Mistwood
PART I
SHIFTER
Chapter One
She knew every inch of the forest, every narrow path that twisted and wound its way beneath the silver branches. They never should have found her. She should have been up and away long before the horses’ scent came to her, and very long before the sound of men’s whispering drifted to her ears. Through the trees or in them, even above them, she could have fled in an instant, or hidden herself so well that they could scour the forest for days and never find her.
Her ankle was hurt, or it never would have happened. So she told herself for days afterward. And even much later, when she knew much more, she still thought it might be true. Whatever instinct made her wait for the prince to find her, it was given strength by the effort it would have cost her to move.
Her forest was an old one, the earth covered with layers of moss and dead leaves, the huge trees covering the sky with vast foliage and wrapping thick roots around mounds of earth. It wasn’t a wood that was easy to ride through—there were no straight lines or even meandering ones. No one would have dared blaze a trail here, and if they had they would have soon regretted it. And always there was the mist, rising through the ferns like tiny feathers, sometimes thinning to a layer of white on the ground and sometimes drifting in hazy clouds that tried to smother the trees.
Only a fool would ride here—a fool with an urgent need. And somewhere, in a stirring in the back of her mind that wasn’t even a thought, she knew what they needed. She stayed where she was until the prince rode into the small clearing and reined in his nervous horse.
She knew he was a prince as soon as she saw him. Not because he was dressed like one; his black riding habit and green cape, while dramatic, could have belonged to any nobleman. His face was chiseled and sharp-jawed, but a bit too drawn to be regal. Nor was it his bearing. He was disheveled and tired, and right before he saw her he uttered a curse that would have fit the mouth of the coarsest peasant.
He reined in his horse, which was a beast fit for a king, and stared at her. “Will!”
The boy who rode behind resembled him closely enough to be his twin, except he was several years younger, barely in his teens. He gaped. “Is it her?”
“Who else could it be?” The prince leaned over his horse’s neck, and—lowering his voice as if trying not to frighten her—said, “Isabel?”
Then she tried to run. She leaped to her feet and her ankle twisted beneath her, too weak to hold her weight. By the time she dragged herself off the ground, the prince was kneeling beside her.
“Are you all right, my lady?”
She struck at him, fingers curved into claws. The prince jumped back, but not fast enough. She left four diagonal slashes on his left cheek, and the bottom three had welled up with redness by the time he looked down at her. His eyes were so dark they appeared black, wide and wary beneath slashing eyebrows.
“Don’t do that,” he said, not even reaching up to touch his cheek. It was somewhere between a command and a plea.
Isabel snarled and lunged at him again, ignoring the pain that shot through her ankle. This time he jumped away fast enough.
“Rokan?” The younger boy’s voice was high with fear. “What’s wrong with her?”
“Hush, Will.” His eyes still on hers, the prince stuck his hand into his belt pouch and drew out a thin bracelet shaped of tiny metal links, with a crystal embedded in each one. Most of the crystals were pure white, but every third one was deep red.
Her hand went up without her conscious control, as if from long habit it knew what to do. Not up to attack, but in a fluid, graceful motion, her palm down and her fingers limp. She did not move when the prince brought both his hands toward hers, though her arm tensed and trembled. He laid the bracelet on her wrist, and she let out a sigh when it touched her skin.
The prince fastened the clasp with one smooth movement. Then he took her hand, and she let him draw her to her feet, keeping her weight off the weak ankle. She felt dazed.
“Isabel,” the prince said with a note of satisfaction in his voice. “By the Shifter’s Seal on your wrist, do you swear to serve me and mine with all your abilities and powers, to defend us and protect us and keep us safe from all harm?”
She looked up at him and said, “What?”
He grinned then, his dark eyes gleaming, and she lost any hope of turning and running before it was too late. It was already too late. Something about that wide, unrestrained smile…
“I suppose we don’t have to go through all that,” he said. “The legends say we should, but—will you come to my castle with me?”
He waited for an answer, and after a long moment she nodded.
“Rokan,” said Will, who was still mounted. “Aren’t you forgetting something?”
“Oh, yes.” The prince kept his eyes on her face, but there was an odd glint in them as he said, “I’m afraid you’re going to have to wear clothes, my lady. They’re very traditional where I come from.”
She looked down at herself, then around at the dead leaves surrounding her feet. She spoke again. It had been so long that she was surprised at how easy it was, how readily her voice responded to her mind’s command.
“Later.”
The prince glanced at his younger brother, who was beet red, and then back at her. “Er—I think now would be better.”
She shrugged, and when he drew a pile of fabric out of his saddlebag and handed it to her, memory began to return. “Turn around while I dress,” she said.
The prince raised his eyebrows but obeyed. Will wheeled his horse around.
She put the clothes on—green riding pants and a white silk tunic—and felt comfortable in them as soon as they settled on her. They fit perfectly. She tapped the prince on the shoulder.
“Better?” she asked, almost pertly. She had gotten dressed without even thinking about it, like it was something she had done a million times before. Maybe she had. She still didn’t remember when, or why, but for the moment that didn’t matter. The ease with which she remembered how was reassuring.
“Superb.” The prince smiled at her, and she thought she should probably smile back but couldn’t seem to figure out how.
The horse began to trot, and she closed her eyes. She didn’t want to see her trees sliding past, sliding away. The prince’s muscles were taut beneath the silk of his tunic. For the briefest of seconds, almost against her will, she shared the excitement she could feel running through him.
She schooled herself into unthinkingness, retreating deeper into her own mind until she couldn’t feel the prince’s body or the jolting of the horse, nothing but the wind against her face. Then she slid in deeper, until she couldn’t even feel that.
PART II
ROKAN
Chapter Two
She woke in a satin-lined bed with green canopies hanging over her head. For a moment she had no idea where she was or why, and she kicked the sheets away in a panic. Her ankle twinged, and she remembered; but she didn’t draw the sheets back up, and she didn’t let go of the panic.
What had she been thinking?
Brushing away the bed’s gauzy draperies, she put her feet on the floor and stood up gingerly, testing her ankle. Still sore, but she could walk on it. In two days it would be completely healed.
If the prince had come two days later, or two days earlier, she wouldn’t be here now.
She took a few steps away from the bed and examined the room—my room, she thought with complete certainty. A great tapestry hung across the wall to the left of the bed, woven forest scenes in muted green and white. The elaborate bed was all gold-trimmed green, as were the few low benches and chairs laid out along the sides of the room. Unbidden, a snatch of song leaped into her head: For the Shifter’s eyes are green, green, green, as green as the woods she loves….
Straight across from the foot of her bed were two vast windows with a long mirror between them. She limped over and looked in the mirror, with no clear idea of what she expected to see.
Her eyes were brown. So was her hair, which was filthy and hung in dark, limp tangles past her sharp chin. Her skin was pale, with regular but plain features—wide forehead, flat cheekbones, long thin nose. She was still wearing the clothes the prince had given her, and beneath them her body was lean and wiry. She stared at her reflection, certain that she had never seen it before.
“Isabel!”
She whirled away from the mirror, the name ringing in her head. Isabel. When the prince had called her by that name, it hadn’t mattered; she hadn’t possessed a name, couldn’t remember ever having a name. But now, in these clothes, in this room, she knew she did. Isabel.
“Are you finally up?” the girl standing in her doorway said with a small smile. “We thought you would sleep forever. You had Rokan quite concerned. He was afraid his trek into the Mistwood had been for nothing.”
The girl kept smiling as she moved forward, the motion of her legs almost invisible beneath her long silk skirt. She was wearing a dark blue dress with a tight bodice and flared sleeves that would be impractical in a fight. Isabel watched her approach. There was nothing else she could do. In these clothes, in this room, as Isabel, she could not attack this girl simply for coming too close to her.
The girl halted when she was only a few feet from Isabel and scrutinized her. She had green eyes, and a wealth of curly blond hair that spilled around her wide face. “I’m Clarisse. Don’t you remember me?”
“Oh.” Clarisse pursed her full lips and tilted her head to one side. “Oh, well. No doubt you remember Rokan?”
“No,” Isabel said.
“I see.” Clarisse paused, looked her up and down, and smiled again. “Well, good-bye, Isabel. I’ll leave you to get some more rest.”
She turned and walked away without waiting for a response, and Isabel watched her go with narrowed eyes. She did not like that smile. It was too smug. Clarisse had come here for a specific purpose and had accomplished it.
She came, Isabel thought with a flash of clarity, to see me. To decide what she thought of me, and what she could get out of me.
It had been an attack, of sorts, and people did fight who lived in castles like these. Not with fists and feet and claws, but with words and whispers and influence. Isabel couldn’t remember having been here before, but she knew. It was a fight, or rather a game, with many players and many rules and many strategies.
She smiled suddenly, feeling her blood pump through her veins. She didn’t know how, and she didn’t know why, but she was suddenly sure it was a game she knew how to play.
Two guards stood outside her door, brawny young men in blue uniforms with bright, shiny swords. When Isabel asked them where Prince Rokan was, they exchanged glances, looked at her, and then at each other again. Clearly, they had been told to guard her room but didn’t know if they were protecting her or imprisoning her.
Reveling in her ability to discern that from an awkward moment, wondering where she had gained the experience to do so, Isabel tossed her head and said haughtily, “Well? Where can I find him? I must speak to him at once.”
“Er—why don’t you stay here, my lady?” one of the guards said. “We’ll send for him.”
“Nonsense,” Isabel said. “I’ll go to him myself.”
The other guard straightened. “I’m afraid we can’t allow you to do that.”
She turned startled eyes on him, pretending this possibility had never occurred to her. “Can’t allow?”
“We were ordered to guard you, my lady. For your own protection. I can’t let you leave until the prince relieves me of my command.”