The Assassin’s Blade: Novella 3 – Chapter 5
The Assassin’s Blade: The Throne of Glass Prequel Novellas
Celaena lay on her cloak, trying to imagine that the sand was her down mattress in Rifthold, and that she wasnât completely exposed to the elements in the middle of the desert. The last thing she needed was to wake up with a scorpion in her hair. Or worse.
She flipped onto her side, cradling her head in the nook of her arm.
âCanât sleep?â Ansel asked from a few feet away. Celaena tried not to growl. Theyâd spent the entire day trudging across the sand, stopping only at midday to sleep under their cloaks and avoid the mind-crisping glare of the sun.
And a dinner of dates and bread hadnât been exactly filling, either. But Ansel had wanted to travel light, and said that they could pick up more food once they got to Xandria tomorrow afternoon. When Celaena complained about that, Ansel just told her that she should be grateful it wasnât sandstorm season.
âIâve got sand in every crevice of my body,â Celaena muttered, squirming as she felt it grind against her skin. How in hell had sand gotten inside her clothes? Her white tunic and pants were layered enough that she couldnât even find her skin beneath.
âAre you sure youâre Celaena Sardothien? Because I donât think sheâd actually be this fussy. I bet sheâs used to roughing it.â
âIâm plenty used to roughing it,â Celaena said, her words sucked into the dunes rising around them. âThat doesnât mean I have to enjoy it. I suppose that someone from the Western Wastes would find this luxurious.â
Ansel chuckled. âYou have no idea.â
Celaena quit her taunting as curiosity seized her. âAre your lands as cursed as they claim?â
âWell, the Flatlands used to be part of the Witch Kingdom. And yes, I suppose you could say theyâre somewhat cursed.â Ansel sighed loudly. âWhen the Crochan Queens ruled five hundred years ago, it was very beautiful. At least, the ruins all over the place seem like they would have been beautiful. But then the three Ironteeth Clans destroyed it all when they overthrew the Crochan Dynasty.â
âIronteeth?â
Ansel let out a low hiss. âSome witches, like the Crochans, were gifted with ethereal beauty. But the Ironteeth Clans have iron teeth, sharp as a fishâs. Actually, their iron fingernails are more dangerous; those can gut you in one swipe.â
A chill went down Celaenaâs spine.
âBut when the Ironteeth Clans destroyed the kingdom, they say the last Crochan Queen cast a spell that turned the land against any that flew under the banners of the Ironteethâso that no crops would grow, the animals withered up and died, and the waters turned muddy. Itâs not like that now, though. The land has been fertile ever since the Ironteeth Clans journeyed east ⦠toward your lands.â
âSo ⦠so have you ever seen one of the witches?â
Ansel was quiet for a moment before she said, âYes.â
Celaena turned toward her, propping her head on a hand. Ansel remained looking at the sky.
âWhen I was eight and my sister was eleven, she and I and Maddy, one of her friends, snuck out of Briarcliff Hall. A few miles away, there was a giant tor with a lone watchtower on top. The upper bits were all ruined because of the witch-wars, but the rest of it was still intact. See, there was this archway that went through the bottom of the watchtowerâso you could see through it to the other side of the hill. And one of the stable boys told my sister that if you looked through the archway on the night of the summer solstice, then you might see into another world.â
The hair on Celaenaâs neck stood. âSo you went inside?â
âNo,â Ansel said. âI got near the top of the tor and became so terrified that I wouldnât set foot on it. I hid behind a rock, and my sister and Maddy left me there while they went the rest of the way. I canât remember how long I waited, but then I heard screaming.
âMy sister came running. She just grabbed my arm and we ran. It didnât come out at first, but when we got to my fatherâs hall, she told them what had happened. They had gone under the archway of the tower and seen an open door leading to its interior. But an old woman with metal teeth was standing in the shadows, and she grabbed Maddy and dragged her into the stairwell.â
Celaena choked on a breath.
âMaddy began screaming, and my sister ran. And when she told my father and his men, they raced for the tor. They arrived at dawn, but there was no trace of Maddy, or the old woman.â
âGone?â Celaena whispered.
âThey found one thing,â Ansel said softly. âThey climbed the tower, and on one of the landings, they found the bones of a child. White as ivory and picked clean.â
âGods above,â Celaena said.
âAfter that, my father walloped us within an inch of our lives, and we were on kitchen duty for six months, but he knew my sisterâs guilt would be punishment enough. She never really lost that haunted gleam in her eyes.â
Celaena shuddered. âWell, now I certainly wonât be able to sleep tonight.â
Ansel laughed. âDonât worry,â she said, nestling down on her cloak. âIâll tell you a valuable secret: the only way to kill a witch is to cut off her head. Besides, I donât think an Ironteeth witch stands much of a chance against us.â
âI hope youâre right,â Celaena muttered.
âI am right,â Ansel said. âThey might be vicious, but theyâre not invincible. And if I had an army of my own ⦠if I had even twenty of the Silent Assassins at my command, Iâd hunt down all the witches. They wouldnât stand a chance.â Her hand thumped against the sand; she must have struck the ground. âYou know, these assassins have been here for ages, but what do they do? The Flatlands would prosper if they had an army of assassins to defend them. But no, they just sit in their oasis, silent and thoughtful, and whore themselves out to foreign courts. If I were the Master, Iâd use our numbers for greatnessâfor glory. Weâd defend every unprotected realm out there.â
âSo noble of you,â Celaena said. âAnsel of Briarcliff, Defender of the Realm.â
Ansel only laughed, and soon was asleep.
Celaena, though, stayed awake a while longer, unable to stop imagining what that witch had done when she dragged Maddy into the shadows of the tower.
It was Market Day in Xandria, and though the city had long suffered from Adarlanâs embargo, it still seemed that there were vendors from all the kingdoms on the continentâand beyond. They were crammed into every possible space in the small, walled port city. All around Celaena were spices and jewels and clothes and food, some sold right out of brightly painted wagons, others spread on blankets in shadowy alcoves. There was no sign that anyone knew anything about the ill-fated attack on the Silent Assassins the other night.
She kept close to Ansel as they walked along, the red-haired girl weaving through the crowd with a kind of casual grace that Celaena, despite herself, envied. No matter how many people shoved into Ansel, or stepped in her path, or cursed her for stepping in theirs, she didnât falter, and her boyish grin only grew. Many people stopped to stare at her red hair and matching eyes, but Ansel took it in stride. Even without her armor, she was stunning. Celaena tried not to think about how few people bothered to notice her.
With the bodies and the heat, Celaena was oozing sweat by the time Ansel stopped near the edge of the souk. âIâm going to be a couple hours,â Ansel said, and waved a long, elegant hand to the sandstone palace hovering above the small city. âThe old beast likes to talk and talk and talk. Why donât you do some shopping?â
Celaena straightened. âIâm not going with you?â
âInto Berickâs palace? Of course not. Itâs the Masterâs business.â
Celaena felt her nostrils flare. Ansel clapped her on the shoulder. âBelieve me, youâd much rather spend the next few hours in the souk than waiting in the stables with Berickâs men leering at you. Unlike usââAnsel flashed that grinââthey donât have access to baths whenever they please.â
Ansel kept glancing at the palace, still a few blocks away. Nervous that sheâd be late? Or nervous that she was going to confront Berick on behalf of the Master? Ansel brushed the remnants of red sand from the layers of her white clothes. âIâll meet you at that fountain at three. Try not to get into too much trouble.â
And with that, Ansel vanished into the press of bodies, her red hair gleaming like a hot brand. Celaena contemplated trailing her. Even if she was an outsider, why let her accompany Ansel on the journey if she was just going to have to sit around? What could be so important and secret that Ansel wouldnât allow her to partake in the meeting? Celaena took a step toward the palace, but passing people jostled her to and fro, and then a vendor began cooking something that smelled divine, and Celaena found herself following her nose instead.
She spent the two hours wandering from vendor to vendor. She cursed herself for not bringing more money with her. In Rifthold, she had a line of credit at all her favorite stores, and never had to bother carrying money, aside from small coppers and the occasional silver coin for tips and bribes. But here ⦠well, the pouch of silver sheâd brought felt rather light.
The souk wound through every street, great and small, down narrow stairways and onto half-buried alleys that had to have been there for a thousand years. Ancient doors opened onto courtyards jammed with spice vendors or a hundred lanterns, glittering like stars in the shadowy interior. For such a remote city, Xandria was teeming with life.
She was standing under the striped awning of a vendor from the southern continent, debating if she had enough to buy the pair of curled-toe shoes before her and the lilac perfume sheâd smelled at a wagon owned by white-haired maidens. The maidens claimed they were the priestesses of Lani, the goddess of dreamsâand perfume, apparently.
Celaena ran a finger down the emerald silk thread embroidered on the delicate shoes, tracing the curve of the point as it swept upward and curled over the shoe itself. Theyâd certainly be eye-catching in Rifthold. And no one else in the capital would have them. Though, in the filthy city streets, these would easily get ruined.
She reluctantly put the shoes down, and the vendor raised his brows. She shook her head, a rueful smile on her face. The man held up seven fingersâone less than the original asking price, and she chewed on her lip, signing back, âSix coppers?â
The man spat on the ground. Seven coppers. Seven coppers was laughably cheap.
She looked at the souk around her, then back at the beautiful shoes. âIâll come back later,â she lied, and with one final, mournful glance, she continued along. The man began shouting after her in a language sheâd never heard before, undoubtedly offering the shoes for six coppers, but she forced herself to keep walking. Besides, her pack was heavy enough; lugging the shoes around would be an additional burden. Even if they were lovely and different and not that heavy. And the thread detailing along the sides was as precise and beautiful as calligraphy. And really, she could just wear them inside, so sheâ
She was about to turn around and walk right back to the vendor when something glistening in the shadows beneath an archway between buildings caught her eye. There were a few hired guards standing around the covered wagon, and a tall, lean man stood behind the table displayed in front of it. But it wasnât the guards or the man or his wagon that grabbed her attention.
No, it was what was on his table that knocked the breath from her and made her curse her too-light money purse.
Spidersilk.
There were legends about the horse-sized stygian spiders that lurked in the woods of the Ruhnn Mountains of the north, spinning their thread for hefty costs. Some said they offered it in exchange for human flesh; others claimed the spiders dealt in years and dreams, and could take either as payment. Regardless, it was as delicate as gossamer, lovelier than silk, and stronger than steel. And sheâd never seen so much of it before.
It was so rare that if you wanted it, odds were you had to go and get it for yourself. But here it was, yards of raw material waiting to be shaped. It was a kingdomâs ransom.
âYou know,â the merchant said in the common tongue, taking in Celaenaâs wide-eyed stare, âyouâre the first person today to recognize it for what it is.â
âIâd know what that is even if I were blind.â She approached the table, but didnât dare to touch the sheets of iridescent fabric. âBut what are you doing here? Surely you canât get much business in Xandria.â
The man chuckled. He was middle-aged, with close-cropped brown hair and midnight-blue eyes that seemed haunted, though they now sparkled with amusement. âI might also ask what a girl from the North is doing in Xandria.â His gaze flicked to the daggers tucked into the brown belt slung across her white clothes. âAnd with such beautiful weapons.â
She gave him a half smile. âAt least your eye is worthy of your wares.â
âI try.â He sketched a bow, then beckoned her closer. âSo, tell me, girl from the North, when have you seen Spidersilk?â
She clenched her fingers into fists to keep from touching the priceless material. âI know a courtesan in Rifthold whose madam had a handkerchief made from itâgiven to her by an extraordinarily wealthy client.â
And that handkerchief had probably cost more than most peasants made in a lifetime.
âThat was a kingly gift. She must have been skilled.â
âShe didnât become madam of the finest courtesans in Rifthold for nothing.â
The merchant let out a low laugh. âSo if you associate with the finest courtesans in Rifthold, then what brings you to this bit of desert scrub?â
She shrugged. âThis and that.â In the dim light beneath the canopy, the Spidersilk still glittered like the surface of the sea. âBut I would like to know how you came across so much of this. Did you buy it, or find the stygian spiders on your own?â
He traced a finger down the plane of fabric. âI went there myself. What else is there to know?â His midnight eyes darkened. âIn the depths of the Ruhnn Mountains, everything is a labyrinth of mist and trees and shadows. So you donât find the stygian spidersâthey find you.â
Celaena stuffed her hands in her pockets to keep from touching the Spidersilk. Though her fingers were clean, there were still grains of red sand under her nails. âSo why are you here, then?â
âMy ship to the southern continent doesnât leave for two days; why not set up shop? Xandria might not be Rifthold, but you never know who might approach your stall.â He winked at her. âHow old are you, anyway?â
She raised her chin. âI turned seventeen two weeks ago.â And what a miserable birthday that had been. Trudging across the desert with no one to celebrate with except her recalcitrant guide, who just patted her shoulder when she announced it was her birthday. Horrible.
âNot much younger than me,â he said. She chuckled, but paused when she didnât find him smiling.
âAnd how old are you?â she asked. There was no mistaking itâhe had to be at least forty. Even if his hair wasnât sprinkled with silver, his skin was weathered.
âTwenty-five,â he said. She gave a start. âI know. Shocking.â
The yards of Spidersilk lifted in a breeze from the nearby sea.
âEverything has a price,â he said. âTwenty years for a hundred yards of Spidersilk. I thought they meant to take them off the end of my life. But even if theyâd warned me, I would have said yes.â She eyed the caravan behind him. This much Spidersilk was enough to enable him to live what years he had left as a very, very wealthy man.
âWhy not take it to Rifthold?â
âBecause Iâve seen Rifthold, and Orynth, and Banjali. Iâd like to see what a hundred yards of Spidersilk might fetch me outside of Adarlanâs empire.â
âIs there anything to be done about the years you lost?â
He waved a hand. âI followed the western side of the mountains on my way here, and met an old witch along the way. I asked if she could fix me, but she said what was taken was taken, and only the death of the spider who consumed my twenty years could return them to me.â He examined his hands, already lined with age. âFor a copper more, she told me that only a great warrior could slay a stygian spider. The greatest warrior in the land ⦠Though perhaps an assassin from the North might do.â
âHow did youââ
âYou canât honestly think no one knows about the sessiz suikast? Why else would a seventeen-year-old girl bearing exquisite daggers be here unescorted? And one who holds such fine company in Rifthold, no less. Are you here to spy for Lord Berick?â
Celaena did her best to quell her surprise. âPardon me?â
The merchant shrugged, glancing toward the towering palace. âI heard from a city guard that strange dealings go on between Berick and some of the Silent Assassins.â
âPerhaps,â was all Celaena said. The merchant nodded, not all that interested in it anymore. But Celaena tucked the information away for later. Were some of the Silent Assassins actually working for Berick? Perhaps that was why Ansel had insisted on keeping the meeting so secretâmaybe the Master didnât want the names of the suspected traitors getting out.
âSo?â the merchant asked. âWill you retrieve my lost years for me?â
She bit her lip, thoughts of spies instantly fading away. To journey into the depths of the Ruhnn Mountains, to slay a stygian spider. She could certainly see herself battling the eight-legged monstrosities. And witches. Though after Anselâs story, meeting a witchâespecially one belonging to the Ironteeth Clansâwas the last thing she ever wanted to do. For a heartbeat, she wished Sam were with her. Even if she told him about this encounter, heâd never believe her. But would anyone ever believe her?
As if he could read her daydreams, he said: âI could make you rich beyond your wildest imaginings.â
âIâm already rich. And Iâm unavailable until the end of the summer.â
âI wonât be back from the southern continent for at least a year, anyway,â he countered.
She examined his face, the gleam in his eyes. Adventure and glory aside, anyone whoâd sell twenty years of his life for a fortune couldnât be trusted. But â¦
âThe next time youâre in Rifthold,â she said slowly, âseek out Arobynn Hamel.â The manâs eyes widened. She wondered how heâd react if he knew who she was. âHeâll know where to find me.â She turned from the table.
âBut whatâs your name?â
She looked over her shoulder. âHeâll know where to find me,â she repeated, and began walking back toward the stall with the pointed shoes.
âWait!â She paused in time to see him fumbling with the folds of his tunic. âHere.â He set down a plain wooden box on the table. âA reminder.â
Celaena flipped open the lid and her breath caught. A folded bit of woven Spidersilk lay inside, no larger than six square inches. She could buy ten horses with it. Not that sheâd ever sell it. No, this was an heirloom to be passed down from generation to generation. If she ever had children. Which seemed highly unlikely.
âA reminder of what?â She shut the lid and tucked the small box into the inner pocket of her white tunic.
The merchant smiled sadly. âThat everything has a price.â
A phantom pain flashed through her face. âI know,â she said, and left.
She wound up buying the shoes, though it was nearly impossible to pass over the lilac perfume, which smelled even more lovely the second time she approached the priestessesâ stall. When the city bells pealed three oâclock, she was sitting on the lip of the fountain, munching on what she hoped was mashed beans inside a warm bread pocket.
Ansel was fifteen minutes late, and didnât apologize. She merely grabbed Celaenaâs arm and began leading her through the still-packed streets, her freckled face gleaming with sweat.
âWhat is it?â Celaena asked. âWhat happened in your meeting?â
âThatâs none of your business,â Ansel said a bit sharply. Then she added, âJust follow me.â
They wound up sneaking inside the Lord of Xandriaâs palace walls, and Celaena knew better than to ask questions as they crept across the grounds. But they didnât head to the towering central building. Noâthey approached the stables, where they slipped around the guards and entered the pungent shadows within.
âThere had better be a good reason for this,â Celaena warned as Ansel crept toward a pen.
âOh, there is,â she hissed back, and stopped at a gate, waving Celaena forward.
Celaena frowned. âItâs a horse.â But even as the words left her mouth, she knew it wasnât.
âItâs an Asterion horse,â Ansel breathed, her red-brown eyes growing huge.
The horse was black as pitch, with dark eyes that bored into Celaenaâs own. Sheâd heard of Asterion horses, of course. The most ancient breed of horse in Erilea. Legend claimed that the Fae had made them from the four windsâspirit from the north, strength from the south, speed from the east, and wisdom from the west, all rolled into the slender-snouted, high-tailed, lovely creature that stood before her.
âHave you ever seen anything so beautiful?â Ansel whispered. âHer name is Hisli.â Mares, Celaena remembered, were more prized, as Asterion pedigrees were traced through the female line. âAnd that one,â Ansel said, pointing to the next stall, âis named Kasidaâit means âdrinker of the windâ in the desert dialect.â
Kasidaâs name was fitting. The slender mare was a dapple gray, with a sea-foam white mane and thundercloud coat. She huffed and stomped her forelegs, staring at Celaena with eyes that seemed older than the earth itself. Celaena suddenly understood why the Asterion horses were worth their weight in gold.
âLord Berick got them today. Bought them from a merchant on his way to Banjali.â Ansel slipped into Hisliâs pen. She cooed and murmured, stroking the horseâs muzzle. âHeâs planning on testing them out in half an hour.â That explained why they were already saddled.
âAnd?â Celaena whispered, holding out a hand for Kasida to smell. The mareâs nostrils flared, her velvety nose tickling Celaenaâs fingertips.
âAnd then heâs either going to give them away as a bribe, or lose interest and let them languish here for the rest of their lives. Lord Berick tends to tire of his playthings rather quickly.â
âWhat a waste.â
âIndeed it is,â Ansel muttered from inside the stall. Celaena lowered her fingers from Kasidaâs muzzle and peered into Hisliâs pen. Ansel was running a hand down Hisliâs black flank, her face still full of wonder. Then she turned. âAre you a strong rider?â
âOf course,â Celaena said slowly.
âGood.â
Celaena bit down on her cry of alarm as Ansel unlocked the stall door and guided Hisli out of her pen. In a smooth, quick motion, the girl was atop the horse, clutching the reins in one hand. âBecause youâre going to have to ride like hell.â
With that, Ansel sent Hisli into a gallop, heading straight for the stable doors.
Celaena didnât have time to gape or really even to process what she was about to do as she unlocked Kasidaâs pen, yanked her out, and heaved herself into the saddle. With a muffled curse, she dug her heels into the mareâs sides and took off.