The Assassin’s Blade: Novella 1 – Chapter 5
The Assassin’s Blade: The Throne of Glass Prequel Novellas
Dinner with Sam was silent, and Rolfe appeared at eight to bring them both to the holding facility. Sam didnât even ask where they were going. He just played along, as if heâd known the whole time.
The holding facility was an enormous wooden warehouse, and even from down the block, something about the place made Celaenaâs instincts scream at her to get away. The sharp reek of unwashed bodies didnât hit her until they stepped inside. Blinking against the brightness of the torches and crude chandeliers, it took her a few heartbeats to sort out what she was seeing.
Rolfe, striding ahead of them, didnât falter as he passed cell after cell packed with slaves. Instead, he walked toward a large open space in the rear of the warehouse, where a nut-brown Eyllwe man stood before a cluster of four pirates.
Beside her, Sam let out a breath, his face wan. If the smell wasnât bad enough, the people in the cells, clinging to the bars or cowering against the walls or clutching their childrenâchildrenâripped at every shred of her being.
Aside from some occasional muffled weeping, the slaves were silent. Some of their eyes widened at the sight of her. Sheâd forgotten how she must appearâfaceless, cloak waving behind her, striding past them like Death itself. Some of the slaves even sketched invisible marks in the air, warding off whatever evil they thought she was.
She took in the locks on the pens, counting the number of people crammed into each cell. They hailed from all the kingdoms on the continent. There were even some orange-haired, gray-eyed mountain clansmenâwild-looking men who tracked her movements. And womenâsome of them barely older than Celaena herself. Had they been fighters, too, or just in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Celaenaâs heart pounded faster. Even after all these years, people still defied Adarlanâs conquest. But what right did Adarlanâor Rolfe, or anyoneâhave to treat them like this? Conquest wasnât enough; no, Adarlan had to break them.
Eyllwe, sheâd heard, had taken the brunt of it. Though their king had yielded his power to the King of Adarlan, Eyllwe soldiers still could be found fighting in the rebel groups that plagued Adarlanâs forces. But the land itself was too vital for Adarlan to abandon. Eyllwe boasted two of the most prosperous cities on the continent; its territoryârich in farmland, waterways, and forestsâwas a crucial vein in trade routes. Now, it seemed, Adarlan had decided that it might make money off its people, too.
The men standing around the Eyllwe prisoner parted as Rolfe approached, bowing their heads. She recognized two of the men from dinner the previous night: the short, bald Captain Fairview and the one-eyed, hulking Captain Blackgold. Celaena and Sam stopped beside Rolfe.
The Eyllwe man had been stripped naked, his wiry body already bruised and bleeding.
âThis one fought back a bit,â said Captain Fairview. Though sweat gleamed on the slaveâs skin, he kept his chin high, his eyes upon some distant sight. He must have been around twenty. Did he have a family?
âKeep him in irons, though, and heâll fetch a good price,â Fairview went on, wiping his face on the shoulder of his crimson tunic. The gold embroidery was fraying, and the fabric, which had probably once been rich with color, was faded and stained. âIâd send him to the market in Bellhaven. Lots of rich men there needing strong hands to do their building. Or women needing strong hands for something else entirely.â He winked in Celaenaâs direction.
Unyielding rage boiled up so fast the breath was knocked from her. She didnât realize her hand was moving toward her sword until Sam knotted his fingers through hers. It was a casual-enough gesture, and to anyone else, it might have looked affectionate. But he squeezed her fingers tightly enough for her to know that he was well aware of what she was about to do.
âHow many of these slaves will actually be deemed useful?â Sam asked, releasing her gloved fingers. âOurs are all going to Rifthold, but youâre dividing this batch up?â
Rolfe said, âYou think your master is the first to strike a deal with me? We have other agreements in different cities. My partners in Bellhaven tell me what the wealthy are looking for, and I supply them. If I canât think of a good place to sell the slaves, Iâll send them to Calaculla. If your master has leftovers, sending them to Endovier might be a good option. Adarlanâs stingy with what theyâll offer when buying slaves for the salt mines, but itâs better than making no money at all.â
So Adarlan wasnât just snatching prisoners from battlefields and their homesâthey were buying slaves for the Salt Mines of Endovier, too.
âAnd the children?â she asked, keeping her voice was neutral as possible. âWhere do they go?â
Rolfeâs eyes darkened a bit at that, glimmering with enough guilt that Celaena wondered if the slave trade had been a last resort for him. âWe try to keep the children with their mothers,â he said quietly. âBut at the auction block, we canât control whether theyâre separated.â
She fought the retort on her tongue, and just said, âI see. Are they a burden to sell? And how many children can we expect in our shipment?â
âWe have about ten here,â Rolfe said. âYour shipment shouldnât contain more than that. And theyâre not a burden to sell, if you know where to sell them.â
âWhere?â Sam demanded.
âSome wealthy households might want them for scullery maids or stableboys.â Though his voice remained steady, Rolfe studied the ground. âA brothel madam might show up at the auction, too.â
Samâs face went white with fury. If there was one thing that set him off, one subject she knew she could always rely upon to rile him, it was this.
His mother, sold at eight to a brothel, had spent her too-short twenty-eight years clawing her way up from an orphan to one of the most successful courtesans in Rifthold. Sheâd had Sam only six years before sheâd diedâmurdered by a jealous client. And though sheâd amassed some money, it hadnât been enough to liberate her from her brothelâor to provide for Sam. But sheâd been a favorite of Arobynnâs, and when heâd learned that she wanted Sam to be trained by him, heâd taken the boy in.
âWeâll take that into consideration,â Sam said sharply.
It wasnât enough for Celaena to ensure the deal fell apart. No, that wasnât nearly enough. Not when all of these people were imprisoned here. Her blood pounded in her veins. Death, at least, was quick. Especially when dealt by her hand. But slavery was unending suffering.
âVery well,â she said, lifting her chin. She had to get out of hereâand get Sam out of here before he snapped. A deadly gleam was growing in his eyes. âI look forward to seeing our shipment tomorrow night.â She inclined her head toward the pens behind her. âWhen will these slaves be sent out?â It was such a dangerous, stupid question.
Rolfe looked to Captain Fairview, who rubbed his dirty head. âThis lot? Weâll divvy them up, and theyâll be loaded onto a new ship tomorrow, probably. Theyâll sail around the same time you do, I bet. We need to assemble crews.â He and Rolfe started off on a conversation about manning the ships, and Celaena took that as her cue to leave.
With a final look at the slave still standing there, Celaena strode out of the warehouse that stank of fear and death.
âCelaena, wait!â Sam called, panting as he walked after her.
She couldnât wait. Sheâd just started walking, and walking, and walking, and now, as she reached the empty beach far from the lights of Skullâs Bay, she wouldnât stop walking until she reached the water.
Not too far down the curve in the bay, the watchtower stood guard, Ship-Breaker hanging across the water for the duration of the night. The moon illuminated the powder-fine sand and turned the calm sea into a silver mirror.
She removed her mask and dropped it behind her, then ripped off her cloak, boots, and tunic. The damp breeze kissed her bare skin, fluttering her delicate white undershirt.
âCelaena!â
Bath-warm waves flooded past her, and she kicked up a spray of water as she kept walking. Before she could get deeper than her calves, Sam grabbed her arm.
âWhat are you doing?â he demanded. She yanked on her arm, but he held firm.
In a single, swift movement, she twirled, swinging her other arm. But he knew the moveâbecause heâd practiced it right alongside her for yearsâand he caught her other hand. âStop,â he said, but she swept her foot. She caught him behind the knee, sending him tumbling down. Sam didnât release her, and water and sand sprayed as they hit the ground.
Celaena landed on top of him, but Sam didnât pause for a moment. Before she could give him a sharp elbow to the face, he flipped her. The air whooshed out of her lungs. Sam lunged for her, and she had the sense to bring her feet up just as he leapt. She kicked him square in the stomach. He cursed as he dropped to his knees. The surf broke around him, a shower of silver.
She sprang into a crouch, the sand hissing beneath her feet as she made to tackle him.
But Sam had been waiting, and he twisted away, catching her by the shoulders and throwing her to the ground.
She knew sheâd been caught before he even finished slamming her into the sand. He pinned her wrists, his knees digging into her thighs to keep her from getting her legs under her again.
âEnough!â His fingers dug painfully into her wrists. A rogue wave reached them, soaking her.
She thrashed, her fingers curling, straining to draw blood, but they couldnât reach his hands. The sand shifted enough that she could scarcely get a steady surface to support herself, to flip him. But Sam knew herâhe knew her movements, knew what tricks she liked to pull.
âStop,â he said, his breathing ragged. âPlease.â
In the moonlight, his handsome face was strained. âPlease,â he repeated hoarsely.
The sorrowâthe defeatâin his voice made her pause. A wisp of cloud passed over the moon, illuminating the strong panes of his cheekbones, the curve of his lipsâthe kind of rare beauty that had made his mother so successful. Far above his head, stars flickered faintly, nearly invisible in the glow of the moon.
âIâm not going to let go until you promise to stop attacking me,â Sam said. His face was inches away, and she felt the breath of every one of his words on her mouth.
She took an uneven breath, then another. She had no reason to attack Sam. Not when heâd kept her from gutting that pirate in the warehouse. Not when heâd gotten so riled about the slave children. Her legs trembled with pain.
âI promise,â she mumbled.
âSwear it.â
âI swear on my life.â
He watched her for a second longer, then slowly eased off her. She waited until he was standing, then got to her feet. Both of them were soaked and crusted with sand, and she was fairly certain her hair had come half out of her braid and she looked like a raging lunatic.
âSo,â he said, taking off his boots and tossing them onto the sand behind them. âAre you going to explain yourself?â He rolled his pants up to the knees and took a few steps into the surf.
Celaena began pacing, waves splattering at her feet. âI just â¦,â she began, but waved an arm, shaking her head fiercely.
âYou what?â His words were almost drowned out by the crashing waves.
She whirled to face him. âHow can you bear to look at those people and not do anything?â
âThe slaves?â
She resumed her pacing. âIt makes me sick. It makes me ⦠makes me so mad I think I might â¦â She couldnât finish the thought.
âMight what?â Splashing steps sounded, and she looked over her shoulder to find him approaching. He crossed his arms, bracing for a fight. âMight do something as foolish as attacking Rolfeâs men in their own warehouse?â
It was now or never. She hadnât wanted to involve him, but ⦠now that her plans had changed, she needed his help.
âI might do something as foolish as freeing the slaves,â she said.
Sam went so still that he might have been turned into stone. âI knew you were thinking up somethingâbut freeing them â¦â
âIâm going to do it with or without you.â Sheâd only intended to ruin the deal, but from the moment sheâd walked into that warehouse tonight, sheâd known she couldnât leave the slaves there.
âRolfe will kill you,â Sam said. âOr Arobynn will, if Rolfe doesnât first.â
âI have to try,â she said.
âWhy?â Sam stepped close enough that she needed to tilt her head back to see his face. âWeâre assassins. We kill people. We destroy lives every day.â
âWe have a choice,â she breathed. âMaybe not when we were childrenâwhen it was Arobynn or deathâbut now ⦠Now you and I have a choice in the things we do. Those slaves were just taken. They were fighting for their freedom, or lived too close to a battlefield, or some mercenaries passed through their town and stole them. Theyâre innocent people.â
âAnd we werenât?â
Something icy pierced her heart at the glimmer of memory. âWe kill corrupt officials and adulterous spouses; we make it quick and clean. These are entire families being ripped apart. Every one of these people used to be somebody.â
Samâs eyes glowed. âIâm not disagreeing with you. I donât like the idea of this at all. Not just the slaves, but Arobynnâs involvement. And those children â¦â He pinched the bridge of his nose. âBut weâre just two peopleâsurrounded by Rolfeâs pirates.â
She gave him a crooked grin. âThen itâs good that weâre the best. And,â she added, âitâs good that Iâve been asking him so many questions about his plans for the next two days.â
Sam blinked. âYou realize this is the most reckless thing youâve ever done, right?â
âReckless, but maybe the most meaningful, too.â
Sam stared at her long enough for heat to flood her cheek, as if he could see right inside of herâsee everything. The fact that he didnât turn away from whatever he saw made her blood thrum in her veins. âI suppose if weâre going to die, it should be for a noble cause,â he said.
She snorted, using it as an excuse to step away from him. âWeâre not going to die. At least, not if we follow my plan.â
He groaned. âYou already have a plan?â
She grinned, then told him everything. When she finished, he only scratched his head. âWell,â he admitted, sitting on the sand, âI suppose thatâd work. Weâd have to time it right, but â¦â
âBut it could work.â She sat beside him.
âWhen Arobynn finds out â¦â
âLeave Arobynn to me. Iâll figure out how to deal with him.â
âWe could always just ⦠not return to Rifthold,â Sam suggested.
âWhat, run away?â
Sam shrugged. Though he kept his eyes on the waves, she could have sworn a blush darkened his cheeks. âHe might very well kill us.â
âIf we ran away, heâd hunt us for the rest of our lives. Even if we took different names, heâd find us.â As if she could leave her entire life behind! âHeâs invested too much money in usâand weâve yet to pay him back entirely. Heâd see it as a bad investment.â
Samâs gaze drifted northward, as if he could see the sprawling capital city and its towering glass castle. âI think thereâs more at work here than this trade agreement.â
âWhat do you mean?â
Sam traced circles in the sand between them. âI mean, why send the two of us here in the first place? His excuse for sending us was a lie. Weâre not instrumental to this deal. He could just as easily have sent two other assassins who arenât at each otherâs throats all the time.â
âWhat are you implying?â
Sam shrugged. âPerhaps Arobynn wanted us out of Rifthold right now. Needed to get us out of the city for a month.â
A chill went through her. âArobynn wouldnât do that.â
âWouldnât he?â Sam asked. âDid we ever find out why Ben was there the night Gregori got captured?â
âIf youâre implying that Arobynn somehow set Ben up toââ
âIâm not implying anything. But some things donât add up. And there are questions that havenât been answered.â
âWeâre not supposed to question Arobynn,â she murmured.
âAnd since when do you ever follow orders?â
She stood. âLetâs get through the next few days. Then weâll consider whatever conspiracy theories youâre inventing.â
Sam was on his feet in an instant. âI donât have any theories. Just questions that you should be asking yourself, too. Why did he want us gone this month?â
âWe can trust Arobynn.â Even as the words left her mouth, she felt stupid for saying them.
Sam stooped to pick up his boots. âIâm going back to the tavern. Are you coming?â
âNo. Iâm staying here for a little longer.â
Sam gave her an appraising look, but nodded. âWeâre to examine Arobynnâs slaves on their ship at four tomorrow afternoon. Try not to stay out here the whole night. We need all the rest we can get.â
She didnât reply, and turned away before she could watch him head toward the golden lights of Skullâs Bay.
She walked along the curve of the shoreline, all the way to the lone watchtower. After studying it from the shadowsâthe two catapults near its top, the giant chain anchored above themâshe continued on. She walked until there was nothing in the world but the grumble and hiss of the waves, the sigh of the sand beneath her feet, and the glare of the moon on the water.
She walked until a surprisingly cold breeze swept past her. She halted.
Slowly, Celaena turned north, toward the source of the breeze, which smelled of a faraway land she hadnât seen in eight years. Pine and snowâa city still in winterâs grasp. She breathed it in, staring across the leagues of lonely, black ocean, seeing, somehow, that distant city that had once, long ago, been her home. The wind ripped the strands of hair from her braid, lashing them across her face. Orynth. A city of light and music, watched over by an alabaster castle with an opal tower so bright it could be viewed for miles.
The moonlight vanished behind a thick cloud. In the sudden dark, the stars glowed brighter.
She knew all the constellations by heart, and she instinctively sought out the Stag, Lord of the North, and the immovable star that crowned his head.
Back then, she hadnât had any choice. When Arobynn offered her this path, it was either that, or death. But now â¦
She took a shuddering breath. No, she was as limited in her choices as sheâd been when she was eight years old. She was Adarlanâs Assassin, Arobynn Hamelâs protégée and heirâand she would always be.
It was a long walk back to the tavern.