"Unleash your creativity and unlock your potential with MsgBrains.Com - the innovative platform for nurturing your intellect." » » 💜💜“Wicked Marigold” by Caroline Carlson

Add to favorite 💜💜“Wicked Marigold” by Caroline Carlson

Select the language in which you want the text you are reading to be translated, then select the words you don't know with the cursor to get the translation above the selected word!




Go to page:
Text Size:

The queen in gold rolled her eyes. “Stickelridge deserved it.”

Then all the rulers were squabbling at once, complaining about the curses they’d received and defending the ones they’d ordered. If Gentleman Northwinds had been in the room, he would have clapped his hands in delight. Marigold tried to tell them again to leave the palace, but she couldn’t even hear her own voice above the clamor.

At the end of the long table, Rosalind pushed her chair back. Marigold hadn’t noticed her there, hidden behind the others’ skirts and swords, but as she got to her feet, the sun shone more brightly through the windows and the scent of rose blossoms filled the room. “Please!” she said. “May I speak?”

Grudgingly, the rulers returned to their seats.

“I’m grateful for all you’ve done to bring peace to our kingdoms,” Rosalind told them, “and I don’t want our meeting to be disturbed. But I won’t ignore my sister, either.” She turned toward Marigold. “I might be able to help you stop the wizards,” she said. “I mean — if you’ll let me.”

Marigold took a long breath. She didn’t quite meet Rosalind’s eyes. “I wouldn’t mind the help,” she said at last.

“And the wizards are nearby?”

Marigold nodded. “I think so.”

“Then we’ll find them.” Rosalind looked back at the rulers around the table. “Please continue the peace negotiations while I’m gone. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

As they made their way through the palace, Marigold told Rosalind as much as she knew about what the Miseries were planning. “They’ve got lots of different potions,” she said. “I think they have to mix them all together to finish the enchantment — and perform the incantation, of course, without losing their intention. Do you know much about big magic?”

Rosalind shook her head. “I heard Torville mention it once or twice, but I never asked him what he meant.” They hurried past the treasury and the steward’s offices. “Is Torville one of the wizards casting the vanishing spell?”

“No.” Marigold tried not to think about the blob of glop trapped in the pocket of Elgin’s robes. “But they’ve taken Pettifog.”

“Oh, dear.” Rosalind ran faster.

Outside the throne room, they bumped into Collin. To Marigold’s dismay, he was all alone. “No one would come with me!” he said. “I tried to tell them what the wizards were planning, but they all thought I was making up a story. I suppose it does sound a little unbelievable. Then Cook started shouting about how I hadn’t shown up for work in a week, and I had to make a run for it.” He shoved his dandelion hair out of his eyes. “I’m sorry, Marigold.”

“The kings and queens wouldn’t come, either,” Marigold told him. “Not even Mama and Papa.”

“But you got Rosalind!” said Collin. “I mean, um, excuse me, Your Highness. Or is it Your Majesty?”

“Please don’t worry about that,” Rosalind said so kindly that Collin turned pink. “We’ve got to find the Miseries, and we certainly don’t have time for titles. Where do you think they’re hiding?”

Marigold wished she knew. “They must be close to the palace,” she said, “or their spell won’t work. It’s not one you can do at a distance.”

“This morning,” Collin volunteered, “before the Miseries put me in the dungeon, that wizard Horace said he wished they didn’t have to stand around in a muddy hollow all day. Isn’t there a hollow behind the back meadow?”

Marigold had seen it from her perch on the rooftop a hundred times. It was gloomy and damp and surrounded by trees — a perfect spot for the Miseries. “I know how to get there,” she said. “Follow me.”

Marigold led the way through the back meadow. Collin strode alongside her, holding his head as high as any hero’s, and Rosalind followed behind them, carrying the long train of her dress over one arm to keep it from slowing her down. Now that she was tromping through the same muddy field as Marigold, she didn’t seem quite so impossible — and anyway, Marigold had other things to worry about. She stopped at the edge of the hollow. “I hear people talking,” she said. “Listen.”

The voices were low, but they traveled on the same cold breeze that always seemed to spring up when Gentleman Northwinds was nearby. When Marigold took a few more steps into the trees, she could see the wizards. They formed a wide circle around the cauldron they’d taken from Torville, chanting in chorus, while Horace kept the beat of the incantation by thumping a tall stick against the ground. As Marigold crept closer, she could see Vivien in the center of the circle, pouring jars of evil-smelling potions into the cauldron: one concoction electric blue, another an uncanny green, a third that glowed orange like embers. Pettifog stood at the far side of the cauldron, dragging a spoon through the mixture with what looked like tremendous effort. He’d been separated from his suit jacket somewhere along the journey from the fortress, and his left arm was hastily bandaged, as if he’d tried to put up a fight and lost. Marigold was so upset by the sight that she almost called out to him.

“Over here!” Collin whispered.

He and Rosalind had ducked behind a huge old tree, and Marigold crouched down to join them. “How many wizards do you think there are?” Rosalind asked.

Marigold tried to count, but everyone’s robes blurred together in the smoke from the cauldron. “At least twenty,” she said. The Twice-Times Witch wasn’t in the circle — she must have gone home on account of the dampness — but Petronella was there, and Millicent and Old Skellytoes and most of the other wicked faces Marigold remembered from the fortress. Even Gentleman Northwinds had joined in the chant. When they’d conjured up the night terror, they’d been as disorderly as the kings and queens in the Green Gallery, but they were working in unison now — and they were powerful.

“What now?” asked Collin. “Should we take them by surprise? Charge them from behind? Tip over their cauldron?”

Marigold wasn’t sure any of those ideas were likely to end well. “Rosalind said she could help us stop the wizards. I think we should let her try.”

Collin raised his eyebrows. “You do?”

Marigold shrugged and looked over at Rosalind. “What’s your plan?” she whispered.

Rosalind put on her sweetest smile. “I’m going to mend their hearts.”

This sounded much more difficult to Marigold than tipping over a cauldron, but Rosalind didn’t look concerned. She made her way over the roots and brambles into the center of the hollow. “Wizards!” Rosalind said. “Hello!” Her voice rang out high and clear over the noise of the spell-casting. Horace dropped his stick, the wizards stopped their incantation, and Pettifog flapped his wings so excitedly that he rose half a foot into the air.

Elgin yanked him down by the tail. “You’re not going anywhere,” he told Pettifog. “Pick up that stick, Horace. And the rest of you, keep chanting. Don’t listen to anything the princess says.” With his robes flapping furiously around his ankles, he left the circle and marched toward Rosalind. “You’ve interrupted our work.”

Rosalind fixed her smile directly on Elgin. “I’m awfully sorry about that,” she said. “I understand that you’re frustrated, Elgin, and I want to apologize.”

“You do?” Elgin brought his damp face close to Rosalind’s, as if he were daring her not to budge. “I seriously doubt that.”

Rosalind didn’t step back. “I apologize,” she said, “for interrupting you now, but mostly for the confrontation we had at Torville’s a few days ago. I had no idea that you and your friends were having a party that night, and I never would have come by if I’d known. I certainly wouldn’t have brought all those soldiers!”

Despite Elgin’s instructions, a few of the wizards had turned to look at Rosalind, and their incantation sounded muddier. “Intention!” snapped Vivien, in much the same way that Torville had said it to Marigold many days earlier. She dumped another potion into the cauldron. “Keep stirring, imp!”

Rosalind forged on. “I know we don’t agree about bringing peace to the kingdoms, but if you’d put your potions aside, I’d be happy to talk to you about your worries. And we wouldn’t have to stand out here in the damp to do it. You could come to the palace!”

Elgin snorted. “You can’t be serious.”

“Of course I am!” Rosalind laughed, sending a thornbush into a frenzy of yellow blooms. “We’ve got hundreds of people staying with us already. Why not add a few evil wizards to our company? You all look chilly and exhausted. Won’t you come inside for a warm drink?”

Collin grimaced. “Cook isn’t going to like that,” he said to Marigold.

“But look!” Marigold pointed toward the circle. Half the wizards had stopped chanting now. A few of the younger ones looked uncomfortable; Millicent had pressed her hands to her chest, and the short and warty wizard was doubled over. “Something’s gone funny with my heart,” he complained. “It doesn’t feel right.”

Rosalind beamed at him. “It’s unshriveling.”

“Stop that!” Vivien marched over and jabbed at Rosalind with a scarlet fingernail. “How dare you mend these wizards’ hearts! You can’t just show up here in your fancy gown and set them thumping again!”

But it seemed Rosalind was doing exactly that. Although some of the wizards were keeping up the incantation, others — the ones whose hearts hadn’t been quite so thoroughly shriveled, Marigold supposed — were unclenching their jaws, blinking hard, and looking around the hollow as if they couldn’t remember how they’d gotten there. A few of them stepped out of the circle and turned toward Elgin. “You told us Princess Rosalind was going to banish us to the demonic realms,” said Juno, “but she’s inviting us in for coffee.”

“And cocoa,” Rosalind added. “We’ve got cocoa, too, if you’d like it.”

“Does the banishment happen after the cocoa?” Petronella asked. “Or before?”

Elgin’s heart must not have unshriveled at all, Marigold decided; he still looked furious. “Stop speaking nonsense,” he told Petronella, “and get back to work. That goes for the rest of you, too.”

“If Princess Rosalind is just going to stand here and be kind to us, I’m not sure why we’re doing this spell.” Millicent narrowed her eyes at the Miseries. “I thought we were in danger.”

“The kindness is the danger!” Vivien screeched. “And they’re still making peace inside the palace. Keep chanting, everyone, or I’ll stuff you in the cauldron myself. Aren’t you wicked? Aren’t you cruel?” She reached out and pulled Juno’s braid. “Get back here!”

Are sens