: Part 2 – Chapter 101
Kingdom of Ash
Human no more.
Aelinâs breath rasped in her earsâher permanently arched, immortal earsâwith each step back toward the camped army. Rowan remained at her side, a hand around her waist.
He hadnât let go of her once. Not once, since sheâd come back.
Since sheâd walked through worlds.
She could see them still. Even walking in silence under the trees, the darkness yielding toward the grayish light before dawn, she could see each and every one of those worlds sheâd broken through.
Perhaps sheâd never stop seeing them. Perhaps she alone in this world and all others knew what lay beyond the invisible walls separating them. How much life dwelled and thrived. Loved and hated and struggled to claw out a living.
So many worlds. More than she could contemplate. Would her dreams forever be haunted by them? To have glimpsed them, but been unable to exploreâwould that longing take root?
Oakwaldâs branches formed a skeletal lattice overhead. Bars of a cage.
As her body, and this world, might be.
She shook off the thought. She had livedâlived, when she should have died. Even if her mortal self ⦠that had been killed. Melted away.
The outer edges of the camp neared, and Aelin peered down at her hands. Coldâthat was a trace of cold now biting into them.
Altered in every way.
Dorian said as they approached the first of the rukhin, âWhat are you going to tell them?â
The first words any of them had spoken since theyâd begun the trek back here.
âThe truth,â Aelin said.
She supposed it was all she had to offer them, after what sheâd done.
She said to Dorian, âIâm sorryâabout your father.â
The chill wind brushed the strands of Dorianâs hair off his brow. âSo am I,â he said, resting a hand atop Damarisâs hilt.
At his side, Chaol kept silent, though he glanced at the king every now and then. Heâd look out for Dorian. As he always had, Aelin supposed.
They passed the first of the ruks, the birds eyeing them, and found Lorcan, Fenrys, Gavriel, and Elide waiting by the edge of the tents.
Chaol and Dorian murmured something about gathering the other royals, and peeled away.
Aelin remained close to Rowan as they approached their court. Fenrys scanned her from head to toe, nostrils flaring as he scented her. He staggered a step closer, horror creeping across his face. Gavriel only paled.
Elide gasped. âYou did it, didnât you?â
But it was Lorcan who answered, stiffening, as if sensing the change that had come over her, âYouâyouâre not human.â
Rowan snarled in warning. Aelin just looked at them, the people whoâd given so much and chosen to follow her here, their doom still remaining. To succeed, and yet to utterly fail.
Erawan remained. His army remained.
And there would be no Fire-Bringer, no Wyrdkeys, no gods to assist them.
âTheyâre gone?â Elide asked softly.
Aelin nodded. Sheâd explain later. Explain it to all of them.
God-killer. Thatâs what she was. A god-killer. She didnât regret it. Not one bit.
Elide asked Lorcan, âDo youâdo you feel any different?â The lack of the gods whoâd watched over them.
Lorcan peered up at the trees overhead, as if reading the answer in their entangled branches. As if searching for Hellas there. âNo,â he admitted.
âWhat does it mean,â Gavriel mused, the first rays of sun beginning to gild his golden hair, âfor them to be gone? Is there a hell-realm whose throne now sits vacant?â
âItâs too early for that sort of philosophical bullshit,â Fenrys said, and offered Aelin a half smile that didnât quite meet his eyes. Reproach lay thereânot for her choice, but in not telling them. Yet he still tried to make light of it.
Doomedâthat lovely, wolfish grin might be in its final days of existence.
They might all be in their last days of existence now. Because of her.
Rowan read it in her eyes, her face. His hand tightened on her waist. âLetâs find the others.â
Standing inside one of the khaganâs fine war tents, Dorian held his hands out before a fire of his own making and winced. âThat meeting could have gone better.â
Chaol, seated across the fire, Yrene in his lap, toyed with the end of his wifeâs braid. âIt really could have.â
Yrene frowned. âI donât know how she didnât walk out and leave everyone to rot. I would have.â
âNever underestimate the power of guilt when it comes to Aelin Galathynius,â Dorian said, and sighed. The fire heâd summoned fluttered.
âShe sealed the Wyrdgate.â Yrene scowled. âThe least they could do is be grateful for it.â
âOh, I have no doubt they are,â Chaol said, frowning now as well. âBut the fact remains that Aelin promised one thing, and did the opposite.â
Indeed. Dorian didnât quite know what to think of Aelinâs choice. Or that sheâd even told them about itâabout trading Erawan for Elena. The gods betraying her in turn.
And then Aelin destroying them for it.
âTypical,â Dorian said, trying for humor and failing. Some part of him still felt as if he were in that place-of-places.
Especially when some part of him had been given up.
The magic that had felt bottomless only yesterday now had a very real, very solid stopping point. A mighty gift, yes, but he did not think heâd ever again be capable of shattering glass castles or enemy strongholds.
He hadnât yet decided whether it was a relief.
It was more power, at least, than Aelin had been left with. Gifted with, it sounded like. Aelin had burned through every ember of her own magic. What she now possessed was all that remained of what Mala had given her to seal the gateâto punish the gods who had betrayed them both.
The idea of it still made Dorian queasy. And the memory of Aelin choosing to throw him out of that non-place still made him grind his teeth. Not at her choice, but that his fatherâ
Heâd think about his father later. Never.
His nameless father, who had come for him in the end.
Chaol hadnât asked about it, hadnât pushed. And Dorian knew that whenever he was ready to talk about it, his friend would be waiting.
Chaol said, âAelin didnât kill Erawan. But at least Erawan can never bring over his brothers. Or use the keys to destroy us all. We have that. Sheâyou both did that.â
There would be no more collars. No more rooms beneath a dark fortress to hold them.
Yrene ran her fingers through Chaolâs brown hair, and Dorian tried to fight the ache in his chest at the sight. At the love that flowed so freely between them.
He didnât resent Chaol for his happiness. But it didnât stop the sharp slicing in his chest every time he saw them. Every time he saw the Torre healers, and wished Sorscha had found them.
âSo the world was only partly saved,â Yrene said. âBetter than nothing.â
Dorian smiled at that. He adored his friendâs wife already. Likely would have married her, too, if heâd had the chance.
Even if his thoughts still drifted northwardâto a golden-eyed witch who walked with death beside her and did not fear it. Did she think of him? Wonder what had become of him in Morath?
âAelin and I still have magic,â Dorian said. âNot like it was before, but we still have it. Weâre not entirely helpless.â
âEnough to take on Erawan?â Chaol said, his bronze eyes wary. Well aware of the answer. âAnd Maeve?â
âWeâll have to figure out a way,â Dorian said. He prayed it was true.
But there were no gods left to pray to at all.
Elide kept one eye on Aelin while they washed themselves in the queenâs tent. One eye on the deliciously warm water that had been brought in.
And kept warm by the woman in the tub beside her own.
As if in defiance of the horrible meeting theyâd had with the khaganate royals upon Aelinâs unexpected return.
Triumphant. But only in some regards.
One threat defeated. The other fumbled.
Aelin had hid it well, but the queen had her tells, too. Her utter stillnessâthe predatory angle of her head. The former had been present this morning. Utter stillness while sheâd been questioned, criticized, shouted at.
The queen had not been this quiet since the day sheâd escaped Maeve.
And it was not trauma that bowed her head, but guilt. Dread. Shame.
Nearly shoulder-deep in the high, long tubs, Elide had been the one to suggest a bath. To give Prince Rowan a chance to fly high and wide and take some of the edge off his temper. To give Aelin a moment to settle herself.
Sheâd planned to bathe this morning anyway. Though sheâd imagined a different partner in the bath beside hers.
Not that Lorcan knew that. Heâd only kissed her temple before striding off into the morningâto join Fenrys and Gavriel in readying the army to move out. Keep plunging northward.
Aelin scrubbed at her long hair, the flowing mass of it draped over her body. In the light of the braziers, the tattoos on the queenâs back seemed to flow like a living black river.
âSo your magic is still there?â Elide blurted.
Aelin slid turquoise eyes over to her. âIs your water warm?â
Elide snorted, dragging her fingers through the water. âYes.â
âYou wish to know how much, exactly.â
âAm I allowed to know?â
âI wasnât lying in the meeting,â Aelin said, voice still hollow. Sheâd stood there and taken every shouted question from Princess Hasar, every frown of disapproval from Prince Sartaq. âItâs â¦â She lifted her arms, and positioned her hands in the air above each other, a foot of space between them. âHereâs where the bottom was before,â she said, wriggling her lower fingers. She lifted her bottom hand until it hovered two inches from her top hand. âHereâs where it is now.â
âYouâve tested it?â
âI can feel it.â Those turquoise eyes, despite all sheâd done, were heavy. Solemn. âIâve never felt a bottom before. Felt it without having to look for it.â Aelin dunked her sudsy scalp in the water, scrubbing free the bubbles and oils. âNot so impressive, is it?â
âI never cared if you had magic or not.â
âWhy? Everyone else did.â A flat question. Yes, when theyâd been children, so many had feared what manner of power Aelin possessed. What sheâd grow into.
âWho you are isnât your magic,â Elide said simply.
âIsnât it?â Aelin rested her head on the back of the tub. âI liked my magic. Loved it.â
âAnd being human?â Elide knew she shouldnât have dared ask, but it slipped out.
Aelin glanced sidelong at her. âAm I still human, deep down, without a human body to possess?â
Elide considered. âI suppose youâre the only person who can decide that.â
Aelin hummed, dunking under the water again.
When she emerged, Elide asked, âAre you afraid? Of facing Erawan in battle?â
Aelin hugged her knees, her tattoo flexing across her back. She was quiet for a long while.
âI am afraid of not reaching Orynth in time,â she said at last. âIf Erawan chooses to drag his carcass up there to fight me, Iâll deal with it then.â
âAnd Maeve? What if she arrives with Erawan, too?â
But Elide knew the answer. They would die. All of them.
There had to be some wayâsome way to defeat both of them. She supposed Anneith would be of no help now. And perhaps it was time for her to rely upon herself anyway. Even if the timing could have been far better.
âSo many questions, Lady of Perranth.â
Elide blushed, and reached for the soap, scrubbing her arms down. âSorry.â
âDo you now see why I didnât have you take the blood oath?â
âThe Fae males challenge you all the time.â
âYes, but I like having you not bound to me.â A soft sigh. âI didnât plan for any of this.â
âFor what?â
âTo survive the Lock. The gate. To actually have to ⦠rule. To live. Iâm in uncharted territory, it seems.â
Elide considered. Then pulled the golden ring from her finger. Silbaâs ringânot Malaâs.
âHere,â she said, extending the ring between their tubs, suds dripping off her fingers.
Aelin blinked at the ring. âWhy?â
âBecause between the two of us, youâre more likely to face Erawan or Maeve.â
Aelin didnât reach for it. âIâd rather you keep it.â
âAnd Iâd rather you have it,â Elide challenged, holding the queenâs stare. She asked softly, âHavenât you given enough, Aelin? Wonât you let one of us do something for you?â
Aelin glanced down to the ring. âI failed. You realize that, donât you?â
âYou put the keys back in the gate. That is not failure. And even if you had failed in that, I would give this ring to you.â
âI owe it to your mother to see that you survive this.â
Elideâs chest tightened. âYou owe it to my mother to live, Aelin.â She leaned closer, practically pushing the ring into Aelinâs face. âTake it. If not for me, then for her.â
Aelin stared at the ring again. And then took it.
Elide tried not to sigh as the queen slid it onto her finger.
âThank you,â Aelin murmured.
Elide was about to answer when the tent flaps opened, icy air howling inâalong with Borte. âYou didnât invite me for a bath?â the rukhin asked, frowning dramatically at the queen.
Aelinâs lips curved upward. âI thought rukhin were too tough for baths.â
âDo you see how nice the men keep their hair? You think that doesnât imply an obsession with cleanliness?â Borte strode across the royal tent and plopped onto the stool beside the queenâs tub. Not at all seeming to care that the queen or Elide were naked.
It took all of Elideâs will not to cover herself up. At least with Aelin in the adjacent tub, the lip of the bath was high enough to offer them privacy. But with Borte sitting above them like thisâ
âHere are my thoughts,â Borte declared, flicking the end of one of her braids.
Aelin smiled slightly.
âHasar is cranky and cold. Sartaq is used to these conditions and doesnât care. Kashin is trying to make the best of it, because heâs so damned nice, but theyâre all just a little nervous that weâre marching on a hundred thousand soldiers, potentially more on the way, and that Erawan is not out of commission. Neither is Maeve. So theyâre pissed. They like you, but theyâre pissed.â
âIâd gathered as much,â Aelin said drily, âwhen Hasar called me a stupid cow.â
It had taken all of Elideâs restraint not to lunge for the princess. And from the growl that had come from the Fae males, even Lorcan, gods above, she knew it had been just as difficult for them.
Aelin had only inclined her head to the princess and smiled. Just as she was smiling now.
Borte waved off Aelinâs words. âHasar calls everyone a stupid cow. Youâre in good company.â Another smile from Aelin at that. âBut Iâm not here to talk about that. I want to talk about you and me.â
âMy favorite subject,â Aelin said, chuckling slightly.
Borte grinned. âYouâre alive. You made it. We all thought youâd be dead.â She drew a line across her neck for emphasis, and Elide cringed. âSartaq is probably going to have me leading one of the flanks into battle, but Iâve done that. Been good at that.â That grin widened. âI want to lead your flank.â
âI donât have a flank.â
âThen who shall you ride with into battle?â
âI hadnât gotten that far,â Aelin said, lifting a brow. âSince I expected to be dead.â
âWell, when you do, expect me to be in the skies above you. Iâd hate for the battle to be dull.â
Only the fierce-eyed rukhin would have the nerve to call marching on a hundred thousand soldiers dull.
But before Aelin could say anything, or Elide could ask Borte whether the ruks were ready against the wyverns, the ruk rider was gone.
When Elide looked to Aelin, the queenâs face was somber.
Aelin nodded toward the tent flaps. âItâs snowing.â
âItâs been snowing with little rest for days now.â
Aelinâs swallow was audible. âItâs a northern snow.â
The storm slammed into the camp, so fierce that Nesryn and Sartaq had given the ruks orders to hunker down for the day and night.
As if crossing into Terrasen days earlier had officially put them into brutal winter.
âWe keep going north,â Kashin was saying, lounging by the fire in Hasarâs sprawling tent.
âLike there is another option,â Hasar snipped, sipping from her mulled wine. âWeâve come this far. We might as well go all the way to Orynth.â
Nesryn, seated on a low sofa with Sartaq, still wondered what, exactly, she was doing in these meetings. Wondered at the fact that she sat with the royal siblings, the Heir to the khaganate at her side.
Empress. The word seemed to hang over her every breath, every movement.
Sartaq said, âOur people have faced odds like this before. Weâll face them again.â
Indeed, Sartaq had stayed up long into the night these weeks reading the accounts and journals of khaganate warriors and leaders from generations past. Theyâd brought a trunk of them from the khaganateâfor this reason. Most Sartaq had already read, heâd told her. But it never hurt to refresh oneâs mind.
If it bought them a shot against a hundred thousand soldiers, she wouldnât complain.
âWe wonât be facing them at all if this storm doesnât let up,â Hasar said, frowning toward her sealed tent flaps. âWhen I return to Antica, I am never leaving again.â
âNo taste for adventure, sister?â Kashin smiled faintly.
âNot when itâs in a frozen hell,â Hasar grumbled.
Nesryn huffed a soft laugh, and Sartaq slipped his arm around her shoulders. A casual, careless bit of contact.
âWe keep going,â Sartaq said. âAll the way to the walls of Orynth. We swore as much, and we do not renege on our promises.â
Nesryn would have fallen in love with him for that statement alone. She leaned into him, savoring his warmth, in silent thanks.
âThen let us pray,â Kashin said, âthat this storm does not slow us so much that thereâs nothing left of Orynth to defend.â