the room sat a wide dais with two ornate thrones sitting atop it. I could hardly believe I was here at Rapunzel’s wedding. Only a month ago, I wasn’t even sure if she’d live long enough to be married. I’d also worried that she would hate the prince and be forced into a loveless relationship, but to my surprise, she’d fallen hopelessly in love with him the moment he’d woken in her tower, and nothing in the world could dissuade her from marrying him now.

I wasn’t sure I’d ever felt so happy for her. She was finally free from the tower, here in this beautiful place, marrying someone she loved and starting a new life.

At the edge of the crowd, I spotted her, and left my friends to walk to her. She smiled as I approached, and I had to blink to make sure it was indeed Rapunzel. She wore a silky golden gown trimmed in pearls around the neckline. The full skirt fanned out around her and swished as she walked. Her hair fell loosely to her shoulders. No longer impossibly tangled and weighing her down, light, wispy strands fell around her face. She was still thin, but her face had filled out a bit, and her rosy cheeks looked nothing like the gaunt skeleton I was so used to seeing.

“Gothel!” Her face lit up as I approached. She hugged me so tightly, I had trouble breathing.

“Rapunzel,” I said as she pulled away. “You look like a different person. You seem so happy.”

She squeezed my hand. “That’s because I am. I’ve never felt happier. To be honest, the past five years spent in the tower seem like a dark blur. I hardly remember any of it.”

“That’s wonderful.”

“Yes, I know. But what about you? What will you do now that you’re not guarding me?”

“I don’t know yet.” I didn’t want to let my disappointment show. I certainly didn’t have the possibility of a future like hers, where I would attend balls, eat feasts every day, and dress in fine clothes. “I might go back to the village and set up a shop. I could sell herbs, tinctures, and such. It would be a quiet life, which would suit me well after all the commotion I’ve been through. I’ll have Jester with me for company, after all. He’s been staying here in the castle temporarily, but he hates being confined. I have to admit—I do as well. Life in the village will work out well, I think.”

“Yes, that sounds lovely. I will visit as often as I can.”

I smiled. “I would like that.” Though in truth, I couldn’t imagine she’d have much time to travel to a remote village to chat with a lowly cat lady.

Prince Merek walked toward us, and Rapunzel smiled so brightly, her face transformed. No, this was no longer the sickly, half-sane girl I’d known in the tower. She’d broken free from her cocoon and transformed. She was a princess walking on clouds, and a tiny pang of jealousy pricked me.

He took her hand and kissed it, and I had to admit, with his sandy, wind-swept hair, mesmerizing blue eyes, and finely woven clothing, he was every bit of the prince I’d read about in fairy tales. Rapunzel was getting her happy ending—and I was returning to the village to live alone once again.

Unless…

Was it wishful thinking for me to hope I might have a different future? One where Raj was a part of it? Since we’d defeated Varlocke, he hadn’t said anything about a possible future between us. Granted, he’d been Prince Merek’s most trusted confidant, and they’d been busy redrawing borders and making negotiations with outlying kingdoms. We’d barely seen one another, and the idea had struck me that perhaps I had no place in his life now. But now wasn’t the time to feel sorry for myself, or to pine over what might have been.

Trumpets blared, announcing the arrival of King Duc’Line and the queen as they walked onto the dais. The room quieted.

“This is a new day,” the king said. “No longer will our lands be massacred by a tyrant, for today, we celebrate the union between my son and the heir to High Sorcerer Varlocke’s throne, Rapunzel!”

Cheers erupted as Rapunzel and Prince Merek climbed the dais to stand beside the king and queen. The king continued his speech, and my mind wandered. Something about being reunited and destroying evil for the good of all the land. I did pay attention when he described the defeat of the high sorcerer, which relied much more heavily on his son’s sword and his unshakable bravery. My name was mentioned in passing, which I supposed I couldn’t expect much more than that, as I was the illegitimate daughter of the high sorcerer—a witch who had been a servant to Varlocke.

By the time the ceremony and feasting came to an end, I was thoroughly exhausted, and after a brief goodbye to Rapunzel—which I had to fight through the crowds to give—I headed by myself out of the castle and to a quiet hill overlooking a valley, away from the throngs of people.

I stood under a tree as I looked out over the steep gorge, watching the sun as it made its final descent into night, streaking the sky in shades of purple and lavender. A sense of calmness came over me, and I felt pleased with the way things had turned out. I’d saved Rapunzel from the tower, and there wasn’t much more I could ask for than that.

Well, maybe one thing.

Behind me, I heard voices, and turned around to spot the wolf, Odette, and Raj trudging up the hill toward me.

“Here you are,” Odette said. “We wondered where you’d gone.”

“I suppose I’m not one for parties.”

“We thought you’d escaped back to the tower,” Raj said.

I laughed. “You couldn’t pay me enough to go back there.”

“Then where will you go?” Raj asked.

“Back to the village. I’m hoping to support myself selling herbs and tinctures. It’s the best

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