seem as if they would pluck the trees straight up from the ground and hurl them down again like broken toys.
The black gate of the poison garden looms before me. I hurl myself at the unyielding bars. The lock taunts me, an iron apple dangling from a lifeless tree. Exhausted, I collapse to the ground.
I assure you, I am no dream, lovely. I have powers you cannot imagine. I can help you find what you seek. All you need do is ask.
Help me, my heart begs, yet I dare not speak the name of the one to whom I plead. The horrors of my nightmares come back to me ten times over: the torment. The lunatic asylum. My fatherâs wickedness and murderous lies.
Nothing about this world is what I thought it was. I am lost, and have only one refuge.
âOleander!â I cry, but the wind swallows all sound. I lift myself from the mud and seize the bars of the gate in my two hands. The wet metal is cold and rough against my cheek. âPlease! I need you. I need you toshow me the truth⦠as you did once beforeâ¦â
The sound of the storm changes. To each side of me rain pours, lightning cracks, wind howls. Somehow I am shielded.
I throw my head back and search the sky. Directly above me the night takes form. It is darkness upon darkness, like ink spilled upon black velvet.
The inky stain is in the shape of outspread wings.
I have waited for you to come back to me, the Prince of Poisons croons. And now you are here.
âTell me, please,â I gasp. The shadow wings beat once, twice. âIs Weed dead or alive?â
Your beloved Crabgrass is rather unkempt at the moment. In a foul temper, and in urgent need of a bath. But yes; he is alive.
The relief I feel is mixed with the sure, sickening knowledge that my father is no more than a murderous villain.
âI must find him â does my father know where he is?â
If your father knew where to find Weed, he would have had him killed by now. He cannot harness Weedâsgifts for his own purposes, and he will not have him be a potential rival.
âHe is a monster! Oleander, can you help me find Weed?â
I can if I choose to. But first you must prove yourself worthy.
âTell me what to do.â
I want you to avenge your motherâs death. Bring justice to her killer. Then you will have earned my aid.
My heart clenches. âMy mother was murdered? By whom?â
Who do you think, lovely?
His laughter falls like a rain of ice. There is no end to the wickedness of humans, is there? It surprises even me, sometimes. When your task is done, then I will help you find what you seek. And you will help me in exchange, when the time comes. For you and I need each other, as you will someday learnâ¦
âWhat do you mean?â I cry, but the shadow being ascends to the vault of the night, and is gone.
The rain pours down with doubled fury. I slip andstumble along the muddy path, back to the cottage, too shocked to even weep.
My whole life has been based on lies. And the only being that can help me find Weed is an incarnation of evil itself.
Have I made a terrible mistake in rousing the dark prince? It does not matter, for I must find Weed again, whatever the price.
And, this, too I swear: No corrupt magistrate, no dim-witted committee of farmers, will stand in judgment of my motherâs killer.
No. I will deal with him â with Father â myself.
Â
The door to the cottage opens with a push. The fire sputters as the water from my clothes streams across the stone floor and sizzles into the hearth.
âFather?â He is not here. Is he out searching for me in the storm? Has he been crushed by a tree or trapped on the far side of a flooding stream?
I hope not. For I would hate to miss the chance to take my own vengeance.
And yet, there is some small doubt within me. My father is wicked, I know. A liar and a murderer. But I always believed he loved my mother. There was a warmth in his voice, a softness in his eyes, that only