Authors: Jennifer Carson
“Doing what?” Faria asked as she swept back into the room carrying a pitcher. She set it on the table and wiped her hands on her apron. Turning to her husband, she pecked him on the cheek and smiled at Reed. “Let her see you doing what, dear?”
Leif's face lit up like a strawberry in the meadow. The hair on his ears shivered. If his momma knew he'd had the dishes enchanted too, he would be in a lot of troubleâand so would Aletta. He shuffled his feet, trying to think of something that would appease her curiosity.
“He was trying to spin a plate on his finger, like the minstrel who visited the Wedge last month,” Reed answered. “Right, Leif?”
Leif smiled at his little brother. “Uh, yeah, right.”
Their mother pulled out her chair and sat down, folding her hands in her lap. “Well, you know how I feel about that
kind of mischiefâ¦especially with those dishes. You know they were passed downâ”
“From your great-great-great-grandmother, yes, we know,” Leif sighed. “I'm sorry. I'll clean up the table and wash the dishes for you after dinner to make up.”
A little smile pulled at the corners of her mouth. “That will be fine, dear. Make sure it doesn't happen again.”
Farmer Burrbridge patted his wife's shoulder. “You're such a softie, Faria.”
Leif's mother shooed him to his seat at the head of the table. “Oh, do sit down, Richard, and eat your meal.”
“Father,” Leif began as Mr. Burrbridge sat down, “piskies have invaded our house.”
“What?” Farmer Burrbridge laughed. “Never. What would the neighbors say?” He waggled his furry brows at Faria and grinned.
“But Father⦔ Leif tried again.
“Oh Leif, no more nonsense,” his mother said. “It's time for dinner. Gather hands, all around.”
Leif reluctantly held out his hands, clasping one with his father on the left and the other with Reed on his right. His father squeezed his hand and Leif sighed. “Bless us this meal. Thank the earth from which it came and the kitchen from which it was prepared.”
And let's hope the little thieves don't steal it all.
T
he wagon wheels kept jamming in the ruts of the bumpy forest road. Mae could tell by the jarring that the two-track path they had turned onto was not traveled often. The trolls would have to rock the wagon back and forth to free the wheels, sending the ponies into fits of bucking and kicking and the troll queen into frenzied madness at their inability to travel as fast as she wanted. Mae gleaned all of this information in the anxious hours of the night, while the hapennies and Callum slept in an enchanted slumber around her.
As the first streaks of a gray dawn touched the horizon, Tory Longbridge moaned. His eyes blinked open and he looked around bleary-eyed.
Mae put her hand over his mouth. He searched her face, his forehead wrinkling, questions flashing in his eyes. Putting her finger to her lips, Mae made a shushing face. When Tory nodded, she removed her hand from his mouth. Tory leaned toward her and motioned for her to come closerâalthough they were already packed into the bed of the wagon like pickles in a jar. She tilted her head so that his lips tickled the hair on her ears. Her heart step-danced against her ribs.
“What's happening?” Tory asked. He tilted his ear toward her for the answer.
Mae found herself wondering if the fur on the backs of his ears shone like strands of copper in the light. “The maiden
who came to us for help,” she whispered, “is a troll queen! Everyone is under an enchantment of some kind.”
Tory nodded, the frown lines returning to his brow. He leaned in again. “Why do you suppose I woke up?”
Mae shrugged.
Could it be that Tory has a bit of magick waking in him too?
“What are we going to do?” he asked.
“I think the best thing to do right now is pretend we are enchanted as well, like the others,” Mae answered.
Tory nodded and lay back down, one arm tucked under his head, the other reaching for Mae's hand. His fingers curled around hers. A ripple of excitement made her nose twitch. No one but Leif had ever held her hand before.
Her stomach twinged as she thought of Leif.
Leif, at home. Safe in the Wedge. Waiting for her to return.
She closed her eyes and let the wagon rock her into a fitful sleep.
M
ae was awakened by shouts. Hapennies were being pulled roughly out of the wagon and forced into a line. Their expressions were dazed, and many shook their heads as if to clear a fog from their mind. Their hands were shackled. Mae shivered, remembering the feel of the heavy iron chains her former guardian, Gelbane, had clapped on her.
The sun was resting just barely over the trees. They had traveled all night and into the morning.
As she was grabbed by rough hands, Mae tried to stay limp as the troll pulled her from the wagon bed.
“Play nice, Drugan,” Huldfrejya shrieked. “I don't want my slaves so bruised that they can't work.”
The troll grunted and set Mae on her feet. He grabbed her chin and shook her head. “Wakey, wakey.”
Mae opened her eyes slowly, pretending to be a little dazed, but her mind raced frantically as she took in the deeply etched lines of the troll's face before her. He was old, with yellowing fangs and sagging ears. His black eyes looked weary, as if he hadn't slept in years.
Behind him, the forest spread out. Why had they stopped in the middle of a forest? Wait, there was a path. Mae squinted as she tried to see where it led. Lumpy gray-blue shapes sprouted out of the distant landscape. Ruins of a castle?
Drugan shoved her toward the other hapennies. Poppy was crying, her tears shining like dew on her rosy cheeks. “What's
happening, Mae?” she asked as another troll pushed Maewyn next to her in line and shackled Poppy's wrists with the heavy iron bracelets. A cold shiver travelled down her spine. She remembered all too well the feel of shackles against her skin. Just then, another troll leading a pony passed them. Callum was draped over the saddle, his toes dragging on the brown earth.
Mae swallowed hard. Her nose twitched and her ears drooped in defeat. “It will be all right, Poppy. Try not to fret.”
“But Callumâ”
“I know.” Mae sighed. She had no idea what Huldfrejya had done to the wizard or where she was taking him. “Don't worry. I'll figure it out.” But she wasn't sure she would.
The line began to move like molasses on a cold morning. Mae's eyes darted to and fro, looking for an escape route, but there were trees and trolls everywhere. Some of the trolls bustled around carrying barrels and casks from the wagon. Others made sure the hapenny line kept moving. Maewyn saw Mr. Whiteknoll leaning heavily on Cook Barley. The troll queen stood at the front of the line, tapping her toes with impatience. As each hapenny approached, she pointed to the left or the right. Cook Barley was sent to the left, but Mr. Whiteknoll was shooed toward the right.
Poppy slowed and grabbed Mae's hand. It was clammy and cold. A tremor worked its way through Mae's body as they approached the troll queen.
“So, the only two girls in the whole camp.” She grabbed Poppy's face, pinching her chin. “This one's pretty. Too pretty.” Huldfrejya shoved Poppy toward the left, her hand slipping from Mae's grasp. “We'll cut off her hair.”
Poppy sucked in her breath and made a noise that sounded like the whimper of a newborn pup.
Thin fingers dug into Mae's shoulder and spun her in a circle. “Must be some reason they'd keep you around. You're much smaller than the rest of them. Got any special talents?”
“Nâno,” Maewyn managed to stutter.
“Can you sew?”
Maewyn blinked. She couldn't sew, but she knew a spell for sewing. She nodded.
“Make tea?”
Maewyn nodded again.
“What else can you do?”
Maewyn bit her lip. “I'm really good at keeping things tidy.”
“You'll do.” Huldfrejya nodded and called one of her trolls over. “Folkvarus. The two girls be my new personal maids. Take them to my quarters and kick that old bag of bones out of the castle. She is no longer useful to me.”
The one named Folkvarus grabbed Mae and Poppy's arms and pulled them forward. The troll dragged the girls past their friends and up a winding path through the forest. Mae looked back at the drawn faces of the other hapennies and worried about what was going to happen to them. She saw Tory being pushed toward the right. Her escort gave her a tug, and Mae cast her eyes forward and quickened her step.
Poppy gripped Mae's arm. “Where are we going?”
“Don't those furry ears work?” their escort retorted. “The queen's chamber, like she ordered.”
“But why are we headed into the forest?” Mae asked.
“You are no front-door guests,” her escort said.
Shivers shot down Mae's spine. Her stomach flip-flopped. She pulled Poppy closer to her. There was a shimmer ahead, making the castle ruins waver and the path appear to be covered in faerie dust.
“Don't go fainting on me when you pass through the barrier,” Folkvarus said.
“Barrier?” Poppy's voice trembled.
Mae's body tingled, and shocks of energy shot out the ends of her curls. She heard popping and hissing sounds as they stepped through a curtain of magick.
The forest opened up to reveal not ruins, but a castle looming on a dark hill, the main spire so tall it nearly pierced the clouds. Tangled ivy scaled the walls and strangled the towers.
Folkvarus pushed the girls forward.
“What was that?” Mae asked.
“Never you mind, nosey,” Folkvarus said. “Just keep stepping lively, one foot in front of the other.”
Mae snorted. “That would be much easier if we didn't have these shackles on our wrists.”
Folkvarus rubbed his forearm as if he had chains on too. “They'll fall off eventually.”
Poppy hiccupped and sniffled.
The winding path led to an ancient-looking wooden door set in a hill and half-hidden with dark ivy. The castle loomed tall above. The troll swiped the ivy aside and shoved the door open with his shoulder. “Infernal crawling pestilence,” he muttered. He waved Mae and Poppy on. “Inside, quickly, before it grows back.”
The girls exchanged an apprehensive glance.
“In now, I tell you!” the troll barked.
Mae scurried inside and strained to see past the small circle of light spread by a single torch. The corridor was dim and damp, and she heard water trickling. Large patches of moss clung to the crumbling mortar. The door slammed shut behind them, accompanied by more muttering from her captor as he grabbed the torch from its bracket.
The fire lit up the troll's face, and Mae tried to hide her surprise. She hadn't gotten a good look at their escort when he'd grabbed her arms and started dragging her toward the castle, but he didn't seem to be like the other trolls. She studied him. His nose was flat and turned up, nostrils flaring open like a hapenny's, but it wasn't twitchy. His ears were big too, but nearly bare, with only a few straggly hairs clinging to the pointed ends, and he was taller than most hapennies but short for a troll. His speech was more refined too. The only things
more trollish about him than his ears were the color of his skin, which was the color of the inside of an avocado, and the smell. He definitely needed a good bathing.
“What are you looking at, half-pint?”
Mae plucked up her courage. “Folkvarus, that's your name, right?”
“Yeah,” he grunted. “What of it?”
“That doesn't seem to be a veryâ¦um⦔ Mae searched for the right words. She didn't want to make him angry. “It doesn't seem to be a veryâ¦trollish name.”
“What would you know about trolls?”
Poppy elbowed Mae in the ribs and made a face that was meant to shush her.
Mae ignored the warning. “More than I'd like to, that's for sure.” She shivered. The shivers weren't from the dampness of the passageway, but her memories. She'd had to fight off a horde of trolls bent on devouring her friends in the village just two years ago.
Folkvarus grunted again and shoved the girls behind him. “Follow me.”
Mae followed, trying to memorize each turn Folkvarus took as they drew deeper into the underbelly of the castle. She could hear Poppy doing the same thingâwhispers of “right,” “left,” and “twenty paces” reached her ears.
A deep roar rumbled through the passage, and Mae froze in her tracks, nose twitching, ears perked and alert. “What was that?”
Folkvarus stopped and turned, the torchlight making his dark eyes shine. “What you hear is a hideous beast locked inside the dungeon, just through this door.” He raised the torch to show the girls a large wooden door on their right. Huge iron handles stood out from the darkened wood. “The queen feeds him curious slaves who won't stop asking questions.”
Poppy's face turned paler than milk.