Instead, the Snake just put his face to the prince’s . . . and smiled.
Earlier that evening, the pirates Beeba and Aran brought Sophie down from the Map Room for dinner.
Rhian and Japeth were already halfway through their first course.
“It needs to be harsh. A warning,” she heard Japeth saying in the refurbished Gold Tower dining room. “Lionsmane’s first tale should instill fear.”
“Lionsmane should give people hope,” said Rhian’s voice. “People like you and me who grew up without any.”
“Mother is dead because she believed in hope,” said his brother.
“And yet, Mother’s death is the reason both of us are in this room,” said Rhian.
As she neared the door, all Sophie heard was silence. Then—
“Supporters of Tedros are protesting tonight in Camelot Park,” said Japeth. “We should ride in and kill them all. That should be Lionsmane’s first tale.”
“Killing protestors will lead to more protests,” said Rhian. “That’s not the story I want to tell.”
“You weren’t afraid of bloodshed when it got you the throne,” said Japeth snidely.
“I’m king. I’ll write the tales,” said Rhian.
“It’s my pen,” Japeth retorted.
“It’s your scim,” said Rhian. “Look, I know it isn’t easy. Serving as my liege. But there can only be one king, Japeth. I know why you’ve helped me. I know what you want. What both of us want. But to get it, I need the Woods on my side. I need to be a good king.”
Japeth snorted. “Every good king ends up dead.”
“You have to trust me,” Rhian pressed. “The same way I trust you.”
“I do trust you, brother,” said Japeth, softening. “It’s that devious little minx I don’t trust. Suppose you start listening to her instead of me?”
Rhian snorted. “As likely as me growing horns. Speaking of the minx.” He laid down his fork on his plate of rare, freckled deer meat and looked up coldly from the decadent table, his crown reflecting his blue-and-gold suit.
“I heard guards pounding on the Map Room door, Sophie. If you can’t make it to dinner on time, then your friends in the dungeon won’t get dinner at all—” He stopped.
Sophie stood beneath the new Lion-head chandelier, wearing the dress they’d left for her. Only she’d slashed the prim white frock in half, ruffled the bottom into three layers (short, shorter, shortest), hiked them high over her knees, and lined the seams of the dress with wet, globby beads, each filled with different colored ink. Crystal raindrops dangled from her ears; silver shadow burnished her eyelids; her lips were coated sparkly red; and she’d crowned her hair with origami stars, made from the parchment she’d ripped out of the wedding books. All in all, instead of the chastened princess the king might have expected after their encounter in the Map Room, Sophie had emerged looking both like a birthday cake and a girl jumping out of one.
The pirates with Sophie looked just as stunned as the king.
“Leave us,” Rhian ordered them.
The moment they did, Japeth launched to his feet, his pale cheeks searing red. “That was our mother’s dress.”
“It still is,” Sophie said. “And I doubt she would have appreciated you gussying up girls you’ve kidnapped in her old clothes. The real question is why you asked me to wear this dress at all. Is it to make me feel like you own me? Is it because I remind you of your dear departed mum? Or is it something else? Hmm . . . In any case, you told me what to wear. Not how to wear it.” She gave a little shimmy, the light catching the colorful gobs on the dress like drops of a rainbow.
The Snake glared at her, scims sliding faster on his body. “You dirty shrew.”
Sophie took a step towards him. “Snakeskin is a specialty. Imagine what I could make out of your suit.”
Japeth lunged towards her, but Sophie thrust out her palm—
“Ever wonder what map ink is made out of?” she asked calmly.
Japeth stopped midstride.
“Iron gall,” said Sophie, green eyes shifting from the Snake to Rhian, who was still seated, watching her between tall candles in the Lion-themed centerpiece. “It’s the only substance that can be dyed multiple colors and last for years without fading. Most maps are inked with iron gall, including yours in the Map Room. The ones you enchanted to track me and my friends. Do you know what else iron gall is used for?”
Neither twin answered.
“Oh, silly me, I learned about it in my Curses class at school and you boys didn’t get into my school,” said Sophie. “Iron gall is a blood poison. Ingest it and it brings instant death. But let’s say I dab a touch on my skin. It would sap the nutrients from my blood, while keeping me alive, just barely, meaning any vampiric freak who might suddenly need my blood . . . well, they would get poisoned too. And it happens this entire dress—your mother’s dress, as you point out—is now dotted in pearls of iron gall I extracted from your maps, using the most basic of first-year spells. Which means the slightest wrong move and—poof!—it’ll smear onto my skin in just the right dose. And then my blood won’t be very useful to you at all, will it? The perils of haute couture, I suppose.” She fluffed the tail of her dress. “Now, darlings. What’s for dinner?”
“Your tongue,” said Japeth. Scims shot off his chest, turning knife-sharp, as they speared towards Sophie’s face. Her eyes widened—
A whipcrack of gold light snapped over the eels, sending them whimpering back into the Snake’s body.
Stunned, Japeth swung to his brother sitting next to him, whose gold fingerglow dimmed. Rhian didn’t look at him, his lips twisted, as if suppressing a smile.
“She needs to be punished!” Japeth demanded.
Rhian tilted his head, taking in Sophie from a different angle. “You have to admit . . . the dress does look better.”
Japeth was startled. Then СКАЧАТЬ