turned to look, there was nothing there but an ivy-covered garden wall.
âRight,â I said, and turned again, starting down the path.
Some of Lunaâs gardens were showy and elaborate, intended to serve as living jewels in the crown of Shadowed Hills. This garden was private, and its design supported that. The only flowers were roses, and they were more subdued than the riotous flowers that grew elsewhere in the knowe. Most of them were striated in yellow and blue, the colors of the Duchy itself. Marble benches ringed the garden, allowing for quiet contemplation. There were several cobblestone walking paths, including the one that I was on. They came together to circle a decorative fountain before they branched out, leading to smaller, freestanding silver gates.
This was only the third time Iâd been in this part of the knowe. The first time, Iâd been coming to warn Sylvester about an attempt on Lunaâs life, and Iâd been elf-shot for my troubles, nearly dying on the cobblestones I was walking along. I looked down, trying to find traces of the trauma in the stones under my feet. It wasnât there. Even when I breathed deeply, looking for traces of the blood, it wasnât there. There was no sign that anything bad had ever happened here. But I remembered, and I walked a little faster as I tried to outpace that memory.
If I remembered correctly, the gate to my right would lead to Rayselineâs quarters. I turned left, walking up to the gate and stopping, unsure how to proceed. âI donât suppose thereâs a doorbell somewhere on this thing, is there?â I asked, only half rhetorically. The gate didnât answer me. I sighed and reached for the handle.
As soon as my fingers touched the metal of the gate it began to chime, quietly at first, but louder and faster with each passing second, until it was like I was standing in a forest of wind chimes. I yanked my hand back like Iâd been burned. The chiming continued.
Then, with a final loud chord, the chiming stopped, the handle turned, and the gate swung open to reveal a tall, redheaded Daoine Sidhe in breeches and a sleeping shirt, squinting slightly in the twilight of the garden. An empty bed was partially visible behind him. I stepped forward and breathed in, catching the reassuring scent of daffodils and dogwood flowers. Only then did I allow my shoulders to unlock. I tried to settle my expression as I let out my hastily taken breath and bowed.
âGood day, my liege,â I said. âIâm sorry to disturb you, but it was genuinely important.â
âOctober?â He sounded confused, and when I straightened, I saw that he looked even more so. Then the confusion passed, replaced by growing wakefulness, and worry. âOf course you wouldnât disturb me if it wasnât genuinely important. Is someone hurt?â
I thought of Jazz. âSomeone was, but I fixed it,â I said. âSylvester . . .â
He raised a hand, cutting me off before I could finish the sentence. The worry in his expression deepened, turning slowly into a deep, burning fury. âI can smell him on you,â he said, voice honed to a razorâs edge. It could have drawn blood. âI should have known that if he ever came back here, he would come for you first.â
âMy liege?â I said, reeling a little. When Oleander had come back, I hadnât been able to convince
anyone
she was in the Kingdom. Sheâd managed to halfway convince me that I was losing my mind. It seemed almost perverse for things to be so much easier this time.
Then again, I
had
been throwing Simonâs spells around like they were softballs. It made sense that some of the stink of him might have clung to me, and if anyone was sensitive to the smell of the manâs magic, it was his twin brother.
Sylvester turned his cold, furious face toward me. I quailed, and he blinked, looking briefly surprised before his fury
Marina Dyachenko, Sergey Dyachenko