Rhysand silently led Lucien to the suite heâd be occupying at the opposite end of the House of Wind. Cassian and I trailed behind, none of us speaking until my mate opened a set of onyx doors to reveal a sunny sitting room carved from more red stone. Beyond the wall of windows, the city flowed far below, the view stretching to the distant jagged mountains and glittering sea.
Rhys paused in the center of a midnight-blue handwoven rug and gestured to the sealed doors on his left. âBedroom.â He waved a lazy hand toward the single door on the opposite wall. âBathing room.â
Lucien surveyed it all with cool indifference. What he felt about Elain, what he planned to do ⦠I didnât want to ask.
âI assume youâll need clothes,â Rhys went on, nodding toward Lucienâs filthy jacket and pantsâwhich heâd worn for the past week while we scrambled through territories. Indeed, that was ⦠blood splattered in several spots. âAny preferences for attire?â
That drew Lucienâs attention, the male shifting enough to take in Rhysâto note Cassian and me lurking in the doorway. âIs there a cost?â
âIf youâre trying to say that you have no money, donât worryâthe clothes are complimentary.â Rhys gave him a half smile. âIf youâre trying to ask if this is some sort of bribe â¦â A shrug. âYou are a High Lordâs son. It would be bad manners not to house and clothe you in your time of need.â
Lucien bristled.
Stop baiting him, I shot down the bond.
But itâs so fun, came the purred reply.
Something had rattled him. Rattled Rhys enough that taunting Lucien was an easy way to take the edge off. I stepped closer, Cassian remaining behind me as I told Lucien, âWeâll be back for dinner in a few hours. Rest a whileâbathe. If you need anything, pull that rope by the door.â
Lucien stiffenedânot at what Iâd said, I realized, but at the tone. A hostess. But he asked, âWhat ofâElain?â
Your call, Rhys offered.
âI need to think about it,â I answered plainly. âUntil I figure out what to do with her, with Nesta, stay out of their way.â I added perhaps too tightly, âThis house is warded against winnowing, both from outside and within. Thereâs one way outâthe stairs to the city. It, too, is wardedâand guarded. Please donât do anything stupid.â
âSo am I a prisoner?â
I could feel the response simmering in Rhys, but I shook my head. âNo. But understand while you may be her mate, Elain is my sister. Iâll do what I must to protect her from further harm.â
âI would never hurt her.â
A bleak sort of honesty in his words.
I simply nodded, loosening a breath, and met Rhysandâs stare in silent urging.
My mate gave no indication of my wordless plea as he said, âYou are free to wander where you wish, into the city itself if you feel like braving the stairs, but there are two conditions: you are not to take either sister, and you are not to enter their floor. If you require a book from the library, you will ask the servants. If you wish to speak to Elain or Nesta, you will also ask the servants, who will ask us. If you disregard those rules, Iâll lock you in a room with Amren.â
Then Rhys turned away, hands sliding into his pockets as he offered his hooked elbow to me. I looped my arm through his, but said to Lucien, âWeâll see you in a few hours.â
We were almost to the door, Cassian already in the hall, when Lucien said to me, âThank you.â
I didnât dare ask him for what.
We flew right to Amrenâs loft, more than a few people waving as we soared over the rooftops of Velaris. My smile wasnât faked when I waved back to themâmy people. Rhys only held me a bit tighter while I did so, his own smile as bright as the sun on the Sidra.
Mor and Azriel were already waiting inside Amrenâs apartment, seated like scolded children on the threadbare divan against the wall while the dark-haired female flipped through the pages of books sprawled around her on the floor.
Mor gave me a grateful, relieved look as we entered, Azrielâs own face revealing nothing while he stood, keeping a careful, too-casual distance from her side. But it was Amren who said from the floor, âYou should kill Beron and his sons and set up the handsome one as High Lord of Autumn, self-imposed exile or no. It will make life easier.â
âIâll take that into consideration,â Rhys said, striding toward her while I remained with the others. If they were hanging back ⦠Amren had to be in some mood.
I blew out a breath. âWho else thinks itâs a terrible idea to leave the three of them up at the House of Wind?â
Cassian raised his hand as Rhys and Mor chuckled. The High Lordâs general said, âI give him an hour before he tries to see her.â
âThirty minutes,â Mor countered, sitting back down on the divan and crossing her legs.
I cringed. âI guarantee Nesta is now guarding Elain. I think she might honestly kill him if he so much as tries to touch her.â
âNot without training she wonât,â Cassian grumbled, tucking in his wings as he claimed the seat beside Mor that Azriel had vacated. The shadowsinger didnât so much as look at it. No, Azriel just walked to the wall beside Cassian and leaned against the wood paneling.
But Rhys and the others remained quiet enough that I knew to proceed carefully as I asked Cassian, âNesta spoke as if youâve been up at the House ⦠often. Youâve offered to train her?â
Cassianâs hazel eyes shuttered as he crossed a booted ankle over another, stretching his muscled legs before him. âI go up there every other day. Itâs good exercise for my wings.â Those wings shifted in emphasis. Not a scratch marred them.
âAnd?â
âAnd what you saw in the library is a pleasanter version of the conversation we always have.â
Morâs lips pressed into a thin line, as if she was trying her best not to say anything. Azriel was trying his best to shoot a warning stare at Mor to remind her to indeed keep her mouth shut. As if theyâd already discussed this. Many times.
âI donât blame her,â Cassian said, shrugging despite his words. âShe wasâviolated. Her body stopped belonging wholly to her.â His jaw clenched. Even Amren didnât dare say anything. âAnd I am going to peel the King of Hybernâs skin off his bones the next time I see him.â
His Siphons flickered in answer.
Rhys said casually, âIâm sure the king will thoroughly enjoy the experience.â
Cassian glowered. âI mean it.â
âOh, I have no doubt that you do.â Rhysâs violet eyes were dazzling in the dimness of the loft. âBut before you lose yourself in plans for revenge, do remember that we have a war to plan first.â
âAsshole.â
A corner of my mateâs mouth tugged upward. AndâRhys was goading him, working Cassian into a temper to keep that brittle edge of guilt from consuming him. The others letting him take on the task, likely having done it several times themselves these weeks. âI am most definitely that,â Rhys said, âbut the fact still remains that revenge is secondary to winning this war.â
Cassian opened his mouth as if heâd keep arguing, but Rhys peered at the books scattered on the lush carpet. âNothing?â he asked Amren.
âI donât know why you sent those two buffoonsââa narrowed glance toward Mor and Azrielââto monitor me.â So this was where Azriel had goneâright to the loft. To no doubt spare Mor from enduring Amren Duty alone. But Amrenâs tone ⦠cranky, yes, but perhaps a bit of a front, too. To banish that too-fragile gleam in Cassianâs eyes.
âWeâre not monitoring you,â Mor said, tapping her foot on the carpet. âWeâre monitoring the Book.â
And as she said it ⦠I felt it. Heard it.
Amren had placed the Book of Breathings on her nightstand.
A glass of old blood atop it.
I didnât know whether to laugh or cringe. The latter won out as the Book murmured, Hello, sweet-faced liar. Hello, princess withâ
âOh, be quiet,â Amren hissed toward the Book, whoâshut up. âOdious thing,â she muttered, and went back to the tome before her.
Rhys gave me a wry smile. âSince the two halves of the Book were joined back together, it has been ⦠known to speak every now and then.â
âWhat does it say?â
âUtter nonsense,â Amren spat, scowling at the Book. âIt just likes to hear itself talk. Like most of the people cramping up my apartment.â
Cassian smirked. âDid someone forget to feed Amren again?â
She pointed a warning finger at him without so much as looking up. âIs there a reason, Rhysand, why you dragged your yapping pack into my home?â
Her home was little more than a giant, converted attic, but none of us dared argue as Mor, Cassian, and Azriel finally came closer, forming a small circle around Amrenâs sprawl in the center of the room.
Rhys said to me, âThe information you got from Dagdan and Brannagh confirms what weâve been gathering ourselves while you were gone. Especially Hybernâs potential allies in other territoriesâon the continent.â
âVultures,â Mor muttered, and Cassian looked inclined to agree.
But RhysâRhys had indeed been spying, while Azriel had beenâ
Rhys snorted. âI can stay hidden, mate.â
I glared at him, but Azriel cut in. âHaving Hybernâs movements confirmed by you, Feyre, is what we needed.â
âWhy?â
Cassian crossed his arms. âWe barely stand a chance of surviving Hybernâs armies on our own. If armies from Vallahan, Montesere, and Rask join them â¦â He drew a line across his tan throat.
Mor elbowed him in the ribs. Cassian nudged her right back as Azriel shook his head at both of them, shadows coiling around the tips of his wings.
âAre those three territories ⦠that powerful?â Perhaps it was a foolish question, showing how little I knew of the faerie lands on the continentâ
âYes,â Azriel said, no judgment in his hazel eyes. âVallahan has the numbers, Montesere has the money, and Rask ⦠it is large enough to have both.â
âAnd we have no potential allies amongst the other overseas territories?â
Rhys pulled at a stray thread on the cuff of his black jacket. âNot ones that would sail here to help.â
My stomach turned. âWhat of Miryam and Drakon?â Heâd once refused to consider, butâ âYou fought for Miryam and Drakon centuries ago,â I said to Rhys. Heâd done a great deal more than that, if Jurian was to be believed. âPerhaps itâs time to call in that debt.â
But Rhys shook his head. âWe tried. Azriel went to Cretea.â The island where Miryam, Drakon, and their unified human and Fae peoples had secretly lived for the past five centuries.
âIt was abandoned,â Azriel said. âIn ruin. With no trace of what happened or where they went.â
âYou think Hybernââ
âThere was no sign of Hybern, or of any harm,â Mor cut in, her face taut. They had been her friends, tooâduring the War. Miryam, and Drakon, and the human queens who had gotten the Treaty signed. And it was worryâtrue, deep worryâthat guttered in her brown eyes. In all their eyes.
âThen do you think they heard about Hybern and ran?â I asked. Drakon had a winged legion, Rhys had once told me. If there was any chance of finding themâ
âThe Drakon and Miryam I knew wouldnât have runânot from this,â Rhys said.
Mor leaned forward, her golden hair spilling over her shoulders. âBut with Jurian now a player in this conflict ⦠Miryam and Drakon, whether they like it or not, have always been tied to him. I donât blame them for running, if he truly hunts them.â
Rhysâs face slackened for a heartbeat. âThat is what the King of Hybern has on Jurian,â he murmured. âWhy Jurian works for him.â
My brow furrowed.
âMiryam diedâa spear through her chest during that last battle at the sea,â Rhys explained. âShe bled out while she was carried to safety. But Drakon knew of a sacred, hidden island where an object of great and terrible power had been concealed. An object made by the Cauldron itself, legend claimed. He brought her there, to Creteaâused the item to resurrect her, make her immortal. As you were Made, Feyre.â
Amren had said itâmonths ago. That Miryam had been Made as I was.
Amren seemed to remember it, too, as she said, âThe King of Hybern must have promised Jurian to use the Cauldron to track the item. To where Miryam and Drakon now live. Perhaps they figured that outâand left as fast as they could.â
And for revenge, for that insane rage that hounded Jurian ⦠heâd do whatever the King of Hybern asked. So he could kill Miryam himself.
âBut where did they go?â I looked to Azriel, the shadowsinger still standing with preternatural stillness against the wall. âYou found no trace at all of where they might have vanished to?â
âNone,â Rhys answered for him. âWeâve sent messengers back sinceâto no avail.â
I rubbed at my face, sealing off that path of hope. âThen if they are not a possible ally ⦠How do we keep those other territories on the continent from joining with Hybernâfrom sending their armies here?â I winced. âThatâs our planâisnât it?â
Rhys smiled grimly. âIt is. One weâve been working on while you were away.â I waited, trying not to pace as Amrenâs silver eyes seemed to glow with amusement. âI looked at Hybern first. At its people. As best I could.â
Heâd gone to Hybernâ
Rhys smirked at the concern flaring across my face. âIâd hoped that Hybern might have some internal conflict to exploitâto get them to collapse from within. That its people might not want this war, might see it as costly and dangerous and unnecessary. But five hundred years on that island, with little trade, little opportunity ⦠Hybernâs people are hungry for change. Or rather ⦠a change back to the old days, when they had human slaves to do their work, when there were no barriers keeping them from what they now perceive as their right.â
Amren slammed shut the book sheâd been perusing. âFools.â She shook her head, inky hair swaying, as she scowled up at me. âHybernâs wealth has been dwindling for centuries. Most of their trade routes before the War dealt with the Southâwith the Black Land. But once it went to the humans ⦠We donât know if Hybernâs king deliberately failed to establish new trade routes and opportunities for his people in order to one day fuel this war, or if he was just that shortsighted and let everything fall apart. But for centuries now, Hybernâs people have been festering. Hybern let their resentment of their growing stagnation and poverty fester.â
âThere are many High Fae,â Mor said carefully, âwho believed before the War, and still believe now, that humans ⦠that they are property. There were many High Fae who knew nothing but privilege thanks to those slaves. And when that privilege was ripped away from them, when they were forced to leave their homelands or forced to make room for other High Fae and re-form territoriesâcreate new onesâabove that wall ⦠They have not forgotten that anger, even centuries later. Especially not in places like Hybern, where their territory and population remained mostly untouched by change. They were one of the few who did not have to yield any land to the wallâand did not yield any land to the Fae territories now looking for a new home. Isolated, growing poorer, with no slaves to do their labor ⦠Hybern has long viewed the days before the War as a golden era. And these centuries since as a dark age.â
I rubbed at my chest. âTheyâre all insane, to think that.â
Rhys nodded. âYesâthey certainly are. But donât forget that their king has encouraged these limited world views. He did not expand their trade routes, did not allow other territories to take any of his land and bring their cultures. He considered where things went wrong for the Loyalists in the War. How they ultimately yielded not from being overwhelmed but because they began arguing amongst themselves. Hybern has had a long, long while to think on those mistakes. And how to avoid them at any cost. So he made sure his people are completely for this war, completely for the idea of the wall coming down, because they think it will somehow restore this ⦠gilded vision of the past. Hybernâs people see their king and their armies not as conquerors, but as liberators of High Fae and those who stand with them.â
Nausea churned in my gut. âHow can anyone believe that?â
Azriel ran a scarred hand through his hair. âThatâs what weâve been learning. Listening in Hybern. And in territories like Rask and Montesere and Vallahan.â
âWeâre to be made an example of, girl,â Amren explained. âPrythian. We were among the fiercest defenders and negotiators of the Treaty. Hybern wants to claim Prythian not only to clear the path to the continent, but to make an example of what happens to High Fae territories that defend the Treaty.â
âBut surely other territories would protect it,â I said, scanning their faces.
âNot as many as weâd hoped,â Rhys admitted, wincing. âThere are manyâtoo manyâwho have also felt squashed and suffocated during these centuries. They want their old lands back beneath the wall, and the power and prosperity that came with it. Their vision of the past has been colored by five hundred years of struggling to adjust and thrive.â
âPerhaps we did them a disservice,â Mor mused, âin not sharing enough of our wealth, our territory. Perhaps we are to blame for allowing some of this to rot and fester.â
âThat remains to be discussed,â Amren said, waving a delicate hand. âThe point is that we are not facing an army hell-bent on destruction. They are hell-bent on what they believe is liberation. Of High Fae stifled by the wall, and what they believe still belongs to them.â
I swallowed. âSo how do the other territories play into itâthe three Hybern claims will ally with them?â I looked between Rhys and Azriel. âYou said you were ⦠over there?â
Rhys shrugged. âOver there, in Hybern, in the other territories â¦â He winked at my gaping mouth. âI had to keep myself busy to avoid missing you.â
Mor rolled her eyes. But it was Cassian who said, âWe canât afford to let those three territories join with Hybern. If they send armies to Prythian, weâre done.â
âSo what do we do?â
Rhys leaned against the carved post of Amrenâs bed. âWeâve been keeping them busy.â He jerked his chin to Azriel. âWe planted informationâtruth and lies and a blend of bothâfor them to find. And also scattered some of it among our old allies, who are now balking at supporting us.â Azrielâs smile was a slash of white. Lies and truthâthe shadowsinger and his spies had sowed them in foreign courts.
My brow narrowed. âYouâve been playing the territories on the continent off each other?â
âWeâve been making sure that theyâre kept busy with each other,â Cassian said, a hint of wicked humor glinting in his hazel eyes. âMaking sure that longtime enemies and rival-nations of Rask, Vallahan, and Montesere have suddenly received information that has them worried about being attacked. And raising their own defenses. Which in turn has made Rask, Vallahan, and Montesere start looking toward their own borders and not our own.â
âIf our allies from the War are too scared to come here to fight,â Mor said, folding her arms over her chest, âthen as long as theyâre keeping the others occupiedâkeeping them from sailing hereâwe donât care.â
I blinked at them. At Rhys.
Brilliant. Utterly brilliant, to keep them so focused and fearful of each other that they stayed away. âSo ⦠they wonât be coming?â
âWe can only pray,â Amren said. âAnd pray we deal with this fast enough that they donât figure out weâve played them all.â
âWhat of the human queens, though?â I chewed on the tip of my thumb. âThey have to be aware that no bargain with Hybern would ultimately work to their advantage.â
Mor braced her forearms on her thighs. âWho knows what Hybern promised themâlied about? He already granted them immortality through the Cauldron in exchange for their cooperation. If they were foolish enough to agree to it, then I donât doubt theyâve already thrown open the gates to him.â
âBut we donât know that for certain,â Amren countered. âAnd none of it explains why theyâve been so quietâlocked up in that palace.â
Rhys and Azriel shook their heads in silent confirmation.
I surveyed them, their fading amusement. âIt drives you mad, doesnât it, that no one has been able to get inside that palace.â
A low growl from both of them before Azriel muttered, âYou have no idea.â
Amren just clicked her tongue, her upswept eyes settling on me. âThose Hybern commanders were fools to reveal their plans in regard to breaking the wall. Or perhaps they knew the information would return to us, and their master wants us to stew.â
I angled my head. âYou mean shattering the wall through the holes already in it?â
A bob of her sharp chin as she gestured to the books around her. âItâs complex spell workâa loophole through the magic that binds the wall.â
âAnd it implies,â Mor said, frowning deeply, âthat something might be amiss with the Cauldron.â
I raised my brows, considering. âBecause the Cauldron should be able to bring that wall down on its own, right?â
âRight,â Rhysand said, striding to the Book on the nightstand. He didnât dare touch it. âWhy bother seeking out those holes to help the Cauldron when he could unleash its power and be done with it?â
âMaybe he used too much of its power transforming my sisters and those queens.â
âItâs likely,â Rhys said, stalking back to my side. âBut if heâs going to exploit those tears in the wall, we need to find a way to fix them before he can act.â
I asked Amren, âAre there spells to patch it up?â
âIâm looking,â she said through her teeth. âItâd help if someone dragged their ass to a library to do more research.â
âWe are at your disposal,â Cassian offered with a mock bow.
âI wasnât aware you could read,â Amren said sweetly.
âIt could be a foolâs errand,â Azriel cut in before Cassian could voice the retort dancing in his eyes. âTo get us to focus on the wall as a decoyâwhile he strikes from another direction.â
I grimaced at the Book. âWhy not just try to nullify the Cauldron again?â
âBecause it nearly killed you the last time,â Rhys said in a sort of calm, steady voice that told me enough: there was no way in hell heâd risk me attempting it again.
I straightened. âI wasnât prepared in Hybern. None of us were. If I tried againââ
Mor cut in. âIf you tried again, it might very well kill you. Not to mention, weâd have to actually get to the Cauldron, which isnât an option.â
âThe king,â Azriel clarified at my furrowed brow, âwonât allow the Cauldron out of his sight. And heâs rigged it with more spells and traps than the last time.â I opened my mouth to object, but the shadowsinger added, âWe looked into it. Itâs not a viable path.â
I believed himâthe stark honesty in those hazel eyes was confirmation enough that theyâd weighed it thoroughly. âWell, if itâs too risky to nullify the Cauldron,â I mused, âthen can I somehow fix the wall? If the wall was made by faeries coming together, and my very magic is a blend of so many â¦â
Amren considered in the silence that fell. âPerhaps. The relationship would be tenuous, but ⦠yes, perhaps you could patch it up. Though your sisters, directly forged by the Cauldron itself, might bear the sort of magic weââ
âMy sisters play no part in this.â
Another beat of silence, interrupted only by the rustle of Azrielâs wings.
âI asked them to help onceâand look what happened. I wonât risk them again.â
Amren snorted. âYou sound exactly like Tamlin.â
I felt the words like a blow.
Rhys slid a hand against my back, having appeared so fast I didnât see him move. But before he could reply, Mor said quietly, âDonât you ever say that sort of bullshit again, Amren.â
There was nothing on Morâs face beyond cold calmâfury.
Iâd never seen her look so ⦠terrifying. She had been furious with the mortal queens, but this ⦠This was the face of the High Lordâs third in command.
âIf youâre cranky because youâre hungry, then tell us,â Mor went on with that frozen quiet. âBut if you say anything like that again, I will throw you in the gods-damned Sidra.â
âIâd like to see you try.â
A little smile was Morâs only answer.
Amren slid her attention to me. âWe need your sistersâif not for this, then to convince others to join us, of the risk. Since any would-be ally might have some ⦠difficulty believing us after so many years of lies.â
âApologize,â said Mor.
âMor,â I murmured.
âApologize,â she hissed at Amren.
Amren said nothing.
Mor took a step toward her, and I said, âSheâs right.â
They both looked to me, brows raised.
I swallowed. âAmren is right.â I walked out of Rhysâs touchârealizing heâd kept silent to let me sort it out. Let me figure out how to deal with both of them, as family, but mostly as their High Lady.
Morâs face tightened, but I shook my head. âI canâask my sisters. See if they have any sort of power. See if theyâd be willing to ⦠talk to others about what they endured. But I wonât force them to help, if they do not wish to participate. The choice will be theirs.â I glanced at my mateâthe male who had always presented me with a choice not as a gift, but as my own gods-given right. Rhysâs violet eyes flickered in acknowledgment. âBut Iâll make our ⦠desperation clear.â
Amren huffed, hardly more than a bird of prey puffing its feathers.
âCompromise, Amren,â Rhys purred. âItâs called compromise.â
She ignored him. âIf you want to start convincing your sisters, get them out of the House. Being cooped up never helped anyone.â
Rhys said smoothly, âIâm not entirely sure Velaris is prepared for Nesta Archeron.â
âMy sisterâs not some feral animal,â I snapped.
Rhys recoiled a bit, the others suddenly finding the carpet, the divan, the books incredibly fascinating. âI didnât mean that.â
I didnât answer.
Mor frowned in disapproval at Rhys, who I felt watching me carefully, but asked me, âWhat of Elain?â
I shifted slightly, pushing past the words still hanging between me and Rhys. âI can ask, but ⦠she might not be ready to be around so many people.â I clarified, âShe was supposed to be married next week.â
âSo she keeps saying, over and over,â Amren grumbled.
I shot her a glare. âCareful.â Amren blinked up at me in surprise. But I went on, âSo, we need to find a way to patch up the wall before Hybern uses the Cauldron to break it. And fight this war before any other territories join Hybernâs assault. And eventually get the Cauldron itself. Anything else?â
Rhys said behind me, his own voice carefully casual, âThat covers it. As soon as a force can be assembled, we take on Hybern.â
âThe Illyrian legions are nearly ready,â Cassian said.
âNo,â Rhys said. âI mean a bigger force. A force not just from the Night Court, but from all of Prythian. Our only decent shot at finding allies in this war.â
None of us spoke, none of us moved as Rhys said simply, âTomorrow, invitations go out to every High Lord in Prythian. For a meeting in two weeks. Itâs time we see who stands with us. And make sure they understand the consequences if they donât.â