A Court of Mist and Fury: Part 2 – Chapter 15
A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses Book 2)
I awoke four hours later.
It took me minutes to remember where I was, what had happened. And each tick of the little clock on the rosewood writing desk was a shove back-back-back into that heavy dark. But at least I wasnât tired. Weary, but no longer on the cusp of feeling like sleeping forever.
Iâd think about what happened at the Spring Court later. Tomorrow. Never.
Mercifully, Rhysandâs Inner Circle left before Iâd finished dressing.
Rhys was waiting at the front doorâwhich was open to the small wood-and-marble antechamber, which in turn was open to the street beyond. He ran an eye over me, from the suede navy shoesâpractical and comfortably madeâto the knee-length sky-blue overcoat, to the braid that began on one side of my head and curved around the back. Beneath the coat, my usual flimsy attire had been replaced by thicker, warmer brown pants, and a pretty cream sweater that was so soft I could have slept in it. Knitted gloves that matched my shoes had already been stuffed into the coatâs deep pockets.
âThose two certainly like to fuss,â Rhysand said, though something about it was strained as we headed out the front door.
Each step toward that bright threshold was both an eternity and an invitation.
For a moment, the weight in me vanished as I gobbled down the details of the emerging city:
Buttery sunlight that softened the already mild winter day, a small, manicured front lawnâits dried grass near-whiteâbordered with a waist-high wrought iron fence and empty flower beds, all leading toward a clean street of pale cobblestones. High Fae in various forms of dress meandered by: some in coats like mine to ward against the crisp air, some wearing mortal fashions with layers and poofy skirts and lace, some in riding leathersâall unhurried as they breathed in the salt-and-lemon-verbena breeze that even winter couldnât chase away. Not one of them looked toward the house. As if they either didnât know or werenât worried that their own High Lord dwelled in one of the many marble town houses lining either side of the street, each capped with a green copper roof and pale chimneys that puffed tendrils of smoke into the brisk sky.
In the distance, children shrieked with laughter.
I staggered to the front gate, unlatching it with fumbling fingers that hardly registered the ice-cold metal, and took all of three steps into the street before I halted at the sight at the other end.
The street sloped down, revealing more pretty town houses and puffing chimneys, more well-fed, unconcerned people. And at the very bottom of the hill curved a broad, winding river, sparkling like deepest sapphire, snaking toward a vast expanse of water beyond.
The sea.
The city had been built like a crust atop the rolling, steep hills that flanked the river, the buildings crafted from white marble or warm sandstone. Ships with sails of varying shapes loitered in the river, the white wings of birds shining brightly above them in the midday sun.
No monsters. No darkness. Not a hint of fear, of despair.
Untouched.
The city has not been breached in five thousand years.
Even during the height of her dominance over Prythian, whatever Rhys had done, whatever heâd sold or bartered ⦠Amarantha truly had not touched this place.
The rest of Prythian had been shredded, then left to bleed out over the course of fifty years, yet Velaris ⦠My fingers curled into fists.
I sensed something looming and gazed down the other end of the street.
There, like eternal guardians of the city, towered a wall of flat-topped mountains of red stoneâthe same stone that had been used to build some of the structures. They curved around the northern edge of Velaris, to where the river bent toward them and flowed into their shadow. To the north, different mountains surrounded the city across the riverâa range of sharp peaks like fishâs teeth cleaved the cityâs merry hills from the sea beyond. But these mountains behind me ⦠They were sleeping giants. Somehow alive, awake.
As if in answer, that undulating, slithering power slid along my bones, like a cat brushing against my legs for attention. I ignored it.
âThe middle peak,â Rhys said from behind me, and I whirled, remembering he was there. He just pointed toward the largest of the plateaus. Holes andâwindows seemed to have been built into the uppermost part of it. And flying toward it, borne on large, dark wings, were two figures. âThatâs my other home in this city. The House of Wind.â
Sure enough, the flying figures swerved on what looked to be a wicked, fast current.
âWeâll be dining there tonight,â he added, and I couldnât tell if he sounded irritated or resigned about it.
And I didnât quite care. I turned toward the city again and said, âHow?â
He understood what I meant. âLuck.â
âLuck? Yes, how lucky for you,â I said quietly, but not weakly, âthat the rest of Prythian was ravaged while your people, your city, remained safe.â
The wind ruffled Rhysâs dark hair, his face unreadable.
âDid you even think for one moment,â I said, my voice like gravel, âto extend that luck to anywhere else? Anyone else?â
âOther cities,â he said calmly, âare known to the world. Velaris has remained secret beyond the borders of these lands for millennia. Amarantha did not touch it, because she did not know it existed. None of her beasts did. No one in the other courts knows of its existence, either.â
âHow?â
âSpells and wards and my ruthless, ruthless ancestors, who were willing to do anything to preserve a piece of goodness in our wretched world.â
âAnd when Amarantha came,â I said, nearly spitting her name, âyou didnât think to open this place as a refuge?â
âWhen Amarantha came,â he said, his temper slipping the leash a bit as his eyes flashed, âI had to make some very hard choices, very quickly.â
I rolled my eyes, twisting away to scan the rolling, steep hills, the sea far beyond. âIâm assuming you wonât tell me about it.â But I had to knowâhow heâd managed to save this slice of peace and beauty.
âNowâs not the time for that conversation.â
Fine. Iâd heard that sort of thing a thousand times before at the Spring Court, anyway. It wasnât worth dredging up the effort to push about it.
But I wouldnât sit in my room, couldnât allow myself to mourn and mope and weep and sleep. So I would venture out, even if it was an agony, even if the size of this place ⦠Cauldron, it was enormous. I jerked my chin toward the city sloping down toward the river. âSo what is there that was worth saving at the cost of everyone else?â
When I faced him, his blue eyes were as ruthless as the churning winter sea in the distance. âEverything,â he said.
Rhysand wasnât exaggerating.
There was everything to see in Velaris: tea shops with delicate tables and chairs scattered outside their cheery fronts, surely heated by some warming spell, all full of chattering, laughing High Faeâand a few strange, beautiful faeries. There were four main market squares; Palaces, they were called: two on this sideâthe southern sideâof the Sidra River, two on the northern.
In the hours that we wandered, I only made it to two of them: great, white-stoned squares flanked by the pillars supporting the carved and painted buildings that watched over them and provided a covered walkway beneath for the shops built into the street level.
The first market we entered, the Palace of Thread and Jewels, sold clothes, shoes, supplies for making both, and jewelryâendless, sparkling jewelerâs shops. Yet nothing inside me stirred at the glimmer of sunlight on the undoubtedly rare fabrics swaying in the chill river breeze, at the clothes displayed in the broad glass windows, or the luster of gold and ruby and emerald and pearl nestled on velvet beds. I didnât dare glance at the now-empty finger on my left hand.
Rhys entered a few of the jewelry shops, looking for a present for a friend, he said. I chose to wait outside each time, hiding in the shadows beneath the Palace buildings. Walking around today was enough. Introducing myself, enduring the gawking and tears and judgment ⦠If I had to deal with that, I might very well climb into bed and never get out.
But no one on the streets looked twice at me, even at Rhysandâs side. Perhaps they had no idea who I wasâperhaps city-dwellers didnât care who was in their midst.
The second market, the Palace of Bone and Salt, was one of the Twin Squares: one on this side of the river, the other oneâthe Palace of Hoof and Leafâacross it, both crammed with vendors selling meat, produce, prepared foods, livestock, confections, spices ⦠So many spices, scents familiar and forgotten from those precious years when I had known the comfort of an invincible father and bottomless wealth.
Rhysand kept a few steps away, hands in his pockets as he offered bits of information every now and then. Yes, he told me, many stores and homes used magic to warm them, especially popular outdoor spaces. I didnât inquire further about it.
No one avoided himâno one whispered about him or spat on him or stroked him as they had Under the Mountain.
Rather, the people that spotted him offered warm, broad smiles. Some approached, gripping his hand to welcome him back. He knew each of them by nameâand they addressed him by his.
But Rhys grew ever quieter as the afternoon pressed on. We paused at the edge of a brightly painted pocket of the city, built atop one of the hills that flowed right to the riverâs edge. I took one look at the first storefront and my bones turned brittle.
The cheery door was cracked open to reveal art and paints and brushes and little sculptures.
Rhys said, âThis is what Velaris is known for: the artistsâ quarter. Youâll find a hundred galleries, supply stores, pottersâ compounds, sculpture gardens, and anything in between. They call it the Rainbow of Velaris. The performing artistsâthe musicians, the dancers, the actorsâdwell on that hill right across the Sidra. You see the bit of gold glinting near the top? Thatâs one of the main theaters. There are five notable ones in the city, but thatâs the most famous. And then there are the smaller theaters, and the amphitheater on the sea cliffs ⦠â He trailed off as he noticed my gaze drifting back to the assortment of bright buildings ahead.
High Fae and various lesser faeries Iâd never encountered and didnât know the names of wandered the streets. It was the latter that I noticed more than the others: some long-limbed, hairless, and glowing as if an inner moon dwelled beneath their night-dark skin, some covered in opalescent scales that shifted color with each graceful step of their clawed, webbed feet, some elegant, wild puzzles of horns and hooves and striped fur. Some were bundled in heavy overcoats, scarves, and mittensâothers strode about in nothing but their scales and fur and talons and didnât seem to think twice about it. Neither did anyone else. All of them, however, were preoccupied with taking in the sights, some shopping, some splattered with clay and dust andâand paint.
Artists. Iâd never called myself an artist, never thought that far or that grandly, but â¦
Where all that color and light and texture had once dwelled, there was only a filthy prison cell. âIâm tired,â I managed to say.
I could feel Rhysâs gaze, didnât care if my shield was up or down to ward against him reading my thoughts. But he only said, âWe can come back another day. Itâs almost time for dinner, anyway.â
Indeed, the sun was sinking toward where the river met the sea beyond the hills, staining the city pink and gold.
I didnât feel like painting that, either. Even as people stopped to admire the approaching sunsetâas if the residents of this place, this court, had the freedom, the safety of enjoying the sights whenever they wished. And had never known otherwise.
I wanted to scream at them, wanted to pick up a loose piece of cobblestone and shatter the nearest window, wanted to unleash that power again boiling beneath my skin and tell them, show them, what had been done to me, to the rest of the world, while they admired sunsets and painted and drank tea by the river.
âEasy,â Rhys murmured.
I whipped my head to him, my breathing a bit jagged.
His face had again become unreadable. âMy people are blameless.â
That easily, my rage vanished, as if it had slipped a rung of the ladder it had been steadily climbing inside me and splattered on the pale stone street.
Yesâyes, of course they were blameless. But I didnât feel like thinking more on it. On anything. I said again, âIâm tired.â
His throat bobbed, but he nodded, turning from the Rainbow. âTomorrow night, weâll go for a walk. Velaris is lovely in the day, but it was built to be viewed after dark.â
Iâd expect nothing less from the City of Starlight, but words had again become difficult.
Butâdinner. With him. At that House of Wind. I mustered enough focus to say, âWho, exactly, is going to be at this dinner?â
Rhys led us up a steep street, my thighs burning with the movement. Had I become so out of shape, so weakened? âMy Inner Circle,â he said. âI want you to meet them before you decide if this is a place youâd like to stay. If youâd like to work with me, and thus work with them. Mor, youâve met, but the three othersââ
âThe ones who came this afternoon.â
A nod. âCassian, Azriel, and Amren.â
âWho are they?â Heâd said something about Illyrians, but Amrenâthe female voice Iâd heardâhadnât possessed wings. At least ones Iâd glimpsed through the fogged glass.
âThere are tiers,â he said neutrally, âwithin our circle. Amren is my Second in command.â
A female? The surprise must have been written on my face because Rhys said, âYes. And Mor is my Third. Only a fool would think my Illyrian warriors were the apex predators in our circle.â Irreverent, cheerful Morâwas Third to the High Lord of the Night Court. Rhys went on, âYouâll see what I mean when you meet Amren. She looks High Fae, but something different prowls beneath her skin.â Rhys nodded to a passing couple, who bowed their heads in merry greeting. âShe might be older than this city, but sheâs vain, and likes to hoard her baubles and belongings like a firedrake in a cave. So ⦠be on your guard. You both have tempers when provoked, and I donât want you to have any surprises tonight.â
Some part of me didnât want to know what manner of creature, exactly, she was. âSo if we get into a brawl and I rip off her necklace, sheâll roast and eat me?â
He chuckled. âNoâAmren would do far, far worse things than that. The last time Amren and Mor got into it, they left my favorite mountain retreat in cinders.â He lifted a brow. âFor what itâs worth, Iâm the most powerful High Lord in Prythianâs history, and merely interrupting Amren is something Iâve only done once in the past century.â
The most powerful High Lord in history.
In the countless millennia they had existed here in Prythian, RhysâRhys with his smirking and sarcasm and bedroom eyes â¦
And Amren was worse. And older than five thousand years.
I waited for the fear to hit; waited for my body to shriek to find a way to get out of this dinner, but ⦠nothing. Maybe itâd be a mercy to be endedâ
A broad hand gripped my faceâgently enough not to hurt, but hard enough to make me look at him. âDonât you ever think that,â Rhysand hissed, his eyes livid. âNot for one damned moment.â
That bond between us went taut, and my lingering mental shields collapsed. And for a heartbeat, just as it had happened Under the Mountain, I flashed from my body to hisâfrom my eyes to his own.
I had not realized ⦠how I looked â¦
My face was gaunt, my cheekbones sharp, my blue-gray eyes dull and smudged with purple beneath. The full lipsâmy fatherâs mouthâwere wan, and my collarbones jutted above the thick wool neckline of my sweater. I looked as if ⦠as if rage and grief and despair had eaten me alive, as if I was again starved. Not for food, but ⦠but for joy and lifeâ
Then I was back in my body, seething at him. âWas that a trick?â
His voice was hoarse as he lowered his hand from my face. âNo.â He angled his head to the side. âHow did you get through it? My shield.â
I didnât know what he was talking about. I hadnât done anything. Just ⦠slipped. And I didnât want to talk about it, not here, not with him. I stormed into a walk, my legsâso damn thin, so uselessâburning with every step up the steep hill.
He gripped my elbow, again with that considerate gentleness, but strong enough to make me pause. âHow many other minds have you accidentally slipped into?â
Lucienâ
âLucien?â A short laugh. âWhat a miserable place to be.â
A low snarl rippled from me. âDo not go into my head.â
âYour shield is down.â I hauled it back up. âYou might as well have been shouting his name at me.â Again, that contemplative angling of his head. âPerhaps you having my power ⦠â He chewed on his bottom lip, then snorted. âItâd make sense, of course, if the power came from meâif my own shield sometimes mistook you for me and let you slip past. Fascinating.â
I debated spitting on his boots. âTake your power back. I donât want it.â
A sly smile. âIt doesnât work that way. The power is bound to your life. The only way to get it back would be to kill you. And since I like your company, Iâll pass on the offer.â We walked a few steps before he said, âYou need to be vigilant about keeping your mental wards up. Especially now that youâve seen Velaris. If you ever go somewhere else, beyond these lands, and someone slipped into your mind and saw this place â¦â A muscle quivered in his jaw. âWeâre called daematiâthose of us who can walk into another personâs mind as if we were going from one room to another. Weâre rare, and the trait appears as the Mother wills it, but there are enough of us scattered throughout the world that manyâmostly those in positions of influenceâextensively train against our skill set. If you were to ever encounter a daemati without those shields up, Feyre, theyâd take whatever they wanted. A more powerful one could make you their unwitting slave, make you do whatever they wanted and youâd never know it. My lands remain mystery enough to outsiders that some would find you, among other things, a highly valuable source of information.â
Daematiâwas I now one if I, too, could do such things? Yet another damned title for people to whisper as I passed. âI take it that in a potential war with Hybern, the kingâs armies wouldnât even know to strike here?â I waved a hand to the city around us. âSo, whatâyour pampered people ⦠those who canât shield their mindsâthey get your protection and donât have to fight while the rest of us will bleed?â
I didnât let him answer, and just increased my pace. A cheap shot, and childish, but ⦠Inside, inside I had become like that distant sea, relentlessly churning, tossed about by squalls that tore away any sense of where the surface might be.
Rhys kept a step behind for the rest of the walk to the town house.
Some small part of me whispered that I could survive Amarantha; I could survive leaving Tamlin; I could survive transitioning into this new, strange body ⦠But that empty, cold hole in my chest ⦠I wasnât sure I could survive that.
Even in the years Iâd been one bad week away from starvation, that part of me had been full of color, of light. Maybe becoming a faerie had broken it. Maybe Amarantha had broken it.
Or maybe I had broken it, when I shoved that dagger into the hearts of two innocent faeries and their blood had warmed my hands.
âAbsolutely not,â I said atop the town houseâs small rooftop garden, my hands shoved deep into the pockets of my overcoat to warm them against the bite in the night air. There was room enough for a few boxed shrubs and a round iron table with two chairsâand me and Rhysand.
Around us, the city twinkled, the stars themselves seeming to hang lower, pulsing with ruby and amethyst and pearl. Above, the full moon set the marble of the buildings and bridges glowing as if they were all lit from within. Music played, strings and gentle drums, and on either side of the Sidra, golden lights bobbed over riverside walkways dotted with cafés and shops, all open for the night, already packed.
Lifeâso full of life. I could nearly taste it crackling on my tongue.
Clothed in black accented with silver thread, Rhysand crossed his arms. And rustled his massive wings as I said, âNo.â
âThe House of Wind is warded against people winnowing insideâexactly like this house. Even against High Lords. Donât ask me why, or who did it. But the option is either walk up the ten thousand steps, which I really do not feel like doing, Feyre, or fly in.â Moonlight glazed the talon at the apex of each wing. He gave me a slow grin that I hadnât seen all afternoon. âI promise I wonât drop you.â
I frowned at the midnight-blue dress Iâd selectedâeven with the long sleeves and heavy, luxurious fabric, the plunging vee of the neckline did nothing against the cold. Iâd debated wearing the sweater and thicker pants, but had opted for finery over comfort. I already regretted it, even with the coat. But if his Inner Circle was anything like Tamlinâs court ⦠better to wear the more formal attire. I winced at the swath of night between the roof and the mountain-residence. âThe wind will rip the gown right off.â
His grin became feline.
âIâll take the stairs,â I seethed, the anger welcome from the past few hours of numbness as I headed for the door at the end of the roof.
Rhys snapped out a wing, blocking my path.
Smooth membraneâflecked with a hint of iridescence. I peeled back. âNuala spent an hour on my hair.â
An exaggeration, but she had fussed while Iâd sat there in hollow silence, letting her tease the ends into soft curls and pin a section along the top of my head with pretty gold barrettes. But maybe staying inside tonight, alone and quiet ⦠maybe itâd be better than facing these people. Than interacting.
Rhysâs wing curved around me, herding me closer to where I could nearly feel the heat of his powerful body. âI promise I wonât let the wind destroy your hair.â He lifted a hand as if he might tug on one of those loose curls, then lowered it.
âIf Iâm to decide whether I want to work against Hybern with youâwith your Inner Circle, canât we just ⦠meet here?â
âTheyâre all up there already. And besides, the House of Wind has enough space that I wonât feel like chucking them all off the mountain.â
I swallowed. Sure enough, curving along the top of the center mountain behind us, floors of lights glinted, as if the mountain had been crowned in gold. And between me and that crown of light was a long, long stretch of open air. âYou mean,â I said, because it might have been the only weapon in my arsenal, âthat this town house is too small, and their personalities are too big, and youâre worried I might lose it again.â
His wing pushed me closer, a whisper of warmth on my shoulder. âSo what if I am?â
âIâm not some broken doll.â Even if this afternoon, that conversation weâd had, what Iâd glimpsed through his eyes, said otherwise. But I yielded another step.
âI know youâre not. But that doesnât mean Iâll throw you to the wolves. If you meant what you said about wanting to work with me to keep Hybern from these lands, keep the wall intact, I want you to meet my friends first. Decide on your own if itâs something you can handle. And I want this meeting to be on my terms, not whenever they decide to ambush this house again.â
âI didnât know you even had friends.â Yesâanger, sharpness ⦠It felt good. Better than feeling nothing.
A cold smile. âYou didnât ask.â
Rhysand was close enough now that he slid a hand around my waist, both of his wings encircling me. My spine locked up. A cageâ
The wings swept back.
But he tightened his arm. Bracing me for takeoff. Mother save me. âYou say the word tonight, and we come back here, no questions asked. And if you canât stomach working with me, with them, then no questions asked on that, either. We can find some other way for you to live here, be fulfilled, regardless of what I need. Itâs your choice, Feyre.â
I debated pushing him on itâon insisting I stay. But stay for what? To sleep? To avoid a meeting I should most certainly have before deciding what I wanted to do with myself? And to fly â¦
I studied the wings, the arm around my waist. âPlease donât drop me. And please donâtââ
We shot into the sky, fast as a shooting star.
Before my yelp finished echoing, the city had yawned wide beneath us. Rhysâs hand slid under my knees while the other wrapped around my back and ribs, and we flapped up, up, up into the star-freckled night, into the liquid dark and singing wind.
The city lights dropped away until Velaris was a rippling velvet blanket littered with jewels, until the music no longer reached even our pointed ears. The air was chill, but no wind other than a gentle breeze brushed my faceâeven as we soared with magnificent precision for the House of Wind.
Rhysâs body was hard and warm against mine, a solid force of nature crafted and honed for this. Even the smell of him reminded me of the windârain and salt and something citrus-y I couldnât name.
We swerved into an updraft, rising so fast it was instinct to clutch his black tunic as my stomach clenched. I scowled at the soft laugh that tickled my ear. âI expected more screaming from you. I must not be trying hard enough.â
âDo not,â I hissed, focusing on the approaching tiara of lights in the eternal wall of the mountain.
With the sky wheeling overhead and the lights shooting past below, up and down became mirrorsâuntil we were sailing through a sea of stars. Something tight in my chest eased a fraction of its grip.
âWhen I was a boy,â Rhys said in my ear, âIâd sneak out of the House of Wind by leaping out my windowâand Iâd fly and fly all night, just making loops around the city, the river, the sea. Sometimes I still do.â
âYour parents must have been thrilled.â
âMy father never knewâand my mother â¦â A pause. âShe was Illyrian. Some nights, when she caught me right as I leaped out the window, sheâd scold me ⦠and then jump out herself to fly with me until dawn.â
âShe sounds lovely,â I admitted.
âShe was,â he said. And those two words told me enough about his past that I didnât pry.
A maneuver had us rising higher, until we were in direct line with a broad balcony, gilded by the light of golden lanterns. At the far end, built into the red mountain itself, two glass doors were already open, revealing a large, but surprisingly casual dining room carved from the stone, and accented with rich wood. Each chair fashioned, I noted, to accomodate wings.
Rhysâs landing was as smooth as his takeoff, though he kept an arm beneath my shoulders as my knees buckled at the adjustment. I shook off his touch, and faced the city behind us.
Iâd spent so much time squatting in trees that heights had lost their primal terror long ago. But the sprawl of the city ⦠worse, the vast expanse of dark beyondâthe sea ⦠Maybe I remained a human fool to feel that way, but I had not realized the size of the world. The size of Prythian, if a city this large could remain hidden from Amarantha, from the other courts.
Rhysand was silent beside me. Yet after a moment, he said, âOut with it.â
I lifted a brow.
âYou say whatâs on your mindâone thing. And Iâll say one, too.â
I shook my head and turned back to the city.
But Rhys said, âIâm thinking that I spent fifty years locked Under the Mountain, and Iâd sometimes let myself dream of this place, but I never expected to see it again. Iâm thinking that I wish I had been the one who slaughtered her. Iâm thinking that if war comes, it might be a long while yet before I get to have a night like this.â
He slid his eyes to me, expectant.
I didnât bother asking again how heâd kept this place from her, not when he was likely to refuse to answer. So I said, âDo you think war will be here that soon?â
âThis was a no-questions-asked invitation. I told you ⦠three things. Tell me one.â
I stared toward the open world, the city and the restless sea and the dry winter night.
Maybe it was some shred of courage, or recklessness, or I was so high above everything that no one save Rhys and the wind could hear, but I said, âIâm thinking that I must have been a fool in love to allow myself to be shown so little of the Spring Court. Iâm thinking thereâs a great deal of that territory I was never allowed to see or hear about and maybe I would have lived in ignorance forever like some pet. Iâm thinking ⦠â The words became choked. I shook my head as if I could clear the remaining ones away. But I still spoke them. âIâm thinking that I was a lonely, hopeless person, and I might have fallen in love with the first thing that showed me a hint of kindness and safety. And Iâm thinking maybe he knew thatâmaybe not actively, but maybe he wanted to be that person for someone. And maybe that worked for who I was before. Maybe it doesnât work for whoâwhat I am now.â
There.
The words, hateful and selfish and ungrateful. For all Tamlin had doneâ
The thought of his name clanged through me. Only yesterday afternoon, I had been there. Noâno, I wouldnât think about it. Not yet.
Rhysand said, âThat was five. Looks like I owe you two thoughts.â He glanced behind us. âLater.â
Because the two winged males from earlier were standing in the doorway.
Grinning.