Celaena backed away, knowing exactly how many steps it would take to get into the hall, but slammed into a hard, unyielding body just as the door shut behind them. Her hands were shaking so badly she didnât bother going for her weaponsâor Rowanâs. Heâd cut her down the instant Maeve gave the order.
The blood rushed from Celaenaâs head. She forced herself to take a breath. And another. Then she said in a too-quiet voice, âAelin Galathynius is dead.â Just speaking her name aloudâthe damned name she had dreaded and hated and tried to forget â¦
Maeve smiled, revealing sharp little canines. âLet us not bother with lies.â
It wasnât a lie. That girl, that princess had died in a river a decade ago. Celaena was no more Aelin Galathynius than she was any other person.
The room was too hotâtoo small, Rowan a brooding force of nature behind her.
She was not to have time to gather herself, to make up excuses and half truths, as she should have been doing these past few days instead of free-falling into silence and the misty cold. She was to face the Queen of the Fae as Maeve wanted to be faced. And in some fortress that seemed far, far beneath the raven-haired beauty watching her with black, depthless eyes.
Gods. Gods.
Maeve was fearsome in her perfection, utterly still, eternal and calm and radiating ancient grace. The dark sister to the fair-haired Mab.
Celaena had been fooling herself into thinking this would be easy. She was still pressed against Rowan as though he were a wall. An impenetrable wall, as old as the ward-stones surrounding the fortress. Rowan stepped away from her with his powerful, predatory ease and leaned against the door. She wasnât getting out until Maeve allowed her.
The Queen of the Fae remained silent, her long fingers moon-white and folded in the lap of her violet gown, a white barn owl perched on the back of her chair. She didnât bother with a crown, and Celaena supposed she didnât need one. Every creature on earth would know who she wasâwhat she wasâeven if they were blind and deaf. Maeve, the face of a thousand legends ⦠and nightmares. Epics and poems and songs had been written about her, so many that some even believed she was just a myth. But here was the dreamâthe nightmareâmade flesh.
This could work to your advantage. You can get the answers you need right here, right now. Go back to Adarlan in a matter of days. Justâbreathe.
Breathing, as it turned out, was rather hard when the queen who had been known to drive men to madness for amusement was observing every flicker of her throat. That owl perched on Maeveâs chairâFae or true beast?âwas watching her, too. Its talons were curled around the back of the chair, digging into the wood.
It was somewhat absurd, thoughâMaeve holding court in this half-rotted office, at a desk stained with the Wyrd knew what. Gods, the fact that Maeve was seated at a desk. She should be in some ethereal glen, surrounded by bobbing will-oâ-the-wisps and maidens dancing to lutes and harps, reading the wheeling stars like they were poetry. Not here.
Celaena bowed low. She supposed she should have gotten on her knees, butâshe already smelled awful, and her face was likely still torn and bruised from her brawling in Varese. As Celaena rose, Maeve remained smiling faintly. A spider with a fly in its web.
âI suppose that with a proper bath, youâll look a good deal like your mother.â
No exchanging pleasantries, then. Maeve was going right for the throat. She could handle it. She could ignore the pain and terror to get what she wanted. So Celaena smiled just as faintly and said, âHad I known who I would be meeting, I might have begged my escort for time to freshen up.â
She didnât feel bad for one heartbeat about throwing Rowan to the lions.
Maeveâs obsidian eyes flicked to Rowan, who still leaned against the door. She could have sworn there was approval in the Fae Queenâs smile. As if the grueling travel were a part of this plan, too. But why? Why get her off-kilter?
âIâm afraid I must bear the blame for the pressing pace,â Maeve said. âThough I suppose he could have bothered to at least find you a pool to bathe in along the way.â The Queen of Faedom lifted an elegant hand, gesturing to the warrior. âPrince Rowanââ
Prince. She swallowed the urge to turn to him.
ââis from my sister Moraâs bloodline. He is my nephew of sorts, and a member of my household. An extremely distant relation of yours; there is some ancient ancestry linking you.â
Another move to get her on uneven footing. âYou donât say.â
Perhaps that wasnât the best reply. She should probably be on the floor, groveling for answers. And she had a feeling sheâd likely get to that point very, very soon. But â¦
âYou must be wondering why it is I asked Prince Rowan to bring you here,â Maeve mused.
For Nehemia, sheâd play this game. Celaena bit her tongue hard enough to keep her gods-damned smart-ass mouth shut.
Maeve placed her white hands on the desk. âI have been waiting a long, long while to meet you. And as I do not leave these lands, I could not see you. Not with my eyes, at least.â The queenâs long nails gleamed in the light.
There were legends whispered over fires about the other skin Maeve wore. No one had lived to tell anything beyond shadows and claws and a darkness to devour your soul.
âThey broke my laws, you know. Your parents disobeyed my commands when they eloped. The bloodlines were too volatile to be mixed, but your mother promised to let me see you after you were born.â Maeve cocked her head, eerily similar to the owl behind her. âIt would seem that in the eight years after your birth, she was always too busy to uphold her vow.â
If her mother had broken a promise ⦠if her mother had kept her from Maeve, it had been for a damn good reason. A reason that tickled at the edges of Celaenaâs mind, a blur of memory.
âBut now you are here,â Maeve said, seeming to come closer without moving. âAnd a grown woman. My eyes across the sea have brought me such strange, horrible stories of you. From your scars and steel, I wonder whether they are indeed true. Like the tale I heard over a year ago, that an assassin with Ashryver eyes was spotted by the horned Lord of the North in a wagon bound forââ
âEnough.â Celaena glanced at Rowan, who was listening intently, as if this was the first he was hearing of it. She didnât want him knowing about Endovierâdidnât want that pity. âI know my own history.â She flashed Rowan a glare that told him to mind his own business. He merely looked away, bored again. Typical immortal arrogance. Celaena faced Maeve, tucking her hands into her pockets. âIâm an assassin, yes.â
A snort from behind, but she didnât dare take her eyes off Maeve.
âAnd your other talents?â Maeveâs nostrils flaredâscenting. âWhat has become of them?â
âLike everyone else on my continent, I havenât been able to access them.â
Maeveâs eyes twinkled, and Celaena knewâknew that Maeve could smell the half truth. âYou are not on your continent anymore,â Maeve purred.
Run. Every instinct roared with the word. She had a feeling that the Eye of Elena would have been no use, but she wished she had it anyway. Wished the dead queen were here, for that matter. Rowan was still at the doorâbut if she was fast, if she outsmarted him â¦
A flash of memory blinded her, bright and uncontrollable, unleashed by the instinct begging her to flee. Her mother had rarely let Fae into their home, even with her heritage. A few trusted ones were allowed to live with them, but any Fae visitors had been closely monitored, and for the duration of their stay, Celaena had been sequestered in the familyâs private chambers. Sheâd always thought it was overprotective, but now ⦠âShow me,â Maeve whispered with a spiderâs smile. Run. Run.
She could still feel the burn of blue wildfire exploding out of her in that demon realm, still see Chaolâs face as she lost control of it. One wrong move, one wrong breath, and she could have killed him and Fleetfoot.
The owl rustled its wings, the wood groaning beneath its talons, and the darkness in Maeveâs eyes spread, reaching. There was a faint pulse in the air, a throbbing against her blood. A tapping, then a razor-sharp slicing against her mindâas if Maeve were trying to cleave open her skull and peer inside. Pushing, testing, tastingâ
Fighting to keep her breathing steady, Celaena positioned her hands within easy reach of her blades as she pushed back against the claws in her mind. Maeve let out a low laugh, and the pressure in her head ceased.
âYour mother hid you from me for years,â Maeve said. âShe and your father always had a remarkable talent for knowing when my eyes were searching for you. Such a rare giftâthe ability to summon and manipulate flame. So few exist who possess more than an ember of it; fewer still who can master its wildness. And yet your mother wanted you to stifle your powerâthough she knew that I only wanted you to submit to it.â
Celaenaâs breath burned her throat. Another flicker of memoryâof lessons not about starting fires but putting them out.
Maeve went on, âLook at how well that turned out for them.â
Celaenaâs blood froze. Every self-preserving instinct went right out of her head. âAnd where were you ten years ago?â She spoke so low, from so deep in her shredded soul, that the words were barely more than a growl.
Maeve angled her head slightly. âI do not take kindly to being lied to.â
The snarl on Celaenaâs face faltered. Dropped right into her gut. Aid had never come for Terrasen from the Fae. From Wendlyn. And it was all because ⦠because â¦
âI do not have more time to spare you,â Maeve said. âSo let me be brief: my eyes have told me that you have questions. Questions that no mortal has the right to askâabout the keys.â
Legend said Maeve could commune with the spirit worldâhad Elena, or Nehemia, told her? Celaena opened her mouth, but Maeve held up a hand. âI will give you those answers. You may come to me in Doranelle to receive them.â
âWhy notââ
A growl from Rowan at the interruption.
âBecause they are answers that require time,â Maeve said, then slowly added, as if she savored every word, âand answers you have not yet earned.â
âTell me what I can do to earn them and I will do it.â Fool. A damned foolâs response.
âA dangerous thing to offer without hearing the price.â
âYou want me to show you my magic? Iâll show it to you. But not hereânotââ
âI have no interest in seeing you drop your magic at my feet like a sack of grain. I want to see what you can do with it, Aelin Galathyniusâwhich currently seems like not very much at all.â Celaenaâs stomach tightened at that cursed name. âI want to see what you will become under the right circumstances.â
âI donâtââ
âI do not permit mortals or half-breeds into Doranelle. For a half-breed to enter my realm, she must prove herself both gifted and worthy. Mistward, this fortressââshe waved a hand to encompass the roomââis one of several proving grounds. And a place where those who do not pass the test can spend their days.â
Beneath the growing fear, a flicker of disgust went through her. Half-breedâMaeve said it with such disdain. âAnd what manner of test might I expect before I am deemed worthy?â
Maeve gestured to Rowan, who had not moved from the door. âYou shall come to me once Prince Rowan decides that you have mastered your gifts. He shall train you here. And you shall not set foot in Doranelle until he deems your training complete.â
After facing the horseshit sheâd seen in the glass castleâdemons, witches, the kingâtraining with Rowan, even in magic, seemed rather anticlimactic.
Butâbut it could take weeks. Months. Years. The familiar fog of nothing crept in, threatening to smother her once again. She pushed it back long enough to say, âWhat I need to know isnât something that can waitââ
âYou want answers regarding the keys, Heir of Terrasen? Then they shall be waiting for you in Doranelle. The rest is up to you.â
âTruthfully,â Celaena blurted. âYou will truthfully answer my questions about the keys.â
Maeve smiled, and it was not a thing of beauty. âYou havenât forgotten all of our ways, then.â When Celaena didnât react, Maeve added, âI will truthfully answer all your questions about the keys.â
It might be easier to walk away. Go find some other ancient being to pester for the truth. Celaena breathed in and out, in and out. But Maeve had been thereâhad been there at the dawn of this world during the Valg wars. She had held the Wyrdkeys. She knew what they looked like, how they felt. Maybe she even knew where Brannon had hidden themâespecially the last, unnamed key. And if Celaena could find a way to steal the keys from the king, to destroy him, to stop his armies and free Eyllwe, even if she could find just one Wyrdkey ⦠âWhat manner of trainingââ
âPrince Rowan shall explain the specifics. For now, he will escort you to your chamber to rest.â
Celaena looked Maeve straight in her death-dealing eyes. âYou swear youâll tell me what I need to know?â
âI do not break my promises. And I have the feeling that you are unlike your mother in that regard, too.â
Bitch. Bitch, she wanted to hiss. But then Maeveâs eyes flicked to Celaenaâs left palm. She knew everything. Through whatever spies or power or guesswork, Maeve knew everything about her and the vow to Nehemia.
âTo what end?â Celaena asked softly, the anger and the fear dragging her down into an inescapable exhaustion. âYou want me to train only so I can make a spectacle of my talents?â
Maeve ran a moon-white finger down the owlâs head. âI wish you to become who you were born to be. To become queen.â
Become queen.
The words haunted Celaena that nightâkept her from sleeping, even though she was so exhausted she could have wept for the dark-eyed Silba to put her out of her misery. Queen. The word throbbed right along with the fresh split lip that also made sleeping very uncomfortable.
She could thank Rowan for that.
After Maeveâs command, Celaena hadnât bothered with good-byes before walking out. Rowan had only cleared the way because Maeve gave him a nod, and he followed Celaena into a narrow hallway that smelled of roasting meat and garlic. Her stomach grumbled, but sheâd probably hurl her guts up the second she swallowed anything. So she trailed Rowan down the corridor, down the stairs, each footstep alternating between iron-willed control and growing rage.
Left. Nehemia.
Right. You made a vow, and you will keep it, by whatever means necessary.
Left. Training. Queen.
Right. Bitch. Manipulative, cold-blooded, sadistic bitch.
Ahead of her, Rowanâs own steps were silent on the dark stones of the hallway. The torches hadnât been lit yet, and in the murky interior, she could hardly tell he was there. But she knewâif only because she could almost feel the ire radiating off him. Good. At least one other person wasnât particularly thrilled about this bargain.
Training. Training.
Her whole life had been training, from the moment she was born. Rowan could train her until he was blue in the face, and as long as it got her the answers about the Wyrdkeys, sheâd play along. But it didnât mean that, when the time came, she had to do anything. Certainly not take up her throne.
She didnât even have a throne, or a crown, or a court. Didnât want them. And she could bring down the king as Celaena Sardothien, thank you very much.
She tightened her fingers into fists.
They encountered no one as they descended a winding staircase and started down another corridor. Did the residents of this fortressâMistward, Maeve had called itâknow who was in that study upstairs? Maeve probably got off on terrifying them. Maybe she had all of themâhalf-breeds, sheâd called themâenslaved through some bargain or another. Disgusting. It was disgusting, to keep them here just for having a mixed heritage that was no fault of theirs.
Celaena finally opened up her mouth.
âYou must be very important to Her Immortal Majesty if she put you on nurse duty.â
âGiven your history, she didnât trust anyone but her best to keep you in line.â
Oh, the prince wanted to tangle. Whatever self-control heâd had on their trek to the fortress was hanging by a thread. Good.
âPlaying warrior in the woods doesnât seem like the greatest indicator of talent.â
âI fought on killing fields long before you, your parents, or your grand-uncle were even born.â
She bristledâexactly like he wanted. âWhoâs to fight here except birds and beasts?â
Silence. ThenââThe world is a far bigger and more dangerous place than you can imagine, girl. Consider yourself blessed to receive any trainingâto have the chance to prove yourself.â
âIâve seen plenty of this big and dangerous world, princeling.â
A soft, harsh laugh. âJust wait, Aelin.â
Another jab. And she let herself fall for it. âDonât call me that.â
âItâs your name. Iâm not going to call you anything different.â
She stepped in his path, getting right near those too-sharp canines. âNo one here can know who I am. Do you understand?â
His green eyes gleamed, animal-bright in the dark. âMy aunt has given me a harder task than she realizes, I think.â My aunt. Not our aunt.
And then she said one of the foulest things sheâd ever uttered in her life, bathing in the pure hate of it. âFae like you make me understand the King of Adarlanâs actions a bit more, I think.â
Faster than she could sense, faster than anything had a right to be, he punched her.
She shifted enough to keep her nose from shattering but took the blow on her mouth. She hit the wall, whacked her head, and tasted blood. Good.
He struck again with that immortal speedâor would have. But with equally unnerving swiftness, he halted his second blow before it fractured her jaw and snarled in her face, low and vicious.
Her breathing turned ragged as she purred, âDo it.â
He looked more interested in ripping out her throat than in talking, but he held the line heâd drawn. âWhy should I give you what you want?â
âYouâre just as useless as the rest of your brethren.â
He let out a soft, lethal laugh that raked claws down her temper. âIf youâre that desperate to eat stone, go ahead: Iâll let you try to land the next punch.â
She knew better than to listen. But there was such a roar in her blood that she could no longer see right, think right, breathe right. So she damned the consequences to hell as she swung.
Celaena hit nothing but airâair, and then his foot hooked behind hers in an efficient maneuver that sent her careening into the wall once more. Impossibleâheâd tripped her as if she was nothing more than a trembling novice.
He was now a few feet away, arms crossed. She spat blood and swore. He smirked. It was enough to send her hurtling for him again, to tackle or pummel or strangle him, she didnât know.
She caught his feint left, but when she dove right, he moved so swiftly that despite her lifetime of training, she crashed into a darkened brazier behind him. The clatter echoed through the too-quiet hall as she landed face-first on the stone floor, her teeth singing.
âLike I said,â Rowan sneered down at her, âyou have a lot to learn. About everything.â
Her lip already aching and swollen, she told him exactly what he could go do to himself.
He sauntered down the hall. âNext time you say anything like that,â he said without looking over his shoulder, âIâll have you chopping wood for a month.â
Fuming, hatred and shame already burning her face, Celaena got to her feet. He dumped her in a very small, very cold room that looked like little more than a prison cell, letting her take all of two steps inside before he said, âGive me your weapons.â
âWhy? And no.â Like hell sheâd give him her daggers.
In a swift movement, he grabbed a bucket of water from beside her door and tossed the contents onto the hall floor before holding it out. âGive me your weapons.â
Training with him would be absolutely wonderful. âTell me why.â
âI donât have to explain myself to you.â
âThen weâre going to have another brawl.â
His tattoo seeming impossibly darker in the dim hall, he stared at her beneath lowered brows as if to say, You call that a brawl? But instead he growled, âStarting at dawn, youâll earn your keep by helping in the kitchen. Unless you plan to murder everyone in the fortress, there is no need for you to be armed. Or to be armed while we train. So Iâll keep your daggers until youâve earned them back.â
Well, that felt familiar. âThe kitchen?â
He bared his teeth in a wicked grin. âEveryone pulls their weight here. Princesses included. No oneâs above some hard labor, least of all you.â
And didnât she have the scars to prove it. Not that sheâd tell him that. She didnât know what sheâd do if he learned about Endovier and mocked her for itâor pitied her. âSo my training includes being a scullery maid?â
âPart of it.â Again, she could have sworn she could read the unspoken words in his eyes: And Iâm going to savor every damn second of your misery.
âFor an old bastard, you certainly havenât bothered to learn manners at any point in your long existence.â Never mind that he looked to be in his late twenties.
âWhy should I waste flattery on a child whoâs already in love with herself ?â
âWeâre related, you know.â
âWeâve as much blood in common as I do with the fortress pig-boy.â
She felt her nostrils flare, and he shoved the bucket in her face. She almost knocked it right back into his, but decided that she didnât want a broken nose and began disarming herself.
Rowan counted every weapon she put in the bucket as though heâd already learned how many sheâd been carrying, even the hidden ones. Then he tucked the bucket against his side and slammed the door without so much as a good-bye beyond âBe ready at dawn.â
âBastard. Old stinking bastard,â she muttered, surveying the room.
A bed, a chamber pot, and a washbasin with icy water. Sheâd debated a bath, but opted to use the water to clean out her mouth and tend to her lip. She was starving, but going to find food involved meeting people. So once sheâd mended her lip as best she could with the supplies in her satchel, she tumbled into bed, reeking vagrant clothes and all, and lay there for several hours.
There was one small window with no coverings in her room. Celaena turned over in bed to look through it to the patch of stars above the trees surrounding the fortress.
Lashing out at Rowan like that, saying the things she did, trying to fight with him ⦠Sheâd deserved that punch. More than deserved it. If she was being honest with herself, she was barely passable as a human being these days. She fingered her split lip and winced.
She scanned the night sky until she located the Stag, the Lord of the North. The unmoving star atop the stagâs headâthe eternal crownâpointed the way to Terrasen. Sheâd been told that the great rulers of Terrasen turned into those bright stars so their people would never be aloneâand would always know the way home. She hadnât set foot there in ten years. While heâd been her master, Arobynn hadnât let her, and afterward she hadnât dared.
She had whispered the truth that day at Nehemiaâs grave. Sheâd been running for so long that she didnât know what it was to stand and fight. Celaena loosed a breath and rubbed her eyes.
What Maeve didnât understand, what she could never understand, was just how much that little princess in Terrasen had damned them a decade ago, even worse than Maeve herself had. She had damned them all, and then left the world to burn into ash and dust.
So Celaena turned away from the stars, nestling under the threadbare blanket against the frigid cold, and closed her eyes, trying to dream of a different world.
A world where she was no one at all.