A Court of Mist and Fury: Part 2 – Chapter 26
A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses Book 2)
The Attor had vanished in the moments after Amarantha died, suspected to have fled for the King of Hybern. And if it was here, in the mortal landsâ
I went pliant in its arms, buying a wisp of time to scan for something, anything to use against it.
âGood,â it hissed in my ear. âNow tell meââ
Night exploded around us.
The Attor screamedâscreamedâas that darkness swallowed us, and I was wrenched from its spindly, hard arms, its nails slicing into my leather. I collided face-first with packed, icy snow.
I rolled, flipping back, whirling to get my feet under meâ
The light returned as I rose into a crouch, knife angled.
And there was Rhysand, binding the Attor to a snow-shrouded oak with nothing but twisting bands of night. Like the ones that had crushed Iantheâs hand. Rhysandâs own hands were in his pockets, his face cold and beautiful as death. âIâd been wondering where you slithered off to.â
The Attor panted as it struggled against the bonds.
Rhysand merely sent two spears of night shooting into its wings. The Attor shrieked as those spears met fleshâand sank deep into the bark behind it.
âAnswer my questions, and you can crawl back to your master,â Rhys said, as if he were inquiring about the weather.
âWhore,â the Attor spat. Silvery blood leaked from its wings, hissing as it hit the snow.
Rhys smiled. âYou forget that I rather enjoy these things.â He lifted a finger.
The Attor screamed, âNo!â Rhysâs finger paused. âI was sent,â it panted, âto get her.â
âWhy?â Rhys asked with that casual, terrifying calm.
âThat was my order. I am not to question. The king wants her.â
My blood went as cold as the woods around us.
âWhy?â Rhys said again. The Attor began screamingâthis time beneath the force of a power I could not see. I flinched.
âDonât know, donât know, donât know.â I believed it.
âWhere is the king currently?â
âHybern.â
âArmy?â
âComing soon.â
âHow large?â
âEndless. We have allies in every territory, all waiting.â
Rhys cocked his head as if contemplating what to ask next. But he straightened, and Azriel slammed into the snow, sending it flying like water from a puddle. Heâd flown in so silently, I hadnât even heard the beat of his wings. Cassian must have stayed at the house to defend my sisters.
There was no kindness on Azrielâs face as the snow settledâthe immovable mask of the High Lordâs shadowsinger.
The Attor began trembling, and I almost felt bad for it as Azriel stalked for him. Almostâbut didnât. Not when these woods were so close to the chateau. To my sisters.
Rhys came to my side as Azriel reached the Attor. âThe next time you try to take her,â Rhys said to the Attor, âI kill first; ask questions later.â
Azriel caught his eye. Rhys nodded. The Siphons atop his scarred hands flickered like rippling blue fire as he reached for the Attor. Before the Attor could scream, it and the spymaster vanished.
I didnât want to think about where theyâd go, what Azriel would do. I hadnât even known Azriel possessed the ability to winnow, or whatever power heâd channeled through his Siphons. Heâd let Rhys winnow us both in the other dayâunless the power was too draining to be used so lightly.
âWill he kill him?â I said, my puffs of breath uneven.
âNo.â I shivered at the raw power glazing his taut body. âWeâll use him to send a message to Hybern that if they want to hunt the members of my court, theyâll have to do better than that.â
I startedâat the claim heâd made of me, and at the words. âYou knewâyou knew he was hunting me?â
âI was curious who wanted to snatch you the first moment you were alone.â
I didnât know where to start. So Tamlin was rightâabout my safety. To some degree. It didnât excuse anything. âSo you never planned to stay with me while I trained. You used me as baitââ
âYes, and Iâd do it again. You were safe the entire time.â
âYou should have told me! â
âMaybe next time.â
âThere will be no next time! â I slammed a hand into his chest, and he staggered back a step from the strength of the blow. I blinked. Iâd forgottenâforgotten that strength in my panic. Just like with the Weaver. Iâd forgotten how strong I was.
âYes, you did,â Rhysand snarled, reading the surprise on my face, that icy calm shattering. âYou forgot that strength, and that you can burn and become darkness, and grow claws. You forgot. You stopped fighting.â
He didnât just mean the Attor. Or the Weaver.
And the rage rose up in me in such a mighty wave that I had no thought in my head but wrath: at myself, what Iâd been forced to do, what had been done to me, to him.
âSo what if I did?â I hissed, and shoved him again. âSo what if I did?â
I went to shove him again, but Rhys winnowed away a few feet.
I stormed for him, snow crunching underfoot. âItâs not easy.â The rage ran me over, obliterated me. I lifted my arms to slam my palms into his chestâ
And he vanished again.
He appeared behind me, so close that his breath tickled my ear as he said, âYou have no idea how not easy it is.â
I whirled, grappling for him. He vanished before I could strike him, pound him.
Rhys appeared across the clearing, chuckling. âTry harder.â
I couldnât fold myself into darkness and pockets. And if I couldâif I could turn myself into smoke, into air and night and stars, Iâd use it to appear right in front of him and smack that smile off his face.
I moved, even if it was futile, even as he rippled into darkness, and I hated him for itâfor the wings and ability to move like mist on the wind. He appeared a step away, and I pounced, hands outâtalons outâ
And slammed into a tree.
He laughed as I bounced back, teeth singing, talons barking as they shredded through wood. But I was already lunging as he vanished, lunging like I could disappear into the folds of the world as well, track him across eternityâ
And so I did.
Time slowed and curled, and I could see the darkness of him turn to smoke and veer, as if it were running for another spot in the clearing. I hurtled for that spot, even as I felt my own lightness, folding my very self into wind and shadow and dust, the looseness of it radiating out of me, all while I aimed for where he was headedâ
Rhysand appeared, a solid figure in my world of smoke and stars.
And his eyes were wide, his mouth split in a grin of wicked delight, as I winnowed in front of him and tackled him into the snow.