Read Pale Kings and Princes Online

Authors: Cassandra Clare,Robin Wasserman

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #School & Education, #Short Stories

Pale Kings and Princes (4 page)

“I decided New York was too crowded,” she said.

“With demons?”

“With memories,” Isabelle clarified.

“Too many memories is not exactly my problem.”

Isabelle elbowed him. Even that made a spark. “You know what I mean.”

He elbowed her back.

To touch her like that, so casually, like it was no big deal . . .

To have her back, so close, so willing . . .

She wanted him.

He wanted her.

It should have been that easy.

Simon cleared his throat and, without knowing why, rose to his feet. Then, like that wasn’t enough distance, retreated safely to the other side of the room. “So what do we do now?” he asked.

She looked thrown, but only for a moment. Then she barreled ahead. “We’re going on another date,” she said. Not a request; a command. “In Alicante. Neutral territory.”

“When?”

“I was thinking . . . now.”

It wasn’t what he expected—but then, why not? Classes were over for the day, and second-year students were allowed off campus. There was no reason
not
to go out with Isabelle immediately. Except that he’d had no time to prepare, no time to come up with a game plan, no time to obsess over his hair and his “casually rumpled” look, no time to brainstorm a list of discussion topics in case conversation flagged . . . but then, none of those things had saved their previous three dates from disaster. Maybe it was time to experiment with spontaneity.

Especially since it didn’t seem like Isabelle was giving him much of a choice.

“Now it is,” Simon agreed. “Should we invite Helen?”

“On our
date
?”

Idiot
. He gave himself a mental slap upside the head.

“Helen, you want to crash our romantic date?” Isabelle called.

Helen emerged from the bedroom. “Nothing I would love more than being an awkward third wheel,” she said. “But I’m not actually allowed to leave.”

“Excuse me?” Isabelle’s fingers played at the electrum whip wrapped around her left wrist. Simon couldn’t blame her for wanting to strike something. Or someone. “Please tell me you’re kidding.”

“Catarina laid a circle of protection around the cabin,” Helen said. “It won’t stop you from coming and going, but I’m told it will be rather effective if I try to leave before I’m summoned.”

“Catarina wouldn’t do that!” Simon protested, but Helen put out a hand to quiet him.

“They didn’t give her much of a choice,” Helen said, “and I asked her to just go along. It was part of the deal.”

“That is
unacceptable
,” Isabelle said with barely concealed fury. “Forget the date, we’re staying here with you.”

She was lit up with a beautiful glow of righteous rage, and Simon wanted suddenly, desperately, to sweep her in his arms and kiss her until the end of the world.

“You will most certainly
not
forget the date,” Helen said. “You’re not staying here a single second longer. No argument.”

There was, in fact, plenty more argument, but Helen finally convinced them that being stuck there with them, knowing she’d ruined their day, would be even worse than being stuck there alone. “Now please, and I say this with love, get the hell out.”

She gave Izzy a hug, and then embraced Simon in turn. “Don’t screw this up,” she whispered in his ear, then pushed them both out the door and closed it behind them.

There were two white horses neighing by the front path, as if they were waiting for Isabelle. Simon supposed they were; animals in Idris behaved differently from how they did back home, almost as if they could understand what their humans wanted and, if you asked nicely enough, were willing to deliver.

“So, where exactly are we going on this date?” Simon asked. It hadn’t occurred to him that they would ride into Alicante, but of course, this was Idris. No cars. No trains. Nothing but medieval or magical transportation, and he supposed a horse was better than a vampire motorcycle. Marginally.

Isabelle grinned and swung herself up onto the saddle as easily as if she were mounting a bike. Simon, on the other hand, clumsily heaved himself onto his horse with enough grunting and sweating that he was afraid she’d take one look and call the whole thing off.

“We’re going shopping,” Isabelle informed him. “It’s time you get yourself a sword.”

*   *   *

“It doesn’t actually have to be a sword,” Isabelle said as they stepped into Diana’s Arrow. The ride to Alicante had been like something out of a dream, or at least a cheesy romance novel. The two of them astride white stallions, galloping across the countryside, charging across emerald meadows and through a forest the color of flames. Isabelle’s hair streamed behind her like a river of ink, and Simon had even managed not to fall off his horse—never a foregone conclusion. Best of all, between the rush of wind and the thunder of hoofbeats, it had been too loud for conversation. In motion, things felt easy between them—natural. Simon could almost forget that this was one of the most important moments of his life and anything he said or did could screw it up forever. Now, back at ground level, the weight settled back on his shoulders. It was hard to think of anything clever to say with his brain echoing the same four words over and over again.

Don’t. Screw. This. Up.

“They have everything here,” Izzy continued, presumably trying to fill the dull silence Simon’s nerves left in their wake. “Daggers, axes, throwing stars—oh, and bows, of course. All kinds of bows. It’s awesome.”

“Yeah,” Simon said weakly. “Awesome.”

He had, in his year at the Academy, learned to fight almost as well as any beginning Shadowhunter, and had a proficiency with every weapon she’d named. But he’d discovered that knowing how to use a weapon was very different from
wanting
to. In his pre-Shadowhunter life, Simon had delivered many passionate rants on the subject of gun control, and would have loved nothing more than for every weapon in the city to be dumped into the East River. Not that a gun was the same as a sword, and not that he didn’t love the feel of unleashing an arrow from his bow and watching it fly swiftly and surely into the heart of his target. But the way Isabelle loved her whip, the way Clary talked about her sword, like it was a member of the family . . . the Shadowhunter passion for deadly weapons still took some getting used to.

Diana’s Arrow, a weapons shop on Flintlock Street at the heart of Alicante, was full of more deadly objects than Simon had ever seen in one place—and that included the Academy weapons room, which could have supplied an army. But while the Academy arsenal was more like a storage closet, swords and daggers and arrows piled in haphazard stacks and crowded onto dangerously rickety shelves, Diana’s Arrow reminded Simon of a fancy jewelry store. The weapons were on proud display, shining blades fanned across velvet cases, the better to show off their metallic gleam.

“So, what kind of thing are you looking for?” The guy behind the counter had a spiky Mohawk and a faded Arcade Fire T-shirt and looked more suited to a comic book counter than this one. Simon assumed this probably wasn’t Diana.

“How about a bow?” Izzy said. “Something really spectacular. Fit for a champion.”

“Maybe not
that
spectacular,” Simon said quickly. “Maybe something a little more . . . unobtrusive.”

“People often underestimate the importance of good battle style,” Isabelle said. “You want to intimidate the enemy before you even make a move.”

“You don’t think my intimidating wardrobe will do the job there?” Simon gestured at his own T-shirt, which featured an anime cat spewing green puke.

Isabelle gave him what sounded like a pity laugh, then turned back to not-Diana. “What have you got in daggers?” she asked. “Anything gold plated?”

“I’m not really a gold-plated kind of guy,” Simon said. “Or, uh, a dagger kind of guy.”

“We have some nice swords,” the guy said.

“You do look hot with a sword,” Isabelle said. “As I recall.”

“Maybe?” Simon tried to sound encouraging, but she must have heard the skepticism in his voice.

She turned on him. “It’s like you don’t even
want
a weapon.”

“Well . . .”

“So what are we doing here?” Isabelle snapped.

“You suggested it?”

Isabelle looked like she wanted to stomp her foot—or stomp his face. “Excuse me for trying to help you behave like a respectable Shadowhunter. Forget it. We can go.”

“No!” he said quickly. “That’s not what I meant.”

With Isabelle, it was never what he meant. Simon had always considered himself a man of words, as opposed to a man of deeds. Or of swords, for that matter. His mother liked to say he could talk her into almost anything. All he could do with Isabelle, it seemed, was talk himself out of a girlfriend.

“I’ll, ah, just give the two of you some space to look around,” the shopkeeper said, backing quickly away from the awkward. He disappeared into the back.

“I’m sorry,” Simon said. “Let’s stay, please. Of course I want your help picking something out.”

She sighed. “No, I’m sorry. Choosing your first weapon is a really personal thing. I get it. Take your time, look around. I’ll shut up.”

“I don’t want you to shut up,” he said.

But she shook her head and zipped her lips shut. Then raised three fingers in the air—Scout’s honor. Which didn’t seem like a Shadowhunter thing, and Simon wondered who had taught her to do that.

He wondered if it had been him.

Sometimes he hated before-Simon and all the things he’d shared with Isabelle, things today-Simon could never understand. It was weird and headache inducing, competing with yourself.

They browsed the store, taking in the options: polearms, athames, seraph blades, elaborately carved crossbows,
chakhrams
, throwing knives, a full display case of golden whips, over which Isabelle nearly began to drool.

The silence was oppressive. Simon had never had a
good
date—at least not that he could recall—but he was pretty sure they tended to involve some talking.

“Poor Helen,” he said, testing the heft and balance of a medieval-looking broadsword. At least this was one subject they were sure to agree on.

“I hate what they’re doing to her,” Isabelle said. She was stroking a deadly-looking silver
kindjal
as if it were a puppy. “How was it, in class? Was it as bad as I imagine?”

“Worse,” Simon admitted. “The look on her face, when she was telling the story of her parents . . .”

Isabelle’s grip tightened around the
kindjal
. “Why can’t they see how hideous it is to treat her like this? She’s
not a faerie.

“Well, that’s not really the point, is it?”

Isabelle laid the
kindjal
down carefully in its velvet case. “What do you mean?”

“Whether or not she’s a faerie. It’s beside the point.”

She fixed Simon with a fiery gaze. “Helen Blackthorn is a
Shadowhunter
,” she spit out. “Mark Blackthorn is a
Shadowhunter
. If we can’t agree on that, we have a problem.”

“Of course we agree on that.” It made him love her all the more, seeing how angry she got on behalf of her friends. Why couldn’t he just
say
that to her? Why was everything so hard? “They’re as much Shadowhunters as you are. I just mean that even if they weren’t, if we were talking about some actual faerie, it still wouldn’t be right to treat her like she’s the enemy, because of what she was, right?”

“Well . . .”

Simon was astonished. “What do you mean, ‘well . . .’?”

“I mean that maybe any faerie
is
potentially an enemy, Simon. Look what they did to us. Look how much misery they caused.”

“They didn’t
all
cause that misery—but they’re all paying for it.”

Isabelle sighed. “Look, I don’t like the Cold Peace any more than you do. And you’re right, not all faeries are the enemy. Obviously. Not all of them betrayed us, and it’s not fair that they should all be punished for that. You think I don’t know that?”

“Good,” Simon said.

“But—”

“I really don’t see how there can be a ‘but,’” Simon cut in.


But
it’s not as simple as you’re trying to make it. The Seelie Queen
did
betray us. A legion of faeries
did
join Sebastian in the Dark War. A lot of good Shadowhunters got killed. You’ve got to see why that would leave people angry. And afraid.”

Stop talking,
Simon told himself. His mother had once told him you should never discuss religion or politics on a date. He was never quite sure which one of those categories Clave policies fell into, but either way, this was like trying to defend J. J. Abrams to a hard-core Trekkie: hopeless.

But inexplicably, and despite the sincere wishes of his brain, Simon’s mouth kept moving. “I don’t care how angry or scared you get, it’s not right to punish all the faeries for a few faeries’ mistakes. Or to discriminate against people—”

“I’m not saying anyone should discriminate—”

“Actually, that’s exactly what you’re saying.”

“Oh, great, Simon. So the Seelie Queen and her minions screw us over and enable the death of hundreds of Shadowhunters, not to mention the ones they slaughtered themselves, and
I’m
the terrible person?”

“I didn’t say you were a terrible person.”

“You’re thinking it,” she said.

“Would you stop telling me what I think?” he barked, more harshly than he’d intended.

Her mouth snapped shut.

She took a deep breath.

He counted to ten.

Each waited the other out.

When Isabelle spoke again, she sounded calmer—but also, somehow, angrier. “I told you, Simon. I don’t like the Cold Peace. I hate it, for your information. Not just for what it’s doing to Helen and Aline. Because it’s wrong. But . . . it’s not like I have a better idea. This isn’t about who you or I want to trust; this is about who the
Clave
can trust. You can’t sign accords with leaders who refuse to be bound by their promises. You simply can’t. If the Clave wanted revenge”—Isabelle looked pointedly around the store, gaze resting on each weapons display in turn—“trust me, they could take it. The Cold Peace isn’t just about the Fair Folk. It’s about us. I may not like it, but I understand it. Better than you do, at least. If you’d been there, if you knew—”

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