โTelling Jespyr to take Orithe to Linden.โ The Nightmare Card in the
Captainโs pocket cast strange shadows across his face. After a moment, his eyes closed in concentration, and he tapped the Card thrice more. โLetโs go.โ
We hurried back up the hill and through the meadow, our silence strained. Voices sounded in the mistโtwo more Black Horses moving in the distance. Ravynโs shoulders tensed, but he did not slow our pace, merely putting a finger to his lips to signal my silence.
I did not reach into the darkness for the Nightmare. Still, he was there, looming like a shadow across every corner of my mind.
By the time Ravyn and I crept out of the mist and back onto the main road, the pandemonium had ceased. The crowd had gone, hurried back through Blunderโs gates, the frivolity of Market Day long dead.
โTake off your mask,โ Ravyn said. His eyes flickered across my cloakโ Elmโs cloak. โThat too. Youโre just a maiden who got caught in the mist, yes?โ
I nodded. But the lie erased nothing. The blood was off my hands, but the feel of it remained. A dark, menacing stain.
We were met by a sea of black and redโDestriers and Hauth Rowan clustered at the edge of the mist. The High Princeโs voice ripped down the road, brutal and loud.
Elm stood apart from the others, hands in his pockets, his green eyes bleary. His shoulders were hunched, his cheeks colorless. A thin sheen of sweat glistened on his brow. I moved to his side, searching his face.
โStill alive, then,โ he said without looking at me. I slipped him his cloak. โAnd you?โ
โFit as a fiddle.โ He raised his sleeve to his face, wiping his nose. When he pulled it away, his cuff was dark with blood. โThe boy?โ
โEscaped, for now. Linden caught me up. We fought.โ I clenched my jaw, afraid I might be sick. โI may have killed him.โ
Elm looked at me, his eyes slow to focus. โShouldnโt you know?โ
The Destriers parted for Ravyn, their heads lowered to their Captain. Ravyn paid them no attention, his gaze fixed on Hauth. โWhat the fuck do you think youโre doing?โ he said, so severe I flinched. โYou called for a public execution on Market Day?โ His voice dripped venom. โWithout my leave?โ
The High Prince turned, his broad jaw set and his cheeks aflame. โI have
the right to execute any person guilty of harboring an infectedโโ
Ravyn closed the distance between himself and his cousin, his anger unrivaled. โIt is your right to uphold the Kingโs law,โ he said. โBut not without my leave.โ His voice lowered, menace in the low, scraping tones. โDonโt think me deaf to the dissent you sow behind my back, cousin. If itโs command you wantโโhe spread his arms wide, an invitationโโtake it.โ
Hauthโs nostrils flared. Next to me, a smile slipped across Elmโs tired face. Both he and Ravyn, and perhaps the rest of the Destriers, knew Hauth would not take his chances against someone immune to the Scythe.
Given the flash of rage in his green eyes, Hauth knew it, too.
Ravyn whirled on his men. โWould you follow a man so unwilling to take a simple challenge?โ
The Destriers said nothing, motionless, as if carved of wood.
Ravyn sneered. โYour Prince is just thatโa Prince. And you are not his brutes. You do not disrupt Blunderโs peace, nor force its citizens to witness cruelty. You are as shadowsโsilent and swift. Most essentially, you are keepers of our words. Wary. Clever. Good. Is that understood?โ
The Destriers clasped the hilts of their swords, their eyes trained on Ravyn. โYes, Captain,โ they called in accordance.
Only Hauth remained silent.
Ravyn turned to him. โI did not hear you, cousin.โ
Hauthโs green eyes narrowed. โNor I you,ย Captain. After all, when the child was discovered and the Destriers summoned, we had no commands to obeyโyou were nowhere to be found.โ He glared over Ravynโs shoulder, his eyes finding mine. โEven now, your attention seems concentrated elsewhere.โ
Ravyn shifted, blocking me from Hauthโs view. For a moment I was certain he would lash outโbreak his cousinโs other hand. But he did not. He merely glared at Hauth, leaching ice. The High Prince glared back until the red in his face moved behind his eyes. Then, weaponless against Ravynโs unyielding silence, hands balled into fists, Hauth lowered his gaze.
Ravyn turned. โStay alert,โ he commanded the Destriers. โDo not let anyone who does not carry a Black Horse or a Physicianโs seal through the gates without inspection. Keep to patrols. If the boy is found or another infection reported, find me at Castle Yew.โ
โAnd if the boy is not found?โ a Destrier called.
Ravyn pushed from the group without a backward glance. โThen let the Spirit have him,โ he snapped.
I followed him up the road, Elm trailing behind us. The sky had darkened, the shadows of the gate long as we crossed into town. No one said a word, the only sound among us the thump of our heels upon cobbled streets.
Then, as if reading my thoughts, Ravyn spoke. โJespyr will search for the boy and his parents,โ he said, pulling the Nightmare Card from his pocket and tapping it three times. โWe have a place for children like him, if weโre lucky enough to find them first.โ
I stared at the back of his cloak. โYouโve saved infected children before?โ
โThatโs the entire point of collecting the Deck,โ Elm muttered behind me. โOr did you imagine we were committing treason for a laugh?โ
Ravyn stopped in his tracks, so sudden I had to pivot to avoid him.
Elm, not so swift, crashed into Ravynโs back. โTreesโWhatโs the matter?โ
Ravynโs eyes were closed. A moment later he tapped his Nightmare Card thrice more. โI just spoke with my father.โ He opened his eyes, his gaze locked on Elm. โWe need to get back to Castle Yew. Now.โ
Without another word, the Captain of the Destriers ran up the street. Elm and I shared a bewildered glance. A moment later we were running, weaving through the remnant crowds of Market Day as we fought to keep Ravynโs lightning pace.
We ran until we met Fenir Yew at the square. Heโd summoned a carriage.
โHurry,โ he said as I climbed in. โThistle says he snuck in the gate after we left this morning, which means he escaped last night. If Orithe hears, he wonโt be gentle with him.โ
โHe wonโt hear,โ Ravyn said as he slammed the door shut. โHeโll be busy for hours.โ
Ravyn pulled himself next to the coachman and cracked the reins. The horses spurred and the carriage lurched forward, dark curtains drawn over the windows.
Next to me, Elm drew long, ragged breaths. More blood had pooled under his nostrils. He wiped it away, a lifeless fatigue lingering in his
shouldersโbehind his green eyesโthe payment for the red Cardโs magic steep.
โIs someone going to tell me whatโs happened?โ he demanded. โWho snuck into the gate? Why are we returning to the castle?โ
Fenirโs voice was grave. โEmory,โ he said. โEmory has run away from Stone.โ