: Part 2 – Chapter 91
Kingdom of Ash
Dorian hadnât believed itâhadnât dared to hope for what he saw.
A foreign army, marching northward. An army heâd grown up studying. There were the khaganâs foot soldiers, and the Darghan cavalry. There were the legendary ruks, magnificent and proud, soaring above them in a sea of wings.
Heâd aimed as close to the head of the army as he could get, wondering which of the royals had come. Wondering if Chaol was with them. If the presence of this miraculous army meant his friend had succeeded against all odds.
The ruks had spied him then.
Chased him, and heâd begun signaling as heâd neared. Hoping theyâd pause.
But then heâd landed at the crossroads. And then heâd seen them. Seen her.
Aelin, galloping for him. Rowan at her side, Elide and the others with her.
Maeve had believed Aelin had headed to Terrasen. And here she was, with the khaganâs army.
Aelinâs smile faded the moment she grew close. As if she sensed what he bore.
âWhereâs Manon?â was all she asked.
âTerrasen,â he breathed, panting slightly. âAnd likely with the Crochans, if it went according to plan.â
She opened her mouth, eyes wide, but another rider came galloping down the road.
The world went quiet.
The approaching rider halted, anotherâa beautiful woman Dorian could only describe as goldenâright behind.
But Dorian stared at the rider before him. At the posture of the body, the commanding seat he possessed.
And as Chaol Westfall dismounted and ran the last few feet toward Dorian, the King of Adarlan wept.
Chaol didnât hide his tears, the shaking that overtook him as he collided with Dorian and embraced his king.
No one said a word, though Chaol knew they were all gathered. Knew Yrene stood behind him, crying with them.
He just held his friend, his brother.
âI knew youâd do it,â Dorian said, voice raw. âI knew youâd find a way. For all of it.â
The army. The fact that he was now standing.
Chaol only gripped Dorian tighter. âYou have one hell of a story to tell yourself.â
Dorian pulled back, his face solemn.
A story, Chaol realized, that might not be as happy as his own.
Yet before whatever doom Dorian carried could fall upon them, Chaol gestured to where Yrene had dismounted and now wiped away her tears.
âThe woman responsible for this,â Chaol said, motioning to his standing, his walking, to the army stretching down the road. âYrene Towers. A healer at the Torre Cesme. And my wife.â
Yrene bowed, and Chaol could have sworn a flicker of sorrow darkened Dorianâs eyes. But then his king was taking Yreneâs hands, lifting her from her bow. And though that sorrow still edged his smile, Dorian said to her, âThank you.â
Yrene went scarlet. âIâve heard so much about you, Your Majesty.â
Dorian only winked, a ghost of the man heâd been before. âAll bad things, I hope.â
Yrene laughed, and the joy on her faceâthe joy that Chaol knew was for both of themâmade him love her all over again.
âI have always wanted a sister,â Dorian said, and leaned to kiss Yrene on either cheek. âWelcome to Adarlan, Lady.â
Yreneâs smile turned softerâdeeper, and she laid a hand on her abdomen. âThen you shall be pleased to hear that youâll soon be an uncle.â
Dorian whirled to him. Chaol nodded, unable to find the words to convey what flooded his heart.
But Dorianâs smile dimmed as he faced where Aelin now leaned against a tree, Rowan and Elide beside her.
âI know,â Aelin said, and Chaol knew she didnât mean about the pregnancy.
Dorian closed his eyes, and Chaol laid a hand on his kingâs shoulder at whatever burden he was about to reveal.
âI retrieved the third from Morath,â Dorian said.
Chaolâs knees buckled, and Yrene was instantly there, an arm around his waist.
The Wyrdkeys.
Chaol asked Dorian, âYou have all three now?â
Dorian nodded once.
A look from Rowan had his cadre peeling off to make sure none from the army got close enough to hear.
âI snuck into Morath to get the third,â Dorian said.
âHoly gods,â Aelin breathed. Chaol just blinked.
âThat was the easy part,â Dorian said, paling. The khaganate royals emerged from the ranks, and Dorian smiled at Nesryn. Then nodded to the royals. Introductions would come later.
âMaeve was there,â Dorian said to Aelin.
Flame danced at Aelinâs fingertips as she rested her hand atop Goldryn. The fire seemed to sink into the blade, the ruby flickering. âI know,â she said quietly.
Dorianâs brows rose. Aelin just shook her head, motioning him to continue as the cadre returned.
âMaeve discovered my presence, and â¦â Dorian sighed, and the whole story came tumbling out.
When he was done, Chaol was glad Yrene had kept her arm around his waist. Silence fell, thick and taut. Dorian had destroyed Morath.
âI have little doubt,â Dorian admitted, âthat both Erawan and Maeve survived Morathâs collapsing. It likely only served to enrage them.â
It didnât stop Chaol from marveling at his friend, the others gawking.
âWell done,â Lorcan said, scanning the king from head to toe. âWell done indeed.â
Aelin let out an impressed whistle. âI wish I could have seen it,â she said to Dorian, shaking her head. Then she turned to Rowan. âYour uncle and Essar came through, then. They kicked Maeve to the curb.â
The Fae Prince snorted. âYou said your letter was strongly worded. I should have believed you.â Aelin sketched a bow. Chaol hadnât the faintest idea what they were talking about, but Rowan went on, âSo if Maeve cannot be Queen of the Fae, she will find herself another throne.â
âBitch,â Fenrys spat. Chaol was inclined to agree.
âOur worst fears have been confirmed, then,â Prince Sartaq said, glancing to his siblings. âA Valg king and queen united.â A nod toward Elide. âYour uncle did not lie.â
âMaeve has no army now,â Dorian reminded them. âJust her power.â
Nesryn cringed. âThe hybrids she created with the princesses might be disaster enough.â
Chaol glanced to Yrene, the woman who held the greatest weapon against the Valg within her own body.
âWhen did you leave Morath?â Rowan asked.
âThree days ago,â Dorian said.
Rowan turned to Aelin, ashen-faced as she remained leaning against the tree. Chaol wondered if she did so only because her own legs might not be able to support her. âThen at least we know that Erawan has not yet come to Terrasen.â
âHis Ironteeth host went ahead of him,â Dorian said.
âWe know,â Chaol said. âTheyâre already at Orynth.â
Dorian shook his head. âThatâs impossible. They left soon after I did. Iâm surprised you didnât see them flying past in the Ruhnns.â
Silence.
âThe full Ironteeth host isnât yet at Orynth,â Aelin said softly. Too softly.
âI counted over a thousand in the host that I flew with,â Dorian said. âMany bore soldiers with themâall Valg.â
Chaol closed his eyes, and Yreneâs arm tightened around him in silent comfort.
âWe knew the rukhin would be outnumbered anyway,â Nesryn said.
âThere wonât be anything left of Terrasen for the rukhin to defend,â Prince Kashin said, rubbing his jaw. âEven if the Crochans arrived before us.â
The Queen of Terrasen pushed off from the tree at last. âWe have two choices, then,â she said, her voice unwavering despite the hell that swept upon them. âWe continue north, as fast as we can. See what there is to fight when we arrive at Terrasen. I might be able to bring down a good number of those wyverns.â
âAnd the other option?â Princess Hasar asked.
Aelinâs face was stark. âWe have the three Wyrdkeys. We have me. I can end this now. Or at least take Erawan out of play before he can find us, steal those keys back, and rule over this world and all others.â
Rowan started, shaking his head. But Aelin held up a hand. And even the Fae Prince stood down. âItâs not my choice alone.â
And Chaol realized that it was indeed a queen standing before them, not the assassin heâd dragged out of a salt mine a few miles down the road. Not even the woman heâd seen in Rifthold.
Dorian squared his shoulders. âThe choice is also mine.â
Slowly, so slowly, Aelin looked at him. Chaol braced himself. Her voice was deadly soft as she said to Dorian, âYou retrieved the third key. Your role in this is done.â
âLike hell it is,â Dorian said, sapphire eyes flashing. âThe same blood, the same debt, flows in my veins.â
Chaolâs hands curled at his sides as he fought to keep his mouth shut. Rowan seemed to be doing the same as the two rulers squared off.
Aelinâs face remained unmovedâdistant. âYouâre so eager to die?â
Dorian didnât retreat. âAre you?â
Silence. Utter silence in the clearing.
Then Aelin shrugged, as if the weight of entire worlds didnât hang in the balance. âRegardless of who will put the keys back into the gate, this is a fate that belongs to all of us. So all of us should decide.â Her chin lifted. âDo we continue on to war, hope we make it to Orynth in time, and then destroy the keys? Or do we destroy the keys now, and then you continue northward.â A pause, horrible and unbearable. âWithout me.â
Rowan was shaking, whether with restraint or in dread, Chaol couldnât tell.
Aelin said, unwavering and calm, âI would like to put it to a vote.â
A vote.
Rowan had never heard of anything so absurd.
Even as part of him glowed with pride that she had chosen now, here, as the moment when that new world she had promised would rise.
A world in which a few did not hold all the power, but many. Beginning with this, this most vital choice. This unbearable fate.
All of them had moved farther down the road, and it was not lost on Rowan that they stood at a crossroads. Or that Dorian and Aelin and Chaol stood in the heart of that crossroads, merely a few miles from the salt mines. Where so much of this had begun, just over a year ago.
There was a dull roar in Rowanâs ears as the debate raged.
He knew he should fall on his knees and thank Dorian for retrieving the third key. But he hated the king all the same.
He hated this path theyâd been put on, a thousand years ago. Hated that this choice lay before them, when they had already fought so much, given so much.
Prince Kashin was saying, âWe march on a hundred thousand enemy troops, possibly more. That number will not change when the Wyrdgate is closed. We will need the Fire-Bringer to cut through them.â
Princess Hasar shook her head. âBut there is the possibility of that armyâs collapse should Erawan vanish. Cut off the beastâs head and the body could die.â
âThatâs a big risk to take,â Chaol said, his jaw tight. âErawanâs removal from all this might help, or it might not. An enemy army this big, full of Valg who might be eager to fill his place, could be impossible to stop at this point.â
âThen why not use the keys?â Nesryn asked. âWhy not bring the keys north and use them, destroy the army, andââ
âThe keys cannot be wielded,â Dorian cut in. âNot without destroying the bearer. Weâre not entirely sure a mortal could withstand the power.â He nodded toward Aelin, silent and watchful while it took all of Rowanâs training not to hurl up his guts. âJust putting them back in the gate requires everything.â He added tightly, âFrom one of us.â
Rowan knew he should be arguing against this, should be bellowing.
Dorian went on, âI should do it.â
âNo.â The word broke from Chaolâand Aelin. Her first word since this debate had begun.
But it was Fenrys who asked Chaol, voice deadly soft, âYouâd rather my queen die than your king?â
Chaol stiffened. âIâd rather neither of my friends die. Iâd rather none of this happen.â
Before Fenrys could snarl his answer, Yrene cut in. âSo when the Lock is forged and the Wyrdgate is sealed, the gods will be gone?â
âGood riddance,â Fenrys muttered.
But Yrene stiffened at the casual dismissal, and put a hand over her heart. âI love Silba. Dearly. When she is gone from this world, will my powers cease to exist?â She gestured to the gathered group.
âDoubtful,â Dorian said. âThat cost, at least, was never demanded.â
âWhat of the other gods in this world?â Nesryn asked, frowning. âThe thirty-six of the khaganate. Are they not gods as well? Will they be sent away, or just these twelve?â
âPerhaps our gods are of a different sort,â Princess Hasar mused.
âCan they not help us, then?â Yrene asked, sorrow for the goddess who had blessed her still darkening her golden eyes. âCan they not intervene?â
âThere are indeed other forces at work in this world,â Dorian said, touching Damarisâs hilt. The god of truthâthatâs who had blessed Gavinâs sword. âBut I think if those forces had been able to aid us in this manner, they would have done so already.â
Aelin tapped her foot on the ground. âExpecting divine handouts is a waste of our time. And not the topic at hand.â She fixed her burning stare on Dorian. âWe are also not debating who shall pay the cost.â
âWhy.â Rowanâs low question was out before he could halt it.
Slowly, his mate turned toward him. âBecause weâre not.â Sharp, icy words. She cut Dorian a look, and the King of Adarlan opened his mouth. âWeâre not,â she snarled.
Dorian opened his mouth again, but Rowan caught his eye. Held his stare and let him read the words there. Later. We shall debate this later.
Whether Aelin noted their silent conversation, whether she beheld Dorianâs subtle nod, she didnât let on. She only said, âWe donât have time to waste on endless debate.â
Lorcan nodded. âEvery moment we have all three keys is a risk of Erawan finding us, and finally gaining what he seeks. Or Maeve,â he added, frowning. âBut even with that, I would go northâlet Aelin put a dent in Morathâs legions.â
âBe objective,â Aelin growled. She surveyed them all. âPretend you do not know me. Pretend I am no one, and nothing to you. Pretend I am a weapon. Do you use me now, or later?â
âYou are not no one, though,â Elide said quietly. âNot to a good many people.â
âThe keys go back in the gate,â Aelin said a bit coldly. âAt some point or another. And I go with them. We are deciding whether that is now, or in a few weeks.â
Rowan couldnât bear it. To hear another word. âNo.â
Everyone halted once more.
Aelin bared her teeth. âNot doing anything isnât an option.â
âWe hide them again,â Rowan said. âHe lost them for thousands of years. We can do it again.â He pointed to Yrene. âShe could destroy him all on her own.â
âThat is not an option,â Aelin growled. âYrene is with childââ
âI can do it,â Yrene said, stepping from Chaolâs side. âIf thereâs a way, I could do it. See if the other healers could helpââ
âThere will be Valg by the thousands for you to destroy or save, Lady Westfall,â Aelin said with that same cold. âErawan could slaughter you before you even get the chance to touch him.â
âWhy are you allowed to give up your life for this, and no one else?â Yrene challenged.
âI am not the one carrying a child within me.â
Yrene blinked slowly. âHafiza might be able toââ
âI will not play a game of what-ifs and mights,â Aelin said, in a tone that Rowan had heard so rarely. That queenâs tone. âWe vote. Now. Do we put the keys back in the gate immediately, or continue to Terrasen and then do it if we are able to stop that army?â
âErawan can be stopped,â Yrene pushed, unfazed by the queenâs words. Unafraid of her wrath. âI know he can. Without the keys, we can stop him.â
Rowan wanted to believe her. Wanted more than anything heâd ever desired in his life to believe Yrene Westfall. Chaol, glancing at Dorian, seemed inclined to do the same.
But Aelin pointed at Princess Hasar. âHow do you vote?â
Hasar held Aelinâs stare. Considered for a moment. âI vote to do it now.â
Aelin just pointed to Dorian. âYou?â
Dorian tensed, the unfinished debate still raging in his face. But he said, âDo it now.â
Rowan closed his eyes. Barely heard the other rulers and their allies as they gave their replies. He walked to the edge of the trees, prepared to run if he began to vomit.
Then Aelin said, âYouâre last, Rowan.â
âI vote no. Not now, not ever.â
Her eyes were cold, distant. The way theyâd been in Mistward.
âItâs decided, then,â Chaol said quietly. Sadly.
âAt dawn, the Lock will be forged and the keys go back into the gate,â Dorian finished.
Rowan just stared and stared at his mate. His reason for breathing.
Elide asked softly, âWhat is your vote, Aelin?â
Aelin tore her eyes from Rowan, and he felt the absence of that stare like a frozen wind as she said, âIt doesnât matter.â