tell me how long Iâm expected to stay before I cut and run. I could barely make it through staff meetings at the bookstore without losing my cool. How am I supposed to be in charge of something like this?â
Cautiously, I moved to sit beside her. âWell, I donât know,â I said. âYouâve been doing pretty well with the whole Queen thing. I canât imagine throwing one party would be that much harder.â
âThen why donât you do it and report back?â
I frowned a little, leaning on my hands as I looked at her. It occurred to me that Arden didnât have that many
friends
. There was Madden, the Cu Sidhe from Borderlands, but . . . that was it, so far as I knew. Sheâd gone from being a bookstore clerk to being Queen essentially overnight, and sheâd been outside Faerie since she was a child. When would she have had the time to make friends? âIâll tell you what,â I said. âI hate parties. You hate this party. Iâll pretend to like parties if youâll pretend to like
this
party, and maybe together we can fool the rest of the Kingdom.â
Arden gave me a sidelong look. âReally.â
âIf nothing else, people will be incredibly impressed that you got me to stay for an entire Yule Ball, rather than escaping at the earliest possible opportunity.â
There was a long pause before, slowly, Arden smiled. âWill you sit at the high table with me during the banquet?â
âOn one condition.â
âName it.â
âTybalt comes, too.â
Ardenâs smile grew. âDeal.â
TWO
S ITTING AT THE HIGH table with Arden wasnât so bad. Tybalt found the idea hysterically funny and was on his best behavior, while my squireâQuentin Sollysânot only joined us, but ate with a mannerly precision that put the rest of us to shame. It helped that he was the Crown Prince of the Westlands, the High Kingdom to which Arden and the Mists swore fealty, and had been trained on things like âwhich fork do you use with the second salad courseâ when he was in diapers. I caught Arden watching Quentin out of the corner of her eye, trying to mimic his motions. I smiled but didnât say anything. Her own training had been disrupted by the years sheâd spent in hiding, and if copying off my squireâs metaphorical homework helped her, that was fine.
May and Jazz sat near the front of the banquet hall, where they could make faces at us throughout dinner. I smirked and made faces right back, earning me a few amused looks from Sylvester, who was seated with them. For the first time in a long time, I was totally relaxed, sure that nothing was going to ruin my good mood.
I should really learn to stop being optimistic.
The Yule Ball went until nearly dawn. Dinner was followed by more dancing, several musical performances by vocalists from around the Kingdom, and even an animal act with a phoenix and a flammable falconer. It was all good fun, and I was a little sorry to see it end. But no party can last forever, and eventually Arden moved to stand in front of her carved redwood throne, holding her hands up, palms facing outward. Bit by bit, the crowd quieted, everyone turning to face their Queen.
âThe Kingdom of the Mists has known great turmoil and tragedy since the death of my father, Gilad Windermere. I am truly sorry to have failed you for so long by allowing a pretender to hold my throne while I hid from your eyes. I will not fail you again. This is the longest night of the year, and the night when we make our pledges unto Faerie, swearing we will never freeze, never falter, but will continue to turn the wheel around. We will keep dancing. By the root and the branch, by the rose and the thorn, we will do our best in service to our unseen Lord and Ladies.â
The room cheered. Arden smiled but didnât lower her hands.
âNow, before the night is done, I must make certain