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Chapter no 8

The Stolen Heir (The Stolen Heir Duology #1)

At fourteen, I learned to make tea out of crushed spruce needles along with bee balm flowers, boiled over a fire.

โ€œWould you like a cup, Mr. Fox?โ€ I asked my stuffed animal solicitously, as though we were very fancy.

He didnโ€™t want any. Since stealing Mr. Fox back from my unparentsโ€™ boxes, Iโ€™d cuddled up with him every night, and his fur had become dingy from sleeping on moss and dirt.

Worse, there were a few times Iโ€™d left him behind when I went to sit underneath windows at Bexโ€™s school or the local community college, repeating probably useless poems and snatches of history to myself, or doing sums by tracing the numbers in the earth. One night when I returned, I found heโ€™d been attacked by a squirrel looking for material to nest in and most of his insides had been pulled out.

Since then, Iโ€™d stayed at my camp, reading him a novel about an impoverished governess Iโ€™d taken from the library when Iโ€™d picked upย Foraging in the American Southeast. There was a lot about convalescing and chilblains, so I figured it might make him feel better.

Mr. Fox looked uncomfortably like the skins Bogdana hung up to dry after her kills.

โ€œWeโ€™ll get you some new guts, Mr. Fox,โ€ I promised him. โ€œFeathers, maybe.โ€

As I flopped down, my gaze tracked a bird in the tree above us. Iโ€™d gotten fast and vicious in the wild. I could catch it easily enough, but it

would be hard to be sure the feathers were clean and parasite-free. Maybe I should consider ripping apart one of my unfamilyโ€™s pillows instead.

Out in the woods, Iโ€™d often think of the games Rebecca and I used to play. Like once, when we were pretending to be fairy-tale princesses. We carted out propsโ€”a rusty axe that had probably never been taken from the garage before, two paper crowns Iโ€™d made from glitter and cut-up newspaper, and an apple, only slightly bruised, but shiny with wax.

โ€œFirst, I am going to be a woodsman and you are going to plead for your life,โ€ Rebecca told me. โ€œIโ€™ll be sympathetic, because youโ€™re so pretty and sad, so Iโ€™ll kill a deer instead.โ€

So we played that out, and Rebecca hacked at weeds with the axe.

โ€œNow Iโ€™ll be the evil queen,โ€ Iโ€™d volunteered. โ€œAnd you can pretend to give meโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™mย the evil queen,โ€ Rebecca insisted. โ€œAnd the prince. And the woodsman.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not fair,โ€ I whined. Rebecca could be so bossy sometimes. โ€œYou get to do everything, and all I get to do is cry and sleep.โ€

โ€œYou get to eat the apple,โ€ Rebecca pointed out. โ€œAnd wear a crown. Besides, youย saidย that you wanted to be the princess. Thatโ€™s what princesses do.โ€

Bite the bad apple. Sleep. Cry.

A rustling sound made my head come up.

โ€œSuren?โ€ a shout came through the woods. No one should have been calling me. No one should have even known my name.

โ€œStay here, Mr. Fox,โ€ I said, tucking him into my dwelling. Then I crept toward the voice.

Only to see Oak, the heir to Elfhame, standing in a clearing. All my memories of him were of a merry young boy. But heโ€™d become tall and rawboned, in the manner of children who have grown suddenly, and too fast. When he moved, it was with coltish uncertainty, as though not used to his body. He would be thirteen. And he had no reason to be in my woods.

I crouched in a patch of ferns. โ€œWhat do you want?โ€

He turned toward my voice. โ€œSuren?โ€ he called again. โ€œIs that you?โ€

Oak wore a blue vest with silver frogging in place of buttons. Beneath was a fine linen shirt. His hooves had silver caps that matched two silver

hoops at the very top of one pointed ear. Butter-blond hair threaded with dark gold blew around his face.

I glanced down at myself. My feet were bare and dark with filth. I couldnโ€™t remember how long it had been since I washed my dress. A bloodstain marred the cloth near my waist, from where Iโ€™d snagged my arm on a thorn. Grass stains on the skirt, near my knees. I recalled him finding me staked to a post, tied like an animal outside the camp of the Court of Teeth. I could not bear more of his pity.

โ€œItโ€™s me,โ€ I called. โ€œNow go away.โ€

โ€œBut Iโ€™ve only just found you. And I want to talk.โ€ He sounded as though he meant it. As though he considered us friends, even after all this time.

โ€œWhat will you give me if I do, Prince of Elfhame?โ€

He flinched at the title. โ€œThe pleasure of my company?โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€ Though it was not a friendly question, I was honestly puzzled.

He was a long time in answering. โ€œBecause youโ€™re the only person I know who was ever a royal, like me.โ€

โ€œNot like you,โ€ I called.

โ€œYou ran away,โ€ he said. โ€œI want to run away.โ€

I shifted into a more comfortable position. It wasnโ€™t that Iโ€™d run. I hadnโ€™t had anywhere else but here to go. My fingers plucked at a piece of grass. He had everything, didnโ€™t he? โ€œWhy?โ€ I asked again.

โ€œBecause I am tired of people trying to assassinate me.โ€

โ€œI would have thought theyโ€™d prefer you on the throne to your sister.โ€ Killing him didnโ€™t seem as though it would accomplish anything useful to anyone. He was replaceable. If Jude wanted another heir, she could have a baby. She was human; she could probably have a lot of babies.

He pressed the toe of his hoof into the dirt, digging restlessly at the edge of a root. โ€œWell, some people want to protect Cardan because they believe that Jude means to murder him and think my not being around would discourage it. Others believe that eliminating me is a good first step to eliminating her.โ€

โ€œThat doesnโ€™t make any sense,โ€ I said.

โ€œCanโ€™t you just come out so we can talk?โ€ The prince turned, frowning, looking for me in the trees and shrubs.

โ€œYou donโ€™t need to see me for that,โ€ I told him.

โ€œFine.โ€ย He sat among the leaves and moss, balancing his cheek on a bent knee. โ€œSomeone tried to kill me. Again. Poison. Again. Someone else tried to recruit me into a scheme where we would kill my sister and Cardan, so I could rule in their place. When I told them no,ย theyย tried to kill me. With a knife, that time.โ€

โ€œA poisoned knife?โ€

He laughed. โ€œNo, just a regular one. But it hurt.โ€

I sucked in a breath. When he said there had been attempts, I assumed that meant theyโ€™d been prevented in some way, not that he merelyย hadnโ€™t died.

He went on. โ€œSo I am going to run away from Faerie. Like you.โ€

Thatโ€™s not how Iโ€™d thought of myself, as a runaway. I was someone with nowhere to go. Waiting until I was older. Or less afraid. Or more powerful. โ€œThe Prince of Elfhame canโ€™t up andย disappear.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™d probably be happier if he did,โ€ he told me. โ€œIโ€™m the reason my father is in exile. The reason my mother married him in the first place. My one sister and her girlfriend had to take care of me when I was little, even though they were barely more than kids themselves. My other sister almost got killed lots of times to keep me safe. Things will be easier without me around. Theyโ€™ll see that.โ€

โ€œTheyย wonโ€™t,โ€ I told him, trying to ignore the intense surge of envy that came with knowing he would be missed.

โ€œLet me stay in your woods with you,โ€ he said with a huff of breath.

I imagined it. Having him share tea with me and Mr. Fox. I could show him the places to pick the sweetest blackberries. We would eat burdock and red clover and parasol mushrooms. At night we would lie on our backs and whisper together. He would tell me about the constellations, about theories of magic, and the plots of television shows heโ€™d seen while in the mortal world. I would tell him all the secret thoughts of my heart.

For a moment, it seemed possible.

But eventually they would come for him, the way that Lady Nore and Lord Jarel came for me. If he was lucky, it would be his sisterโ€™s guards dragging him back to Elfhame. If he wasnโ€™t, it would be a knife in the dark from one of his enemies.

He did not belong here, sleeping in dirt. Scrabbling out an existence at the very edges of things.

โ€œNo,โ€ I made myself tell him. โ€œGo home.โ€

I could see the hurt in his face. The honest confusion that came with unexpected pain.

โ€œWhy?โ€ he asked, sounding so lost that I wanted to snatch back my words.

โ€œWhen you found me tied to that stake, I thought about hurting you,โ€ I told him, hating myself. โ€œYou are not my friend.โ€

I do not want you here.ย Those are the words I ought to have said, but couldnโ€™t, because they would be a lie.

โ€œAh,โ€ he said. โ€œWell.โ€

I let out a breath. โ€œYou can stay the night,โ€ I blurted out, unable to resist that temptation. โ€œTomorrow, you go home. If you donโ€™t, Iโ€™ll use the last favor you owe me from our game to force you.โ€

โ€œWhat if I go and come back again?โ€ he asked, trying to mask his hurt. โ€œYou wonโ€™t.โ€ When he got home, his sisters and his mother would be

waiting. They would have worried when they couldnโ€™t find him. Theyโ€™d make him promise never to do anything like that again. โ€œYou have too much honor.โ€

He didnโ€™t answer.

โ€œStay where you are a moment,โ€ I told him, and crept off through the grass.

I had him there with me for one night, after all. And while I didnโ€™t think he wasย myย friend, it didnโ€™t mean I couldnโ€™t be his. I brought him a cup of tea, hot and fresh. Set it down on a nearby rock, with leaves beside it for a plate, piled with blackberries.

โ€œWould you like a cup of tea, prince?โ€ I asked him. โ€œItโ€™s over here.โ€ โ€œSure,โ€ he said, walking toward my voice.

When he found it, he sat down on the stone, settling the tea on his leg and holding the blackberries in the palm of one hand. โ€œAre you drinking with me?โ€

โ€œI am,โ€ I said.

He nodded, and this time he didnโ€™t ask me to come out. โ€œWill you tell me about the constellations?โ€ I asked him. โ€œI thought you didnโ€™t like me,โ€ he said.

โ€œI can pretend,โ€ I told him. โ€œFor one night.โ€

And so he described the constellations overhead, telling me a story about a child of the Gentry who believed heโ€™d stumbled onto a prophecy that promised him great success, only to find that his star chart was upside down.

I told him the plot of a mortal movie Iโ€™d watched years ago, and he laughed at the funny parts. When he lay down in a pile of rushes and closed his eyes, I crept up to him and carefully covered him in dry leaves so that he would be warm.

When I woke up in the afternoon, he was already gone.

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