“Sure,” I say, interrupting him.
“Jack of the Lakes,” he says with a menacing grin. “A merry wight. And whom do I have the honor of addressing?” He looks at me.
“Wren,” I say, and immediately wish I hadn’t. It’s not my true name, but all names have some power.
“You have an unusual voice,” he says. “Raspy. Quite fetching, really.”
“I damaged my vocal cords a long time ago,” I inform him. “Screaming.”
Oak steps between us, and I am grateful for the reprieve. “What a fine gentleman you make, Jack.”
Jack turns to the prince, his sinister smile dropping back into place. “Oak and Wren. Wren and Oak. Delightful! Named for woodland creatures, but neither of you so simple.” He glances at Tiernan and Hyacinthe. “Not nearly as simple as these two.”
“That’s enough,” Tiernan says.
Jack’s gaze stays on Oak. “Will you caper for the pleasure of the Queen of Moths? For she is a grim ruler, and her favor hard to win. Not that you need to concern yourself with impressing anyone, Your Highness.”
I get a cold feeling at his words.
“I don’t mind a caper,” Oak says.
“That’s enough impertinence,” says Tiernan, inserting himself into the conversation. He stands with his shoulders back and his arms folded, the picture of the officer in Madoc’s army that he must have once been. “You had the privilege of carrying the prince a ways, and that’s that. Whatever we see fit to give you in recompense, be it a coin or a kick in the teeth, you’ll take it and be grateful.”
Jack of the Lakes sniffs, offended.
Hyacinthe’s eyes glitter with anger, as though he feels the knight spoke directly to him.
“Nonsense,” Oak tells Jack. “Your hooves were swift and sure. Come with us to the Court, rest your feet, and take some refreshment.” He claps his hand on Tiernan’s shoulder. “We’re the ones with reason to be grateful, isn’t that so?”
The knight pointedly ignores him, clearly not experiencing the awe of Prince Oak that he expects of Jack of the Lakes.
“This way,” the prince says, and ushers us along the bank. I follow, trying not to slide on the wet mud.
“Decide for yourself how well they repay gratitude,” says Hyacinthe to the kelpie, touching the leather strap of the bridle he wears. “And do not give them cause for too much of it.”
Tiernan rolls his eyes.
There’s solid concrete blocking our path, with the river on one side and a hill covered in poisonous manchineel trees on the other. The remains of the old building have no door, only large windows that show an even more forbidding and swampy landscape beyond. And yet I can feel the stillness in the air, the crackling presence of magic. Oak stops, frowning. I am sure he can feel it, too.
The prince presses his hand against the concrete, like he’s trying to find the source.
Jack of the Lakes is wading in the water, looking eager to drag someone down into its depths.
Hyacinthe moves to stand nearby, his free hand clenching as though missing something. I wonder what weapon he used when he was a soldier. “I bet you think you’re all great friends now.”
I lower my voice to a rasp, remembering our conversation by the sea. “I am not under anyone’s spell.”
His gaze goes to the prince, standing on a windowsill, and then back to me. “He seems like an open book, but that’s the game he plays. He keeps plenty of secrets. For instance, did you know he received a message from Lady Nore?”
“A message?” I echo.
He smiles, satisfied he has rattled me.
Before I can press him for details, Oak turns to us with a grin that calls for an answer. “Come look.”
A meadow of flowers flows impossibly from the other side of the window. There is no river there, no scrub grass or mud. Just endless blooms, and among them scattered bones, as white as petals.
He hops into the meadow, hooves sinking beneath the flowers, and then reaches up for me.
Do not fall under his spell.
I remind myself that I knew Oak when we were children, that we have the same enemies. That he has no reason to play me false. Still, thinking of Hyacinthe’s words, I shake my head at Oak’s offer of help and climb down myself.
“It’s beautiful, no?” he asks, a little smile on his face. A light in his fox eyes.
It is, of course. All of Faerie is beautiful like this, with carnage hidden just beneath. “I am sure the Queen of Moths will be delighted that the Crown Prince thinks so.”
“You’re in a prickly mood,” he tells me.
As though I am not all-over briars at all times.
We walk through a landscape with no sun or moon above us until we come to a patch of earth with a deep pit half-hidden by swirling fog. There cut into the dirt are steps spiraling down into darkness.
“The Court of Moths,” says Jack of the Lakes softly.
As I glance back at the field, the bones bother me: signs of death strewn among a carpet of flowers. I wish we had not come here. I have a dread that feels like premonition.
I notice that Oak has his hand on his sword as he begins his descent.
We follow, Tiernan behind the prince, then me and Jack, with Hyacinthe bringing up the rear, bridle tight against his cheeks. I hold my knife against my belly, inhale the rich scent of earth, and remember all the times I broke curses, all the tricks I played on the Folk.
We step into a long hall of packed dirt, with pale roots forming a latticework along the ceiling. Occasional glowing crystals light our way. I find myself growing more uncomfortable the deeper we go into the hill. I feel the weight of the earth above me, as though the passageway could collapse, burying us all. I bite my lip and keep going.
Finally, we step into a high-ceilinged cavern, its walls shining with mica.
There stands a green-skinned troll woman, with piercings through her cheeks and two sets of black horns protruding from her head. Sabers hang on either side of her hips. She wears armor of leather, carefully worked so that it seems as though there are a dozen screaming mouths on her chest plate.
At the sight of us, she scowls. “I guard the passage to the Court of Moths. Declare your name and your purpose in coming here. Then I will very likely kill you.”
The expression on Tiernan’s face hardens. “Do you not know your own sovereign? This is Prince Oak, heir to Elfhame.”
The troll’s gaze goes to Oak, looking as though she could eat him in three bites. Finally, she makes a reluctant, shallow bow. “You do us honor.”
The prince, for his part, appears genuinely pleased to meet her and not the least bit afraid, bespeaking either great arrogance or foolishness, or both. “The honor is ours,” he says, looking ready to kiss her hand if she offered it to him. I cannot imagine being so certain of one’s welcome.
Just imagining it makes my stomach hurt.
“We seek the Thistlewitch, who dwells in Queen Annet’s lands. We understand that without permission to see her, supplicants become lost in her swamp for a hundred years,” Oak says.
The troll tilts her head, as if still evaluating his deliciousness. “Some don’t make it back at all.”
The prince nods, as though she’s confirming his suspicions. “Alas, we don’t have time for either of those options.”