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Arthur didn’t hesitate to ask questions. He flagged Percival down and sent him running for the town’s wall. It wasn’t far, only down the lane and around the corner.

But they were already too late.

“Shit!” Lancelot jumped down from the ledge as a cacophony of shouting rose from where Percival had disappeared. “The hunt’s not over. The bloody boar’s gotten loose. It’s within the wall.”

All at once, everything was in motion.

“Get inside!” Arthur bellowed.

He and Lancelot shouted repeated warnings as Arthur scooped up a fallen child and passed him to a frantic mother, and Lancelot sprinted to where they had left their swords, but they were out of time. He had barely lain a finger on the hilt of his weapon when the furious beast rounded the corner and pummeled through the square.

Vera gasped. She couldn’t have guessed how fast and ferocious a boar would be. It was no pig. It was closer to the size of a bull, and its eyes were so wide in rage that they were more whites than pupils. It trampled past her, near enough that she could see that its black hair was coarse and oily, that it had worked up a lather around its mouth, and that its short tusks were wickedly sharp. Arthur jumped down next to her, able to do nothing more than take hold of her arm as the boar thundered by them. The panicked shouts mostly came from inside houses as, mercifully, most people in the square had gotten to safety.

Percival rounded the corner, sword drawn, shield ready. Lancelot was already sprinting toward the boar when it skidded to a halt. Even if he’d had a spear in hand, ready to throw, he was too far to get enough power to pierce its hide. And anyway, he didn’t have one. None of the armed warriors running after the beast did.

Lancelot’s gait stuttered to an unexpected stop. Vera heard the horse’s whinny before she followed the boar’s grunting stare to see it. Grady had one arm around the newly broken stallion’s neck, the other clutching its lead with all his might, but the barely trained horse’s terror was far more powerful than a fourteen-year-old boy’s grip. The horse reared up on its hind legs, sending Grady tumbling backward onto his bottom with a grunt. Freed from his grasp, the horse galloped away at full speed, leaving Grady alone and dazed on the ground, stuck in a corner between two buildings on either side and a frothing monster in front of him.

“Grady!” Arthur shouted. The boy looked up at once, eyes searching for Arthur but first finding the boar and widening. Arthur, armed with absolutely nothing, tore toward him, but there was no way he would get to Grady in time. Lancelot was closest. He wouldn’t get there either.

The boar snorted. And again. And again—in a quickening rhythm like a battle drum before it charged. Grady scrambled backward until he could scramble no further when his back hit the wall behind him. He raised his arms helplessly in front of his face.

Oh God. She couldn’t watch, but she couldn’t turn away. Vera dropped to her knees with a cry, not feeling the sting of rocks digging into them, only a rush of burning sensation over her skin that did not come from the winter air. Even if Grady didn’t know she was there, even if it was horrendous, Vera would not look away. She would not abandon him to die without someone who cared for him at least bearing witness. A distant part of her noted what a dismal thought this was, but the heat raging through her scorched it to ash.

When the boar was about to slam into him, when Grady should have been taking his last breaths, there was something else. It started at Grady’s chest and exploded out from there—a blue-white disk of light that burst from him with a colossal exhale of wind, so powerful that the boar was tossed in the air like a rag doll, thrown onto its back. The explosion sent a shockwave like a string threaded through them all, stretched tight and thrummed. If the beast hadn’t been stunned by the impossibility of what had happened, it still would have struggled to find Grady.

Every loose piece of wood, be it the handle of a tool, a spare board, or even a wagon for hay, zipped toward Grady and formed a wall in front of him. It gave Lancelot and Percival time to get to the dazed boar and swiftly end it.

Vera ran to catch up with Arthur. They were all left staring at an unharmed Grady behind his makeshift fortress. He stared at it in shock.

“Looks like somebody used their gift for you,” Percival called over as he tied the dead hog’s feet together. Vera caught Arthur’s eyes and knew he’d seen it all, too.

“I—I did it,” Grady said in awe. To confirm it, he swiped his hand, and all the gathered wall clumsily disassembled into a pile in the dirt. “I felt like something in my body exploded and then …” He shook his head, and his jaw hung slack. “I knew I could do it. I knew I could, and I knew how.”

“That’s not possible,” Percival said. His eyes searched the gathered men for answers. “That—powers don’t just show up. You have to be born with them.”

No one present had ever seen someone exhibit a new gift after infancy, but there was no denying it. Impossible or not, Grady now had magic, a gift that had saved his life.

The once and future queen - img_27

The story of the hunt gone wrong and its aftermath tore through town as quickly as the boar itself. The horn’s call, mistaken for the end of the hunt, was meant to be a series of emergency blasts warning that the beast had broken loose, but it was cut short by sharp tusks to the crier’s gut. Thanks to the quick work of Gawain, who had arrived barely in time to keep the man on this side of the brink of death, the crier would survive.

The next morning, before their departure to Glastonbury, Arthur sent Percival out to find the mage and bring him back so the king might thank him, but it wasn’t so easy a task.

“Well, I found him after searching the whole bloody castle and half the village.” Percival rolled his eyes. “And you aren’t going to believe this, but he flat-out refused to come. Said he was too busy.”

Annoyance flashed through Arthur’s eyes, but Vera saw the way his lips tugged up at the corner.

They decided to go find Gawain themselves.

Percival led Arthur and Vera straight to the training field and past the keep-away pit. At first, Vera thought that Percival got it wrong. She didn’t see anyone, save the townsfolk, who all cast disconcerted glances toward the spot where Grady had nearly been killed yesterday. Was it superstition that captivated their attention? Nothing was there—

Vera’s thoughts screeched to a stop as she saw a man in a dingy brown robe crawling in the dirt. Gawain.

Percival cleared his throat. Gawain ignored him.

“Mage Gawain,” Arthur called.

“Yes,” he said, barely audible as he lowered the side of his face to examine the ground without so much as glancing at Arthur.

Percival stared at Gawain, aghast as his eyes narrowed. “Mage Gawain,” he barked. “Your king addresses you. Another ruler would lock you in the stocks for far less than this display of disrespect.”

He blinked as he sat up.

“I was supplicant on the ground, was I not?” he asked dryly, only addressing Percival.

“Yes,” Percival said with exasperation as he gestured toward Arthur. “And yet you continue to ignore your king and queen.”

Gawain’s sunken eyes stayed on Percival for a long moment. Percival’s face reddened. He might have even stopped breathing. Arthur looked on in bemused silence.

“You’re right,” Gawain muttered. He cleared his throat. “Your Majesty, I apologize.” He sounded about as engaged as if he was reading the phone book. Vera wished Lancelot was there to witness it because she would swear that Gawain’s scowl deepened as he addressed her. “And to you, my queen.”

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