Ironside

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Authors: Holly Black
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like a tear. “Let everything that your fingers touch wither.”
    Corny staggered back, and as he did so, his hand brushed the wall. The paint under his fingers buckled and flaked. Stopping, he looked at his palm, the familiar lines and grooves and calluses seemed, suddenly, to form a new and horrible landscape.
    “Come on!” Kaye grabbed him by the sleeve, steering him toward the door.
    The metal of the knob tarnished at the stroke of his skin.

Chapter 5
    Hell is oneself,
    Hell is alone.
    —T. S. E LIOT
    A faun with bloodstained claws sank into a low bow before Roiben’s throne. They had come, each of his vassals, to boast of their usefulness, to tell him of their service to the crown, to win his favor and the promise of better tasks. Roiben looked out at the sea of them and had to fight down panic. He gripped the arms of his throne hard enough that the braided wood groaned.
    “In your name,” said the creature, “I have killed seven of my brethren and kept their hooves.” He emptied out a sack with a clatter.
    “Why?” Roiben asked before he thought better of it, his eye drawn to the jagged chopped bone of the ankles, the way the gore had dried black. The mortar that grooved the floor of the audience chamber was already discolored, but this gift freshened the ruddy stains.
    The faun shrugged. Brambles snarled the fur of his legs. “It was a token that often pleased Lady Nicnevin. I sought only to ingratiate myself with you.”
    Roiben closed his eyes tightly for a moment, then opened them again and took a deep breath, schooling himself to indifference. “Right. Excellent.” He turned to the next creature.
    A delicate fey boy with tar-black wings curtsied. “I am pleased to report,” he said in a soft, shivery voice, “I have led nearly a dozen mortal children off of rooftops or to their deaths in marshes.”
    “I see,” Roiben said with exaggerated reasonableness. For a moment, he was afraid what he might do. He thought of Kaye and what she would think of this; he thought of her standing on her own roof in the T-shirt and underwear she wore to bed, swaying forward drowsily. “In my name? I think you amuse only yourself. Perhaps you could find something more vicious than children to torment now that the war has begun.”
    “As my Lord commands,” said the winged faery, scowling at his feet.
    A small hunched hob came forward. With gnarled hands, he unrolled a hideous cloth and spread it over the floor.
    “I have killed a thousand mice, keeping only their tails and weaving those together into a rug. I present it now as a tribute to your magnificence.”
    For the first time he could recall, Roiben had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep from laughing. “Mice?” He looked at his chamberlain. Ruddles raised a single brow. “Mice,” said the hob, puffing out his chest.
    “This is quite an effort,” said Roiben. His servants rolled up the rug as the hob walked away, looking pleased with himself.
    A silky made a bobbing bow, her tiny body clothed only in her pale yellow-green hair. “I have caused fields of grapes to wither on the vine, becoming black and heavy with poison. The wine from their juice will harden the hearts of men.”
    “Yes, because the hearts of men aren’t nearly hardened enough.” Roiben frowned. His diction sounded human. He didn’t have to guess where he had picked up those phrases.
    The silky did not appear to notice the sarcasm. She smiled as though he were offering her great praise.
    And so they came, a parade of deeds and gifts, each more grisly than the last, all of them done in the name of Roiben, Lord of the Unseelie Court. Each hideous feat laid before him as a cat drops the bird it has finally killed, once all possible amusement has been wrung from toying with it.
    “In your name,” each one said.
    In his name. The name that no one living knew in full, save for Kaye. His name. Now that it belonged to all these others to conjure and to curse by, he wondered who had

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