A Court of Mist and Fury: Part 1 – Chapter 7
A Court of Mist and Fury (A Court of Thorns and Roses Book 2)
War.
The word clanged through me, freezing my veins.
âDonât invade,â I breathed. Iâd get on my knees for this. Iâd crawl if I had to. âDonât invadeâplease.â
Rhys cocked his head, his mouth tightening. âYou truly think Iâm a monster, even after everything.â
âPlease,â I gasped out. âTheyâre defenseless, they wonât stand a chanceââ
âIâm not going to invade the mortal lands,â he said too quietly.
I waited for him to go on, glad for the spacious room, the bright air, as the ground started to slide out from beneath me.
âPut your damn shield up,â he growled.
I looked inward, finding that invisible wall had dropped again. But I was so tired, and if war was coming, if my familyâ
âShield. Now.â
The raw command in his voiceâthe voice of the High Lord of the Night Courtâhad me acting on instinct, my exhausted mind building the wall brick by brick. Only when itâd ensconced my mind once more did he speak, his eyes softening almost imperceptibly. âDid you think it would end with Amarantha?â
âTamlin hasnât said ⦠â And why would he tell me? But there were so many patrols, so many meetings I wasnât allowed to attend, such ⦠tension. He had to know. I needed to ask himâdemand why he hadnât told meâ
âThe King of Hybern has been planning his campaign to reclaim the world south of the wall for over a hundred years,â Rhys said. âAmarantha was an experimentâa forty-nine-year test, to see how easily and how long a territory might fall and be controlled by one of his commanders.â
For an immortal, forty-nine years was nothing. I wouldnât have been surprised to hear heâd been planning this for far longer than a century. âWill he attack Prythian first?â
âPrythian,â Rhys said, pointing to the map of our massive island on the table, âis all that stands between the King of Hybern and the continent. He wants to reclaim the human lands thereâperhaps seize the faerie lands, too. If anyone is to intercept his conquering fleet before it reaches the continent, it would be us.â
I slid into one of the chairs, my knees wobbling so badly I could hardly keep upright.
âHe will seek to remove Prythian from his way swiftly and thoroughly,â Rhys continued. âAnd shatter the wall at some point in the process. There are already holes in it, though mercifully small enough to make it difficult to swiftly pass his armies through. Heâll want to bring the whole thing downâand likely use the ensuing panic to his advantage.â
Each breath was like swallowing glass. âWhenâwhen is he going to attack?â The wall had held steady for five centuries, and even then, those damned holes had allowed the foulest, hungriest Fae beasts to sneak through and prey on humans. Without that wall, if Hybern was indeed to launch an assult on the human world ⦠I wished I hadnât eaten such a large breakfast.
âThat is the question,â he said. âAnd why I brought you here.â
I lifted my head to meet his stare. His face was drawn, but calm.
âI donât know when or where he plans to attack Prythian,â Rhys went on. âI donât know who his allies here might be.â
âHeâd have allies here?â
A slow nod. âCowards who would bow and join him, rather than fight his armies again.â
I could have sworn a whisper of darkness spread along the floor behind him. âDid ⦠did you fight in the War?â
For a moment, I thought he wouldnât answer. But then Rhys nodded. âI was youngâby our standards, at least. But my father had sent aid to the mortal-faerie alliance on the continent, and I convinced him to let me take a legion of our soldiers.â He sat in the chair beside mine, gazing vacantly at the map. âI was stationed in the south, right where the fighting was thickest. The slaughter was ⦠â He chewed on the inside of his cheek. âI have no interest in ever seeing full-scale slaughter like that again.â
He blinked, as if clearing the horrors from his mind. âBut I donât think the King of Hybern will strike that wayânot at first. Heâs too smart to waste his forces here, to give the continent time to rally while we fight him. If he makes his move to destroy Prythian and the wall, itâll be through stealth and trickery. To weaken us. Amarantha was the first part of that plan. We now have several untested High Lords, broken courts with High Priestesses angling for control like wolves around a carcass, and a people who have realized how powerless they might truly be.â
âWhy are you telling me this?â I said, my voice thin, scratchy. It made no senseânoneâthat he would reveal his suspicions, his fears.
And Iantheâshe might be ambitious, but she was Tamlinâs friend. My friend, of sorts. Perhaps the only ally weâd have against the other High Priestesses, Rhysâs personal dislike for her or no â¦
âI am telling you for two reasons,â he said, his face so cold, so calm, that it unnerved me as much as the news he was delivering. âOne, youâre ⦠close to Tamlin. He has menâbut he also has long-existing ties to Hybernââ
âHeâd never help the kingââ
Rhys held up a hand. âI want to know if Tamlin is willing to fight with us. If he can use those connections to our advantage. As he and I have strained relations, you have the pleasure of being the go-between.â
âHe doesnât inform me of those things.â
âPerhaps itâs time he did. Perhaps itâs time you insisted.â He examined the map, and I followed where his gaze landed. On the wall within Prythianâon the small, vulnerable mortal territory. My mouth went dry.
âWhat is your other reason?â
Rhys looked me up and down, assessing, weighing. âYou have a skill set that I need. Rumor has it you caught a Suriel.â
âIt wasnât that hard.â
âIâve tried and failed. Twice. But thatâs a discussion for another day. I saw you trap the Middengard Wyrm like a rabbit.â His eyes twinkled. âI need you to help me. To use those skills of yours to track down what I need.â
âWhat do you need? Whatever was tied to my reading and shielding, Iâm guessing?â
âYouâll learn of that later.â
I didnât know why Iâd even bothered to ask. âThere have to be at least a dozen other hunters more experienced and skilledââ
âMaybe there are. But youâre the only one I trust.â
I blinked. âI could betray you whenever I feel like it.â
âYou could. But you wonât.â I gritted my teeth, and was about to say something vicious when he added, âAnd then thereâs the matter of your powers.â
âI donât have any powers.â It came out so fast that there was no chance of it sounding like anything but denial.
Rhys crossed his legs. âDonât you? The strength, the speed ⦠If I didnât know better, Iâd say you and Tamlin were doing a very good job of pretending youâre normal. That the powers youâre displaying arenât usually the first indications among our kind that a High Lordâs son might become his Heir.â
âIâm not a High Lord.â
âNo, but you were given life by all seven of us. Your very essence is tied to us, born of us. What if we gave you more than we expected?â Again, that gaze raked over me. âWhat if you could stand against usâhold your own, a High Lady?â
âThere are no High Ladies.â
His brows furrowed, but he shook his head. âWeâll talk about that later, too. But yes, Feyreâthere can be High Ladies. And perhaps you arenât one of them, but ⦠what if you were something similar? What if you were able to wield the power of seven High Lords at once? What if you could blend into darkness, or shape-shift, or freeze over an entire roomâan entire army?â
The winter wind on the nearby peaks seemed to howl in answer. That thing Iâd felt under my skin â¦
âDo you understand what that might mean in an oncoming war? Do you understand how it might destroy you if you donât learn to control it?â
âOne, stop asking so many rhetorical questions. Two, we donât know if I do have these powersââ
âYou do. But you need to start mastering them. To learn what you inherited from us.â
âAnd I suppose youâre the one to teach me, too? Reading and shielding arenât enough?â
âWhile you hunt with me for what I need, yes.â
I began shaking my head. âTamlin wonât allow it.â
âTamlin isnât your keeper, and you know it.â
âIâm his subject, and he is my High Lordââ
âYou are no oneâs subject.â
I went rigid at the flash of teeth, the smoke-like wings that flared out.
âI will say this onceâand only once,â Rhysand purred, stalking to the map on the wall. âYou can be a pawn, be someoneâs reward, and spend the rest of your immortal life bowing and scraping and pretending youâre less than him, than Ianthe, than any of us. If you want to pick that road, then fine. A shame, but itâs your choice.â The shadow of wings rippled again. âBut I know youâmore than you realize, I thinkâand I donât believe for one damn minute that youâre remotely fine with being a pretty trophy for someone who sat on his ass for nearly fifty years, then sat on his ass while you were shredded apartââ
âStop itââ
âOr,â he plowed ahead, âyouâve got another choice. You can master whatever powers we gave to you, and make it count. You can play a role in this war. Because war is coming one way or another, and do not try to delude yourself that any of the Fae will give a shit about your family across the wall when our whole territory is likely to become a charnel house.â
I stared at the mapâat Prythian, and that sliver of land at its southern base.
âYou want to save the mortal realm?â he asked. âThen become someone Prythian listens to. Become vital. Become a weapon. Because there might be a day, Feyre, when only you stand between the King of Hybern and your human family. And you do not want to be unprepared.â
I lifted my gaze to him, my breath tight, aching.
As if he hadnât just knocked the world from beneath my feet, Rhysand said, âThink it over. Take the week. Ask Tamlin, if itâll make you sleep better. See what charming Ianthe says about it. But itâs your choice to makeâno one elseâs.â
I didnât see Rhysand for the rest of the week. Or Mor.
The only people I encountered were Nuala and Cerridwen, who delivered my meals, made my bed, and occasionally asked how I was faring.
The only evidence I had at all that Rhys remained on the premises were the blank copies of the alphabet, along with several sentences I was to write every day, swapping out words, each one more obnoxious than the last:
Rhysand is the most handsome High Lord.
Rhysand is the most delightful High Lord.
Rhysand is the most cunning High Lord.
Every day, one miserable sentenceâwith one changing word of varying arrogance and vanity. And every day, another simple set of instructions: shield up, shield down; shield up, shield down. Over and over and over.
How he knew if I obeyed or not, I didnât careâbut I threw myself into my lessons, I raised and lowered and thickened those mental shields. If only because it was all I had to do.
My nightmares left me groggy, sweatyâbut the room was so open, the starlight so bright that when Iâd jerk awake, I didnât rush to the toilet. No walls pushing in around me, no inky darkness. I knew where I was. Even if I resented being there.
The day before our week finally finished, I was trudging to my usual little table, already grimacing at what delightful sentences Iâd find waiting and all the mental acrobatics ahead, when Rhysâs and Morâs voices floated toward me.
It was a public space, so I didnât bother masking my footsteps as I neared where they spoke in one of the sitting areas, Rhys pacing before the open plunge off the mountain, Mor lounging in a cream-colored armchair.
âAzriel would want to know that,â Mor was saying.
âAzriel can go to hell,â Rhys sniped back. âHe likely already knows, anyway.â
âWe played games the last time,â Mor said with a seriousness that made me pause a healthy distance away, âand we lost. Badly. Weâre not going to do that again.â
âYou should be working,â was Rhysandâs only response. âI gave you control for a reason, you know.â
Morâs jaw tightened, and she at last faced me. She gave me a smile that was more of a cringe.
Rhys turned, frowning at me. âSay what it is you came here to say, Mor,â he said tightly, resuming his pacing.
Mor rolled her eyes for my benefit, but her face turned solemn as she said, âThere was another attackâat a temple in Cesere. Almost every priestess slain, the trove looted.â
Rhys halted. And I didnât know what to process: her news, or the utter rage conveyed in one word as Rhys said, âWho.â
âWe donât know,â Mor said. âSame tracks as last time: small group, bodies that showed signs of wounds from large blades, and no trace of where they came from and how they disappeared. No survivors. The bodies werenât even found until a day later, when a group of pilgrims came by.â
By the Cauldron. I must have made some tiny noise, because Mor gave me a strained, but sympathetic look.
Rhys, though ⦠First the shadows startedâplumes of them from his back.
And then, as if his rage had loosened his grip on that beast heâd once told me he hated to yield to, those wings became flesh.
Great, beautiful, brutal wings, membranous and clawed like a batâs, dark as night and strong as hell. Even the way he stood seemed alteredâsteadier, grounded. Like some final piece of him had clicked into place. But Rhysandâs voice was still midnight-soft and he said, âWhat did Azriel have to say about it?â
Again, that glance from Mor, as if unsure I should be present for whatever this conversation was. âHeâs pissed. Cassian even more soâheâs convinced it must be one of the rogue Illyrian war-bands, intent on winning new territory.â
âItâs something to consider,â Rhys mused. âSome of the Illyrian clans gleefully bowed to Amarantha during those years. Trying to expand their borders could be their way of seeing how far they can push me and get away with it.â I hated the sound of her name, focused on it more than the information he was allowing me to glean.
âCassian and Az are waitingââ She cut herself off and gave me an apologetic wince. âTheyâre waiting in the usual spot for your orders.â
Fineâthat was fine. Iâd seen that blank map on the wall. I was an enemyâs bride. Even mentioning where his forces were stationed, what they were up to, might be dangerous. I had no idea where Cesere even wasâwhat it was, actually.
Rhys studied the open air again, the howling wind that shoved dark, roiling clouds over the distant peaks. Good weather, I realized, for flying.
âWinnowing in would be easier,â Mor said, following the High Lordâs gaze.
âTell the pricks Iâll be there in a few hours,â he merely said.
Mor gave me a wary grin, and vanished.
I studied the empty space where sheâd been, not a trace of her left behind.
âHow does that ⦠vanishing work?â I said softly. Iâd seen only a few High Fae do itâand no one had ever explained.
Rhys didnât look at me, but he said, âWinnowing? Think of it as ⦠two different points on a piece of cloth. One point is your current place in the world. The other one across the cloth is where you want to go. Winnowing ⦠itâs like folding that cloth so the two spots align. The magic does the foldingâand all we do is take a step to get from one place to another. Sometimes itâs a long step, and you can feel the dark fabric of the world as you pass through it. A shorter step, letâs say from one end of the room to the other, would barely register. Itâs a rare gift, and a helpful one. Though only the stronger Fae can do it. The more powerful you are, the farther you can jump between places in one go.â
I knew the explanation was as much for my benefit as it was to distract himself. But I found myself saying, âIâm sorry about the templeâand the priestesses.â
The wrath still glimmered in those eyes as he at last turned to me. âPlenty more people are going to die soon enough, anyway.â
Maybe that was why heâd allowed me to get close, to overhear this conversation. To remind me of what might very well happen with Hybern.
âWhat are ⦠,â I tried. âWhat are Illyrian war-bands?â
âArrogant bastards, thatâs what,â he muttered.
I crossed my arms, waiting.
Rhys stretched his wings, the sunlight setting the leathery texture glowing with subtle color. âTheyâre a warrior-race within my lands. And general pains in my ass.â
âSome of them supported Amarantha?â
Darkness danced in the hall as that distant storm grew close enough to smother the sun. âSome. But me and mine have enjoyed ourselves hunting them down these past few months. And ending them.â
Slowly was the word he didnât need to add.
âThatâs why you stayed awayâyou were busy with that?â
âI was busy with many things.â
Not an answer. But it seemed he was done talking to me, and whoever Cassian and Azriel were, meeting with them was far more important.
So Rhys didnât as much as say good-bye before he simply walked off the edge of the verandaâinto thin air.
My heart stopped dead, but before I could cry out, he swept past, swift as the wicked wind between the peaks. A few booming wing beats had him vanishing into the storm clouds.
âGood-bye to you, too,â I grumbled, giving him a vulgar gesture, and started my work for the day, with only the storm raging beyond the houseâs shield for company.
Even as snow lashed the protective magic of the hall, even as I toiled over the sentencesâRhysand is interesting; Rhysand is gorgeous; Rhysand is flawlessâand raised and lowered my mental shield until my mind was limping, I thought of what Iâd heard, what theyâd said.
I wondered what Ianthe would know about the murders, if she knew any of the victims. Knew what Cesere was. If temples were being targeted, she should know. Tamlin should know.
That final night, I could barely sleepâhalf from relief, half from terror that perhaps Rhysand really did have some final, nasty surprise in store. But the night and the storm passed, and when dawn broke, I was dressed before the sun had fully risen.
Iâd taken to eating in my rooms, but I swept up the stairs, heading across that massive open area, to the table at the far veranda.
Sprawled in his usual chair, Rhys was in the same clothes as yesterday, the collar of his black jacket unbuttoned, the shirt as rumpled as his hair. No wings, fortunately. I wondered if heâd just returned from wherever heâd met Mor and the others. Wondered what heâd learned.
âItâs been a week,â I said by way of greeting. âTake me home.â
Rhys took a long sip of whatever was in his cup. It didnât look like tea. âGood morning, Feyre.â
âTake me home.â
He studied my teal and gold clothes, a variation of my daily attire. If I had to admit, I didnât mind them. âThat color suits you.â
âDo you want me to say please? Is that it?â
âI want you to talk to me like a person. Start with âgood morningâ and letâs see where it gets us.â
âGood morning.â
A faint smile. Bastard. âAre you ready to face the consequences of your departure?â
I straightened. I hadnât thought about the wedding. All week, yes, but today ⦠today Iâd only thought of Tamlin, of wanting to see him, hold him, ask him about everything Rhys had claimed. During the past several days, I hadnât shown any signs of the power Rhysand believed I had, hadnât felt anything stirring beneath my skinâand thank the Cauldron.
âItâs none of your business.â
âRight. Youâll probably ignore it, anyway. Sweep it under the rug, like everything else.â
âNo one asked for your opinion, Rhysand.â
âRhysand?â He chuckled, low and soft. âI give you a week of luxury and you call me Rhysand?â
âI didnât ask to be here, or be given that week.â
âAnd yet look at you. Your face has some colorâand those marks under your eyes are almost gone. Your mental shield is stellar, by the way.â
âPlease take me home.â
He shrugged and rose. âIâll tell Mor you said good-bye.â
âI barely saw her all week.â Just that first meetingâthen that conversation yesterday. When we hadnât exchanged two words.
âShe was waiting for an invitationâshe didnât want to pester you. I wish she extended me the same courtesy.â
âNo one told me.â I didnât particularly care. No doubt she had better things to do, anyway.
âYou didnât ask. And why bother? Better to be miserable and alone.â He approached, each step smooth, graceful. His hair was definitely ruffled, as if heâd been dragging his hands through it. Or just flying for hours to whatever secret spot. âHave you thought about my offer?â
âIâll let you know next month.â
He stopped a handâs breadth away, his golden face tight. âI told you once, and Iâll tell you again,â he said. âI am not your enemy.â
âAnd I told you once, so Iâll tell you again. Youâre Tamlinâs enemy. So I suppose that makes you mine.â
âDoes it?â
âFree me from my bargain and letâs find out.â
âI canât do that.â
âCanât, or wonât?â
He just extended his hand. âShall we go?â
I nearly lunged for it. His fingers were cool, sturdyâcallused from weapons Iâd never seen on him.
Darkness gobbled us up, and it was instinct to grab him as the world vanished from beneath my feet. Winnowing indeed. Wind tore at me, and his arm was a warm, heavy weight across my back while we tumbled through realms, Rhys snickering at my terror.
But then solid groundâflagstonesâwere under me, then blinding sunshine above, greenery, little birds chirpingâ
I shoved away from him, blinking at the brightness, at the massive oak hunched over us. An oak at the edge of the formal gardensâof home.
I made to bolt for the manor house, but Rhys gripped my wrist. His eyes flashed between me and the manor. âGood luck,â he crooned.
âGet your hand off me.â
He chuckled, letting go.
âIâll see you next month,â he said, and before I could spit on him, he vanished.
I found Tamlin in his study, Lucien and two other sentries standing around the map-covered worktable.
Lucien was the first to turn to where I lurked in the doorway, falling silent mid-sentence. But then Tamlinâs head snapped up, and he was racing across the room, so fast that I hardly had time to draw breath before he was crushing me against him.
I murmured his name as my throat burned, and thenâ
Then he was holding me at armâs length, scanning me from head to toe. âAre you all right? Are you hurt?â
âIâm fine,â I said, noticing the exact moment when he realized the Night Court clothes I was wearing, the strip of bare skin exposed at my midriff. âNo one touched me.â
But he kept scouring my face, my neck. And then he rotated me, examining my back, as if he could discern through the clothes. I tore out of his grip. âI said no one touched me.â
He was breathing hard, his eyes wild. âYouâre all right,â he said. And then said it again. And again.
My heart cracked, and I reached to cup his cheek. âTamlin,â I murmured. Lucien and the other sentries, wisely, made their exit. My friend caught my gaze as he left, giving me a relieved smile.
âHe can harm you in other ways,â Tamlin croaked, closing his eyes against my touch.
âI knowâbut Iâm all right. I truly am,â I said as gently as I could. And then noticed the study wallsâthe claw marks raked down them. All over them. And the table theyâd been using ⦠that was new. âYou trashed the study.â
âI trashed half the house,â he said, leaning forward to press his brow to mine. âHe took you away, he stole youââ
âAnd left me alone.â
Tamlin pulled back, growling. âProbably to get you to drop your guard. You have no idea what games he plays, what heâs capable of doingââ
âI know,â I said, even as it tasted like ash on my tongue. âAnd the next time, Iâll be carefulââ
âThere wonât be a next time.â
I blinked. âYou found a way out?â Or perhaps Ianthe had.
âIâm not letting you go.â
âHe said there were consequences for breaking a magical bargain.â
âDamn the consequences.â But I heard it for the empty threat it wasâand how much it destroyed him. That was who he was, what he was: protector, defender. I couldnât ask him to stop being that wayâto stop worrying about me.
I rose onto my toes and kissed him. There was so much I wanted to ask him, butâlater. âLetâs go upstairs,â I said onto his lips, and he slid his arms around me.
âI missed you,â he said between kisses. âI went out of my mind.â
That was all I needed to hear. Untilâ
âI need to ask you some questions.â
I let out a low sound of affirmation, but angled my head further. âLater.â His body was so warm, so hard against mine, his scent so familiarâ
Tamlin gripped my waist, pressing his brow to my own. âNoânow,â he said, but groaned softly as I slid my tongue against his teeth. âWhile ⦠â He pulled back, ripping his mouth from mine. âWhile itâs all fresh in your mind.â
I froze, one hand tangled in his hair, the other gripping the back of his tunic. âWhat?â
Tamlin stepped back, shaking his head as if to clear the desire addling his senses. We hadnât been apart for so long since Amarantha, and he wanted to press me for information about the Night Court? âTamlin.â
But he held up a hand, his eyes locked on mine as he called for Lucien.
In the moments that it took for his emissary to appear, I straightened my clothesâthe top that had ridden up my torsoâand finger-combed my hair. Tamlin just strode to his desk and plopped down, motioning for me to take a seat in front of it. âIâm sorry,â he said quietly, as Lucienâs strolling footsteps neared again. âThis is for our own good. Our safety.â
I took in the shredded walls, the scuffed and chipped furniture. What nightmares had he suffered, waking and asleep, while I was away? What had it been like, to imagine me in his enemyâs hands, after seeing what Amarantha had done to me?
âI know,â I murmured at last. âI know, Tamlin.â Or I was trying to know.
Iâd just slid into the low-backed chair when Lucien strode in, shutting the door behind him. âGlad to see you in one piece, Feyre,â he said, claiming the seat beside me. âI could do without the Night Court attire, though.â
Tamlin gave a low growl of agreement. I said nothing. Yet I understoodâI really didâwhy itâd be an affront to them.
Tamlin and Lucien exchanged glances, speaking without uttering a word in that way only people who had been partners for centuries could do. Lucien gave a slight nod and leaned back in his chairâto listen, to observe.
âWe need you to tell us everything,â Tamlin said. âThe layout of the Night Court, who you saw, what weapons and powers they bore, what Rhys did, who he spoke to, any and every detail you can recall.â
âI didnât realize I was a spy.â
Lucien shifted in his seat, but Tamlin said, âAs much as I hate your bargain, youâve been granted access into the Night Court. Outsiders rarely get to go inâand if they do, they rarely come out in one piece. And if they can function, their memories are usually ⦠scrambled. Whatever Rhysand is hiding in there, he doesnât want us knowing about it.â
A chill slithered down my spine. âWhy do you want to know? What are you going to do?â
âKnowing my enemyâs plans, his lifestyle, is vital. As for what weâre going to do ⦠Thatâs neither here nor there.â His green eyes pinned me. âStart with the layout of the court. Is it true itâs under a mountain?â
âThis feels an awful lot like an interrogation.â
Lucien sucked in a breath, but remained silent.
Tamlin spread his hands on the desk. âWe need to know these things, Feyre. Orâor can you not remember?â Claws glinted at his knuckles.
âI can remember everything,â I said. âHe didnât damage my mind.â And before he could question me further, I began to speak of all that I had seen.
Because I trust you, Rhysand had said. And maybeâmaybe he had scrambled my mind, even with the lessons in shielding, because describing the layout of his home, his court, the mountains around them, felt like bathing in oil and mud. He was my enemy, he was holding me to a bargain Iâd made from pure desperationâ
I kept talking, describing that tower room. Tamlin grilled me on the figures on the maps, making me turn over every word Rhysand had uttered, until I mentioned what had weighed on me the most this past week: the powers Rhys believed I now possessed ⦠and Hybernâs plans. I told him about that conversation with Morâabout that temple being sacked (Cesere, Tamlin explained, was a northern outpost in the Night Court, and one of the few known towns), and Rhysand mentioning two people named Cassian and Azriel. Both of their faces had tightened at that, but they didnât mention if they knew them, or of them. So I told him about whatever the Illyrians wereâand how Rhys had hunted down and killed the traitors amongst them. When I finished, Tamlin was silent, Lucien practically buzzing with whatever repressed words he was dying to spew.
âDo you think I might have those abilities?â I said, willing myself to hold his gaze.
âItâs possible,â Tamlin said with equal quiet. âAnd if itâs true ⦠â
Lucien said at last, âItâs a power other High Lords might kill for.â It was an effort not to fidget while his metal eye whirred, as if detecting whatever power ran through my blood. âMy father, for one, would not be pleased to learn a drop of his power is missingâor that Tamlinâs bride now has it. Heâd do anything to make sure you donât possess itâincluding kill you. There are other High Lords who would agree.â
That thing beneath my skin began roiling. âIâd never use it against anyoneââ
âItâs not about using it against them; itâs about having an edge when you shouldnât,â Tamlin said. âAnd the moment word gets out about it, you will have a target on your back.â
âDid you know?â I demanded. Lucien wouldnât meet my eyes. âDid you suspect?â
âIâd hoped it wasnât true,â Tamlin said carefully. âAnd now that Rhys suspects, thereâs no telling what heâll do with the informationââ
âHe wants me to train.â I wasnât stupid enough to mention the mental shield trainingânot right now.
âTraining would draw too much attention,â Tamlin said. âYou donât need to train. I can guard you from whatever comes our way.â
For there had been a time when he could not. When he had been vulnerable, and when he had watched me be tortured to death. And could do nothing to stop Amarantha fromâ
I would not allow another Amarantha. I would not allow the King of Hybern to bring his beasts and minions here to hurt more people. To hurt me and mine. And bring down that wall to hurt countless others across it. âI could use my powers against Hybern.â
âThatâs out of the question,â Tamlin said, âespecially as there will be no war against Hybern.â
âRhys says war is inevitable, and weâll be hit hard.â
Lucien said drily, âAnd Rhys knows everything?â
âNoâbut ⦠He was concerned. He thinks I can make a difference in any upcoming conflict.â
Tamlin flexed his fingersâkeeping those claws contained. âYou have no training in battle or weaponry. And even if I started training you today, itâd be years before you could hold your own on an immortal battlefield.â He took a tight breath. âSo despite what he thinks you might be able to do, Feyre, Iâm not going to have you anywhere near a battlefield. Especially if it means revealing whatever powers you have to our enemies. Youâd be fighting Hybern at your front, and have foes with friendly faces at your back.â
âI donât careââ
âI care,â Tamlin snarled. Lucien whooshed out a breath. âI care if you die, if youâre hurt, if you will be in danger every moment for the rest of our lives. So there will be no training, and weâre going to keep this between us.â
âBut Hybernââ
Lucien intervened calmly, âI already have my sources looking into it.â
I gave him a beseeching look.
Lucien sighed a bit and said to Tamlin, âIf we perhaps trained her in secretââ
âToo many risks, too many variables,â Tamlin countered. âAnd there will be no conflict with Hybern, no war.â
I snapped, âThatâs wishful thinking.â
Lucien muttered something that sounded like a plea to the Cauldron.
Tamlin stiffened. âDescribe his map room for me again,â was his only response.
End of discussion. No room for debate.
We stared each other down for a moment, and my stomach twisted further.
He was the High Lordâmy High Lord. He was the shield and defender of his people. Of me. And if keeping me safe meant that his people could continue to hope, to build a new life, that he could do the same ⦠I could bow to him on this one thing.
I could do it.
You are no oneâs subject.
Maybe Rhysand had altered my mind, shields or no.
The thought alone was enough for me to begin feeding Tamlin details once more.