The Assassin’s Blade: Novella 1 – Chapter 9
The Assassin’s Blade: The Throne of Glass Prequel Novellas
Down the slope of the street, Celaena could perfectly see the two slave ships sittingâstill unmovingâin the bay. And the mast-snapping chain not too far from them. Unfortunately, from his angle, so could Rolfe.
The sky had turned light gray. Dawn.
Celaena bowed her head to the Pirate Lord. âIâd rather not get my hands dirty in that mess.â
Rolfeâs lips formed a thin line. âFunny, given that you tripped the man who started the brawl.â
Sam glared at her. Sheâd been subtle, damn it!
Rolfe drew his sword, the dragonâs eyes gleaming in the growing light. âAnd also funny, since youâve been spoiling for a fight for days, that you suddenly decided to vanish when everyoneâs attention is elsewhere.â
Sam raised his hands. âWe donât want any trouble.â
Rolfe chuckled, a harsh, humorless sound. âMaybe you donât, Sam Cortland, but she does.â Rolfe stepped toward her, his sword dangling at his side. âSheâs wanted trouble since the moment she got here. What was your plan? Steal treasure? Information?â
From the corner of her eye, something shifted in the ships. Like a bird flexing its wings, a row of oars shot out from their sides. They were ready. And the chain was still up.
Donât look, donât look, donât look â¦
But Rolfe looked, and Celaenaâs breathing turned shallow as he scanned the ships.
Sam tensed, his knees bending slightly.
âI am going to kill you, Celaena Sardothien,â Rolfe breathed. And he meant it.
Celaenaâs fingers tightened around her sword, and Rolfe opened his mouth, lungs filling with air as he prepared to shout a warning.
Quick as a whip, she did the only thing she could think of to distract him.
Her mask clattered to the ground, and she shook off her hood. Her golden hair gleamed in the growing light.
Rolfe froze. âYou ⦠Youâre ⦠What sort of trickery is this?â
Beyond them, the oars began moving, churning the water as the boats turned toward the chainâand the freedom beyond it. âGo,â she murmured to Sam. âNow.â
Sam only nodded before he sprinted down the street.
Alone with Rolfe, Celaena raised her sword. âCelaena Sardothien, at your service.â
The pirate was still staring at her, his face pale with rage. âHow dare you deceive me?â
She sketched a bow. âI did nothing of the sort. I told you I was beautiful.â
Before she could stop him, Rolfe shouted, âTheyâre trying to steal our ships! To your boats! To the watchtower!â
A roar erupted around them, and Celaena prayed that Sam could reach the watchtower before the pirates caught him.
Celaena began circling the Pirate Lord. He circled her, too. He wasnât drunk in the least.
âHow old are you?â Each of his steps was carefully placed, but she noticed that he kept shifting to expose his left side.
âSixteen.â She didnât bother to keep her voice low and gravelly.
Rolfe swore. âArobynn sent a sixteen-year-old to deal with me?â
âHe sent the best of the best. Consider that an honor.â
With a growl, the Pirate Lord lunged.
She danced back, swinging up her sword to block the blow he aimed for her throat. She didnât need to kill him right awayâjust to distract him long enough to prevent him from further organizing his men. And keep him away from the ships. She had to buy Sam enough time to disable the chain and the catapults. The ships were already turning toward the mouth of the bay.
Rolfe launched himself again, and she let him land two strikes on her sword before she ducked the third blow and slammed into him. She swept her foot, and Rolfe staggered back a step. Not missing a beat, she pulled out her long hunting knife, slashing for his chest. She let her blow fall short, ripping through the fine blue material of his tunic instead.
Rolfe stumbled into the wall of a building behind him, but caught his footing and dodged the blow that would have taken off his head. The vibrations of her sword hitting stone stung her hand, but she kept hold of the hilt.
âWhat was the plan?â Rolfe panted above the roar of the pirates rushing toward the docks. âSteal my slaves and take all the profit?â
She laughed, feinting to his right, but sweeping for his unprotected left with her dagger. To her surprise, Rolfe deflected both moves in a swift, sure motion.
âTo free them,â she said. Beyond the chain, beyond the mouth of the bay, the clouds on the horizon began to color with the light of the coming dawn.
âFool,â Rolfe spat, and this time feinted so well that even Celaena couldnât avoid the rake of his sword across her arm. Warm blood seeped through her black tunic. She hissed, darting away a few steps. A careless mistake.
âYou think freeing two hundred slaves will solve anything?â Rolfe kicked a fallen bottle of liquor at her. She knocked it aside with the flat of her sword, her right arm screaming in pain. Glass shattered behind her. âThere are thousands of slaves out there. Are you going to march into Calaculla and Endovier and free them, too?â
Behind him, the steady strokes of the oars propelled the ships toward the chain. Sam had to hurry.
Rolfe shook his head. âStupid girl. If I donât kill you, your master will.â
Not him giving the luxury of a warning, she threw herself at him. She ducked, twirling, and Rolfe barely turned before she slammed the pommel of her sword into the back of his head.
The Pirate Lord crumpled to the dirt street just as a crowd of bloodied and filthy pirates appeared around the corner. Celaena only had time to throw her hood over her head, hoping the shadows concealed enough of her face, before she took off at a run.
It didnât take much to get away from a group of half-drunk battle-crazed pirates. She only had to lead them down a few twisted streets, and then she lost them. But the wound on her arm still slowed her considerably as she ran for the watchtower. Sam was already far ahead. Releasing the chain was now in his hands.
Pirates raged up and down the docks, seeking any boat that was in working order. That had been the final leg of her journey last night: disabling the rudders in all of the ships along the docks, including Rolfeâs own ship, the Sea Dragonâwhich honestly deserved to be tampered with, given that security on board had been so lax. But, despite the damage, some pirates managed to find rowboats and piled into them, brandishing swords or cutlasses or axes and shouting profanities to the high heavens. The ramshackle buildings blurred as she sprinted toward the watchtower. Her breath was ragged in her throat, a night of no sleep already taking its toll. She burst past pirates on the docks, too busy bemoaning their ruined boats to notice her.
The slaves still rowed for the chain as if demons from every Hell-realm were upon them.
Celaena charged down the road, heading for the edge of the town. With the sloping, wide-open road, she could see Sam racing far aheadâand a large group of pirates not too far behind him. The cut on her arm throbbed, but she pushed herself to run faster.
Sam had mere minutes to get that chain down, or else the slavesâ ships would shatter upon it. Even if the slavesâ ships were able to stop before they hit it, there were enough smaller boats heading out that the pirates would overpower them. The pirates had weapons. Aside from whatever was onboard the ships, the slaves were unarmed, even if many of them had been warriors and rebels.
There was a flash of movement from the half-crumbling tower. Steel glimmered, and there was Sam, charging up the staircase that wound up the outside of the tower.
Two pirates rushed down the steps, swords raised. Sam dodged one, knocking him down with a swift strike to the spine. Before the pirate had even finished falling, Samâs blade skewered the other man clean through the middle.
But there was still Ship-Breaker to disable, along with the two catapults, andâ
And the dozen pirates who had now reached the foot of the tower.
Celaena cursed. She was still too far. There was no way she could make it in time to disable the chainâthe ships would crash into it long before she got there.
She swallowed the pain in her arm, focusing on her breathing as she ran and ran, not daring to take her eyes off the tower ahead. Sam, still a tiny figure in the distance, reached the top of the tower and the expanse of open stone where the anchor to the chain lay. Even from here, she could tell it was gargantuan. And as Sam rushed around it, hacking at whatever he could, throwing himself against the enormous lever, both of them realized the horrible truth, the one thing sheâd overlooked: the chain was too heavy for one man to move.
The slavesâ ships were close now. So close that stopping ⦠stopping was impossible.
They were going to die.
But the slaves didnât cease rowing.
The dozen pirates were climbing the stairs. Sam had been trained to engage multiple men in combat, but a dozen pirates ⦠Damn Rolfe and his men for delaying her!
Sam glanced toward the stairs. He knew about the pirates, too.
She could see everything with such maddening clarity. Sam remained atop the tower. A level below him, perched on a platform jutting out over the sea, sat the two catapults. And in the bay, the two ships that rowed with increasing speed. Freedom or death.
Sam slung himself down to the catapult level, and Celaena staggered a step as he hurled himself against the rotating platform on which the catapult sat, pushing, pushing, pushing until the catapult began to moveânot toward the sea, but toward the tower itself, toward the spot in the stone wall where the chain was anchored.
She didnât dare take her attention from the tower as Sam heaved the catapult into position. A boulder had already been loaded, and in the glare of the rising sun, she could just make out the rope stretched taut to secure the catapult.
The pirates were almost at the catapult level. The two ships rowed faster and faster, the chain so close that its shadow loomed over them.
Celaena sucked in a breath as pirates poured onto the catapult landing, weapons held high.
Sam raised his sword. Light from the sunrise gleamed off the blade, bright as a star.
A warning cry broke from her lips as a pirateâs dagger flipped toward Sam.
Sam brought his sword down on the catapult rope, doubling over. The catapult snapped so fast she could hardly follow the motion. The boulder slammed into the tower, shattering stone, wood, and metal. Rock exploded, dust clouding the air.
And with a boom that echoed across the bay, the chain collapsed, taking out a chunk of the towerâtaking out the spot where sheâd last seen Sam.
Celaena, reaching the tower at last, paused to watch as the white sails of the slavesâ ships unfurled, glowing golden in the sunrise.
The wind filled their sails and set them cruising, flying swiftly from the mouth of the bay and into the ocean beyond it. By the time the pirates fixed their ships, the slaves would be too far away to catch.
She murmured a prayer for them to find a safe harbor, her words carrying on the wings of the wind, and wished them well.
A block of stone crashed near her. Celaenaâs heart gave a lurch. Sam.
He couldnât be dead. Not from that dagger, or those dozen pirates, or from the catapult. No, Sam couldnât be so stupid that heâd get himself killed. Sheâd ⦠sheâd ⦠Well, sheâd kill him if he was dead.
Drawing her sword despite the ache in her arm, she made to rush into the half-wrecked tower, but a dagger pressed against her neck halted her in her tracks.
âI donât think so,â Rolfe whispered in her ear.