When the queen herself succumbed to a cough that turned like a stone in her chest, Grith took to the garden in the deep hours and dug with his long fingers until his palms bled. He plucked from the earth a root no one else had noticed: pale as bone and sweet as forgiveness. He brewed it into a tea that steamed like a small sunrise and fed it to the queen by the apple tree before dawn. She drank, and the cough eased enough that she could speak.
The last line of the novel is spoken by a court historian, interviewing the Queen on her deathbed: “Was it worth it? All that death? All that chaos? For a goblin?”