For a month now, it had been the same dream. Every night, over and over, until Chaol could see it in his waking hours.
Archer Finn groaning as Celaena shoved her dagger up through his ribs and into his heart. She embraced the handsome courtesan like a lover, but when she gazed over Archerâs shoulder, her eyes were dead. Hollow.
The dream shifted, and Chaol could say nothing, do nothing as the golden-brown hair darkened to black and the agonized face wasnât Archerâs but Dorianâs.
The Crown Prince jerked, and Celaena held him tighter, twisting the dagger one final time before she let Dorian slump to the gray stones of the tunnel. Dorianâs blood was already poolingâtoo fast. But Chaol still couldnât move, couldnât go to his friend or the woman he loved.
The wounds on Dorian multiplied, and there was bloodâso much blood. He knew these wounds. Though heâd never seen the body, heâd combed through the reports detailing what Celaena had done to the rogue assassin Grave in that alley, the way sheâd butchered him for killing Nehemia.
Celaena lowered her dagger, each drop of blood from its gleaming blade sending ripples through the pool already around her. She tipped back her head, breathing in deep. Breathing in the death before her, taking it into her soul, vengeance and ecstasy mingling at the slaughter of her enemy. Her true enemy. The Havilliard Empire.
The dream shifted again, and Chaol was pinned beneath her as she writhed above him, her head still thrown back, that same expression of ecstasy written across her blood-splattered face.
Enemy. Lover.
Queen.
The memory of the dream splintered as Chaol blinked at Dorian, who was sitting beside him at their old table in the Great Hallâand waiting for an answer to whatever he had said. Chaol gave an apologetic wince.
The Crown Prince didnât return Chaolâs half smile. Instead, Dorian quietly said, âYou were thinking about her.â
Chaol took a bite from his lamb stew but tasted nothing. Dorian was too observant for his own good. And Chaol had no interest in talking about Celaena. Not with Dorian, not with anyone. The truth he knew about her could jeopardize more lives than hers.
âI was thinking about my father,â Chaol lied. âWhen he returns to Anielle in a few weeks, Iâm to go with him.â It was the price for getting Celaena to the safety of Wendlyn: his fatherâs support in exchange for his return to the Silver Lake to take up his title as the heir of Anielle. And heâd been willing to make that sacrifice; heâd make any sacrifice to keep Celaena and her secrets safe. Even now that he knew whoâwhat she was. Even after sheâd told him about the king and the Wyrdkeys. If this was the price he had to pay, so be it.
Dorian glanced toward the high table, where the king and Chaolâs father dined. The Crown Prince should have been eating with them, but heâd chosen to sit with Chaol instead. It was the first time Dorian had done so in agesâthe first time they had spoken since their tense conversation after the decision was made to send Celaena to Wendlyn.
Dorian would understand if he knew the truth. But Dorian couldnât know who and what Celaena was, or what the king was truly planning. The potential for disaster was too high. And Dorianâs own secrets were deadly enough.
âI heard the rumors you were to go,â Dorian said warily. âI didnât realize they were true.â
Chaol nodded, trying to find somethingâanythingâto say to his friend.
They still hadnât spoken of the other thing between them, the other bit of truth that had come out that night in the tunnels: Dorian had magic. Chaol didnât want to know anything about it. If the king decided to interrogate him ⦠he hoped heâd hold out, if it ever came to that. The king, he knew, had far darker methods of extracting information than torture. So he hadnât asked, hadnât said one word. And neither had Dorian.
He met Dorianâs gaze. There was nothing kind in it. But Dorian said, âIâm trying, Chaol.â
Trying, because Chaolâs not consulting him on the plan to get Celaena out of Adarlan had been a breach of trust, and one that shamed him, though Dorian could never know that, either. âI know.â
âAnd despite what happened, Iâm fairly certain weâre not enemies.â Dorianâs mouth quirked to the side.
You will always be my enemy. Celaena had screamed those words at Chaol the night Nehemia had died. Screamed it with ten yearsâ worth of conviction and hatred, a decade spent holding the worldâs greatest secret so deep within her that sheâd become another person entirely.
Because Celaena was Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, heir to the throne and rightful Queen of Terrasen.
It made her his mortal enemy. It made her Dorianâs enemy. Chaol still didnât know what to do about it, or what it meant for them, for the life heâd imagined for them. The future heâd once dreamed of was irrevocably gone.
Heâd seen the deadness in her eyes that night in the tunnels, along with the wrath and exhaustion and sorrow. Heâd seen her go over the edge when Nehemia died, and knew what sheâd done to Grave in retribution. He didnât doubt for one heartbeat that she could snap again. There was such glittering darkness in her, an endless rift straight through her core.
Nehemiaâs death had shattered her. What he had done, his role in that death, had shattered her, too. He knew that. He just prayed that she could piece herself back together again. Because a broken, unpredictable assassin was one thing. But a queen â¦
âYou look like youâre going to be sick,â Dorian said, bracing his forearms on the table. âTell me whatâs wrong.â
Chaol had been staring at nothing again. For a heartbeat, the weight of everything pressed so heavily upon him that he opened up his mouth.
But the boom of swords striking shields in salute echoed from the hallway, and Aedion Ashryverâthe King of Adarlanâs infamous General of the North and cousin to Aelin Galathyniusâstalked into the Great Hall.
The hall fell silent, including his father and the king at the high table. Before Aedion was halfway across the room, Chaol was positioned at the bottom of the dais.
It wasnât that the young general was a threat. Rather, it was the way Aedion prowled toward the kingâs table, his shoulder-length golden hair gleaming in the torchlight as he smirked at them all.
Handsome was a light way of describing what Aedion was. Overwhelming was more like it. Towering and heavily muscled, Aedion was every inch the warrior rumor claimed him to be. Even though his clothes were mostly for function, Chaol could tell that the leather of his light armor was of fine make and exquisitely detailed. A white wolf pelt was slung across his broad shoulders, and a round shield had been strapped to his backâalong with an ancient-looking sword.
But his face. And his eyes ⦠Holy gods.
Chaol put a hand on his sword, schooling his features to remain neutral, disinterested, even as the Wolf of the North came close enough to slaughter him.
They were Celaenaâs eyes. Ashryver eyes. A stunning turquoise with a core of gold as bright as their hair. Their hairâeven the shade of it was the same. They could have been twins, if Aedion werenât twenty-four and tanned from years in the snow-bright mountains of Terrasen.
Why had the king bothered to keep Aedion alive all those years ago? Why bother to forge him into one of his fiercest generals? Aedion was a prince of the Ashryver royal line and had been raised in the Galathynius householdâand yet he served the king.
Aedionâs grin remained as he stopped before the high table and sketched a bow shallow enough that Chaol was momentarily stunned. âMajesty,â the general said, those damning eyes alight.
Chaol looked at the high table to see if the king, if anyone, noticed the similarities that could doom not only Aedion but also Chaol and Dorian and everyone he cared about. His father just gave him a small, satisfied smile.
But the king was frowning. âI expected you a month ago.â
Aedion actually had the nerve to shrug. âApologies. The Staghorns were slammed with a final winter storm. I left when I could.â
Every person in the hall held their breath. Aedionâs temper and insolence were near-legendaryâpart of the reason he was stationed in the far reaches of the North. Chaol had always thought it wise to keep him far from Rifthold, especially as Aedion seemed to be a bit of a two-faced bastard, and the BaneâAedionâs legionâwas notorious for its skill and brutality, but now ⦠why had the king summoned him to the capital?
The king picked up his goblet, swirling the wine inside. âI didnât receive word that your legion was here.â
âTheyâre not.â
Chaol braced for the execution order, praying he wouldnât be the one to do it. The king said, âI told you to bring them, General.â
âHere I was, thinking you wanted the pleasure of my company.â When the king growled, Aedion said, âTheyâll be here within a week or so. I didnât want to miss any of the fun.â Aedion again shrugged those massive shoulders. âAt least I didnât come empty-handed.â He snapped his fingers behind him and a page rushed in, bearing a large satchel. âGifts from the North, courtesy of the last rebel camp we sacked. Youâll enjoy them.â
The king rolled his eyes and waved a hand at the page. âSend them to my chambers. Your gifts, Aedion, tend to offend polite company.â A low chuckleâfrom Aedion, from some men at the kingâs table. Oh, Aedion was dancing a dangerous line. At least Celaena had the good sense to keep her mouth shut around the king.
Considering the trophies the king had collected from Celaena as Champion, the items in that satchel wouldnât be mere gold and jewels. But to collect heads and limbs from Aedionâs own people, Celaenaâs people â¦
âI have a council meeting tomorrow; I want you there, General,â the king said.
Aedion put a hand on his chest. âYour will is mine, Majesty.â
Chaol had to clamp down on his terror as he beheld what glinted on Aedionâs finger. A black ringâthe same that the king, Perrington, and most of those under their control wore. That explained why the king allowed the insolence: when it came down to it, the kingâs will truly was Aedionâs.
Chaol kept his face blank as the king gave him a curt nodâdismissal. Chaol silently bowed, now all too eager to get back to his table. Away from the kingâfrom the man who held the fate of their world in his bloodied hands. Away from his father, who saw too much. Away from the general, who was now making his rounds through the hall, clapping men on the shoulder, winking at women.
Chaol had mastered the horror roiling in his gut by the time he sank back into his seat and found Dorian frowning. âGifts indeed,â the prince muttered. âGods, heâs insufferable.â
Chaol didnât disagree. Despite the kingâs black ring, Aedion still seemed to have a mind of his ownâand was as wild off the battlefield as he was on it. He usually made Dorian look like a celibate when it came to finding debauched ways to amuse himself. Chaol had never spent much time with Aedion, nor wanted to, but Dorian had known him for some time now. Sinceâ
Theyâd met as children. When Dorian and his father had visited Terrasen in the days before the royal family was slaughtered. When Dorian had met Aelinâmet Celaena.
It was good that Celaena wasnât here to see what Aedion had become. Not just because of the ring. To turn on your own peopleâ
Aedion slid onto the bench across from them, grinning. A predator assessing prey. âYou two were sitting at this same table the last time I saw you. Good to know some things donât change.â
Gods, that face. It was Celaenaâs faceâthe other side of the coin. The same arrogance, the same unchecked anger. But where Celaena crackled with it, Aedion seemed to ⦠pulse. And there was something nastier, far more bitter in Aedionâs face.
Dorian rested his forearms on the table and gave a lazy smile. âHello, Aedion.â
Aedion ignored him and reached for a roast leg of lamb, his black ring glinting. âI like the new scar, Captain,â he said, jerking his chin toward the slender white line across Chaolâs cheek. The scar Celaena had given to him the night Nehemia died and sheâd tried to kill himânow a permanent reminder of everything heâd lost. Aedion went on, âLooks like they didnât chew you up just yet. And they finally gave you a big-boy sword, too.â
Dorian said, âIâm glad to see that storm didnât dim your spirits.â
âWeeks inside with nothing to do but train and bed women? It was a miracle I bothered to come down from the mountains.â
âI didnât realize you bothered to do anything unless it served your best interests.â
A low laugh. âThereâs that charming Havilliard spirit.â Aedion dug into his meal, and Chaol was about to demand why he was bothering to sit with themâother than to torment them, as heâd always liked to do when the king wasnât lookingâwhen he noticed that Dorian was staring.
Not at Aedionâs sheer size or armor, but at his face, at his eyes â¦
âShouldnât you be at some party or other?â Chaol said to Aedion. âIâm surprised youâre lingering when your usual enticements await in the city.â
âIs that your courtly way of asking for an invitation to my gathering tomorrow, Captain? Surprising. Youâve always implied that you were above my sort of party.â Those turquoise eyes narrowed and he gave Dorian a sly grin. âYou, howeverâthe last party I threw worked out very well for you. Redheaded twins, if I recall correctly.â
âYouâll be disappointed to learn Iâve moved on from that sort of existence,â Dorian said.
Aedion dug back into his meal. âMore for me, then.â
Chaol clenched his fists under the table. Celaena had not exactly been virtuous in the past ten years, but sheâd never killed a natural-born citizen of Terrasen. Had refused to, actually. And Aedion had always been a gods-damned bastard, but now ⦠Did he know what he wore on his finger? Did he know that despite his arrogance, his defiance and insolence, the king could make him bend to his will whenever he pleased? He couldnât warn Aedion, not without potentially getting himself and everyone he cared about killed should Aedion truly have allegiance to the king.
âHow are things in Terrasen?â Chaol asked, because Dorian was studying Aedion again.
âWhat would you like me to tell you? That we are well-fed after a brutal winter? That we did not lose many to sickness?â Aedion snorted. âI suppose hunting rebels is always fun, if youâve a taste for it. Hopefully His Majesty has summoned the Bane to the South to finally give them some real action.â As Aedion reached for the water, Chaol glimpsed the hilt of his sword. Dull metal flecked with dings and scratches, its pommel nothing more than a bit of cracked, rounded horn. Such a simple, plain sword for one of the greatest warriors in Erilea.
âThe Sword of Orynth,â Aedion drawled. âA gift from His Majesty upon my first victory.â
Everyone knew that sword. It had been an heirloom of Terrasenâs royal family, passed from ruler to ruler. By right, it was Celaenaâs. It had belonged to her father. For Aedion to possess it, considering what that sword now did, the lives it took, was a slap in the face to Celaena and to her family.
âIâm surprised you bother with such sentimentality,â Dorian said.
âSymbols have power, Prince,â Aedion said, pinning him with a stare. Celaenaâs stareâunyielding and alive with challenge. âYouâd be surprised by the power this still wields in the Northâwhat it does to convince people not to pursue foolhardy plans.â
Perhaps Celaenaâs skills and cunning werenât unusual in her bloodline. But Aedion was an Ashryver, not a Galathyniusâwhich meant that his great-grandmother had been Mab, one of the three Fae-Queens, in recent generations crowned a goddess and renamed Deanna, Lady of the Hunt. Chaol swallowed hard.
Silence fell, taut as a bowstring. âTrouble between you two?â Aedion asked, biting into his meat. âLet me guess: a woman. The Kingâs Champion, perhaps? Rumor has it sheâs ⦠interesting. Is that why youâve moved on from my sort of fun, princeling?â He scanned the hall. âIâd like to meet her, I think.â
Chaol fought the urge to grip his sword. âSheâs away.â
Aedion instead gave Dorian a cruel smile. âPity. Perhaps she might have convinced me to move on as well.â
âMind your mouth,â Chaol snarled. He might have laughed had he not wanted to strangle the general so badly. Dorian merely drummed his fingers on the table. âAnd show some respect.â
Aedion chuckled, finishing off the lamb. âI am His Majestyâs faithful servant, as I have always been.â Those Ashryver eyes once more settled on Dorian. âPerhaps Iâll be your whore someday, too.â
âIf youâre still alive by then,â Dorian purred.
Aedion went on eating, but Chaol could still feel his relentless focus pinned on them. âRumor has it a Matron of a witch clan was killed on the premises not too long ago,â Aedion said casually. âShe vanished, though her quarters indicated sheâd put up a hell of a fight.â
Dorian said sharply, âWhatâs your interest in that?â
âI make it my business to know when the power brokers of the realm meet their end.â
A shiver spider-walked down Chaolâs spine. He knew little about the witches. Celaena had told him a few storiesâand heâd always prayed they were exaggerated. But something like dread flickered across Dorianâs face.
Chaol leaned forward. âItâs none of your concern.â
Aedion again ignored him and winked at the prince. Dorianâs nostrils flared, the only sign of the rage that was rising to the surface. That, and the air in the room shiftedâbrisker. Magic.
Chaol put a hand on his friendâs shoulder. âWeâre going to be late,â he lied, but Dorian caught it. He had to get Dorian outâaway from Aedionâand try to leash the disastrous storm that was brewing between the two men. âRest well, Aedion.â Dorian didnât bother saying anything, his sapphire eyes frozen.
Aedion smirked. âThe partyâs tomorrow in Rifthold if you feel like reliving the good old days, Prince.â Oh, the general knew exactly what buttons to push, and he didnât give a damn what a mess it made. It made him dangerousâdeadly.
Especially where Dorian and his magic were concerned. Chaol forced himself to say good night to some of his men, to look casual and unconcerned as they walked from the dining hall. Aedion Ashryver had come to Rifthold, narrowly missing running into his long-lost cousin.
If Aedion knew Aelin was still alive, if he knew who and what she had become or what she had learned regarding the kingâs secret power, would he stand with her, or destroy her? Given his actions, given the ring he bore ⦠Chaol didnât want the general anywhere near her. Anywhere near Terrasen, either.
He wondered how much blood would spill when Celaena learned what her cousin had done.
Chaol and Dorian walked in silence for most of the trek to the princeâs tower. When they turned down an empty hallway and were certain no one could overhear them, Dorian said, âI didnât need you to step in.â
âAedionâs a bastard,â Chaol growled. The conversation could end there, and part of him was tempted to let it, but he made himself say, âI was worried youâd snap. Like you did in the passages.â He loosed a tight breath. âAre you ⦠stable?â
âSome days are better than others. Getting angry or frightened seems to set it off.â
They entered the hallway that ended in the arched wooden door to Dorianâs tower, but Chaol stopped him with an arm on his shoulder. âI donât want details,â he murmured so the guards posted outside Dorianâs door couldnât hear, âbecause I donât want my knowledge used against you. I know Iâve made mistakes, Dorian. Believe me, I know. But my priority has always beenâand still isâkeeping you protected.â
Dorian stared at him for a long moment, cocking his head to the side. Chaol must have looked as miserable as he felt, because the princeâs voice was almost gentle as he said, âWhy did you really send her to Wendlyn?â
Agony punched through him, raw and razor-edged. But as much as he yearned to tell the prince about Celaena, as much as he wanted to unload all his secrets so it would fill the hole in his core, he couldnât. So he just said, âI sent her to do what needs to be done,â and strode back down the hall. Dorian didnât call after him.