The Hostage Prince

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Authors: Jane Yolen

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Books by

JANE YOLEN

Young Merlin Trilogy

Passager

Hobb

Merlin

 

Sword of the Rightful King

The Last Dragon

Curse of the Thirteenth Fey

Snow in Summer

 

The Pit Dragon Chronicles

Dragon's Blood

Heart's Blood

A Sending of Dragons

Dragon's Heart

 

Dragon's Boy

Sister Light, Sister Dark

White Jenna

The One-Armed Queen

Wild Hunt

Wizard's Hall

Boots and the Seven Leaguers

 

 

Books by

ADAM STEMPLE

Singer of Souls

Steward of Song

 

 

Books by

JANE YOLEN and ADAM STEMPLE

Pay the Piper: A Rock 'n' Roll Fairy Tale

Troll Bridge: A Rock 'n' Roll Fairy Tale

B.U.G. (Big Ugly Guy)

The Hostage Prince: The Seelie Wars—Book I

THE SEELIE WARS: BOOK I

Jane Yolen & Adam Stemple

VIKING

An imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

VIKING

An imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

375 Hudson Street

New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

 

 

USA / Canada / UK / Ireland / Australia / New Zealand /

India / South Africa / China

Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

 

For more information about the Penguin Group visit www.penguin.com

 

First published in the United States of America by Viking,

an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2013

 

Copyright © Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple, 2013

Original map conceived by John Sjogren, rendered by Eileen Savage

 

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author's rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

 

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA IS AVAILABLE

ISBN 978-1-101-60243-0

  

The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

F
or Terri Windling, Ellen Kushner, and Delia Sherman, that magical trio, and Sharyn November, who asked for it—J.Y.

F
or my favorite changeling, Alison—A.S.

CONTENTS

Also by Jane Yolen

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

 

Map of the Shifting Lands

 

1. Snail Wakes

2. Aspen Enters the Hall

3. Snail in the Kitchen

4. Prince Aspen Regrets

5. Snail in the Tower Room

6. Aspen's Desperate Plan

7. Snail Spies the Queen's Hallway

8. Aspen's Packed Bag

9. Snail Underground

10. Aspen Follows the Wall

11. Snail in the Dungeon

12. Aspen Falls

13. Snail Speaks to the Ogre

14. Aspen Spies Skellies and Cells

15. Snail's Fight

16. Aspen At the Tower

17. Snail Ties a Knot

18. Aspen in Rough Waters

19. Snail and the Mer

20. Aspen Leads On Shore

21. Snail on the Path

22. Aspen in the Cook's Cave

23. Snail's First Birthing

24. What Aspen Brings to the Battle

25. Snail Finds the Way

26. Aspen in the Castle

27. Snail's Time Out

28. Aspen Leads the Way

 

About the Authors

SNAIL WAKES

“S
hift
yourself, Snail. It's half morning and the queen's baby will be born this day.” The midwife gave her apprentice a sharp slap on the rump with the measuring stick, hard enough to sting through the covers. Then she waddled back into the parlor room they shared with the other midwives.

“Mmmmmmf,” Snail replied. There'd been a celebration last night with the backstairs folk—the cook boys and ostlers, the dog boys and castle maids—all of them wild with anticipation. Since the queen gave birth only once every hundred years, none of them had ever seen a baby royal. They'd stayed up much too late eating enough cake to feed the entire Unseelie army.

“But why?” Snail had asked the midwife in the first days of her actual apprenticeship. She'd been four at the time, and trying to tie her shoes.

Hands on ample hips, Mistress Softhands replied, “Since the queen lives so long, the palace would be crammed full of royal babes all fighting for a chance at the throne if she had them once a year like ordinary Unseelie folk. And we can't have that.”

“But why?” Snail had repeated. Sometimes she was slow at grasping such things. Slow at spells, too. Like the lace tying. She knew she should have mastered that spell by three years old. All the other new apprentices had. And there she was still struggling with it a year past. Usually the laces she'd just bespelled would simply sigh open. Or she'd trip over them minutes after she'd just bound them up. Then Mistress Softhands would scold her. Gently, but firmly. Hold her hands over the laces just so. Correct her spelling.

“But why?”

“Think, Snail, think. It would make all our lives miserable, that would, with dozens of young royals crowding the palace. Spats, quarrels, spells thrown hithery-thithery, duels, wars.”

It makes sense, in a way
, Snail had thought at the time, though later, when she was old enough to know a thing or three about the court, she'd thought differently. There were already spats, quarrels, tongue-lashings, and duels between the royals. And when spells were hurled about carelessly, well, it was the underlings, apprentices, and other non-toffs who bore the brunt of them.

Wars, though . . . those are few and far between.
Too dangerous. And, for the long-lived fey, too final.
But at least
, Snail thought
, I'm
smart enough not to say so aloud
.

All throughout the royal palace there were spies, turncoats, tittle-tattlers, lickspittles, liars, moles, patrols, lackeys, flunkies, toadies, snoops, spooks, and just plain liars-for-a-penny. An apprentice—even a midwife's apprentice—could just . . . just disappear after having voiced such thoughts to the wrong fey. And no one actually knew who the wrong fey might be until it was too late.

Best to be leery and wary, than teary and buried
, was the apprentice creed.

“Snail!” Mistress Softhands' voice split the fusty air.

Snail tore off her bedsocks and pulled on fresh underclothes and, after them, her striped leggings. Then she bent over to put on her shoes, good sturdy cowhide shoes with fat, tough laces. Apprentice shoes, not the soft, fawn-skin dancing slippers that the court ladies favored, of course. Or even the calf-leather sandals of the ladies-in-waiting. The stone floors of the palace were far too cold to go around even for a few minutes without some kind of foot cover—unless of course one was a satyr with hooves, or a hall hound with furred feet, or a drow with those clacketing, scaly claws. Any skin-footed fey knew that without shoes on one's feet would turn into ice for the rest of the morning.

Snail held her hands over the laces just so. Said the spell.

 

Tie and bind

Lace to leather,

Keep these pieces

All together.

Ally-bally bargo.

 

It was a children's spell, of course, but at least one she could count on for as long as needed. And she'd never say it in front of another fey or they'd tease her till she wept. Feys were not supposed to weep unless it was for the death of a queen. Or king.

As she worked the spell, Snail thought to herself,
But really
,
the queen gives birth
only once in a hundred years?
It still made little sense. Snail herself had grown up without any brothers or sisters, and she thought it hard that a royal baby should have to live so lonely a life. Of course a royal baby would have nurses and maids and ladies- or gentlemen-in-waiting, would have cooks, nannies, tutors, and . . .

“And me,” she whispered, though she knew that even should she be called upon to help Mistress Softhands with the birth, she'd never be allowed to actually hold the royal baby.

Or even,
she supposed
, see it again except from very far away
. A midwife's apprentice was hardly a suitable companion for a prince. Or a princess, if the luck ran that way.

Of course the queen of Faerie
, Snail thought,
hardly needs a midwife. Her babies slip out with a bit of magic and a good dose of warm oil.
Or so
any outsider might think
.

But royal or not, there were still dangers. No one in the Unseelie Court was likely to forget the baby prince named Disaster of two hundred years past who'd been hanged in his own cord before a spell could get him out. Since that time, royal births were always attended not only by one or two midwives, but by all of the birthgravers in the kingdom, along with their apprentices. What Mistress Softhands called “pulling up the drawbridge after the moat dragon has wandered in and fouled the Great Hall.”

“And wouldn't that have been a sight!” Snail mused, knowing that she wouldn't have been the one to have to clean
that
mess up. That job belonged to the moat boys and the dragon wranglers.

But thinking about it—the fat old moat dragon humping out of the water, dripping pond scum and duckweed, shedding frogs and lily pads, lumping through the portcullis and into the courtyard, scattering the warhorses, making its loopy way into the Great Hall . . . she began to giggle.

“Snail!”

“Moving,” Snail answered as she quickly scootched around her bed, throwing off nightgown and nightcap. Fey ears were sensitive to the cold, and even though hers were rounder and shorter than most, and closer to her head, she wore a cap to bed at night. Everyone did.

“Snail!” This time there was steel in Mistress Softhands' voice. She always called three times.
Not the magical three
, she always warned,
but the practical three
.
Because it takes you three times to do what I ask.

Snail didn't wait for a fourth call, for if it came, it would be accompanied by a switch and a spell. Usually a turn-into-a-snail spell. Not a real snail, of course. True transformations were royal magic and no one below that status could do them. But it would be an illusion that felt real enough to Snail. For a minute or more she'd look and feel like a single-footed slime creature, the size of the snail relating to how angry her mistress was at the time. Once—it was a truly awful once—she'd been turned into a dog-sized snail for an entire afternoon. Or at least she remembered it that way. Then she was set out on the lip of the castle's well where everyone laughed at her and two of the young dukes threatened to push her in. They were only kept back from accomplishing their threat by Mistress Softhands's secondary ward spell.

Snail knew her name was a joke, given to her when she was three years old. Before that, she had been called “Baby” and then “Child” and sometimes “Little Nuisance” and “Why Did I Bother?” And when Mistress Softhands was really angry with her, simply “You!”

Only “Snail” had stuck.

But at the moment names didn't much matter to her. Her belly hurt from all that cake, and her rump stung from Mistress Softhands' measuring stick, and somewhere during the night's festivities she must have banged the back of her arm, because she could just make out a bruise blossoming there, the color of thistle.

Mistress Softhands stomped into the bedchamber, jowls aquiver, grey hair threatening to come down from her tightly wound bun, and then wouldn't there be trouble!

Leaping off the bed, Snail cried out, “I'm up, Mistress! I'm up!”

“But not dressed.”

Mistress Softhands handed her the striped apprentice dress and white starched apron that she'd taken from the floor. She held it between her thumb and forefinger as if the thing was something stinking, something hauled out of the midden pile.

Snail accepted the dress and apron, her mouth turned down in what she hoped was a penitent's pout.

“Not your dress on the floor again, Snail. Not
today
of all days.” Mistress Softhands was aroar and her face practically a wound. “What if the new princeling picks up something ghastly from this garment—a fleshbug or a nose nibbler or . . .”

Head down, her cheeks practically blistering with shame, Snail put the dress on, buttoned it up the front, then tied the apron with a knot in the back, only thinking the tying spell but not daring to say it aloud.

Mistress Softhands held her right palm toward the dress, and Snail flinched. She hated being poked in the stomach and Mistress Softhands knew it. But the midwife had no such intentions. Fingers tight together, she moved her hand in circles.

 

Absterge, clarify,

Launder, wash, rinse, then dry,

Dredge, dust, depurate,

Scour, scrunge, and expurgate.

All out!

 

On the last, with a controlled shout, she pushed her hand forward, almost—but not really—touching the dress.

Now that
, Snail thought,
is a proper grown-up spell
. She couldn't remember half the words and didn't know what the other half meant. Except for wash and rinse.
Oh, and dry!
But now, at least, her dress was clean.

Mission accomplished, Mistress Softhands smiled, smoothed down her own starched white apron, and left the room.

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