by Anthea Sharp
As Anneth made her way to the dining hall for luncheon, she heard the whispers of the court, twisting and sibilant through the corridors.
Did you know? His horse returned to the stables, rider-less.
Now that the prophecy has been fulfilled, he ran away rather than face the truth that we are still doomed.
I heard the human murdered him. She destroyed the remains and fled back to her world.
Which was pure nonsense. Anneth knew the mortal girl, Mara Geary, and knew that the love between her and Bran was unmistakable, no matter how much they both tried to deny it.
But perhaps their stubbornness had been their undoing.
Anneth stepped through the arched doorway to the dining hall, though her appetite had fled. She made her formal curtsey to the head table, where her parents sat, regal and uncaring. At least her mother certainly seemed unconcerned, wearing her usual cold, remote expression. The Hawthorne Lord had a slight furrow in his brow that might mean he was worried about his son and heir.
Or it might simply mean his elderberry wine had soured.
Anneth took a seat at a half-empty table. Glowing spheres of blue foxfire hovered overhead, illuminating the brocade tablecloth and platters of food.
Although the lord and lady presided, luncheon at court was an informal affair. Diners were free to summon whatever dish they wished from the kitchens, though most were content to eat the array of delicacies laid out.
She took a slice of moonmelon and some cheese, and poured a small measure of wine into the silver goblet at her place. Though she might not feel hungry, she must eat something. The hazy worry inside her was clearing, leaving a purpose behind.
She knew where Bran had gone. It was her task to attempt to find him. As soon as she finished her lunch—
“I don’t understand how some people can eat in the face of this tragedy.” A high-pitched voice broke into Anneth’s thoughts.
Before she could protest, an ornately dressed lady took the place beside her, glancing at Anneth’s plate with smug superiority.
“Lady Mireleth,” Anneth said, offering no greeting or welcome.
“For myself, wine and honey is the only thing I can stomach.” Mireleth let out a dramatic sigh. “Alas, the prince has abandoned us. That mortal woman he was forced to wed has lured him into her world. Or killed him with her treacherous human ways. Either way, we’ll never see him again.” She sighed again, then fixed Anneth with her hard, bright stare. “I suppose you’re next in line for the Hawthorne Throne, ill-suited as you might be.”
The words sent a stab of panic through Anneth. Her, inherit the throne? Oh, stars forefend. She understood the line of succession, of course, but had never considered that her brother would not take the throne. Of course he would—he had his prophecy to fulfill.
“Bran will return,” she said. “And Mara too—you’ll see. They didn’t save Elfhame from destruction merely to abandon the realm. Besides, Bran is ever true to his duty.”
“His duty.” Mireleth sniffed in disapproval. “Better that he’d honored the betrothal bond he made with me. Dark Elf blood should not be tainted by associating with mortals. If that human woman never returns, none will miss her. Good riddance, I say. But we need the Hawthorne Prince.”
Anneth’s fingers tightened on the leaf-carved handle of her fork. Carefully, she set it down so that she would not stab Mireleth in the arm.
“You know as well as I do that your betrothal to Bran was a sham. A ploy, concocted by our fathers to activate the prophecy. And it worked.”
Mireleth turned a wounded look on her. “I’ve loved Brannonilon all my life! I would have married him in an instant. But no—he spurned me for that hideous mortal creature.”
There was no reasoning with Mireleth. Though Anneth strongly suspected the lady’s “love” was motivated by a fondness for power and the title of Hawthorne Lady, rather than any true affection for Bran.
Anneth took a bite of melon, tasteless on her tongue, and forced herself to patience.
“And now he has deserted us,” Mireleth said.
Anneth half expected her to fall into a despairing swoon so that she could be the center of attention, but Mireleth showed remarkable self-restraint, instead settling for yet another melancholy sigh.
“He’ll be back soon,” Anneth said, infusing her voice with a certainty she did not feel.
“I hope he returns, for all our sakes,” Mireleth said. “What good is it to save the Hawthorne Court only to let it fall into disarray?”
Anneth shot a quick glance at her parents at the head table. As long as Calithilon and his unyielding wife ruled, the court would be stable.
But what if Bran never returned?
Anneth swallowed back the panic that tried to rise, hot and sickening, in her throat.
Whatever had happened, she could sit idle no longer. As soon as luncheon ended, she would pack a traveling bag, fetch supplies from the kitchen, and go out in search of her brother.
Unlike him, she would leave a note, telling her family where she was bound: a place where the edges of the mortal world and Elfhame brushed up against one another, full of magic and dangerous mystery. A place her people called Erynvorn.
The Darkwood.
1
Prince Brannonilon Luthinor, heir to the Hawthorne throne, husband of the mortal woman Mara Geary, lay beneath the sheltering branches of an enormous cedar tree, his wife in his arms. Overhead, the palemoon was a bitten silver coin tossed against the dark. Stars flared in the sky, unthreatened by that half-light.
Exhaustion still pulled at him, tugging him down toward the blackness of sleep, but he fought it. Mara dreamed, and he would watch over her. A poor husband he would be indeed, to fall into slumber and let some enemy take them unawares.
Not that he trusted himself to be a particularly fine husband. He knew almost nothing of human ways and customs, and the strange girl sleeping in the shelter of his embrace was equal parts fascinating and confusing to him.
He let out a low, weary exhalation, echoed by the rustle of the wind through the feathery cedar branches. The prophecy was fulfilled, the great enemy of Elfhame defeated, and he felt like a boat unmoored, abandoned by captain and crew and left at the mercy of currents he could no longer chart.
Mara stirred sleepily, her fingers twined in the long, dark strands of his hair.
“Hush, love.” He patted her shoulder lightly. “All is well. You are safe.”
Even though his magic might be drained, his sharp sword was at the ready to defend her.
“Bran?” Her voice was hoarse with sleep.
“I am here.”
Her grip on him tightened. “I thought I’d lost you forever.”
“No, my heart. You saved me.”
Barely. He had walked close enough to death to see his own reflection in the gray shadows of the Beyond.
“Don’t ever go away again.” There was an endearing fierceness in her voice.
“You must promise the same.”
She sighed, warm against his neck. “I won’t insist you send me away again, if that’s what you mean. If I ever return to the mortal world, you must come with me.”
He blinked at the palemoon through the lacework of branches. Leave Elfhame? The thought was cold and strange. He’d lived his entire life in service to the prophecy that demanded he save his land. The realm had been the heart of him for as long as he could remember.
“Why would I leave Elfhame?”
She shrugged, a curiously mortal gesture, felt more than seen. “You never know what will happen.”
He gave a hollow laugh. “Once, I always knew. It was simply a matter of reaching that point.”
“Poor love.” She lifted her hand to cup his cheek. “It must be hard, now that your prophecy has been fulfilled.”
It was so like her, to feel sympathy for him when she was the one trapped once more in his realm. A tremor of worry ran through him. A scant few moons ago, Mara had risked everything in order t
o return to her home world. Could she ever be happy here? Could she ever be happy with him?
He feared he knew the answer, and it was not kind.
“What will become of us?” he asked.
She slowly sat up and ran her fingers through her tousled brown hair.
“I don’t know. I suppose you’ll teach me more about the magic I carry, and the Hawthorne Court, and how to be a proper Dark Elf lady.”
“You could never be one of them,” he said, then cursed as he felt her stiffen beside him. He rose to his knees and placed his hands on her shoulders. “No, Mara, I did not mean that cruelly.”
“You Dark Elves are ever cruel,” she said, a bite in her voice, though he hoped she did not mean it. “In the fables we humans tell, it is part of your nature.”
“Do you truly believe that?” He touched her face, careful to keep his claws sheathed. “I meant only that you are too kind and brave and strong to be a simpering court lady.”
She stared at him a moment, her human features strange and lovely, lit by the soft purple glow of nearby dusk lilies. The hurt in her eyes faded, and a rueful smile crossed her face.
“And short-tempered and outspoken, too. You forgot to add those most admirable qualities of mine to your list.”
She could make him smile as no other could. He gathered her against him, just to marvel at the feel of her in his arms. He dropped a kiss into her hair, breathing deeply of the smell of her: moss and flowers and joy.
“You know those attributes are prized beyond compare,” he said.
“I’m lucky to have a moon-crazed Dark Elf for a husband, who believes such things.” Her voice held laughter.
The moment was broken by the sound of a scream.
In an instant, Bran was on his feet, sword in his hand. His attempt to summon light resulted in a sickly, gaseous shimmer in the air, and even that much effort left him nauseated.
Then Mara stood and slipped her arm about his waist, and the deep power of her magical wellspring poured into him. He laid his arm across her shoulders and accepted the gift. The light steadied, and he cocked his head, listening.
“What is it?” Mara glanced at the tall cedar trees surrounding them. “Is someone in trouble? That sounded like a Dark Elf.”
“Perhaps. Or perhaps it is another trap set by the Void.”
“I don’t think the Void is clever enough for that.” She looked up at him, the reflection of their sphere of light sparking twin stars in her eyes. “It nearly succeeded in killing you—and would have, if I hadn’t returned. Why bother with more traps?”
He cocked up one shoulder and did not answer. Who knew the ways of the enemy? He had almost lost his life underestimating it. He would not make that mistake again.
Regardless, they must investigate. He drew on more of Mara’s magic, careful not to drain her overmuch, and sent a questing tendril into the dusky air.
It met a familiar energy, and he pulled in a quick breath. If he was not mistaken, his sister was roaming about Erynvorn—and she was in danger.
“Come, quickly.” He broke into a fast stride. Nearly a run, but if he sprinted away, he would leave Mara behind, and that, he refused to do.
“What? Where?” she asked, already breathing heavily as she followed his weaving path through the forest.
He could hear the edge of annoyance in her voice, but had neither the breath nor energy to answer. The compass in his mind was fixed at a bright point ahead, and the closer they drew, the more certain he was that Anneth was ahead. And engaged in some kind of battle.
Shadows take it, she was no battle mage. He prayed to the absent brightmoon that she still had the dagger he’d insisted she learn to use.
A spark of pain jabbed through him, and he winced at the evidence that his sister had been injured.
Mara drew in a sharp breath. She must have felt the same jolt through the magical bond they shared.
“Who?” she asked.
“Anneth.”
“Then hurry, Bran. Run!” He could not abandon his heart, his bride. But how could he leave his sister to face an enemy alone?
Anneth screamed again.
“Here.” Bran thrust Mara’s kitchen knife at her—her wedding gift to him, but he could not leave her unarmed.
She took it, then pushed him forward. “Go!”
Bran turned and ran, fleet-footed over the soft mosses. He must reach Anneth in time—and trust that Mara would come to no harm, and that she could fend for herself in her indomitable mortal way.
Poor husband, poor husband, his footsteps seemed to mock him.
Resolutely, he ignored them and sped through the silver-washed forest, fear and worry nearly breaking him in two.
2
It was ridiculously easy to sneak out of the Hawthorne Court.
Anneth left the note concerning her whereabouts carefully folded on the embossed silver table in her quarters, then slipped out to the stables. She took one of the prepared travel packs kept ready for the scouts, checking to make sure there were supplies enough for several moons’ worth of travel. Satisfied, she mounted on her mare, Silma, and rode out across the long-grassed meadows. Behind her, the elegant buildings of the Hawthorne Court shone faintly beneath the half-sphere of the palemoon.
After several turns of travel, she stopped and made camp, careful to cast protective wards about the small clearing. The night passed uneventfully, and the next moon, she approached the shadowy mass of Erynvorn. The forest reached up to cover the sky, and a shiver went through her. Her brother and Mara had entered that place moons ago—and never returned. She leaned back, and her mount halted obediently.
Despite Anneth’s brave hopes to the contrary, what if Bran and Mara had, in fact, come to a dreadful end? She did not think she could bear to discover their broken bodies, or stare into their empty eyes. And yet, there was no one else willing to discover the truth of what had become of the Hawthorne Prince and his bride.
The huge, dark trees closed over her head, as though she’d plunged into a pool full of blackest night. Their branches whispered, either stirred by the wind or remarking upon her presence. Pine, cedar, hemlock—the scent of the forest imbued the air with a wild flavor.
As her vision adjusted to the dusky light, the flowers growing within Erynvorn brightened. Glowing white petals starred the mossy forest floor, and the nodding bells of qille shed violet light where they grew in clusters.
Even better, nearly a dozen glimglows flitted between the tall columns of the tree trunks. They darted to her in a flurry of sparks, weaving light-trailed patterns in the air, and came to hover just above her head. If she squinted, she could see the small, winged forms inside each ball of light.
“Hello,” she said softly. “Have you seen my brother?”
To her immense relief, they seemed to understand her question. At least, she hoped their sudden whirl and rush into the forest meant they knew where to lead her.
General opinion was that the glimglows were not particularly intelligent, but Anneth had found that, if spoken to, they did respond. Not always in ways that made sense, however. She urged Silma forward and hoped that, in this case, the glimglows would not lead her astray.
They bobbed ahead, some darting off now and then, until only four remained. Those moved steadily forward, and Anneth followed, guiding her mount through the hushed and dim ranks of the trees. Her mare’s steps were silent, muffled by the carpet of needle-strewn moss. The only sounds were the whisper of the wind high overhead and an occasional chiming—the noise of the glasslike stalks of linque rubbing together.
A sudden coldness moved through the air. The glimglows halted, then winked out as if extinguished. The smell of burnt iron scorched Anneth’s nostrils, and she glanced, wide-eyed, at the shadows surrounding her.
Heart pounding, she drew the dagger at her belt.
“Who’s there?” she asked. Her voice trembled on the words.
With a sudden rush, a dark form lunged at her—red eyes glowing male
volently, savage teeth bared. A gyrewolf!
Anneth screamed and kicked Silma into motion. The mare leaped forward. Snarling, the wolf gave chase.
Breath ragged in her throat, Anneth tried to guide her mount through the trees, but this was no wide road or grassland where they could run flat-out. The snarls of the gyrewolf sounded just behind them, and panic clouded her senses.
Silma stumbled, and the wolf sprang. Its sharp claws raked Anneth’s back, and, with another scream, she tumbled to the ground.
Trying to ignore the pain, she jumped to her feet and faced the gyrewolf. It opened its jaws, as if laughing at her. Then it gathered its haunches and sprang.
“No!” she yelled, twisting to the side.
She thrust her dagger at the beast, wishing desperately she was better prepared—fully trained in weapons or magic to confront such a deadly foe. But no one had expected Princess Anneth to go into the forest unaccompanied, let alone face a gyrewolf.
It growled, low in its throat, and she saw her death reflected in its red eyes.
Then, as if from nowhere, a gleaming silver sword flashed out of the darkness, slashing the wolf across the flank.
With a screech of pain, the beast turned to meet its new foe.
“Bran!” Anneth cried, gratitude and love rushing hotly through her at the sight of her brother wielding the blade.
He was alive, thank the double moons. And there was none she would trust more to defeat the deadly beast.
“Get back,” he said, his black hair flying as he pivoted away from the gyrewolf’s attack.
She did, scurrying away to where Silma stood, nostrils flaring. Leaning for comfort against her mount’s warm bulk, Anneth gritted her teeth against the pain in her back and tried to concentrate on the fight.
Something was wrong with Bran. His skin held a grayish hue, and despite being the best battle mage among the Dark Elves, he did not cast a single spell.
He slashed at the wolf, nimbly twisting away from its attacks, but his movements seemed weighted with weariness. Fear crawled through Anneth again. She must help.