A Court of Mist and Fury: Part 3 – Chapter 54
A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses Book 2)
I stared at Rhys.
He stared at me.
His cheeks were tinged pink with cold, his dark hair ruffled, and he honestly looked freezing as he stood there, wings tucked in tight.
And I knew that one word from me, and heâd go flying off into the crisp night. That if I shut the door, heâd go and not push it.
His nostrils flared, scenting the paint behind me, but he didnât break his stare. Waiting.
Mate.
Myâmate.
This beautiful, strong, selfless male ⦠Who had sacrificed and wrecked himself for his family, his people, and didnât feel it was enough, that he wasnât enough for anyone ⦠Azriel thought he didnât deserve someone like Mor. And I wondered if Rhys ⦠if he somehow felt the same about me. I stepped aside, holding the door open for him.
I could have sworn I felt a pulse of knee-wobbling relief through the bond.
But Rhys took in the painting Iâd done, gobbling down the bright colors that now made the cottage come alive, and said, âYou painted us.â
âI hope you donât mind.â
He studied the threshold to the bedroom hallway. âAzriel, Mor, Amren, and Cassian,â he said, marking the eyes Iâd painted. âYou do know that one of them is going to paint a moustache under the eyes of whoever pisses them off that day.â
I clamped my lips to keep the smile in. âOh, Mor already promised to do that.â
âAnd what about my eyes?â
I swallowed. All right, then. No dancing around it.
My heart was pounding so wildly I knew he could hear it. âI was afraid to paint them.â
Rhys faced me fully. âWhy?â
No more games, no more banter. âAt first, because I was so mad at you for not telling me. Then because I was worried Iâd like them too much and find that you ⦠didnât feel the same. Then because I was scared that if I painted them, Iâd start wishing you were here so much that Iâd just stare at them all day. And it seemed like a pathetic way to spend my time.â
A twitch of his lips. âIndeed.â
I glanced at the shut door. âYou flew here.â
He nodded. âMor wouldnât tell me where youâd gone, and there are only so many places that are as secure as this one. Since I didnât want our Hybern friends tracking me to you, I had to do it the old-fashioned way. It took ⦠a while.â
âYouâreâbetter?â
âHealed completely. Quickly, considering the bloodbane. Thanks to you.â
I avoided his stare, turning for the kitchen. âYou must be hungry. Iâll heat something up.â
Rhys straightened. âYouâdâmake me food?â
âHeat,â I said. âI canât cook.â
It didnât seem to make a difference. But whatever it was, the act of offering him food ⦠I dumped some cold soup into a pan and lit the burner. âI donât know the rules,â I said, my back to him. âSo you need to explain them to me.â
He lingered in the center of the cabin, watching my every move. He said hoarsely, âItâs an ⦠important moment when a female offers her mate food. It goes back to whatever beasts we were a long, long time ago. But it still matters. The first time matters. Some mated pairs will make an occasion of itâthrowing a party just so the female can formally offer her mate food ⦠Thatâs usually done amongst the wealthy. But it means that the female ⦠accepts the bond.â
I stared into the soup. âTell me the storyâtell me everything.â
He understood my offer: tell me while I cooked, and Iâd decide at the end whether or not to offer him that food.
A chair scraped against the wood floor as he sat at the table. For a moment, there was only silence, interrupted by the clack of my spoon against the pot.
Then Rhys said, âI was captured during the War. By Amaranthaâs army.â
I paused my stirring, my gut twisting.
âCassian and Azriel were in different legions, so they had no idea that my forces and I had been taken prisoner. And that Amaranthaâs captains held us for weeks, torturing and slaughtering my warriors. They put ash bolts through my wings, and they had those same chains from the other night to keep me down. Those chains are one of Hybernâs greatest assetsâstone delved from deep in their land, capable of nullifying a High Faeâs powers. Even mine. So they chained me up between two trees, beating me when they felt like it, trying to get me to tell them where the Night Court forces were, using my warriorsâtheir deaths and painâto break me.
âOnly I didnât break,â he said roughly, âand they were too dumb to know that I was an Illyrian, and all they had to do to get me to yield would have been to try to cut off my wings. And maybe it was luck, but they never did. And Amarantha ⦠She didnât care that I was there. I was yet another High Lordâs son, and Jurian had just slaughtered her sister. All she cared about was getting to himâkilling him. She had no idea that every second, every breath, I plotted her death. I was willing to make it my last stand: to kill her at any cost, even if it meant shredding my wings to break free. Iâd watched the guards and learned her schedule, so I knew where sheâd be. I set a day, and a time. And I was readyâI was so damned ready to make an end of it, and wait for Cassian and Azriel and Mor on the other side. There was nothing but my rage, and my relief that my friends werenât there. But the day before I was to kill Amarantha, to make my final stand and meet my end, she and Jurian faced each other on the battlefield.â
He paused, swallowing.
âI was chained in the mud, forced to watch as they battled. To watch as Jurian took my killing blow. Onlyâshe slaughtered him. I watched her rip out his eye, then rip off his finger, and when he was prone, I watched her drag him back to the camp. Then I listened to her slowly, over days and days, tear him apart. His screaming was endless. She was so focused on torturing him that she didnât detect my fatherâs arrival. In the panic, she killed Jurian rather than see him liberated, and fled. So my father rescued meâand told his men, told Azriel, to leave the ash spikes in my wings as punishment for getting caught. I was so injured that the healers informed me if I tried to fight before my wings healed, Iâd never fly again. So I was forced to return home to recoverâwhile the final battles were waged.
âThey made the Treaty, and the wall was built. Weâd long ago freed our slaves in the Night Court. We didnât trust the humans to keep our secrets, not when they bred so quickly and frequently that my forefathers couldnât hold all their minds at once. But our world was changed nonetheless. We were all changed by the War. Cassian and Azriel came back different; I came back different. We came hereâto this cabin. I was still so injured that they carried me here between them. We were here when the messages arrived about the final terms of the Treaty.
âThey stayed with me when I roared at the stars that Amarantha, for all she had done, for every crime committed, would go unpunished. That the King of Hybern would go unpunished. Too much killing had occurred on either side for everyone to be brought to justice, they said. Even my father gave me an order to let it goâto build toward a future of co-existence. But I never forgave what Amarantha had done to my warriors. And I never forgot it, either. Tamlinâs fatherâhe was her friend. And when my father slaughtered him, I was so damn smug that perhaps sheâd feel an inkling of what Iâd felt when she murdered my soldiers.â
My hands were shaking as I stirred the soup. Iâd never known ⦠never thought â¦
âWhen Amarantha returned to these shores centuries later, I still wanted to kill her. The worst part was, she didnât even know who I was. Didnât even remember that I was the High Lordâs son that sheâd held captive. To her, I was merely the son of the man who had killed her friendâI was just the High Lord of the Night Court. The other High Lords were convinced she wanted peace and trade. Only Tamlin mistrusted her. I hated him, but heâd known Amarantha personallyâand if he didnât trust her ⦠I knew she hadnât changed.
âSo I planned to kill her. I told no one. Not even Amren. Iâd let Amarantha think I was interested in trade, in alliance. I decided Iâd go to the party thrown Under the Mountain for all the courts to celebrate our trade agreement with Hybern ⦠And when she was drunk, Iâd slip into her mind, make her reveal every lie and crime sheâd committed, and then Iâd turn her brain to liquid before anyone could react. I was prepared to go to war for it.â
I turned, leaning against the counter. Rhys was looking at his hands, as if the story were a book he could read between them.
âBut she thought fasterâacted faster. She had been trained against my particular skill set, and had extensive mental shields. I was so busy working to tunnel through them that I didnât think about the drink in my hand. I hadnât wanted Cassian or Azriel or anyone else there that night to witness what I was to doâso no one bothered to sniff my drink.
âAnd as I felt my powers being ripped away by that spell sheâd put on it at the toast, I flung them out one last time, wiping Velaris, the wards, all that was good, from the minds of the Court of Nightmaresâthe only ones Iâd allowed to come with me. I threw the shield around Velaris, binding it to my friends so that they had to remain or risk that protection collapsing, and used the last dregs to tell them mind to mind what was happening, and to stay away. Within a few seconds, my power belonged wholly to Amarantha.â
His eyes lifted to mine. Haunted, bleak.
âShe slaughtered half the Court of Nightmares right then and there. To prove to me that she could. As vengeance for Tamlinâs father. And I knew ⦠I knew in that moment there was nothing I wouldnât do to keep her from looking at my court again. From looking too long at who I was and what I loved. So I told myself that it was a new war, a different sort of battle. And that night, when she kept turning her attention to me, I knew what she wanted. I knew it wasnât about fucking me so much as it was about getting revenge at my fatherâs ghost. But if that was what she wanted, then that was what she would get. I made her beg, and scream, and used my lingering powers to make it so good for her that she wanted more. Craved more.â
I gripped the counter to keep from sliding to the ground.
âThen she cursed Tamlin. And my other great enemy became the one loophole that might free us all. Every night that I spent with Amarantha, I knew that she was half wondering if Iâd try to kill her. I couldnât use my powers to harm her, and she had shielded herself against physical attacks. But for fifty yearsâwhenever I was inside her, Iâd think about killing her. She had no idea. None. Because I was so good at my job that she thought I enjoyed it, too. So she began to trust meâmore than the others. Especially when I proved what I could do to her enemies. But I was glad to do it. I hated myself, but I was glad to do it. After a decade, I stopped expecting to see my friends or my people again. I forgot what their faces looked like. And I stopped hoping.â
Silver gleamed in his eyes, and he blinked it away. âThree years ago,â he said quietly, âI began to have these ⦠dreams. At first, they were glimpses, as if I were staring through someone elseâs eyes. A crackling hearth in a dark home. A bale of hay in a barn. A warren of rabbits. The images were foggy, like looking through cloudy glass. They were briefâa flash here and there, every few months. I thought nothing of them, until one of the images was of a hand ⦠This beautiful, human hand. Holding a brush. Paintingâflowers on a table.â
My heart stopped beating.
âAnd that time, I pushed a thought back. Of the night skyâof the image that brought me joy when I needed it most. Open night sky, stars, and the moon. I didnât know if it was received, but I tried, anyway.â
I wasnât sure I was breathing.
âThose dreamsâthe flashes of that person, that woman ⦠I treasured them. They were a reminder that there was some peace out there in the world, some light. That there was a place, and a person, who had enough safety to paint flowers on a table. They went on for years, until ⦠a year ago. I was sleeping next to Amarantha, and I jolted awake from this dream ⦠this dream that was clearer and brighter, like that fog had been wiped away. Sheâyou were dreaming. I was in your dream, watching as you had a nightmare about some woman slitting your throat, while you were chased by the Bogge ⦠I couldnât reach you, speak to you. But you were seeing our kind. And I realized that the fog had probably been the wall, and that you ⦠you were now in Prythian.
âI saw you through your dreamsâand I hoarded the images, sorting through them over and over again, trying to place where you were, who you were. But you had such horrible nightmares, and the creatures belonged to all courts. Iâd wake up with your scent in my nose, and it would haunt me all day, every step. But then one night, you dreamed of standing amongst green hills, seeing unlit bonfires for Calanmai.â
There was such silence in my head.
âI knew there was only one celebration that large; I knew those hillsâand I knew youâd probably be there. So I told Amarantha ⦠â Rhys swallowed. âI told her that I wanted to go to the Spring Court for the celebration, to spy on Tamlin and see if anyone showed up wishing to conspire with him. We were so close to the deadline for the curse that she was paranoidârestless. She told me to bring back traitors. I promised her I would.â
His eyes lifted to mine again.
âI got there, and I could smell you. So I tracked that scent, and ⦠And there you were. Humanâutterly human, and being dragged away by those piece-of-shit picts, who wanted to ⦠â He shook his head. âI debated slaughtering them then and there, but then they shoved you, and I just ⦠moved. I started speaking without knowing what I was saying, only that you were there, and I was touching you, and ⦠â He loosed a shuddering breath.
There you are. Iâve been looking for you.
His first words to meânot a lie at all, not a threat to keep those faeries away.
Thank you for finding her for me.
I had the vague feeling of the world slipping out from under my feet like sand washing away from the shore.
âYou looked at me,â Rhys said, âand I knew you had no idea who I was. That I might have seen your dreams, but you hadnât seen mine. And you were just ⦠human. You were so young, and breakable, and had no interest in me whatsoever, and I knew that if I stayed too long, someone would see and report back, and sheâd find you. So I started walking away, thinking youâd be glad to get rid of me. But then you called after me, like you couldnât let go of me just yet, whether you knew it or not. And I knew ⦠I knew we were on dangerous ground, somehow. I knew that I could never speak to you, or see you, or think of you again.
âI didnât want to know why you were in Prythian; I didnât even want to know your name. Because seeing you in my dreams had been one thing, but in person ⦠Right then, deep down, I think I knew what you were. And I didnât let myself admit it, because if there was the slightest chance that you were my mate ⦠They would have done such unspeakable things to you, Feyre.
âSo I let you walk away. I told myself after you were gone that maybe ⦠maybe the Cauldron had been kind, and not cruel, for letting me see you. Just once. A gift for what I was enduring. And when you were gone, I found those three picts. I broke into their minds, reshaping their lives, their histories, and dragged them before Amarantha. I made them confess to conspiring to find other rebels that night. I made them lie and claim that they hated her. I watched her carve them up while they were still alive, protesting their innocence. I enjoyed itâbecause I knew what they had wanted to do to you. And knew that it would have paled in comparison to what Amarantha would have done if sheâd found you.â
I wrapped a hand around my throat. I had my reasons to be out then, heâd once said to me Under the Mountain. Do not think, Feyre, that it did not cost me.
Rhys kept staring at the table as he said, âI didnât know. That you were with Tamlin. That you were staying at the Spring Court. Amarantha sent me that day after the Summer Solstice because Iâd been so successful on Calanmai. I was prepared to mock him, maybe pick a fight. But then I got into that room, and the scent was familiar, but hidden ⦠And then I saw the plate, and felt the glamour, and ⦠There you were. Living in my second-most enemyâs house. Dining with him. Reeking of his scent. Looking at him like ⦠Like you loved him.â
The whites of his knuckles showed.
âAnd I decided that I had to scare Tamlin. I had to scare you, and Lucien, but mostly Tamlin. Because I saw how he looked at you, too. So what I did that day ⦠â His lips were pale, tight. âI broke into your mind and held it enough that you felt it, that it terrified you, hurt you. I made Tamlin begâas Amarantha had made me beg, to show him how powerless he was to save you. And I prayed my performance was enough to get him to send you away. Back to the human realm, away from Amarantha. Because she was going to find you. If you broke that curse, she was going to find you and kill you.
âBut I was so selfishâI was so stupidly selfish that I couldnât walk away without knowing your name. And you were looking at me like I was a monster, so I told myself it didnât matter, anyway. But you lied when I asked. I knew you did. I had your mind in my hands, and you had the defiance and foresight to lie to my face. So I walked away from you again. I vomited my guts up as soon as I left.â
My lips wobbled, and I pressed them together.
âI checked back once. To ensure you were gone. I went with them the day they sacked the manorâto make my performance complete. I told Amarantha the name of that girl, thinking youâd invented it. I had no idea ⦠I had no idea sheâd send her cronies to retrieve Clare. But if I admitted my lie ⦠â He swallowed hard. âI broke into Clareâs head when they brought her Under the Mountain. I took away her pain, and told her to scream when expected to. So they ⦠they did those things to her, and I tried to make it right, but ⦠After a week, I couldnât let them do it. Hurt her like that anymore. So while they tortured her, I slipped into her mind again and ended it. She didnât feel any pain. She felt none of what they did to her, even at the end. But ⦠But I still see her. And my men. And the others that I killed for Amarantha.â
Two tears slid down his cheeks, swift and cold.
He didnât wipe them away as he said, âI thought it was done after that. With Clareâs death, Amarantha believed you were dead. So you were safe, and far away, and my people were safe, and Tamlin had lost, so ⦠it was done. We were done. But then ⦠I was in the back of the throne room that day the Attor brought you in. And I have never known such horror, Feyre, as I did when I watched you make that bargain. Irrational, stupid terrorâI didnât know you. I didnât even know your name. But I thought of those painterâs hands, the flowers Iâd seen you create. And how sheâd delight in breaking your fingers apart. I had to stand and watch as the Attor and its cronies beat you. I had to watch the disgust and hatred on your face as you looked at me, watched me threaten to shatter Lucienâs mind. And thenâthen I learned your name. Hearing you say it ⦠it was like an answer to a question Iâd been asking for five hundred years.
âI decided, then and there, that I was going to fight. And I would fight dirty, and kill and torture and manipulate, but I was going to fight. If there was a shot of freeing us from Amarantha, you were it. I thought ⦠I thought the Cauldron had been sending me these dreams to tell me that you would be the one to save us. Save my people.
âSo I watched your first trial. Pretendingâalways pretending to be that person you hated. When you were hurt so badly against the Wyrm ⦠I found my way in with you. A way to defy Amarantha, to spread the seeds of hope to those who knew how to read the message, and a way to keep you alive without seeming too suspicious. And a way to get back at Tamlin ⦠To use him against Amarantha, yes, but ⦠To get back at him for my mother and sister, and for ⦠having you. When we made that bargain, you were so hateful that I knew Iâd done my job well.
âSo we endured it. I made you dress like that so Amarantha wouldnât suspect, and made you drink the wine so you would not remember the nightly horrors in that mountain. And that last night, when I found you two in the hall ⦠I was jealous. I was jealous of him, and pissed off that heâd used that one shot of being unnoticed not to get you out, but to be with you, and ⦠Amarantha saw that jealousy. She saw me kissing you to hide the evidence, but she saw why. For the first time, she saw why. So that night, after I left you, I had to ⦠service her. She kept me there longer than usual, trying to squeeze the answers out of me. But I gave her what she wanted to hear: that you were nothing, that you were human garbage, that Iâd use and discard you. Afterward ⦠I wanted to see you. One last time. Alone. I thought about telling you everythingâbut who Iâd become, who you thought I was ⦠I didnât dare shatter that deception.
âBut your final trial came, and ⦠When she started torturing you, something snapped in a way I couldnât explain, only that seeing you bleeding and screaming undid me. It broke me at last. And I knew as I picked up that knife to kill her ⦠I knew right then what you were. I knew that you were my mate, and you were in love with another male, and had destroyed yourself to save him, and that ⦠that I didnât care. If you were going to die, I was going to die with you. I couldnât stop thinking it over and over as you screamed, as I tried to kill her: you were my mate, my mate, my mate.
âBut then she snapped your neck.â
Tears rolled down his face.
âAnd I felt you die,â he whispered.
Tears were sliding down my own cheeks.
âAnd this beautiful, wonderful thing that had come into my life, this gift from the Cauldron ⦠It was gone. In my desperation, I clung to that bond. Not the bargainâthe bargain was nothing, the bargain was like a cobweb. But I grabbed that bond between us and I tugged, I willed you to hold on, to stay with me, because if we could get free ⦠If we could get free, then all seven of us were there. We could bring you back. And I didnât care if I had to slice into all of their minds to do it. Iâd make them save you.â His hands were shaking. âYouâd freed us with your last breath, and my powerâI wrapped my power around the bond. The mating bond. I could feel you flickering there, holding on.â
Home. Home had been at the end of the bond, Iâd told the Bone Carver. Not Tamlin, not the Spring Court, but ⦠Rhysand.
âSo Amarantha died, and I spoke to the High Lords mind to mind, convincing them to come forward, to offer that spark of power. None of them disagreed. I think they were too stunned to think of saying no. And ⦠I again had to watch as Tamlin held you. Kissed you. I wanted to go home, to Velaris, but I had to stay, to make sure things were set in motion, that you were all right. So I waited as long as I could, then I sent a tug through the bond. Then you came to find me.
âI almost told you then, but ⦠You were so sad. And tired. And for once, you looked at me like ⦠like I was worth something. So I promised myself that the next time I saw you, Iâd free you of the bargain. Because I was selfish, and knew that if I let go right then, heâd lock you up and Iâd never get to see you again. When I went to leave you ⦠I think transforming you into Fae made the bond lock into place permanently. Iâd known it existed, but it hit me thenâhit me so strong that I panicked. I knew if I stayed a second longer, Iâd damn the consequences and take you with me. And youâd hate me forever.
âI landed at the Night Court, right as Mor was waiting for me, and I was so frantic, so ⦠unhinged, that I told her everything. I hadnât seen her in fifty years, and my first words to her were, âSheâs my mate.â And for three months ⦠for three months I tried to convince myself that you were better off without me. I tried to convince myself that everything Iâd done had made you hate me. But I felt you through the bond, through your open mental shields. I felt your pain, and sadness, and loneliness. I felt you struggling to escape the darkness of Amarantha the same way I was. I heard you were going to marry him, and I told myself you were happy. I should let you be happy, even if it killed me. Even if you were my mate, youâd earned that happiness.
âThe day of your wedding, Iâd planned to get rip-roaring drunk with Cassian, who had no idea why, but ⦠But then I felt you again. I felt your panic, and despair, and heard you beg someoneâanyoneâto save you. I lost it. I winnowed to the wedding, and barely remembered who I was supposed to be, the part I was supposed to play. All I could see was you, in your stupid wedding dressâso thin. So, so thin, and pale. And I wanted to kill him for it, but I had to get you out. Had to call in that bargain, just once, to get you away, to see if you were all right.â
Rhys looked up at me, eyes desolate. âIt killed me, Feyre, to send you back. To see you waste away, month by month. It killed me to know he was sharing your bed. Not just because you were my mate, but because I ⦠â He glanced down, then up at me again. âI knew ⦠I knew I was in love with you that moment I picked up the knife to kill Amarantha.
âWhen you finally came here ⦠I decided I wouldnât tell you. Any of it. I wouldnât let you out of the bargain, because your hatred was better than facing the two alternatives: that you felt nothing for me, or that you ⦠you might feel something similar, and if I let myself love you, you would be taken from me. The way my family wasâthe way my friends were. So I didnât tell you. I watched as you faded away. Until that day ⦠that day he locked you up.
âI would have killed him if heâd been there. But I broke some very, very fundamental rules in taking you away. Amren said if I got you to admit that we were mates, it would keep any trouble from our door, but ⦠I couldnât force the bond on you. I couldnât try to seduce you into accepting the bond, either. Even if it gave Tamlin license to wage war on me. You had been through so much already. I didnât want you to think that everything I did was to win you, just to keep my lands safe. But I couldnât ⦠I couldnât stop being around you, and loving you, and wanting you. I still canât stay away.â
He leaned back, loosing a long breath.
Slowly, I turned around, to where the soup was now boiling, and ladled it into a bowl.
He watched every step I took to the table, the steaming bowl in my hands.
I stopped before him, staring down.
And I said, âYou love me?â
Rhys nodded.
And I wondered if love was too weak a word for what he felt, what heâd done for me. For what I felt for him.
I set the bowl down before him. âThen eat.â