Entwined(100)



“You are looking better, for being shot!” said Azalea, as the girls sat down around him, on the polished wood floor.

“The ball hit his waistcoat button,” said Eve. “That’s what Sir John said.”

“And…it pierced his skin.” Bramble looked entirely unconvinced.

“I beg your pardon?” said Azalea. “His waistcoat button? Didn’t you see all the blood?”

“Azalea,” said the King.

“You all saw it! It was all over the floor! Pints of it!”

“Azalea,” said the King again, and something in his tone made her stop. She met his eyes. An odd light shone in them, and she remembered snow that burned.

“You’re all right?” she said.

“Well enough.” The King gave her a trace of a smile.

“Your satchel is so heavy,” squeaked Hollyhock, who fiddled with the clasps. “What’s in there? Open it up.”

The King smiled, shrugged the satchel off his shoulder, and pulled out a wrapped bundle. He unrolled the fabric, and a long, heavy piece of silver fell onto the floor, clanking against the fine wood. He gave the fabric another shake, and a hilt clattered on the ground.

“We dragged the river for it,” said the King.

“The sword!” Azalea scooped up the pieces. “I’ve ruined it!”

“Ah, well. Yes and no,” said the King. “It would have broken sooner than later. Of course, the circumstances could have been better, but—” The King smiled, and Azalea saw a touch of wryness to it, almost like Bramble’s. “It can be mended. Now, what is all this? Draping the windows? What of your dresses? Hadn’t you new ones?”

The girls clasped their hands in their laps, turning their eyes shyly to the ground. Azalea spoke.

“It’s our gift,” she said. “To you. We know mourning means a lot to you. And…we don’t really mind it. We can go without dancing and things a little longer.”

“Especially since our Great Slipper Scandal quickened the undead and nearly destroyed the palace,” said Bramble. “It put us off dancing for at least an hour. Anyway. Merry Christmas…P-Papa.”

“Merry Christmas,” peeped Hollyhock.

“Merry Christmas,” all the girls chimed.

An unreadable expression fell over the King’s face. He opened his mouth, then closed it. He placed his hand over Lily’s dark curls. Lily had pulled herself up to his trouser leg and gnawed on it, leaving a wet spot. He lifted her to his knee.

“We never thought about how you felt,” said Azalea, closing her hands in fists so she didn’t have to see the red marks across her palms. “We’ll be better. I’ll be better.”

The King placed his firm, solid hand on Azalea’s shoulder. She looked up into his eyes, and saw they had a light in them not so different from Mother’s.

“And I,” he said. “You will be a fine queen, Azalea.”

Azalea flushed from this unexpected praise, but beamed as the girls giggled and nudged her. The King stood, Lily wrapping her arms about his neck.

“Mourning is over,” he said. “I am in earnest. Draw the curtains. Your mother would not have wanted it to last as such.”

The girls cheered and danced, tugging on the King’s suitcoat as he helped them to open the drapes.



The sword was mended and sworn on in parliament. In spite of the King’s limps and bandages, he set to work on the palace with the help of Mr. Pudding and the regiments. What couldn’t be unmagicked with the sword’s weakened force was burned or replaced. Regiments with axes cleared away the thorny bushes that choked the palace and gardens. Spider lamps were destroyed, and the mirrors and windows replaced. The ceiling was repainted white, too, the cupids cowering at the corners until they were painted over. It was surprising, the King said, how much Keeper had magicked within the short time he had been able.

Every day the King would return long after the sun had set, arriving at Fairweller’s manor, leaning heavily on his walking stick. The girls, waiting for him, flocked to his side and brought him to the dining room for hot pheasant and other Fairweller-esque food, and they would eat as a family.

“All this work and replacements,” said Azalea as they ate dinner one evening, roast quail and artichokes. “How can we afford it?”

“Parliament has granted us a sum,” said the King. “And we will accept it graciously. The palace has needed renovation for quite some time.”

“May we come with you tomorrow?” piped Flora. “Oh, please?”

“No,” said the King.

“Oh, but we miss it so much!” said Goldenrod.

“Please, let us go!”

“Pwease, oh, pwease!”

The girls leaped from their chairs and swarmed to the King, tugging on his suitcoat.

“Please, Papa! Papa!” they cried. “Oh, Papa, please!”

They went.

The palace felt different. It wasn’t the hustle and come-and-go of cranes and workers and glass smithies who mended the facades and tower and windows, bowing when the girls peeked at them working. Nor was it the eager Herald reporter who perched about the gate of the palace, inkwell at the ready, begging to be invited in, and only getting a slammed gate in reply from the King. And it wasn’t the way the sunlight shone through the palace in patches, like it used to.

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