A Court of Mist and Fury: Part 3 – Chapter 60
A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses Book 2)
âVelaris is secure,â Rhys said in the black hours of the night. âThe wards the Cauldron took out have been remade.â
We had not stopped to rest until now. For hours weâd worked, along with the rest of the city, to heal, to patch up, to hunt down answers any way we could. And now we were all again gathered, the clock chiming three in the morning.
I didnât know how Rhys was standing as he leaned against the mantel in the sitting room. I was near-limp on the couch beside Mor, both of us coated in dirt and blood. Like the rest of them.
Sprawled in an armchair built for Illyrian wings, Cassianâs face was battered and healing slowly enough that I knew heâd drained his power during those long minutes when heâd defended the city alone. But his hazel eyes still glowed with the embers of rage.
Amren was hardly better off. The tiny femaleâs gray clothes hung mostly in strips, her skin beneath pale as snow. Half-asleep on the couch across from mine, she leaned against Azriel, who kept casting alarmed glances at her, even as his own wounds leaked a bit. Atop his scarred hands, Azrielâs blue Siphons were dull, muted. Utterly empty.
As I had helped the survivors in the Rainbow tend to their wounded, count their dead, and begin repairs, Rhys had checked in every now and then while heâd rebuilt the wards with whatever power lingered in his arsenal. During one of our brief breaks, heâd told me what Amren had done on her side of the river.
With her dark power, she had spun illusions straight into the soldiersâ minds. They believed they had fallen into the Sidra and were drowning; they believed they were flying a thousand feet above and had dived, fast and swift, for the cityâonly to find the street mere feet away, and the crunch of their skulls. The crueler ones, the wickedest ones, she had unleashed their own nightmares upon themâuntil they died from terror, their hearts giving out.
Some had fallen into the river, drinking their own spreading blood as they drowned. Some had disappeared wholly.
âVelaris might be secure,â Cassian replied, not even bothering to lift his head from where it rested against the back of the chair, âbut for how long? Hybern knows about this place, thanks to those wyrm-queens. Who else will they sell the information to? How long until the other courts come sniffing? Or Hybern uses that Cauldron again to take down our defenses?â
Rhys closed his eyes, his shoulders tight. I could already see the weight pushing down on that dark head.
I hated to add to that burden, but I said, âIf we all go to Hybern to destroy the Cauldron ⦠who will defend the city?â
Silence. Rhysâs throat bobbed.
Amren said, âIâll stay.â Cassian opened his mouth to object, but Rhys slowly looked at his Second. Amren held his gaze as she added, âIf Rhys must go to Hybern, then I am the only one of you who might hold the city until help arrives. Today was a surprise. A bad one. When you leave, we will be better prepared. The new wards we built today will not fall so easily.â
Mor loosed a sigh. âSo what do we do now?â
Amren simply said, âWe sleep. We eat.â
And it was Azriel who added, his voice raw with the aftermath of battle-rage, âAnd then we retaliate.â
Rhys did not come to bed.
And when I emerged from the bath, the water clouded with dirt and blood, he was nowhere to be found.
But I felt for the bond between us and trudged upstairs, my stiff legs barking in pain. He was sitting on the roofâin the dark. His great wings were spread behind him, draped over the tiles.
I slid into his lap, looping my arms around his neck.
He stared at the city around us. âSo few lights. So few lights left tonight.â
I did not look. I only traced the lines of his face, then brushed my thumb over his mouth. âIt is not your fault,â I said quietly.
His eyes shifted to mine, barely visible in the dark. âIsnât it? I handed this city over to them. I said I would be willing to risk it, but ⦠I donât know who I hate more: the king, those queens, or myself.â
I brushed the hair out of his face. He gripped my hand, halting my fingers. âYou shut me out,â he breathed. âYouâshielded against me. Completely. I couldnât find a way in.â
âIâm sorry.â
Rhys let out a bitter laugh. âSorry? Be impressed. That shield ⦠What you did to the Attor ⦠â He shook his head. âYou could have been killed.â
âAre you going to scold me for it?â
His brows furrowed. Then he buried his face in my shoulder. âHow could I scold you for defending my people? I want to throttle you, yes, for not going back to the town house, but ⦠You chose to fight for them. For Velaris.â He kissed my neck. âI donât deserve you.â
My heart strained. He meant itâtruly felt that way. I stroked his hair again. And I said to him, the words the only sounds in the silent, dark city, âWe deserve each other. And we deserve to be happy.â
Rhys shuddered against me. And when his lips found mine, I let him lay me down upon the roof tiles and make love to me under the stars.
Amren cracked the code the next afternoon. The news was not good.
âTo nullify the Cauldronâs power,â she said by way of greeting as we crowded around the dining table in the town house, having rushed in from the repairs weâd all been making on very little sleep, âyou must touch the Cauldronâand speak these words.â She had written them all down for me on a piece of paper.
âYou know this for certain?â Rhys said. He was still bleak-eyed from the attack, from healing and helping his people all day.
Amren hissed. âIâm trying not to be insulted, Rhysand.â
Mor elbowed her way between them, staring at the two assembled pieces of the Book of Breathings. âWhat happens if we put both halves together?â
âDonât put them together,â Amren simply said.
With either piece laid out, their voices blended and sang and hissedâevil and good and madness; dark and light and chaos.
âYou put the pieces together,â she clarified when Rhys gave her a questioning look, âand the blast of power will be felt in every corner and hole in the earth. You wonât just attract the King of Hybern. Youâll draw enemies far older and more wretched. Things that have long been asleepâand should remain so.â
I cringed a bit. Rhys put a hand on my back.
âThen we move in now,â Cassian said. His face had healed, but he limped a bit from an injury I couldnât see beneath his fighting leathers. He jerked his chin to Rhys. âSince you canât winnow without being tracked, Mor and Az will winnow us all in, Feyre breaks the Cauldron, and we get out. Weâll be there and gone before anyone notices and the King of Hybern will have a new piece of cookware.â
I swallowed. âIt could be anywhere in his castle.â
âWe know where it is,â Cassian countered.
I blinked. Azriel said to me, âWeâve been able to narrow it down to the lower levels.â Through his spying, their planning for this trip all these months. âEvery inch of the castle and surrounding lands is heavily guarded, but not impossible to get through. Weâve worked out the timing of itâfor a small group of us to get in and out, quick and silent, and be gone before they know whatâs happening.â
Mor said to him, âBut the King of Hybern could notice Rhysâs presence the moment he arrives. And if Feyre needs time to nullify the Cauldron, and we donât know how much time, thatâs a risky variable.â
Cassian said, âWeâve considered that. So you and Rhys will winnow us in off the coast; we fly in while he stays.â Theyâd have to winnow me, I realized, since I still had not yet mastered doing it over long distances. At least, not with many stops in between. âAs for the spell,â Cassian continued, âitâs a risk weâll have to take.â
Silence fell as they waited for Rhysâs answer. My mate scanned my face, eyes wide.
Azriel pushed, âItâs a solid plan. The king doesnât know our scents. We wreck the Cauldron and vanish before he notices ⦠Itâll be a graver insult than the bloodier, direct route weâd been considering, Rhys. We beat them yesterday, so when we go into that castle ⦠â Vengeance indeed danced in that normally placid face. âWeâll leave a few reminders that we won the last damn war for a reason.â
Cassian nodded grimly. Even Mor smiled a bit.
âAre you asking me,â Rhys finally said, far too calmly, âto stay outside while my mate goes into his stronghold?â
âYes,â Azriel said with equal calm, Cassian shifting himself slightly between them. âIf Feyre canât nullify the Cauldron easily or quickly, we steal itâsend the pieces back to the bastard when weâre done breaking it apart. Either way, Feyre calls you through the bond when weâre doneâyou and Mor winnow us out. They wonât be able to track you fast enough if you only come to retrieve us.â
Rhysand dropped onto the couch beside me at last, loosing a breath. His eyes slid to me. âIf you want to go, then you go, Feyre.â
If I hadnât been already in love with him, I might have loved him for thatâfor not insisting I stay, even if it drove his instincts mad, for not locking me away in the aftermath of what had happened yesterday.
And I realizedâI realized how badly Iâd been treated before, if my standards had become so low. If the freedom Iâd been granted felt like a privilege and not an inherent right.
Rhysâs eyes darkened, and I knew he read what I thought, felt. âYou might be my mate,â he said, âbut you remain your own person. You decide your fateâyour choices. Not me. You chose yesterday. You choose every day. Forever.â
And maybe he only understood because he, too, had been helpless and without choices, had been forced to do such horrible things, and locked up. I threaded my fingers through his and squeezed. Togetherâtogether weâd find our peace, our future. Together weâd fight for it.
âLetâs go to Hybern,â I said.
I was halfway up the stairs an hour later when I realized that I still had no idea what room to go to. Iâd gone to my bedroom since weâd returned from the cabin, but ⦠what of his?
With Tamlin, heâd kept his own rooms and slept in mine. And I supposedâI supposed itâd be the same.
I was almost to my bedroom door when Rhysand drawled from behind me, âWe can use your room if you like, but ⦠â He was leaning against his open bedroom door. âEither your room or mineâbut weâre sharing one from now on. Just tell me whether I should move my clothes or yours. If thatâs all right with you.â
âDonât youâyou donât want your own space?â
âNo,â he said baldly. âUnless you do. I need you protecting me from our enemies with your water-wolves.â
I snorted. Heâd made me tell him that part of my tale over and over. I jerked my chin toward his bedroom. âYour bed is bigger.â
And that was that.
I walked in to find my clothes already there, a second armoire now beside his. I stared at the massive bed, then at all the open space around us.
Rhys shut the door and went to a small box on the deskâthen silently handed it to me.
My heart thundered as I opened the lid. The star sapphire gleamed in the candlelight, as if it were one of the Starfall spirits trapped in stone. âYour motherâs ring?â
âMy mother gave me that ring to remind me she was always with me, even during the worst of my training. And when I reached my majority, she took it away. It was an heirloom of her familyâhad been handed down from female to female over many, many years. My sister wasnât yet born, so she wouldnât have known to give it to her, but ⦠My mother gave it to the Weaver. And then she told me that if I were to marry or mate, then the female would either have to be smart or strong enough to get it back. And if the female wasnât either of those things, then she wouldnât survive the marriage. I promised my mother that any potential bride or mate would have the test ⦠And so it sat there for centuries.â
My face heated. âYou said this was something of valueââ
âIt is. To me, and my family.â
âSo my trip to the Weaverââ
âIt was vital that we learn if you could detect those objects. But ⦠I picked the object out of pure selfishness.â
âSo I won my wedding ring without even being asked if I wanted to marry you.â
âPerhaps.â
I cocked my head. âDoâdo you want me to wear it?â
âOnly if you want to.â
âWhen we go to Hybern ⦠Letâs say things go badly. Will anyone be able to tell that weâre mated? Could they use that against you?â
Rage flickered in his eyes. âIf they see us together and can scent us both, theyâll know.â
âAnd if I show up alone, wearing a Night Court wedding ringââ
He snarled softly.
I closed the box, leaving the ring inside. âAfter we nullify the Cauldron, I want to do it all. Get the bond declared, get married, throw a stupid party and invite everyone in Velarisâall of it.â
Rhys took the box from my hands and set it down on the nightstand before herding me toward the bed. âAnd if I wanted to go one step beyond that?â
âIâm listening,â I purred as he laid me on the sheets.