All night, as I sit through dinner, I am conscious of the secret I hold. It makes me feel, for the first time, as though I have a power of my own, a power Madoc cannot take from me. Even thinking of it for too longโI am a spy! I am Prince Dainโs spy!โgives me a thrill.
We eat little birds stuffed with barley and wild ramps, their skins crackling with fat and honey. Oriana delicately picks hers apart. Oak chews on the skin. Madoc does not bother to separate off the flesh, eating bones and all. I poke at the stewed parsnips. Although Taryn is at the table, Vivi has not returned. I suspect that hunting with Rhyia was a ruse and that she has gone to the mortal world after a brief ride through the woods. I wonder if she ate her dinner with Heatherโs family.
โYou did well at the tournament,โ Madoc says between bites.
I do not point out that he left the grounds. He couldnโt have been too impressed. I am not even sure how much he actually saw. โDoes that mean youโve changed your mind?โ
Something in my voice makes him stop chewing and regard me with narrowed eyes. โAbout knighthood?โ he asks. โNo. Once there is a new High King in place, we will discuss your future.โ
My mouth curves into a secretive smile. โAs you wish.โ
Down the table, Taryn watches Oriana and tries to copy her movements with the little bird. She does not look my way, even when she asks me to pass her a carafe of water.
She canโt keep me from following her to her room when weโre done, though.
โLook,โ I say on the stairs. โI tried to do what you wanted, but I couldnโt,
and I donโt want you to hate me for it. Itโs my life.โ She turns around. โYour life to squander?โ
โYes,โ I say as we come to the landing. I cannot tell her about Prince Dain, but even if I could, I am not sure it would help. I am not at all sure sheโd approve of that, either. โOur lives are the only real thing we have, our only coin. We get to buy what we want with them.โ
Taryn rolls her eyes. Her voice is acid. โIsnโt that pretty? Did you make it up yourself?โ
โWhat is the matter with you?โ I demand.
She shakes her head. โNothing. Nothing. Maybe it would be better if I thought the way that you do. Never mind, Jude. You really were good out there.โ
โThanks,โ I say, frowning in confusion. I wonder again over Cardanโs words about her, but I do not want to repeat them and make her feel bad. โSo have you fallen in love yet?โ I ask.
All my question gets me is a strange look. โI am staying home from the lecture tomorrow,โ Taryn says. โI guess it is your life to squander, but I donโt have to watch.โ
My feet feel like lead as I make my way to the palace, over ground strewn with windfall apples, their golden scent blowing in the air. I am wearing a long black dress with gold cuffs and a lacing of green braid, a comfortable favorite.
Afternoon birdsong trills above me, making me smile. I let myself have a brief fantasy of Prince Dainโs coronation, of me dancing with a grinning Locke while Cardan is dragged away and thrown in a dark oubliette.
A flash of white startles me from my thoughts. Itโs a stagโa white stag, standing not ten feet from where I am. His antlers are threaded with a few thin cobwebs, and his coat is a white so bright that it seems silver in the afternoon light. We regard each other for a long moment, before he races off in the direction of the palace, taking my breath with him.
I decide to believe this is a good omen.
And, at least at first, it seems to be. Classes arenโt too bad. Noggle, our instructor, is a kind but odd old Fir Darrig from up north, with huge eyebrows, a long beard into which he occasionally shoves pens or scraps of paper, and a tendency to maunder on about meteor storms and their meanings. As afternoon turns to evening, he has us counting falling stars, which is a dull
but relaxing task. I lie back on my blanket and stare up at the night sky.
The only downside is that it is hard for me to note down numbers in the dark. Usually, glowing orbs hang from the trees or large concentrations of fireflies light our lessons. I carry extra stubs of candles for when even that is too dim, since human eyesight isnโt nearly as keen as theirs, but Iโm not allowed to light them when we study the stars. I try to write legibly and not get ink all over my fingers.
โRemember,โ Noggle says, โunusual celestial events often presage important political changes, so with a new king on the horizon, itโs important for us to observe the signs carefully.โ
Some giggling rises out of the darkness.
โNicasia,โ our instructor says. โIs there some difficulty?โ Her haughty voice is unrepentant. โNone at all.โ
โNow, what can you tell me about falling stars? What would be the meaning of a shower of them in the last hour of a night?โ
โA dozen births,โ Nicasia says, which is wrong enough to make me wince. โDeaths,โ I say under my breath.
Noggle hears me, unfortunately. โVery good, Jude. I am glad someone has been paying attention. Now, who would like to tell me when those deaths are most likely to occur?โ
There is no point in my holding back, not when I made a declaration that I was going to shame Cardan with my greatness. I better start being great. โIt depends on which of the constellations they passed through and in which direction the stars fell,โ I say. Halfway through answering, I feel like my throat is going to close up. I am suddenly glad of the dark, so I donโt have to see Cardanโs expression. Or Nicasiaโs.
โExcellent,โ Noggle says. โWhich is why our notes must be thorough.
Continue!โ
โThis is dull,โ I hear Valerian drawl. โProphecy is for hags and small folk. We should be learning things of a more noble mien. If I am going to pass a night on my back, then Iโd wish to be lessoned inย love.โ
Some of the others laugh.
โVery well,โ said Noggle. โTell me what event might portend success in love?โ
โA girl taking off her dress,โ he says to more laughter.
โElga?โ Noggle calls on a girl with silver hair and a laugh like shattering glass. โCan you answer for him? Perhaps heโs had such little success in love that he truly doesnโt know.โ
She begins to stammer. I suspect she knows the answer but doesnโt want to court Valerianโs ire.
โShall I ask Jude again?โ Noggle asks tartly. โOr perhaps Cardan. Why donโt you tell us?โ
โNo,โ he says.
โWhat was that?โ Noggle asks.
When Cardan speaks, his voice rings with sinister authority. โIt is as Valerian says. This lesson is boring. You will light the lamps and begin another, more worthy one.โ
Noggle pauses for a long moment. โYes, my prince,โ he says finally, and all the globes around us flare to life. I blink several times as my eyes try to adjust. I wonder if Cardan has ever had to do anything he didnโt want to. I guess it is no surprise that he drowses during lectures. No surprise that he once, drunk as anything, rode a horse across the grass while we were having classes, trampling blankets and books and sending everyone scrambling to get out of his way. He can change our curriculum on a whim. How can anything matter to someone like that?
โHer eyesight is so poor,โ Nicasia says, and I realize sheโs standing over me. She has my notebook and waves it around so everyone can see my scrawls. โPoor, poor, Jude. Itโs so hard to overcome so many disadvantages.โ
Thereโs ink all over my fingers and on the golden cuffs of my dress.
Across the grove, Cardan is talking with Valerian. Only Locke is watching us, his expression troubled. Noggle is flipping through a stack of thick, dusty books, probably trying to come up with a lesson that Cardan will like.
โSorry if you canโt read my handwriting,โ I say, grabbing the notebook. The page tears, leaving most of my nightโs work shredded. โBut thatโs not exactlyย myย disadvantage.โ
Nicasia slaps me in the face. I stumble, shocked, suddenly down on one knee, barely catching myself before I go sprawling. My cheek is hot, stinging. My head rings.
โYou canโt do that,โ I say to her nonsensically.
I thought I understood how this game worked. I thought wrong. โI may do whatever I wish,โ she informs me, still haughty.
Our classmates stare. Elga has one delicate hand over her mouth. Cardan looks over, and I can tell from his expression that she has failed to please him. Embarrassment starts to creep over Nicasiaโs face.
For as long as I have been among them, there were lines they didnโt cross. When they shoved us into the river, no one witnessed it. For better or worse, I am part of the generalโs household and under Madocโs protection. Cardan might dare to cross him, but I thought the others would at least strike in secret.
I seem to have angered Nicasia past caring about any of that.
I brush myself off. โAre you calling me out? Because then itโs my right to choose the time and the weapon.โ How I would love to knock her down.
She realizes that my question actually demands a response. I might be lower than the ground, but that doesnโt absolve her from obligations to her own honor.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see Cardan coming toward us. Jittery anticipation commingles with dread. On my other side, Valerian bumps my shoulder. I take a step away from him, but not fast enough to avoid being assailed with the smell of overripe fruit.
Above us, in the black dome of night, seven stars fall, streaking gloriously across the sky before guttering out. I look up automatically, too late to have seen their precise path.
โDid anyone note that down?โ Noggle begins shouting, fumbling in his beard for a pen. โThis is the celestial event weโve been waiting for! Someone must have seen the exact origin point. Quickly! Set down everything you can remember.โ
Just then, as I am looking at the stars, Valerian shoves something soft against my mouth. An apple, sweet and rotten at the same time, honeyed juice running over my tongue, tasting of sunlight and pure heady, stupid joy. Faerie fruit, which muddles the mind, which makes humans crave it enough to starve themselves for another taste, which makes us pliant and suggestible and ridiculous.
Dainโs geas protected me from enchantment, from anyoneโs control, but faerie fruit puts you out of even your own control.
Oh no. Oh no no no no no.
I spit it out. The apple rolls in the dirt, but I can already feel it working on me.
Salt, I think, fumbling for my basket. Salt is what I need. Salt is the antidote. It will clear the fog in my head.
Nicasia sees what I am going for and snatches up my basket, dancing out of the way, while Valerian pushes me to the ground. I try to crawl away from him, but he pins me, shoving the filthy apple back into my face.
โLet me sweeten that sour tongue of yours,โ he says, pressing it down.
Pulp is in my mouth and up my nose.
I canโt breathe. I canโt breathe.
My eyes are open, staring up at Valerianโs face. Iโm choking. Heโs watching me with an expression of mild curiosity, as though heโs looking forward to seeing what happens next.
Darkness is creeping in at the edges of my vision. I am choking to death. The worst part is the joy blooming inside me from the fruit, blotting out
the terror. Everything is beautiful. My vision is swimming. I reach up to claw at Valerianโs face, but I am too dizzy to reach him. A moment later, it doesnโt matter. I donโt want to hurt him, not when I am so happy.
โDo something!โ someone says, but in my delirium, I canโt tell who is speaking.
Abruptly, Valerian is kicked off me. I roll onto my side, coughing. Cardan is looming there. Tears and snot are running down my face, but all I can do is lie in the dirt and spit out pieces of sweet, fleshy pulp. I have no idea why I am crying.
โEnough,โ Cardan says. He has an odd, wild expression on his face, and a muscle is jumping in his jaw.
I start to laugh.
Valerian looks mutinous. โRuin my fun, will you?โ
For a moment, I think theyโre going to fight, although I cannot think why. Then I see what Cardanโs got in his hand. The salt from my basket. The antidote. (Why did I want that? I wonder.) He tosses it up into the air with a laugh, and I watch it scatter with the wind. Then he looks at Valerian, mouth curling. โWhatโs wrong with you, Valerian? If she dies, your little prank is over before it begins.โ
โIโm not going to die,โ I say, because I donโt want them to worry. I feel fine. I feel better than I have ever felt in my entire life. Iโm glad the antidote is gone.
โPrince Cardan?โ Noggle says. โShe ought to be taken home.โ
โEveryone is so dull today,โ Cardan says, but he doesnโt sound as if heโs bored. He sounds as if heโs barely keeping his temper in check.
โOh, Noggle, she doesnโt wish to go.โ Nicasia comes over to me and strokes my cheek. โDo you, pretty thing?โ
The cloying taste of honey is in my mouth. I feel light. I am unwinding. I am unfurling like a banner. โIโd like to stay,โ I say, because here is wondrous. Because she is dazzling.
Iโm not sure I feel good, but I know I feel great.
Everything is wondrous. Even Cardan. I didnโt like him before, but that seems silly. I give him a wide, happy grin, although he doesnโt smile in return.
I donโt take it personally.
Noggle turns away from us, muttering something about the general and foolishness and princes getting their heads removed from their shoulders. Cardan watches him go, hands fisting at his sides.
A knot of girls flop down in the moss beside me. Theyโre laughing, which makes me laugh again, too. โIโve never seen a mortal take the fruits of Elfhame before,โ one of them, Flossflower, says to another. โWill she
remember this?โ
โWould that someone would enchant her to do otherwise,โ Locke says from somewhere behind me, but he doesnโt sound angry like Cardan. He sounds nice. I turn toward him, and he touches my shoulder. I lean into the warmth of his skin.
Nicasia laughs. โShe wouldnโt want that. What sheโd like is another bite of apple.โ
My mouth waters at the memory. I recall them strewn across my path, golden and glittering, on the way to school and curse my foolishness for not stopping to eat my fill.
โSo we can ask her things?โ Another girlโMoragnaโwants to know. โEmbarrassing things. And sheโll answer?โ
โWhy should she find anything embarrassing when sheโs among friends?โ says Nicasia, eyes slitted. She looks like a cat that has eaten all the cream and is ready for a nap in the sun.
โWhich one of us would you most like to kiss?โ Flossflower demands, coming closer. Sheโs barely spoken to me before. Iโm glad she wants to be friends.
โIโd like to kiss all of you,โ I say, which makes them scream with laughter.
I grin up at the stars.
โYouโre wearing too many clothes,โ Nicasia says, frowning at my skirts. โAnd theyโve grown dirty. You should take them off.โ
My dress does seem abruptly heavy. I imagine myself naked in the moonlight, my skin turned as silvery as the leaves above us.
I stand. Everything feels as if itโs going a bit sideways. I start pulling off my clothes.
โYouโre right,โ I say, delighted. My gown slides into a puddle of cloth that I can easily step out of. I am wearing mortal underclothesโa mint-and-black polka-dotted bra and underpants.
Theyโre all staring at me oddly, as though wondering where I got my underwear. All of them so resplendent that it is difficult for me to look too long without my head hurting.
I am conscious of the softness of my body, of the calluses on my hands, and of the sway of my breasts. I am conscious of the soft tickle of grass underneath my feet and the warm earth.
โAm I beautiful like you are?โ I ask Nicasia, genuinely curious.
โNo,โ she says, darting a look toward Valerian. She picks up something from the ground. โYou are nothing like us.โ I am sorry to hear it but not surprised. Beside them, anyone might as well be a shadow, a blurry reflection of a reflection.
Valerian points to the rowan necklace that dangles around my throat, dried red berries threaded onto a long silver chain. โYou should take that off, too.โ
I nod conspiratorially. โYouโre right,โ I say. โI donโt need it anymore.โ Nicasia smiles, holding up the golden thing she has in her hand. The filthy,
mashed remains of the apple. โCome lick my hands clean. You donโt mind, do you? But you have to do it on your knees.โ
Gasping and tittering spread through our classmates like a breeze. They want me to do it. I want to make them happy. I want everyone to be as happy as I am. And I do want another taste of the fruit. I begin to crawl toward Nicasia.
โNo,โ Cardan says, stepping in front of me, his voice ringing and a little unsteady. The others back off, giving him room. He toes off his soft leather shoe and puts one pale foot directly in front of me. โJude will come here and kiss my foot. She said she wanted to kiss us. And I am her prince, after all.โ
I laugh again. Honestly, I donโt know why I laughed so infrequently before. Everything is marvelous and ridiculous.
Looking up at Cardan, though, something strikes me wrong. His eyes are glittering with fury and desire and maybe even shame. A moment later, he blinks, and itโs just his usual chilly arrogance.
โWell? Be quick about it,โ he says impatiently. โKiss my foot and tell me how great I am. Tell me how much you admire me.โ
โEnough,โ Locke says sharply to Cardan. Heโs got his hands on my shoulders and is pulling me roughly to my feet. โIโm taking her home.โ
โAre you, now?โ Cardan asks him, eyebrows raised. โInteresting timing.
You like the savor of a little humiliation, just not too much?โ
โI hate it when you get like this,โ Locke says under his breath.
Cardan pulls a pin from his coat, a glittering, filigree thing in the shape of an acorn with an oak leaf behind it. For a delirious moment, I think heโs going to give it to Locke in exchange for leaving me there. That seems impossible, even to my wild mind.
Then Cardan takes hold of my hand, which seems even less possible. His fingers are overwarm against my skin. He stabs the point of his pin into my thumb.
โOw,โ I say, pulling away from him and putting the injured digit into my mouth. My own blood is metallic against my tongue.
โHave a nice walk home,โ he tells me.
Locke guides me away, stopping to grab up someoneโs blanket, which he wraps around my shoulders. Faeries are staring at us as we pass out of the grove, me stumbling, him holding me up. The few teachers I see do not meet my gaze.
I suck on my injured thumb, feeling odd. My head is still swimming, but not like it was. Somethingโs wrong. A moment later, I realize what. Thereโs salt in my human blood.
My stomach lurches.
I look back at Cardan, who is laughing with Valerian and Nicasia. Moragna is on his arm. Another of our lecturers, a sinewy elf-woman from an island to the east, is trying to begin her talk.
I hate them. I hate them all so much. For a moment, there is only that, the heat of my fury turning my every thought to ash. With shaking hands, I clutch the blanket more tightly around my shoulders and let Locke lead me into the woods.
โI owe you a debt,โ I grit out after we walk for a little while. โFor getting me out of there.โ
He gives me an appraising look. I am struck all over again by how handsome he is, by the soft curls falling around his face. Itโs awful to be alone with him, knowing heโs seen me in my underwear and crawling around on the ground, but I am too angry for embarrassment.
He shakes his head. โYou donโt owe anyone anything, Jude. Especially not today.โ
โHow can you stand them?โ I ask, fury making me turn on Locke, even though heโs the only one Iโm not mad at. โTheyโre horrible. Theyโre monsters.โ
He doesnโt answer me. We walk along, and when I come to the patch of windfall apples, I kick one so hard it ricochets off the trunk of an elm tree.
โThere is a pleasure in being with them,โ he says. โTaking what we wish, indulging in every terrible thought. Thereโs safety in being awful.โ
โBecause at least theyโre not terrible to you?โ I ask. Again, he does not answer.
When we get close to Madocโs estate, I stop. โI should go alone from here.โ I give him a smile that probably wavers a little bit. Itโs hard to keep it on my face.
โWait,โ he says, taking a step toward me. โI want to see you again.โ
I groan, too exasperated for surprise. I am standing here in a borrowed blanket, boots, and mall-bought underwear. I am smeared in soil, and I have just made a fool of myself.ย โWhy?โ
He looks at me as though he sees something else entirely. Thereโs an intensity in his gaze that makes me stand up a little straighter, despite the dirt. โBecause youโre like a story that hasnโt happened yet. Because I want to see what you will do. I want to be part of the unfolding of the tale.โ
Iโm not sure if thatโs a compliment or not, but I guess Iโll take it.
He lifts my handโthe same one Cardan stabbed with the pinโand kisses the very tips of my fingers. โUntil tomorrow,โ he says, making a bow.
And so, in that borrowed blanket, boots, and mall-bought underwear, I walk on by myself, heading for home.
โTell me who did this,โ Madoc insists, over and over again, but I wonโt. He stomps around, explaining in detail how he will find the faeries responsible and destroy them. He will rip out their hearts. He will cut off their heads and mount them on the roof of our house as a warning to others.
I know itโs not me heโs threatening, but itโs still me heโs yelling at.
When I am scared, I canโt forget that no matter how well he plays the role of father, he will always and forever also be my fatherโs murderer.
I donโt say anything. I think about how Oriana was afraid that Taryn or I would misbehave at the Court and cause Madoc embarrassment. Now I wonder if she was more worried about how heโd react if something did happen. Cutting off Valerianโs and Nicasiaโs heads is bad politics. Hurting Cardan amounts to treason.
โI did it myself,โ I say finally, to make this stop. โI saw the fruit and it looked good, so I ate it.โ
โHow could you be so foolish?โ Oriana says, whirling around. She doesnโt look surprised; she looks as though I am confirming her worst suspicions. โJude, you know better.โ
โI wanted to have fun. Itโs supposed to be fun,โ I tell her, playing the disobedient daughter for all itโs worth. โAnd itย was. It was like a beautiful dreamโโ
โBe quiet!โ Madoc shouts, shocking us both into silence. โBoth of you,
quiet!โ
I cringe involuntarily.
โJude, stop trying to annoy Oriana,โ he says, giving me an exasperated look I am not sure heโs ever given me before, but has turned it on Vivi plenty.
He knows Iโm lying.
โAnd, Oriana, donโt be so gullible.โ When she realizes what he means, a small, delicate hand comes up to cover her mouth.
โWhen I find out whom youโre protecting,โ he tells me, โthey will be sorry they ever drew breath.โ
โThis is not helping,โ I say, leaning back in my chair.
He kneels down in front of me and takes my hand in his rough green
fingers. He must be able to feel how I am trembling. He lets out a long sigh, probably discarding more threats. โThen tell me what will help, Jude. Tell me, and I will do it.โ
I wonder what would happen if I said the words:ย Nicasia humiliated me. Valerian tried to murder me. They did it to impress Prince Cardan, who hates me. I am scared of them. I am more scared of them than I am of you, and you terrify me. Make them stop. Make them leave me alone.
But I wonโt. Madocโs anger is fathomless. I have seen it in my motherโs blood on the kitchen floor. Once summoned, it cannot be called back.
What if he murdered Cardan? What if he killed them all? His answer to so many problems is bloodshed. If they were dead, their parents would demand satisfaction. The wrath of the High King would fall on him. I would be worse off than I am now, and Madoc would likely be dead.
โTeach me more,โ I say instead. โMore strategy. More bladework. Teach me everything you know.โ Prince Dain may want me for a spy, but that doesnโt mean giving up my sword.
Madoc looks impressed, and Oriana, annoyed. I can tell she thinks that I am manipulating him and that I am doing a good job of it.
โVery well,โ he says with a sigh. โTatterfell will bring you dinner, unless you feel up to joining us at the dining table. We will begin a more intensive training tomorrow.โ
โIโll eat upstairs,โ I say, and head to my room, still wrapped in someone elseโs blanket. On the way, I pass Tarynโs closed door. Part of me wants to go in, fling myself on her bed, and weep. I want her to hold me and tell me that there wasnโt anything I could have done differently. I want her to tell me that I am brave and that she loves me.
But since I am sure thatโs not what sheโd do, I pass her door by.
My room has been tidied while I was gone, my bed made and my windows opened to let in the night air. And there, on the foot of my bed, is a folded-up dress of homespun with the royal crest that servants of the princes and princesses wear. Sitting on the balcony is the owl-faced hob.
It preens a bit, ruffling its feathers. โYou,โ I say. โYouโre one of hisโโ
โGo to Hollow Hall tomorrow, sweetmeat,โ it chirps, cutting me off. โFind us a secret the king wonโt like. Find treason.โ
Hollow Hall. Thatโs the home of Balekin, the eldest prince. I have my first assignment from the Court of Shadows.