The Assassin’s Blade: Novella 5 – Chapter 4
The Assassin’s Blade: The Throne of Glass Prequel Novellas
Alone in the kitchen, Celaena poured herself a cup of tea, trying to keep her hands from shaking. Heâd probably gotten the address from the servants who had helped bring over her things. To find him here, having broken into her home ⦠How long had he been sitting inside? Had he gone through her things?
She poured another cup of tea for Arobynn. Cups and saucers in hand, she walked back into the living room. He had his legs crossed, one arm sprawled across the back of the sofa, and seemed to have made himself quite at home.
She said nothing as she gave him the cup and then took a seat in one of the armchairs. The hearth was dark, and the day had been warm enough that Sam had left one of the living room windows open. A briny breeze off the Avery flowed into the apartment, rustling the crimson velvet curtains and teasing through her hair. Sheâd miss that smell, too.
Arobynn took a sip, then peered into his teacup to look at the amber liquid inside. âWho can I thank for the impeccable taste in tea?â
âMe. But you already know that.â
âHmm.â Arobynn took another sip. âYou know, I did know that.â The afternoon light caught in his gray eyes, turning them to quicksilver. âWhat I donât know is why you and Sam think itâs a good idea to dispatch Ioan Jayne and Rourke Farran.â
Of course he knew. âItâs none of your business. Our client wanted to operate outside of the Guild, and now that Iâve transferred it the money to your account, Sam and I are no longer a part of it.â
âIoan Jayne,â Arobynn repeated, as if she somehow didnât know who he was. âIoan Jayne. Are you insane?â
She clenched her jaw. âI donât see why I should trust your advice.â
âEven I wouldnât take on Jayne.â Arobynnâs gaze burned. âAnd Iâm saying that as someone who has spent years thinking of ways to put that man in a grave.â
âIâm not playing another one of your mind games.â She set down her tea and rose from her seat. âGet out of my house.â
Arobynn just stared up at her as if she were a sullen child. âJayne is the undisputed Crime Lord in Rifthold for a reason. And Farran is his Second for a damn good reason, too. You might be excellent, Celaena, but youâre not invincible.â
She crossed her arms. âMaybe youâre trying to dissuade me because youâre worried that when I kill him, I will have truly surpassed you.â
Arobynn shot to his feet, towering over her. âThe reason Iâm trying to dissuade you, you stupid, ungrateful girl, is because Jayne and Farran are lethal. If a client offered me the glass castle itself, I wouldnât touch an offer like that!â
She felt her nostrils flare. âAfter all that youâve done, how can you expect me to believe a word that comes out of your mouth?â Her hand had started drifting toward the dagger at her waist. Arobynnâs eyes remained on her face, but he was awareâhe knew every movement her hands made and didnât have to look at her to track them. âGet out of my house,â she growled.
Arobynn gave her a half smile and looked around the apartment with deliberate care. âTell me something, Celaena: do you trust Sam?â
âWhat sort of a question is that?â
Arobynn casually slid his hands into the pockets of his silver tunic. âHave you told him the truth about where you came from? I have a feeling thatâs something heâd like to know. Perhaps before he dedicates his life to you.â
She focused on keeping her breathing even, and pointed at the door again. âGo.â
Arobynn shrugged, waving a hand as if to dismiss the questions heâd raised, and walked toward the front door. She watched his every move, took in every step and shift of his shoulders, noted what he looked at. He reached for the brass doorknob, but turned to her. His eyesâthose silver eyes that would probably haunt her for the rest of her lifeâwere bright.
âNo matter what I have done, I really do love you, Celaena.â
The word hit her like a stone to the head. Heâd never said that word to her before. Ever.
A long silence fell between them.
Arobynnâs neck shifted as he swallowed. âI do the things that I do because Iâm afraid ⦠and because I donât know how to express what I feel.â He said it so quietly that she barely heard it. âI did all of those things because I was angry with you for picking Sam.â
Was it the King of the Assassins who spoke, or the father, or the lover who had never manifested himself ?
Arobynnâs carefully cultivated mask fell, and the wound sheâd given him flickered in those magnificent eyes. âStay with me,â he whispered. âStay in Rifthold.â
She swallowed, and found it particularly hard to do so. âIâm going.â
âNo,â he said softly. âDonât go.â
No.
That was what sheâd said to him that night heâd beaten her, in the moment before heâd struck her, when she thought he was going to hurt Sam instead. And then heâd beaten her so badly sheâd been knocked unconscious. Then heâd beaten Sam, too.
Donât.
That was what Ansel had said to her in the desert, when Celaena had pressed the sword into the back of her neck, when the agony of Anselâs betrayal had been almost enough to make Celaena kill the girl sheâd called a friend. But that betrayal still paled in comparison to what Arobynn had done to her when heâd tricked her into killing Doneval, a man who could have freed countless slaves.
He was using words as chains to bind her again. Heâd had so many chances over the years to tell her that he loved herâheâd known how much sheâd craved those words. But he hadnât spoken them until he needed to use them as weapons. And now that she had Sam, Sam who said those words without expecting anything in return, Sam who loved her for reasons she would never understand â¦
Celaena tilted her head to the side, the only warning she gave that she was still ready to attack him. âGet out of my house.â
Arobynn just nodded slowly and left.
The Black Cygnet tavern was packed wall-to-wall, as it was most nights. Seated with Sam at a table in the middle of the busy room, Celaena didnât particularly feel like eating the beef stew in front of her. Or like talking, even though Sam had told her all about the information heâd gathered on Farran and Jayne. She hadnât mentioned Arobynnâs surprise visit.
A cluster of giggling young women sat nearby, tittering about how the Crown Prince was gone on a holiday to the Surian coast, and how they wished they could join the prince and his dashing friends, and on and on until Celaena contemplated chucking her spoon at them.
But the Black Cygnet wasnât a violent tavern. It catered to a crowd who came to enjoy good food, good music, and good company. There were no brawls, no dark dealings, and certainly no prostitutes milling about. Perhaps that was what brought her and Sam back here for dinner most nightsâit felt so normal.
It was another place sheâd miss.
When they arrived home after dinner, the apartment feeling strangely not hers now that Arobynn had broken in, Celaena went straight to the bedroom and lit a few candles. She was ready for this day to be over. Ready to dispatch Jayne and Farran, and then leave.
Sam appeared in the doorway. âIâve never seen you so quiet,â he said.
She looked at herself in the mirror above the dresser. The scar from her fight with Ansel had faded from her cheek, and the one on her neck was well on its way to disappearing, too.
âIâm tired,â she said. It wasnât a lie. She began unbuttoning her tunic, her hands feeling strangely clumsy. Was this why Arobynn had visited? Because heâd known heâd impact her like this? She straightened, hating the thought so much that she wanted to shatter the mirror in front of her.
âDid something happen?â
She reached the final button of her tunic, but didnât take it off. She turned to face him, looking him up and down. Could she ever tell him everything?
âTalk to me,â he said, his brown eyes holding only concern. No twisted agendas, no mind games â¦
âTell me your deepest secret,â she said softly.
Samâs eyes narrowed, but he pushed off the threshold and took a seat on the edge of the bed. He ran a hand through his hair, setting the ends sticking up at odd angles.
After a long moment, he spoke. âThe only secret Iâve borne my entire life is that I love you.â He gave her a slight smile. âIt was the one thing I believed Iâd go to the grave without voicing.â His eyes were so full of light that it almost stopped her heart.
She found herself walking toward him, then placing one hand along his cheek and threading the other through his hair. He turned his head to kiss her palm, as if the phantom blood that coated her hands didnât bother him. His eyes found hers again. âWhatâs yours, then?â
The room felt too small, the air too thick. She closed her eyes. It took her a minute, and more nerve than she realized, but the answer finally came. It had always been thereâwhispering to her in her sleep, behind every breath, a dark weight that she couldnât ever escape.
âDeep down,â she said, âIâm a coward.â
His brows rose.
âIâm a coward,â she repeated. âAnd Iâm scared. Iâm scared all the time. Always.â
He removed her hand from his cheek to kiss the tips of her fingers. âI get scared, too,â he murmured onto her skin. âYou want to hear something ridiculous? Whenever Iâm scared out of my wits, I tell myself: My name is Sam Cortland ⦠and I will not be afraid. Iâve been doing it for years.â
It was her turn to raise her brows. âAnd that actually works?â
He laughed onto her fingers. âSometimes it does, sometimes it doesnât. But it usually makes me feel better to some degree. Or it just makes me laugh at myself a bit.â
It wasnât the sort of fear sheâd been talking about, but â¦
âI like that,â she said.
He laced his fingers with hers and pulled her onto his lap. âI like you,â he murmured, and Celaena let him kiss her until sheâd again forgotten the dark burden that would always haunt her.