wits?â Taryn demands, shaking my shoulder so that I have to turn to her. âYouâre making everything worse. Thereâs a reason no one stands up to them.â
âI know,â I say softly, unable to keep the smile off my lips. âA lot of reasons.â
Sheâs right to be worried. I just declared war.
I âve told this story all wrong. There are things I really ought to have said about growing up in Faerie. I left them out of the story, mostly because I am a coward. I donât even like to let myself think about them. But maybe knowing a few relevant details about my past will make more sense of why Iâm the way I am. How fear seeped into my marrow. How I learned to pretend it away.
So here are three things I should have told you about myself before, but didnât:
1.When I was nine, one of Madocâs guards bit off the very top of the ring finger on my left hand. We were outside, and when I screamed, he pushed me hard enough that my head smacked into a wooden post in the stables. Then he made me stand there while he chewed the piece heâd bitten off. He told me exactly how much he hated mortals. I bled so muchâyou wouldnât think that much blood could come out of a finger. When it was over, he explained that I better keep what happened secret, because if I didnât, heâd eat the rest of me. So, obviously, I didnât tell anyone. Until now, when I am telling you.
2.When I was eleven, I was spotted hiding under the banquet table at one of the revels by a particularly bored member of the Gentry. He dragged me out by one foot, kicking and squirming. I donât think he knew who I wasâat least, I tell myself he didnât. But he compelled me to drink, and so I drank; the grass-green faerie wine slipping down my throat like nectar. He danced me around the hill. It was fun at first, the kind of terrifying fun that makes you screech to be put down half the time and feel dizzy and sick the rest. But when the fun wore off and I still couldnât stop, it was just terrifying. It turned out that my fear was equally amusing to him, though. Princess Elowyn found me at the end of the revel, puking and crying. She didnât ask me a single thing about how I got that way, she just handed me over to Oriana like I was a misplaced jacket. We never told Madoc about it. What would have been the point? Everyone who saw me probably thought I was having a grand old time.
3.When I was fourteen and Oak was four, he glamoured me. He didnât mean toâwell, at least he didnât really understand why he shouldnât. I wasnât wearing any protective charms because Iâd just come out of a bath. Oak didnât want to go to bed. He told me to play dolls with him, so we played. He commanded me to chase him, so we played chase through the halls. Then he figured out he could make me slap myself, which was very funny. Tatterfell came upon us hours later, took a good look at my reddened cheeks and the tears in my eyes, and then ran for Oriana. For weeks, a giggling Oak tried to glamour me into getting him sweets or lifting him above my head or spitting at the dinner table. Even though it never worked, even though I wore a strand of rowan berries everywhere after that, it was all I could do for months not to strike him to the floor. Oriana has never forgiven me for that restraintâshe believes my not revenging myself on him then means I plan to revenge myself in the future.
Hereâs why I donât like these stories: They highlight that I am vulnerable. No matter how careful I am, eventually Iâll make another misstep. I am weak. I am fragile. I am mortal.
I hate that most of all.
Even if, by some miracle, I could be better than them, I will never be one of them.
T hey donât wait long to retaliate.
For the rest of the afternoon and early evening, we receive lessons in history. A cat-headed goblin named Yarrow recites ballads and asks us