Empire of Storms (Throne of Glass #5)(113)
Lorcan chucked three knives in the air, bowing without one bit of humility or amusement to the crowd. They gasped again as the blades aimed for his exposed spine.
But in an easy, beautiful maneuver, Lorcan rolled, catching each blade, one after another.
The crowd cheered, and Lorcan coolly looked at his pan of coins.
More copper—and some silver—flowed, like the patter of rain.
Molly let out a low laugh. “Desire and fear can loosen any purse strings.” A sharp glance. “Shouldn’t you be in your tent?”
Elide didn’t bother responding as she left, and could have sworn she felt Lorcan’s gaze narrow on her, on the headdress and swaying beads, on the long, voluminous robes. She kept going, and endured a few more young men—and some young women—asking about their love lives before she found herself again alone in that silly tent, the dark only illuminated by dangling crystal orbs with tiny candles inside.
She was waiting for Molly to finally shout the carnival was over when Lorcan shouldered through the flaps, wiping his face with a scrap of fabric that was most definitely not his shirt.
Elide said, “Molly will be begging you to stay, you realize.”
He slid into the folding chair before her round table. “Is that your professional prediction?”
She swatted at a strand of beads that swayed into her eyes. “Did you sell your shirt, too?”
Lorcan gave a feral grin. “Got ten coppers from a farmer’s wife for it.”
Elide scowled. “That’s disgusting.”
“Money is money. I suppose you don’t need to worry about it, with all the gold you’ve got stashed.”
Elide held his stare, not bothering to look pleasant. “You’re in a rare good mood.”
“Having two women and one man offer a spot in their beds tonight will do that to a person.”
“Then why are you here?” It came out sharper than she intended.
He surveyed the hanging orbs, the woven carpet, the black tablecloth, and then her hands, scarred and calloused and small, gripping the edge of the table. “Wouldn’t it ruin your ruse if I slipped off into the night with someone else? You’d be expected to throw me out on my ass—to be heartbroken and raging for the rest of your time here.”
“You might as well enjoy yourself,” she said. “You’re going to leave soon anyway.”
“So are you,” he reminded her.
Elide tapped a finger on the tablecloth, the rough fabric scratching against her skin.
“What is it?” he demanded. As if it were an inconvenience to be polite.
“Nothing.”
It wasn’t nothing, though. She knew why she’d been delaying that turn northward, the inevitable departure from this group and final trek on her own.
She could barely make an impact at a backwater carnival. What the hell would she do in a court of such powerful people—especially without being able to read? While Aelin could destroy kings and save cities, what the hell would she do to prove her worth? Wash their clothes? Clean their dishes?
“Marion,” he said roughly.
She looked up, surprised to find him still there. Lorcan’s dark eyes were unreadable in the dimness. “You had plenty of young men unable to stop staring at you tonight. Why not have some fun with them?”
“Why?” she snapped. The thought of a stranger touching her, of some faceless, nameless man pawing at her in the dark…
Lorcan stilled. He said too calmly, “When you were in Morath, did someone—”
“No.” She knew what he meant. “No—it didn’t get that far.” But the memory of those men touching her, laughing at her nakedness … She shoved it away. “I’ve never been with a man. Never had the chance or the interest.”
He cocked his head, his dark, silken hair sliding over his face. “Do you prefer women?”
She blinked at him. “No—I don’t think so. I don’t know what I prefer. Again, I’ve never … I’ve never had the opportunity to feel … that.” Desire, lust, she didn’t know. And she didn’t know how or why they’d wound up talking about this.
“Why?” And with all of Lorcan’s considerable focus honed in on her, with the way he’d glanced at her red-painted mouth, Elide wanted to tell him. About the tower, and Vernon, and her parents. About why, if she were to ever feel desire, it’d be a result of trusting someone so much that those horrors faded away, a result of knowing they would fight tooth and claw to keep her free and never lock her up or hurt her or leave her.
Elide opened her mouth. Then the screaming started.
Lorcan didn’t know why the hell he was in Marion’s ridiculous little oracle’s tent. He needed to wash, needed to clean away the sweat and oil and feel of all those ogling eyes on him.
But he’d spotted Marion in the crowd while he’d finished up his piss-poor performance. He hadn’t seen her earlier in the evening before she’d put on that headdress and those robes, but … maybe it was the cosmetics, the heavy kohl around her eyes, the way the red-painted lips made her mouth look like a fresh piece of fruit, but … he’d noticed her.
Noticed the way the men had spotted her, too. Some had outright gawked, wonder and lust written across their bodies, as Marion lingered, oblivious, at the edge of the crowd and watched Lorcan instead.
Sarah J. Maas's Books
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- A Court of Frost and Starlight (A Court of Thorns and Roses #3.1)
- A Court of Wings and Ruin (A Court of Thorns and Roses #3)
- A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses #2)
- Throne of Glass (Throne of Glass #1)
- A Court of Thorns and Roses (A Court of Thorns and Roses #1)
- Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4)
- Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass #3)
- Crown of Midnight (Throne of Glass #2)