“Let. Me. Go.” He enunciates the words clearly despite the whole tusk situation.
“I’m sorry. I swear I didn’t do this on purpose. I-I don’t have control over it!” I gesture frantically at the roots coiled around his middle. “It’s never done this before.”
“Lady, let mego!” His bellow shakes the walls of the tower.
Before I can explain further, the roots slither up the stone like tentacles and hurl him through the window like a sack of potatoes. I barely move out of the way before he crashes onto the floorboards with a teeth-rattlingthud. The roots slither away like they didnotjust assault a full-grown orc.
Well, this is new.
I wince, stepping toward him. “Are you okay?”
“What thefuckis going on?” he snarls, brandishing what looks like a handmade knife.
I take a nervous step back. “You were... delivered?”
“Delivered?”
“By the forest.” I motion to the still-swaying roots by the window. It’s the best explanation I have for his unceremonious arrival. “The, um, trees dragged you up here. I swear it wasn’t me.”
His brow furrows, tusks glinting. “The gods-damnedforestkidnapped me?”
“Apparently.”
He grunts, glaring around the room as if expecting someone else to be responsible. “First, the vines tried toeatme, now they’re tossing me at strange women in towers. What the hell is this realm?”
“Fable Forest,” I offer helpfully. “It’s kind of... enchanted.”
He pushes to his feet—barely missing the ceiling—and towers over me like a mountain of bad decisions and worse intentions.
I gape as I get my first good look at him. Deep emerald skin. Eyes like green fire. Muscles that could crush coconuts under a threadbare shirt. Scars lacing his arms and neck. He looks like a warrior. Or a villain. Or both.
Despite the shouting, the tusks, and his sheer intimidating size, he’s kind of gorgeous. Or maybe that’s the loneliness talking. I briefly wonder if that’s why the forest delivered him up the side of the tower, but file the thought away to examine more fully later.
“Um, please, take a seat,” I offer politely as if I’m offering him tea and finger sandwiches.
He looks at the chair. It's small. Wooden.Notbuilt for orcs.
I smile sheepishly. “Perhaps you’ll be safer on the floor.”
He grunts, which I’m sure in Orc (Orcish? Orcalish?) means “yes.”
His thigh muscles ripple beneath his leather pants as he stretches out legs the size of tree trunks.
I smooth my dress nervously. “I’m Rapunzel. And this is… well, this is my tower.”
He eyes me warily. “Brannock. I was trying to get out of this gods-damned forest when I was yanked up here.” He mutters the last bit, still annoyed.
I nod sympathetically. “I’m sorry. Like I said, this place has a mind of its own. I’ve been up here for… well, I’m not sure. Time’s strange in Fable Forest. It’s like the trees breathe, and your sense of reality shifts.”
His gaze flicks to the writhing pile of roots that is my hair. “Is that… normal?”
“Nope.” I tug at a strand, and it squirms. “My hair is alive. It moves. Grows. Every day is a bad hair day.”
His eyes narrow as he follows the trail of my hair around the tower, noting how it coils over shelves, winds around table legs, and disappears into shadowy corners.“You’retetheredhere? By your hair?”
I nod. “Like a goat.”
He scrubs a hand over his face. “This is a nightmare.”