Oak isnโt sure how long he has lain on the cold stone tiles, dropping in and out of consciousness. He dreams of hunting snakes that glisten
with gems as they whip through the night, of girls made of ice whose kisses cool his burns. Several times, he thinks he ought to crawl toward his blanket, but just contemplating the idea of moving hurts his head.
Whatever the prince thought of himself before, however skilled he claimed to be at evading traps and laughing in the face of danger, he isnโt laughing now. Heโd have been better off sitting in his cell and waiting. Heโd have been better off if he ran out into the snow. He took a chance and lost, lostย spectacularly, which is just about all he can say to his creditโat least it was spectacular.
It is the shift of shadows that causes him to realize someone is standing outside his cell. Feverishly, he looks up. For a moment, her face swims in front of him, and he thinks she must be part of another nightmare.
Bogdana.
The storm hag looms tall, her hair a wild mane around her head. She peers at him with black eyes that shine like chips of wet onyx.
โPrince Oak, our most honored guest. I was afraid you might have died in there,โ she says, kicking a tray beneath the door of his cell with her foot. On it rests a bowl of watery soup with scales Boating on top, beside a carafe of sour-smelling wine. He has no doubt she selected the food personally.
โWell, hello,โ Oak says. โWhat an unexpected visit.โ
She smiles down in malicious glee. โYou seem unwell. I thought a simple meal might be to your liking.โ
He pushes himself into a sitting position, ignoring how it makes his head pound. โHow long was I out?โ He isnโt even sure how he got to the prisons. Had Straun been forced to carry him here, once Valen realized he wasnโt going to wake anytime soon? Had Valen brought him back, in case he never woke?
โSomewhere you need to be, Prince of Elfhame?โ Bogdana asks him. โOf course not.โ Oakโs hand goes to his chest. The burn by his throat is
scabbed over. He can feel the wild beat of his heart beneath his palm. He couldnโt have been unconscious long since Wren hadnโt sent anyone to drag him before her Court for a whipping.
Bogdanaโs smile widens. โGood. Because I came to tell you that I will gut every servant you conscript, should you try to use one to escape your cell again.โ
โI didnโtโโ he begins.
She gives a harsh laugh, something that is half a snarl. โThe huldu girl? You cannot truly expect me to believe you donโt have her eating out of your hand. That you didnโt put her under your spell?โ
โYou think Fernwaif helped me escape?โ he snaps, incredulous. โFeeling remorseful now, when itโs too late?โ The storm hagโs lip curls.
โYou knew the risk when you used her.โ
โThe girl did nothing.โ Fernwaif, who believed in romance, despite living in Lady Noreโs Citadel. Who he hoped was still alive. โI got the key from Straun, and thatโs because heโs a fool, not because I conscripted him.โ
Bogdana watches Oakโs expression, drawing out the moment. โSuren interceded on Fernwaifโs behalf. Sheโs safe from me, for the moment.โ
Oak lets out a breath. โI shall be as unpleasant to the servants of the Citadel as you like hereafter. Now I hope our business is concluded.โ
Bogdana frowns down at him. โOur business wonโt be concluded until the Greenbriars have repaid their debt to me.โ
โWith our lives, blah, blah, I know.โ Pain and despair have made the prince reckless.
The storm hagโs eyes are bright with reflected light. Her nails tap against the iron of the bars as though contemplating shoving her hand inside and slashing him with them. โYou desire something from Suren, donโt you, prince? Perhaps itโs that you arenโt used to being rejected and itโs not sitting well with you. Perhaps you see the greatness in her and want to ruin it. Perhaps you truly are drawn to her. Any which way, it will make the moment she bites out your throat all the sweeter.โ
Oak cannot help thinking of his dream and the fox walking beside him, prophesying his doom. Cannot help thinking of other things. โSheโs bitten me before, you know,โ he says with a grin. โIt wasnโt so bad.โ
Bogdana looks satisfyingly infuriated by the comment. โI am glad youโre still locked up tight, little bait,โ she tells him, eyes flashing. โWere you less useful, I would flay your skin from your bones. I would hurt you in ways you cannot imagine.โ There is a hunger in her words that unnerves him.
โSomeone beat you to that.โ Oak leans back onto the pillow of his own arm.
โYouโre still breathing,โ says the storm hag.
โIf you were actually worried I was dead,โ he says, recalling the first thing she said to him when she came to his cell, โI must have looked pretty bad.โ
He may have been unconscious longer than he guessed. Is there still a day before Elfhame makes its move? Is it happening already? He really, really wishes the metal snake had been more specific about what Jude was planning.ย Three dayssssssย was just not enough information.
โI donโt need you to last long,โ Bogdana says. โItโs the High King I want.โ
Oak snorts. โGood luck with that.โ โYouโre my luck.โ
โI wonder what Wren thinks,โ he says, trying to hide his discomfiture. โYouโre using her every bit as much as Lord Jarel and Lady Nore ever did. And youโve been planning on using her for a long time.โ
Lightning sparks along Bogdanaโs fingers. โMy revenge is hers as well.
Her crown and throne were stolen.โ
โSheโs got both a crown and a throne now, hasnโt she?โ Oak asks. โAnd it seems youโre the one likely to cost her them,ย again.โ
The look the storm hag gives him could have boiled his blood. โFor what Mab did, I will see the end of the Greenbriar reign,โ snaps Bogdana. โYou think you know Suren, but you do not. Her heart is that of my dead daughter. She was born to be the ruin of your kin.โ
โI know her well enough to call herย Wren,โ he says, and watches the storm hagโs eyes glisten with deeper malice. โAnd we donโt always do the thing we were born for.โ
โEat up, boy,โ Bogdana says, gesturing to the disgusting food she brought. โIโd hate to see you go to your slaughter hungry.โ
Itโs only hours later, when the footsteps of three guards wake him from another half sleep, that Oak realizes she may have meant those last words literally. His head still hurts enough that he thinks about just lying there and letting them do their worst, but then he decides that if he is going to die, at least he will do so standing.
Heโs up by the time they arrive. As they open the door to his cell, he uses the tip of his hoof to flip the bowl of soup into his hands. Then he slams it into the first guardโs face.
The guard goes down. Oak kicks the second into the iron bars and, in a moment of hesitation from the third, grabs for the first guardโs fallen sword.
Before he can get it, a club hits him in the stomach, knocking the air out of him.
He was faster, before the iron. Before his muscles got stiff. Before getting hit in the head several times by Valen. A few weeks ago, he would have had the sword.
Theyโre crowded in the entrance of his cell; thatโs his main advantage. Only one can really come at him at a time, but all three have weapons drawn and Oak has only his hands and hooves. Even the bowl is lying on the ground, cracked in half.
But he refuses to be dragged back to the interrogation chamber. Panic fills him at the thought of Valen starting the torture over. At the strike of an ice whip. At Bogdanaโs nails peeling off his skin.
The second guard, the one who hit the bars, lunges at him with the sword. Itโs a small space, though, too small to get a real swing in, and the guard is slow as a consequence. Oak ducks and barrels into the first guard, who has managed to get onto his feet. The prince slams into him, and they both sprawl onto the cold stone tiles of the prison hall. Oak attempts to scramble up, only to be hit between the shoulder blades with the club by the third guard. He is knocked down again, falling heavily onto the second guard. He goes for a knife strapped to that oneโs belt. Drawing it, he rolls onto his back, ready to throw.
As he does, he feels a familiar shift in his mind. The shuttering of all other thoughts, the casting off of himself. There is a relief in letting go, allowing the future and past to drop away, to become someone without a hope or fear beyond this moment. Someone for whom there was only ever this fight and there will only ever be this fight.
It worries him, too, though, because every time it happens, he feels less and less in control of what he does when heโs outside himself. How many times now has he found himself standing over a body with blood on his clothes, blood on his face and his sword and his handsโand no memory of what happened?
It makes him think of the gancanagh power, of all the warnings he doesnโt seem able to heed anymore.
โOak!โ Hyacinthe shouts.
The prince lets his arm with the dagger in it sag. Somehow being yelled at by Hyacinthe brings him back to himself. Maybe it is just the familiarity of his scorn.
When he isnโt hit again, he lets himself lie there, breathing hard. The other guard stands.
โShe wants you to sit down to supper with her,โ Hyacinthe says. โIโm supposed to get you cleaned up.โ
โWren?โ Oakโs sense of time is still very unclear. โI thought she was going to have me punished.โ
Hyacinthe raises both his eyebrows. โYes, Wren. Who else?โ
The prince looks at the guards, who glare at him resentfully. If heโd been thinking more clearly, he would have realized he had no cause to try toย murderย them. They werenโt necessarily working for Valen or Bogdana, werenโt necessarily leading him to his doom. He probably would have figured that out sooner had his head not hurt so much. Had Bogdana not come and threatened him.
โNo one mentioned supper,โ Oak complains.
One of the guards, the one with the club, snorts. The other two wear scowls that remain unaltered.
Hyacinthe turns to all of them. โFind something else to do. I will escort the prince.โ
The guards depart, one spitting on the stone floor as he leaves.
โI warn you,โ Oak says. โIf you are also planning on hitting me, it will have to be quite a blow to have any effect on the swelling and bruises already coming in.โ
โYou might consider occasionally bowing to wisdom and keeping your tongue between your teeth,โ Hyacinthe says, reaching out a hand to pull Oak to his feet.
For a moment, the prince is certain heโs going to open his mouth and say something Hyacinthe will not think is at all funny. Something that probably wonโtย beย at all funny.
โUnlikely, but we can both live in hope,โ Oak manages as he lets himself be levered up. He staggers a little and realizes that if he tries to
catch himself, he will have to burn his hand on the iron bars. Dizziness washes over him. โIf you intend to gloat, have at it.โ
Hyacintheโs mouth twists into a smile. โYouโre being paid, Prince of Elfhame. In exactly the coin you once demanded.โ
To that, Oak can make no refutation. He is staying upright by sheer force of will, taking deep breaths until he is sure he is going to stay that way.
โWell, come on,โ says Hyacinthe. โUnless you want me to carry you.โ โCarry me? What a delightful offer. You can bear me in your arms like a
maiden in a fairy tale.โ
Hyacinthe rolls his eyes. โI can throw you over my shoulder like a sack of grain.โ
โThen I suppose I shall walk,โ Oak says, hoping he can. He staggers after Hyacinthe, remembering how Hyacinthe was once his prisoner, feeling the poetic justice of the moment. โAre you going to bind my hands?โ
โDo I need to?โ Hyacinthe asks.
For a moment, Oak thinks heโs referring to the bridle. But then the prince realizes Hyacinthe is simply offering him an opportunity to walk up the stairs without restraints. โWhy are youโโ
โA kinder captor than ever you were to me?โ Hyacinthe supplies with a short laugh. โMaybe I am just a better person.โ
Oak doesnโt bother to remind Hyacinthe of how he tried toย murder the High Kingย and, if Oak hadnโt interceded, would have been executed or sent to the Tower of Forgetting. It doesnโt matter. It is very possible that neither of them is a particularly nice person.
They move down the hall, past lit torches. Hyacinthe takes a long look at Oak and frowns. โYouโve got bruises, and itโs too soon for them to have come from the fight I just saw. Those iron burns arenโt fresh, either, and theyโre the wrong shape and angle to come from your prison bars. What happened?โ
โIโm a miracle of self-destructiveness,โ Oak says.
Hyacinthe stops walking and folds his arms. The pose is so like one that Tiernan regularly makes that Oak is certain itโs a copy, even if Hyacinthe isnโt aware heโs doing it.
Maybe thatโs what makes him talk, that familiar gesture. Or maybe itโs that heโs so tired and no small amount afraid. โYou know a guy named
Valen? Former general. Thick neck. More anger than sense?โ Hyacintheโs brow furrows, and he nods slowly.
โHe wants your job,โ Oak says, and begins walking again.
Hyacinthe falls into step beside him. โI donโt see what that has to do with you.โ
They come to the stairs and head up, out of the dungeons. The fading sunlight hits his face, hurting his eyes, but the only thing he feels is gratitude. He wasnโt sure heโd ever see the sun again. โHe may have told you something about a soldier named Bran deserting. He didnโt. Heโs dead.โ โBran isโโ Hyacinthe begins, and then lowers his voice to a whisper.
โHeโsย dead?โ
โDonโt look at me like that,โ Oak says quietly. โI didnโt kill him.โ
Guards Bank an entrance a few paces ahead, and by unspoken consensus, they both fall silent. Oakโs shoulders tense as he passes them, but they do nothing to stop his progress through the halls. For the first time, as he steps into a high-ceilinged corridor, he is free to look around the Citadel without the danger of being caught. He catches the scent of melting wax and the sap of fir trees. Rose petals, too, he thinks. Without the persistent stink of the iron, his head hurts less.
Then the princeโs gaze goes to one of the large, translucent walls of ice, and he stumbles.
As through a window, he can see the landscape beyond the Citadel and the troll kings moving across it. Although distant, they are far larger than the boulders in the Stone Forest, as if those massive boulders represented only the topmost portions of their bodies and the rest were buried beneath the earth. These trolls are larger than any giant Oak saw in the Court of Elfhame, or the Court of Moths, for that matter. He watches them lurch through the snow, dragging enormous chunks of ice, and mentally recalculates Wrenโs resources.
They are building a wall. A miles-wide defensive shield, encircling the Citadel.
In less than a month, between her own newfound power and her newfound allies, Wren has made the Court of Teeth more formidable and more forbidding than it ever was during Lord Jarelโs reign. But when he thinks of her, he cannot help seeing the darkness beneath her eyes and the
feverish shine of them. Cannot put aside the thought that something is wrong.
โWren looks as though sheโs been unwell,โ Oak says. โHas she been sick?โ
Hyacinthe frowns. โYou canโt really expect me to betray my queen by telling you her secrets.โ
Oakโs smile is sharp-edged. โSo thereโs a secret to tell.โ Hyacintheโs frown deepens.
โI am a prisoner,โ Oak says. โWhether you have me in chains or no, I canโt hurt her, and I wouldnโt if I could. I warned you about Valen. About Bran. Surely, I have proved some measure of loyalty.โ
Hyacinthe huffs out a breath, his gaze going to the troll kings beyond the icy pane. โLoyalty? I think not, but I am going to tell you because you might be the one person whoย canย help. Wrenโs power takes something terrible out of her.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ Oak demands.
โItโs eating away at her,โ Hyacinthe says. โAnd sheโs going to keep having to use it, again and again, so long as youโre here.โ
Oak opens his mouth to demand further explanation, but at that moment, a knot of courtiers passes, all of them pale and cold-looking, their gazes sliding over Oak as though the very sight of him is an offense.
โYouโre going to the leftmost tower,โ Hyacinthe says.
Oak nods, trying not to be rattled by the hate in their eyes. The tower heโs heading toward is, ironically, the same one he was caught in the day before. โExplain,โ he says.
โWhat she doesโitโs not just unbinding, itโsย unmaking. She became sick after what she did to Lady Nore and her stick army.ย Harrowed.ย And Bogdana was so insistent that Wren use it again to break the curse of the Stone Forest because sheโs going to need the trolls if Elfhame moves against us. But sheโs formed of magic herself, and the more she unmakes, the more she is unmade.โ
Oak recalls the strain in Wrenโs face as she looked down from the dais in the Great Hall, the hollows beneath her cheekbones as she slept.
He assumed that Wren didnโt visit the prisons because she didnโt want to see him out of uninterest or anger. But she might not have come if she was sick. As much as she knows that looking weak in front of her newly
formed Court is dangerous, itโs possible she feels it is similarly risky to look weak in front of him.
And if she doesnโt keep using her power . . .
No matter how dangerous the magic, Oak can too easily imagine Wren believing that if she doesnโt use it, she wonโt be able to keep her throne. This was a land of huldufรณlk, nisser, and trolls, used to bowing only to strength and ferocity. They followed Lady Nore, but they were willing to hail Wren, her murderer, as their new queen.
She may be inclined to push herself past her limits to keep that support.
To prove herself worthy. Has he not witnessed his sister doing just that?
You know what would really impress them?ย his mind supplies unhelpfully.ย Daring to skewer the heir to Elfhame.
โTonight, at dinner,โ Hyacinthe says, โpersuade her to let you go. And if you canโt, then leave. Go. Actuallyย escapeย this time, and take your political conflict with you.โ
Oak rolls his eyes at the assumption that getting out of the prisons was easy and he could have done it at any time. โYou could advise her toย letย me go. Unless she doesnโt trust you, either.โ
Hyacinthe hesitates, not taking the bait. โShe would trust me less if she knew we were having this conversation. Perhaps wisely, I am not sure she trusts anyone. All the Folk in the Citadel have their own agendas.โ
โI am last on the list of those whose advice sheโd heed,โ Oak says. โAs you well know.โ
โYou have a way of persuading people.โ
Itโs a barbed comment, but the prince grits his teeth and refuses to be offended. No matter how barbed, itโs also the truth. โIt would be far easier if I wasnโt wearing this bridle.โ
Hyacinthe gives him a sideways look. โYouโll manage.โ He must have heard the specifics of her command.ย You will stay in my prisons until you are sent for.
Oak sighs.
โAnd in the interim, stop picking fights,โ Hyacinthe says, making Oak want to pick a fight withย him. โIs there no situation youโre not compelled to make worse?โ
Oak climbs the steps of the tower, thinking of the dinner ahead of him with Wren. The idea of sitting across from her at a table seems surreal, part
of his hectic, fox-filled dreams.
They come to a wooden door with two locks on the outside. Hyacinthe moves past the prince to fit a key inside the first one and then the other.
One key. Two locks. Oak notes that. And none of it iron.
The room it opens onto is well appointed. Low couches are arranged on a rug looking so much softer than anything heโs seen in weeks that he could sink down onto that and be happy. Blue flames burn in the grate of a fireplace. They seem hot, and yet when he puts a hand to the ice wall above the fire, there is none of the slickness that would indicate melting. Where the rug doesnโt cover, the floor is inset with stone. If you didnโt look carefully, you could suppose that you werenโt in an ice palace at all.
โA far finer class of prison,โ Oak says, moving to lean against one of the posts of the bed. While he was moving, he wasnโt dizzy, but now that heโs stopped, he feels the immense need to be supported by something.
โGet dressed,โ Hyacinthe says, pointing to a set of clothes laid out on the bed. He holds the key in his palm pointedly, then places it on the mantel. โIf you canโt persuade her, it may interest you to know thereโs a shift in the guard at dawn. I left you a book on the table over there as well. Itโs mortal literature, and I understand you like that sort of thing.โ
Oak stares at the key as Hyacinthe leaves. Part of him wants to dismiss this as a trick, a way for the former falcon to prove the prince untrustworthy.
His gaze goes to the clothing left for him and then the mattress beneath, stuffed with goose down or perhaps duck feathers. He feels almost sick with the desire to lie down, to allow his throbbing temple to rest on a pillow.
He takes a deep breath and forces himself to pick up the book that Hyacinthe indicatedโa hardback with a dust jacket that proclaimsย Magic Tricks for Dummies. He ruffies the pages, thinking of how he once made a coin disappear and reappear in front of Wren. Remembering his fingers brushing against her ear, her surprised laugh.
He should have let her leave that night. Let her take the damned bridle, get on the bus, and go, if that was what she wanted.
But no, he had to show off. Be clever. Manipulate everyone and everything, just the way heโd been taught. Just the way his father had manipulated him to come here.
With a sigh, he frowns down at the book again. There doesnโt seem to be anything tucked inside. He isnโt sure what it means then, except that Hyacinthe thinks heโs a dummy. Just in case, he goes through the pages again, more slowly this time.
On 161, he finds an almost thoroughly dried stalk of ragwort.
Guards wait for him in the hall when he emerges from the room, dressed in the clothes he was given.
The doublet is of some silvery fabric that feels sturdy and stiff, as though there might be silver threads woven into the cloth. His shoulders are a little broader and his torso a little longer than the original owner, and it feels even more uncomfortably tight than the uniform. The pants are black as a starless sky and have to be pushed up a little because of the curve of his leg above his hooves.
He says nothing to the guards, and their faces are grim as they escort him to a high-ceilinged dining room where their new queen is waiting.
Wren stands at the head of a long table in a dress of some material that seems to be black and then silver, depending on the light. Her hair is pulled away from her pale blue face, and while she does not wear a crown, the ornaments in her hair suggest one.
She looks every bit a terrifying Queen of Faerie, beckoning him to some final supper of poisoned apples.
He bows.
Her gaze rests on him, as though trying to decide if the gesture is mockery or not. Or maybe sheโs only inspecting his bruises.
Heโs certainly noting how fragile she looks.ย Harrowed.
And something else. Something he ought to have noted in her bedroom, when sheโd given him orders, but heโd been too panicked to think about. Thereโs a defensiveness in her posture, as though sheโs bracing for his anger. After having held him prisoner, she believes heย hatesย her. She might still be angry with him, but she quite obviously expects him to be furious with her.
And every time he behaves as though he isnโt, she thinks heโs playing a trick.
โHyacinthe told me you were reluctant to explain how you came to be hurt,โ Wren says.
Oak doesnโt need to glance at the entrances to note the guards. He saw them upon his arrival. Not knowing their loyalties, he can hardly mention Valen, or even Straun, without stripping Hyacinthe of the element of surprise. Did she know that? Was this a play put on for their benefit? Or was this another test? โWhat would you say if I told you I grew so bored that I hit myself in the face?โ
Her mouth becomes an even grimmer line. โNo one would believe that lie, could you even tell it.โ
Oakโs head dips forward, and he cannot keep the despair out of his voice. This is off to a bad start, and yet he truly does seem unable to keep himself from making it worse. โWhat lieย wouldย you believe?โ