The two other members of Dainโs spy troupe also have code names. Thereโs the lean, handsome faerie that looks at least part human, who winks and tells me to call him the Ghost. He has sandy-colored hair, which is normal for a mortal but is unusual for a faerie, and ears that come to very subtle points.
The other is a tiny, delicate girl, her skin the dappled brown of a doe, her hair a cloud of white around her head, and a miniature pair of blue-gray butterfly wings on her back. Sheโs got at least some pixie in her, if not some imp.
I recognize her now from the High Kingโs full moon revel. Sheโs the one who stole a belt from an ogre, weapons and pouches attached.
โIโm the Bomb,โ she says. โI like blowing things up.โ
I nod. Itโs the kind of blunt thing I donโt expect faeries to say, but I am used to being around Court faeries with their baroque etiquette. I am not used to the solitary fey. I am at a loss as to how to speak with them. โSo is it just the three of you?โ
โFour now,โ says the Roach. โWe make sure Prince Dain stays alive and well informed about the doings of the Court. We steal, sneak, and deceive to secure his coronation. And when he is king, we will steal, sneak, and deceive to make sure he stays on the throne.โ
I nod. After seeing what Balekin is like, I want Dain on the throne more than ever. Madoc will be by his side, and if I can make myself useful enough, maybe theyโll get the rest of the Gentry off my back.
โYou can do two things the rest of us canโt,โ the Roach says. โOne, you can blend in with the human servants. Two, you can move among the Gentry. Weโre going to teach you some other tricks. So until you get another mission
directly from the prince, your job is what I say it is.โ
I nod. I expected something like that. โI canโt always get away. I skipped classes today, but I canโt do that all the time or someone will notice and ask where Iโve been. And Madoc expects me to have dinner with him and Oriana and the rest of the family around midnight.โ
The Roach looks over at the Ghost and shrugs. โThis is always the problem with infiltrating the Court. Lots of etiquette taking up time. Whenย canย you get away?โ
โI could sneak out after Iโm supposed to be in bed,โ I tell them.
โGood enough,โ the Roach says. โOne of us will meet you near the house and either train you or give you assignments. You need not always come here, to the nest.โ The Ghost nods, as though my problems are reasonable, part of the job, but I feel childish. They are a childโs problems.
โSo letโs initiate her,โ the Bomb says, walking up to me.
I catch my breath. Whatever happens next, I can endure it. I have endured more than they can guess.
But the Bomb only starts laughing, and the Roach gives her a playful shove.
The Ghost gives me a sympathetic look and shakes his head. His eyes, I notice, are a shifting hazel. โIf Prince Dain says you are part of the Court of Shadows, then you are. Try not to be too much of a disappointment and weโll have your back.โ
I let out my breath. I am not sure that I wouldnโt have preferred some ordeal, some way to prove myself.
The Bomb makes a face. โYouโll know youโre really one of us when you get your name. Donโt expect it anytime soon.โ
The Ghost goes over to a cabinet and takes out a half-empty bottle of a pale greenish liquid and a stack of polished acorn cups. He pours out four shots. โHave a drink. And donโt worry,โ he tells me. โIt wonโt befuddle you any more than any other drink.โ
I shake my head, thinking of the way I felt after having the golden apple mashed into my face. Never do I want to feel out of control like that again. โIโll pass.โ
The Roach knocks back his drink and makes a face, as though the liquor is scorching his throat. โSuit yourself,โ he manages to choke out before he starts to cough.
The Ghost barely winces at the contents of his acorn. The Bomb is taking tiny sips of hers. From her expression, I am extra glad I passed on it.
โBalekinโs going to be a problem,โ the Roach says, explaining what I found.
The Bomb puts down her acorn. โI mislike everything about this. If he was going to go to Eldred, he would have done it already.โ
I had not considered that he might poison his father.
The Ghost stretches his lanky body as he gets up. โItโs getting late. I should take the girl home.โ
โJude,โ I remind him.
He grins. โI know a shortcut.โ
We go back into the tunnels, and following him is a challenge because, as his name suggests, he moves almost completely silently. Several times, I think heโs left me alone in the tunnels, but just when I am about to stop walking, I hear the faintest exhalation of breath or shuffle of dirt and persuade myself to go on.
After what feels like an agonizingly long time, a doorway opens. The Ghost is standing in it, and beyond him is the High Kingโs wine cellar. He makes a small bow.
โThis is your shortcut?โ I ask.
He winks. โIf a few bottles happen to fall into my satchel as we pass through, thatโs hardly my fault, is it?โ
I force out a laugh, the sound creaky and false in my ears. Iโm not used to one of the Folk including me in their jokes, at least not outside my family. I like to believe that I am doing okay here in Faerie. I like to believe that even though I was drugged and nearly murdered at school yesterday, I am able to put that behind me today. Iโm fine.
But if I canโt laugh, maybe Iโm not so fine after all.
I change into the blue shift I packed in the woods outside Madocโs grounds, despite being so tired that my joints hurt. I wonder if the Folk are ever tired like that, if they ever ache after a long evening. The toad seems exhausted, too, although maybe sheโs just full. As far as I can tell, most of what she did today was snap her tongue at passing butterflies and a mouse or two.
Itโs full deep dark when I get back to the estate. The trees are lit with tiny sprites, and I see a laughing Oak racing through them, pursued by Vivi and Taryn andโoh hellโLocke. Itโs disorienting to see him here, impossibly out of context. Has he come because of me?
With a shriek, Oak dashes over, clamoring up the saddlebags and onto my lap.
โChase me!โ he yells, out of breath, full of the wriggling ecstasy of
childhood.
Even faeries are young once.
Impulsively, I hug him to my chest. Heโs warm and smells of grass and deep woods. He lets me do it for a moment, small arms twining around my neck, small horned head butting against my chest. Then, laughing, he slides down and away, throwing a puckish glance back to see if Iโll follow.
Growing up here, in Faerie, will he learn to scorn mortals? When I am old and he is still young, will he scorn me, too? Will he become cruel like Cardan? Will he become brutal like Madoc?
I have no way of knowing.
I step off the toad, foot in the stirrup as I swing my body down. I pat just above her nose, and her golden eyes drift shut. In fact, she seems a little like she might be asleep until I yank on the reins, leading her back toward the stables.
โHello,โ Locke says, jogging up to me. โNow, where might you have gone off to?โ
โNone of your business,โ I tell him, but I soften the words with a smile. I canโt help it.
โAh! A lady of mystery. My very favorite kind.โ Heโs wearing a green doublet, with slits to show his silk shirt underneath. His fox eyes are alight. He looks like a faerie lover stepped out of a ballad, the kind where no good comes to the girl who runs away with him. โI hope youโll consider returning to classes tomorrow,โ he says.
Vivi continues to chase Oak, but Taryn has stopped near a large elm tree. She watches me with the same expression she had on the tournament field, as though if she concentrates hard enough, she can will me into not offending Locke.
โYou mean so your friends know they havenโt chased me off?โ I say. โDoes it matter?โ
He looks at me oddly. โYouโre playing the great game of kings and princes, of queens and crowns, arenโt you? Of course it matters. Everything matters.โ
I am not sure how to interpret his words. I didnโt think I was playing that kind of game at all. I thought I was playing the game of pissing off people who hated me already and eating the consequences.
โCome back. You and Taryn both should return. I told her so.โ I turn my head, looking for my twin in the yard, but she is no longer by the elm. Vivi and Oak are disappearing over a hill. Perhaps she has gone with them.
We get to the stables, and I return the toad to her pen. I fill her water station from a barrel in the center of the room, and a fine mist appears, raining
down on her soft skin. The horses nicker and stamp as we leave. Locke watches this all in silence.
โMay I ask you something else?โ Locke says, glancing in the direction of the manor.
I nod.
โWhy havenโt you told your father whatโs been happening?โ Madocโs stables are very impressive. Maybe standing in them, Locke was reminded of just how much power and influence the general has. But that doesnโt mean I am the inheritor of that power. Maybe Locke should also remember that I am merely one of the by-blow children of Madocโs human wife. Without Madoc and his honor, no one would care about me.
โYou mean so he can go stomping into our classes with a broadsword, killing everyone in sight?โ I ask, instead of correcting Locke about my station in life.
Lockeโs eyes widen. I guess that wasnโt what he meant. โI thought that your father would pull you outโand that if you didnโt tell him, it was because you wanted to stay.โ
I give a short laugh. โThatโs not what heโd do at all. Madoc is not a fan of surrender.โ
In the cool dark of the stables, with the snorting of faerie horses all around us, he takes my hands. โNothing there would be the same without you.โ
Since I never intended to quit, itโs nice to have someone making all this effort to get me to do something I would have done anyway. And the way heโs looking at me, the intensity of it, is so nice that I am embarrassed. No one has ever looked at me this way.
I can feel the heat of my cheeks and wonder if the shadows help cover it up at all. Right then, I feel as though he sees everythingโevery hope of my heart, every stray thought Iโve had before falling into an exhausted sleep each dawn.
He brings one of my hands up to his mouth and presses his lips against my palm. My whole body tenses. I am suddenly too warm, too everything. His breath is a soft susurration against my skin.
With a gentle tug, he pulls me closer. His arm is around me. He leans in for a kiss and my thoughts slide away.
This canโt be happening.
โJude?โ I hear Taryn call uncertainly from nearby, and I stagger away from Locke. โJude? Are you still in the stable?โ
โHere,โ I say, my face hot. We emerge into the night to find Oriana on the steps of the house, hauling Oak inside. Vivi is waving to him as he tries to squirm free from his motherโs grip. Taryn has her hands on her hips.
โOriana has called everyone in to dinner,โ Taryn informs us both grandly. โShe wants Locke to stay and eat with us.โ
He makes a bow. โYou may inform your lady mother that though I am honored to be asked to her table, I would not so impose myself on her. I only wanted to speak with you both. I will, however, call again. You may be sure of that.โ
โYou talked to Jude about school?โ There is trepidation in Tarynโs voice. I wonder what they spoke about before I returned. I wonder if he persuaded her to attend the lectures again, and if so, how he did it.
โUntil tomorrow,โ he says to us with a wink.
I watch him walk off, still overwhelmed. I donโt dare look at Taryn, for fear she will see all of it on my face, the whole dayโs events, the almost kiss. I am not ready to talk, so I am the one who avoids her for once. Skipping up the steps with as much nonchalance as I can muster, I head to my room to change for dinner.
I forgot that I asked Madoc to teach me swordplay and strategy, but after dinner he gives me a stack of military history books from his personal library. โWhen youโre done reading these, we will talk,โ he informs me. โI will set you a series of challenges, and you will tell me how you might overcome
them with the resources I give you.โ
I think he expects me to object and insist on more swordplay, but I am too tired to even think of it.
Flopping down on my bed an hour later, I decide that I am not going to even take off the blue silk dress I am wearing. My hair is still disarranged, although I tried to improve it with a few pretty pins. I should take those out, at least, I tell myself, but I canโt seem to make any movement toward doing so.
My door opens, and Taryn comes in, hopping up onto my bed.
โOkay,โ she says, poking me in the side. โWhat did Locke want? He said he had to talk to you.โ
โHeโs nice,โ I say, rolling over and folding my arms behind my head, staring up at the folds of fabric gathered above me. โNot totally Cardanโs puppet like the rest of them.โ
Taryn has an odd expression on her face, like she wants to contradict me but is holding herself back. โWhatever. Spill.โ
โAbout Locke?โ I ask.
She rolls her eyes. โAbout what happened with him and his friends.โ
โTheyโre never going to respect me if I donโt fight back,โ I tell her. She sighs. โTheyโre never going to respect you, period.โ
I think of crawling across the grass, my knees dirty, the savor of the fruit in my mouth. Even now I can taste the echo of it, the emptiness it would fill, the giddy, delirious joy it promises.
Taryn goes on. โYou came home practically naked yesterday, smeared with faerie fruit. Isnโt that bad enough? Donโt you care?โ Taryn has pulled her whole body back against one of the posts of my bed.
โI am tired of caring,โ I say. โWhy should I?โ โBecause they could kill you!โ
โThey better,โ I say to her. โBecause anything less than that isnโt going to work.โ
โDo you have a plan for stopping them?โ she asks. โYou said you were going to defy Cardan by being your awesome self and if he tried to take you down, youโd take him down with you. How are you going to manage that?โ
โI donโt know exactly,โ I admit.
She throws up her hands in frustration.
โNo, look,โ I say. โEvery day that I donโt beg Cardan for forgiveness over a feud he started is a day I win. He can humiliate me, but every time he does and I donโt back down, he makes himself less powerful. After all, heโs throwing everything heโs got at someone as weak as I am and itโs not working. Heโs going to take himself down.โ
She sighs and comes over to me, laying her head against my chest, putting her arms around me. Against my shoulder she whispers, โHeโs flint, youโre tinder.โ
I hug her closer and make no promises. We stay like that for a long moment.
โDid Locke threaten you?โ she asks softly. โIt was so odd that he came here looking for you, and then you had such a weird expression when I walked into the stables.โ
โNo, nothing bad,โ I tell her. โI donโt know exactly what he came for, but he kissed my hand. It was nice, like out of a storybook.โ
โNice things donโt happen in storybooks,โ Taryn says. โOr when they do happen, something bad happens next. Because otherwise the story would be boring, and no one would read it.โ
Itโs my turn to sigh. โI know itโs stupid, thinking well of one of Cardanโs friends, but he really did help me. He stood up to Cardan. But Iโd rather talk about you. Thereโs someone, isnโt there? When you said you were going to fall in love, you were talking about someone in particular.โ
Not that Iโd be the first to green gown her.
โThereโs a boy,โ she says slowly. โHeโs going to declare himself at Prince Dainโs coronation. Heโs going to ask for my hand from Madoc, and then everything is going to change for me.โ
I think of her weeping, standing beside Cardan. I think of how angry sheโs been that I am feuding with him. I think of that, and a cold and terrible dread creeps over me. โWho?โ I demand.
Please not Cardan. Anyone but Cardan.
โI promised not to tell anyone,โ she says. โEven you.โ
โOur promises donโt matter,โ I say, thinking of Prince Dainโs geas still freezing my tongue, of how little any of them trust us. โNo one expects us to have any honor. Everyone knows we lie.โ
She gives me a stern, disapproving look. โItโs a faerie prohibition. If I break it, heโll know. I need to show him I can live like one of the Folk.โ
โOkay,โ I say slowly.
โBe happy for me,โ she says, and I feel cut to the quick. She has found her place in Faerie, and I guess I have found mine. But I canโt help worrying.
โJust tell me something about him. Tell me that he is kind. Tell me that you love him and that heโs promised to be good to you. Tell me.โ
โHeโs a faerie,โ she says. โThey donโt love the way we do. And I think you would like himโthere, thatโs something.โ
That doesnโt sound like Cardan, whom I despise. But I am not sure I find her answer reassuring, either.
What does it mean, I would like him? Does that mean weโve never met?
What does it mean that he doesnโt love the way we do?
โIย amย happy for you. Honest,โ I say, although I am more worried than anything. โThis is exciting. When Orianaโs dressmaker comes, youโre going to have to make sure you get an extra-pretty gown.โ
Taryn relaxes. โI just want everything to be better. For both of us.โ
I reach over to my bedside table to retrieve the book I stole from Hollow Hall. โRemember this?โ I ask, lifting up the collectedย Aliceโs Adventures in Wonderlandย book. When I do, a folded piece of paper slips out and flutters to the floor.
โWe used to read that when we were little,โ she says, grabbing for the book. โWhere did you get it?โ
โI found it,โ I say, not able to explain whose bookshelf it had come from or why I had been in Hollow Hall in the first place. To test the geas, I try to say the words:ย Spying for Prince Dain. My mouth will not move. My tongue stays still. A wave of panic washes over me, but I push it back. This is a small price for what heโs given me.
Taryn doesnโt press for more information. Sheโs too busy flipping through
the pages and reading bits of it aloud. While I canโt quite remember the cadence of my motherโs voice, I think I hear an echo of it in Tarynโs.
โNow,ย here, you see, it takes all the runningย youย can do, to keep in the same place,โ she reads.ย โIf you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!โ
I reach down surreptitiously and shove the fallen paper under my pillow. I plan to unfold it once she returns to her room, but instead I fall asleep, long before the story is over.
I wake in the early morning, alone, needing to pee. I pad into my bath area, lift my skirts, and do my business in the copper basin left there for this purpose, shame heating my face even though I am alone. It is one of the most humbling aspects of being human. I know that faeries are not godsโmaybe I know that better than any mortal aliveโbut neither have I ever seen one hunched over a bedpan.
Back in bed, I push aside the curtain and let the sunlight spill in, brighter than any lamp. I take the folded-up paper from behind my pillow.
Smoothing it out, I see Cardanโs furious, arrogant handwriting scrawled over the page, taking up all available space. In some places he pressed the nib so angrily that the paper tore.
Jude, it reads, each hateful rendering of my name like a punch to the gut.