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Dearest




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Some Strange Magic

  Safely Delivered

  Princess of Children

  A Bevy of Idiots

  Prickly and Proud

  Silver Linings

  Blood and Fire

  Blame It on the Fairies

  Deadly Living

  Swansbody

  Vengeful Angels

  Infernal Wings

  Hopes Come to Life

  Nefarious Purposes

  Wild Swan Chase

  Demolished

  The Wrong God

  Benevolence

  A Heart As Big as the Moon

  Acknowledgments

  Sample Chapter from ENCHANTED

  Buy the Book

  Read All the Woodcutter Sisters Books

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2015 by Alethea Kontis

  All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhco.com

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Kontis, Alethea.

  Dearest / by Alethea Kontis.

  pages cm.—(The Woodcutter sisters ; book 3)

  Summary: “When Friday Woodcutter, a kind and loving seamstress, stumbles upon seven sleeping brothers in her sister Sunday’s palace, she takes one look at Tristan and knows he’s her future. But the brothers are cursed to be swans by day. Can Friday’s unique magic somehow break the spell?”

  —Provided by publisher.

  ISBN 978-0-544-07407-1 (hardback)

  [1. Fairy tales. 2. Magic—Fiction. 3. Characters in literature—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ8.K833De 2015

  [Fic]—dc23 2014000737

  eISBN 978-0-544-07372-2

  v1.0215

  For Jonathan Brandis, Barrett Oliver, Noah Hathaway, Val Kilmer, Scott Grimes, River Phoenix, Harrison Ford, and Michael J. Fox,

  because an impressionable young girl needs to fall in love a lot

  &

  for Murphy,

  because a jaded young woman needs to fall in love only once

  1

  Some Strange Magic

  CONRAD SLOWED his pace, not because he lacked energy, but because the hard calluses on his feet had cracked and started to bleed. It had been a long, dry road from Rose Abbey, part of an even longer road that had begun in the slums of Sandaar. Conrad’s battered feet had trod the length of this continent from the fiery south to the frozen north, but his soul had yet to find its destination. Omi had told him his journey would end when he found the place where his heart waited for him. He hoped Omi had not died at the hands of the sultan.

  Conrad’s stomach growled, distracting him from the wistful sadness that always threatened to overcome him when he thought about Omi, but he knew she would be proud of him, proud of his accomplishments, proud that he had kept his promise to leave the slums and never return.

  The tips of his fingers throbbed. Perhaps he should not have declined the offer of food and drink at the Woodcutter house. Omi had advised him to rest where he was welcomed. The breeze picked up and Conrad stopped altogether, closing his eyes and spreading his arms wide so that the gusts might better cool his sweat-damp body. He took a deep breath. There was water on the wind.

  The sky had been clear this day, with not so much as a cloud in warning. They were there now, rolling quick and fat and angry up from the west. The gray of rain blurred the horizon and erased the sun. Conrad had never seen clouds behave like this. Had he been in Sandaar, this would have meant a sandstorm. Here, in Arilland, the circumstances were all wrong. The colors were all wrong. The water was all wrong. He needed to find shelter.

  He turned back to the road and froze mid-stride; a long-eared owl stood before him. The bird stared at him with unblinking yellow eyes. Omi had warned him against being superstitious, but Conrad had seen too many strange things on his travels to take chances. He backed away into the wooded area off the road. The owl’s head turned slowly, those flat, yellow eyes never leaving Conrad. The wind kicked up again, lashing Conrad’s now-damp hair into his face, but still the owl did not take wing. Conrad bowed low to the owl and eased farther into the brush.

  Lightning flashed in the distance and thunder rolled soon after it—booming, unending thunder that trembled the earth to such a degree that Conrad could feel it through the soles of his shoes. The second tremor knocked him off-balance. The third ripped away the forest on the opposite side of the road completely.

  The last things Conrad remembered before losing both his footing and his consciousness were giant waves washing away the trees before him and those solemn eyes of the long-eared owl.

  He awoke soaking wet and face-down in the mud. His head throbbed; when he placed his palm to the tender spot behind his right ear, it came away bloody. Conrad spat bark and soil out of his mouth as he slowly rolled over and sat up, leaning back against the trunk of a tree that had no doubt been his unwitting bludgeoner. He blinked once to clear his head, and then again, only to realize that it was not his vision that had erased the sparse woods before him. The landscape had erased itself. Across the empty road now lapped the ceaseless waves of an ocean, ebbing and flowing in the twilight as regularly as the tide from a distant shore. Some strange magic had not removed Conrad to this coastline—it had moved the coastline here, to Arilland.

  Carefully he rose to his feet and shuffled to the water’s edge. This water, he knew, would not slake his thirst, but it would tend to his wounds until they could be properly addressed. He threw his tattered shoes farther up on the muddy beach and waded into the surf. It was not as cold as it might have been for the climate; Conrad suspected the ocean was still energized from its journey east. If there was any latent magic still crashing with the flotsam in the waves, he hoped that it was good, natural magic. Either way, he would risk it rather than remain caked in mud from bleeding head to bleeding toes.

  Once satisfied of his cleanliness and reinvigorated by the salty bath, he retrieved his shoes and walked barefoot along the new coastline as it skirted the main road to the castle. Night fell, the moon rose, and odd sounds erupted from both sides of the road, the moaning and wailing of confused sea creatures and shorebirds against the crickets and locusts of the Wood.

  Conrad strained to hear the hoot of an owl, but none came. He concentrated so hard that he did not see the long lump of rags on the beach before him until he tripped over it and fell sprawling into the mud.

  Conrad cursed.

  The bundle groaned.

  Lifting himself onto his hands and knees, he turned back to the bundle and sifted through yards of soaked material until he unearthed a face. Long dark hair was plastered to the face; he brushed it aside with a muddy palm. It was a young woman, he surmised, from what little he could discern in the moonlight. There was no mistaking the curve of her cheek or the softness about her mouth. She might have been of marrying age but there was no jewelry marking her person; at the moment she was simply a very pale, mostly dead girl. And she was now his responsibility. Conrad took a deep breath and let it out slowly and loudly. As if he didn’t have enough to do.

  He took off his shirt, went deeper into the surf, and collected some water so that he might discover the extent of her wounds before moving her body. It took a few trips to wash the mud from her completely. Like him, she had a rather large bump on the back of her head and a few angry scratches, nothing more. But she did not regain consciousness during his ministrations, and this worried him.

  Conrad did not feel comfortab
le leaving her here alone, but the castle was still a distant shadow on the horizon. He could not carry her—she was almost twice again his scrawny size. He caught the heavy material of her overskirt in his hands. It seemed thick enough—though a good portion of its weight was due to water—and if the waist was a drawstring . . . it was. Conrad fumbled at the knot with shaking cold fingers until he had it undone. He peeled the overskirt away from her petticoat—she was lucky not to have drowned under the weight of so much clothing!—and then pulled the drawstring tight, closing the waist-hole completely. He laid the great circle of fabric out as best he could, and then rolled the girl up into it. With apologies to the girl, he began dragging her down the muddy shore.

  Conrad had carried strange parcels and ridden stranger animals, but he had never dragged a body any significant distance. His arms quickly began to tire. Still he pulled and pulled the girl, in shorter and shorter bursts, until his skinny arms shook and his numb fingers could hold the skirt-sack closed no more. Defeated, he fell to his knees beside his charge. The looming shadow of the castle seemed no closer than it had before.

  He moved the material away from her face, allowing the unconscious girl to breathe what little air she could. Her pale skin shone out from her dark cocoon. Conrad wondered if he had caught a fallen angel.

  Divine or not, he couldn’t leave her. There would be no warm bed and hot supper for him this night. He only hoped he’d be able to rest in this mud and regain what little strength he had come sunrise.

  “Ho there, friend!” called a voice from the road. Conrad quickly covered the angel’s face again.

  Conrad rose and walked back to the road, where a round-faced man sat high in the seat of a cart filled with what smelled like sour hay. The cart was pulled by a donkey; Conrad approached the animal first. He could instantly tell the measure of a man by how he treated his animals. This donkey nuzzled Conrad’s chest without hesitation, using its nose to lift his arm and sniff for the treats the man undoubtedly kept in his pockets. A good man, then. So good that his animal seemed to retain no memory of the earthbreaking storm that had just passed.

  “Did you see it?” Conrad asked the man.

  The man shook his head. “Never witnessed anything like it. Hope to never again.” The man waved at the donkey. “Bobo here braved it far better than I did. Are you all right?”

  Conrad chose his words carefully. “I am, but my companion is not. She hit her head in the storm and will not wake. I was trying to get us to the castle, but . . .” He raised his scrawny arms in illustration.

  The man laughed. “Worry not, son. You’ve still got a ways to grow.” He hopped down from the seat of the cart. “Show me to your friend, and I’ll help see her safely into the cart. I assume she’s somewhere along the shore?”

  Conrad hesitated, startled at the sight of the man’s eyes, bright and yellow as those of the owl that had saved him. “Thank you,” said Conrad.

  The man, more than he—did shoveling hay make all men so strong?—carried the girl to the back of the haycart and gently laid her inside. Conrad slipped in beside her, tied up the tailboard with his numb fingers, and let Bobo steadily walk them the remaining distance to the castle gates.

  There was already a commotion at the main doors to the palace as guards tried to calm the throng of people desperate to see the king.

  “Order!” cried one of the guards. “King Rumbold will hear all of you, each at a time, but not until I have order!” Some of the people obeyed and stepped to the side, but others still clamored to slip by the guards and worm their way through the gates.

  “I will let you off here,” said Bobo’s master. “If you think you can manage it.”

  The ground seemed level, and there were only a few steps up to the main doors. “I can,” said Conrad. “I thank you again.”

  “Don’t mention it,” said the man. “We are family now. Family weathers the weather together.”

  Conrad bowed to the man. “It is my honor.” With renewed strength he pulled the skirt-sack together and lifted the girl out of the cart. If he held some of the hem in each hand, he could distribute her weight across his back and make it up those stairs. He prayed he wouldn’t have to carry her much farther. Those prayers were soon answered.

  “Ho there, boy.” A guard who seemed to be all muscles and no hair barred his path to the door. “You’ll have to wait your turn like everyone else.” A few people in the crowd behind Conrad rudely jeered their support.

  “I have a very important message for the king,” Conrad said, almost under his breath. He did not want the crowd to hear anything he had to say.

  “Wazzat?” bellowed the guard. “Speak up!”

  Conrad did no such thing. He merely closed his eyes and invited a sense of calm into his body. He knew when the guard leaned down to him; Conrad could smell the meat and beer on his breath. Conrad opened his eyes.

  “I bear a very important message for their majesties, from Seven Woodcutter,” he said, only slightly louder than before. “Please handle this parcel with the utmost care.”

  The guard shot a glance to the angry crowd, looked at Conrad again, and shook his head. He snapped at another guard by the door—this one full of muscles and hair. “Parcel for the king.”

  Conrad held out the ends of the skirt-sack to the hairy guard. “It’s heavy,” he warned. The hairy guard nodded, pulling the sack up over his shoulder and lifting the girl with ease, as if she were nothing but potatoes.

  You may not be strong, Omi’s voice echoed in his mind, but you are quick. You move mountains in your own way.

  The hairy guard entered the receiving hall only a few steps before him, so Conrad saw everything. He saw the young queen raise her head as they entered and calmly reach over to her husband. The young king stopped mid-sentence at her slight touch and turned to her. They communicated without a word. The king followed his wife’s eyes to the hairy guard’s burden and his face became stern. He slowly raised a hand and curled his fingers, urging them forward. The queen raised a hand too, putting trembling fingers to her lips.

  Conrad knew from experience that the best way to deliver bad news was quickly. “Your Highnesses, I bore a message this day to Seven Woodcutter from Rose Abbey. Tesera Mouton is dead.” He turned to the queen. “Your father asked that I deliver the same message to you, in hopes that you would send a carriage to take your mother north.”

  The young king seemed confused.

  The young queen’s big blue eyes were anxious and sad. “Of course, but . . .”

  Another guard—copper-haired this time—leaned in to the royal couple. “All roads north are blocked at the moment.” The guard added no honorific to the sentiment, and neither the king nor the queen admonished him for it.

  “. . . but what does this have to do with Friday?” the queen finished.

  It was Conrad’s turn to be confused. “I’m sorry, Your Highness. I don’t understand.” Was something supposed to happen on Friday? Had the Woodcutters neglected some pertinent information in their message?

  A dark, fey gentleman uncurled himself from the chair behind the copper-haired guard. “Everyone out.” He casually swept an arm across the room and the assembly turned and left. Conrad, unaffected by the magical influence of the gesture, remained.

  “I’ll get Monday,” the copper-haired guard said, before disappearing himself.

  What? Would the guard really not return until Monday?

  This did not seem to further upset their royal majesties, who stepped forward as soon as the hall was clear. The hairy guard gently lowered the sack to the floor. The skirt was dull and damp with mud, but the soul of its original colors still shone through. In the dark, Conrad had not noticed the richness of its many fabrics. A unique material, to be sure. The queen had certainly recognized it at once.

  Conrad began to realize just how important his delivery truly was. He rushed to the girl’s side and uncovered her face.

  The queen gave a choked gasp and the king caught her
in his arms before her legs gave way completely. The fey man appeared on his knees next to Conrad and placed a pale, long-fingered hand on the girl’s equally pale shoulder. His lids fell over eyes the deep indigo of late twilight. After a moment they reopened.

  “She is well. The sleep is a healing sleep. She has a bump on the head, nothing more.” The fey man backed away, allowing the young queen room to collapse in a billow of golden skirts. She gently cradled the girl’s head in her lap. Conrad noticed the family resemblance now. He noticed, too, that the queen’s feet were bare. He smiled inwardly at this.

  The king was speaking to him. “. . . what happened?”

  “I had just left the Woodcutter house, Your Highness. There was an owl in the road and it frightened me, so I moved to avoid it. Then the world broke. I hit my head.” His explanation sounded like a child’s. He was far more eloquent when delivering someone else’s well-thought-out words. Funny, he hadn’t thought about his injury since finding the girl. The fey gentleman reached a hand over to examine Conrad’s own noggin, and Conrad let him. The hand was warm. Suddenly the room seemed steadier. “Thank you, milord,” he told the man.

  “When I awoke, it was twilight. The far side of the road had been replaced by a muddy beach, beyond which lay . . . lies . . . a vast ocean. I washed myself off and made my way up the shore until I found . . .” Conrad still wasn’t sure what to call her.

  “You dragged her all the way here?” The fey man sounded dubious.

  Conrad was forced to admit his shortcomings. “I tried, Your Highness. We didn’t get far. But then a man came along driving a cartful of hay.”

  “Hay,” the king mused. “Did this man have yellow eyes?”

  The question shocked Conrad so much that he forgot his manners. “How did you know?”

  “Velius!” the king addressed the fey gentleman. “That’s the same man who helped me back to the castle after my transformation. I’d bet my crown on it. We must find him!” He turned to Conrad again. “Did he tell you his name?”