Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4)(139)
She couldn’t breathe, couldn’t think. Rowan knelt down beside them and slid his arms around the girl, scooping her up, his hand so big that it nearly enveloped the entire back of her head. Evangeline buried her face in his tattooed chest, and Rowan murmured wordless sounds of comfort.
He met Aelin’s eyes over the girl’s head. We need to be out of this house in ten minutes—until we figure out if he betrayed you, too.
As if he’d heard it, Aedion edged past them, going to the warehouse window that Evangeline had somehow slipped in through. Lysandra, it seemed, had taught her charge a few things.
Aelin scrubbed at her face and braced a hand on Rowan’s shoulder as she stood, his skin warm and soft beneath her callused fingers. “Nesryn’s father. We’ll ask him to look after her today.”
Arobynn had done this. A final card up his sleeve.
He’d known. About Lysandra—about their friendship.
He didn’t like to share his belongings.
Chaol and Nesryn burst into the warehouse a level below, and Aedion was halfway to them before they even realized he was there.
They had more news. One of Ren’s men had contacted them moments ago: a meeting was to take place tomorrow in Oakwald, between the king, Dorian, and the Wing Leader of his aerial cavalry.
With a delivery of one new prisoner headed for Morath.
“You have to get her out of the tunnels,” Aelin said to Chaol and Nesryn, as she stormed down the stairs. “Right now. You’re human; they won’t notice you at first. You’re the only ones who can go into that darkness.”
Chaol and Nesryn exchanged glances.
Aelin stalked up to them. “You have to get her out right now.”
For a heartbeat, she wasn’t in the warehouse. For a heartbeat, she was standing in a beautiful bedroom, before a bloody bed and the wrecked body splayed upon it.
Chaol held out his hands. “We’re better off spending the time setting up an ambush.”
The sound of his voice … The scar on his face was stark in the dim light. Aelin clenched her fingers into a fist, her nails—the nails that had shredded his face—digging in. “They could be feeding on her,” she managed to say.
Behind her, Evangeline let out a sob. If they made Lysandra endure what Aelin had endured when she fought the Valg prince … “Please,” Aelin said, her voice breaking on the word.
Chaol noticed, then, where her eyes had focused on his face. He paled, his mouth opening.
But Nesryn reached for her hand, her slim, tan fingers cool against Aelin’s clammy palms. “We will get her back. We will save her. Together.”
Chaol just held Aelin’s gaze, his shoulders squaring as he said, “Never again.”
She wanted to believe him.
56
A few hours later, seated on the floor of a ramshackle inn on the opposite side of Rifthold, Aelin peered at a map they’d marked with the meeting’s location spot—about half a mile from the temple of Temis. The tiny temple was just inside the cover of Oakwald, perched atop a towering slice of rock in the middle of a deep ravine. It was accessible only via two dangling footbridges attached to either side of the ravine, which had spared it from invading armies over the years. The surrounding forest would likely be empty, and if wyverns were flying in, they would no doubt arrive under cover of darkness the night before. Tonight.
Aelin, Rowan, Aedion, Nesryn, and Chaol sat around the map, sharpening and polishing their blades as they talked over their plan. They’d given Evangeline to Nesryn’s father, along with more letters for Terrasen and the Bane—and the baker hadn’t asked any questions. He’d only kissed his youngest daughter on the cheek and announced that he and Evangeline would bake special pies for their return.
If they returned.
“What if she has a collar or a ring on?” Chaol asked from across their little circle.
“Then she loses a head or a finger,” Aedion said baldly.
Aelin shot him a look. “You don’t make that call without me.”
“And Dorian?” Aedion asked.
Chaol was staring at the map as if he would burn a hole through it. “Not my call,” Aelin said tightly.
Chaol’s eyes flashed to hers. “You don’t touch him.”
It was a terrible risk, to bring them all within range of a Valg prince, but … “We paint ourselves in Wyrdmarks,” Aelin said. “All of us. To ward against the prince.”
In the ten minutes it had taken them to grab their weapons, clothes, and supplies from the warehouse apartment, she’d remembered to get her books on Wyrdmarks, which now sat on the little table before the sole window in the room. They’d rented three for the night: one for Aelin and Rowan, one for Aedion, and the other for Chaol and Nesryn. The gold coin she’d slapped onto the innkeeper’s counter had been enough to pay for at least a month. And his silence.
“Do we take out the king?” Aedion said.
“We don’t engage,” Rowan replied, “until we know for sure we can kill the king and neutralize the prince with minimal risk. Getting Lysandra out of that wagon comes first.”
“Agreed,” Aelin said.
Aedion’s gaze settled on Rowan. “When do we leave?”
Aelin wondered at his yielding to the Fae Prince.
“I don’t want those wyverns or witches sniffing us out,” Rowan said, the commander bracing for the battlefield. “We arrive just before the meeting takes place—long enough to find advantageous spots and to locate their scouts and sentries. The witches’ sense of smell is too keen to risk discovery. We move in fast.”
Sarah J. Maas's Books
- A Court of Frost and Starlight (A Court of Thorns and Roses #3.1)
- Catwoman: Soulstealer (DC Icons #3)
- 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)
- Empire of Storms (Throne of Glass #5)
- Throne of Glass (Throne of Glass #1)
- A Court of Thorns and Roses (A Court of Thorns and Roses #1)
- Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass #3)
- Crown of Midnight (Throne of Glass #2)