Linetteâs and Edmundâs deaths, Will had been sitting on the floor in the drawing room, Tessa in the overstuffed armchair behind him, and Lucie and James had been stretched upon the fireplace rug. Willâs back had been against Tessaâs legs as he stared unseeing into the fire. They had all heard the front doors open; Will had looked up when Jem came in, and Jem, in his Silent Brother robes, went over to Will and sat down beside him. He drew Willâs head against his shoulder, and Will held the front of Jemâs robes in his fists and he cried. Tessa bowed her head over both of them, and the three were united in adult grief, a sphere James could not yet touch. It was the first time it had ever occurred to James that his father might cry about anything.
Lucie and James escaped to the kitchen. That was where Tatiana Blackthorn found themâsitting at a table while their cook, Bridget, fed them pudding for dinnerâwhen she arrived to ask James to cut the briars.
She looked like a gray crow, out of place in their bright kitchen.Her dress was worn serge, ragged at the hems and cuffs, and a dirty hat with a beady-eyed stuffed bird on it was tilted sideways on her head. Her hair was gray, her skin was gray, and her eyes were dull green, as if misery and anger had sucked all the color out of her.
âBoy,â she said, looking at James. âMy manor gates are stuck fast by overgrowth. I need someone to cut the briars. Will you do it?â
Maybe if things had been different, if James had not already been feeling restless with the desire to help his father but no idea how to do so, he might have said no. He might have wondered why Mrs. Blackthorn didnât simply ask whoever had been doing the briar cutting for her all these years, or why she suddenly needed this task accomplished in the evening.
But he didnât. He stood up from the table and followed Tatiana out into the falling night. Sunset had begun, and the trees of Brocelind Forest seemed to flame at the tops as she strode across the grounds between their two houses, up to the front gates of Blackthorn Manor. They were black and twisted iron, with an arch at the top that spelled out words in Latin: LEX MALLA, LEX NULLA .
A bad law is no law.
She bent down among the drifting leaves and stood up, holding an enormous knife. It had clearly once been sharp, but now the blade was such a dark brown with rust it looked almost black. For a moment James had the fantasy that Tatiana Blackthorn had brought him here to kill him. She would cut out his heart and leave him lying where his blood ran out across the ground.
Instead she shoved the knife into his hands. âThere you go, boy,â she said. âTake your time.â
He thought for a moment that she smiled, but it might have been a trick of the light. She was gone in a rustle of dry grass, leaving James standing before the gates, rusty blade in hand, like Sleeping Beautyâs least successful suitor. With a sigh, he began to cut.
Or at least, he began to try. The dull blade sliced nothing, andthe briars were as thick as the bars on the gates. More than once he was stuck sharply by the wicked points of the thorns.
His aching arms soon felt like lead, and his white shirt was spotted with blood. This was ridiculous, he told himself. Surely this went beyond the obligation to help a neighbor. Surely his parents would understand if he tossed the knife aside and went home. Surelyâ
A pair of hands, white as lilies, suddenly fluttered between the vines. âHerondale boy,â whispered a voice. âLet me help you.â
He stared in astonishment as a few of the vines fell away. A moment later a girlâs face appeared in the gap, pale and small. âHerondale boy,â she said again. âHave you a voice?â
âYes, and a name,â he said. âItâs James.â
Her face disappeared from the gap in the vines. There was a rattling sound, and a