: Chapter 43
A Court of Thorns and Roses
For my final task, I was given my old tunic and pantsâstained and torn and reekingâbut despite my stench, I kept my chin high as I was escorted to the throne room.
The doors were flung open, and the silence of the room assaulted me. I waited for the jeers and shouts, waited to see gold flash as the onlookers placed their bets, but this time the faeries just stared at me, the masked ones especially intently.
Their world rested on my shoulders, Rhys had said. But I didnât think it was worry alone that was spread across their features. I had to swallow hard as a few of them touched their fingers to their lips, then extended their hands to meâa gesture for the fallen, a farewell to the honored dead. There was nothing malicious about it. Most of these faeries belonged to the courts of the High Lordsâhad belonged to those courts long before Amarantha seized their lands, their lives. And if Tamlin and Rhysand were playing games to keep us alive â¦
I strode up the path theyâd clearedâstraight for Amarantha. The queen smiled when I stopped in front of her throne. Tamlin was in his usual place beside her, but I wouldnât look at himânot yet.
âTwo trials lie behind you,â Amarantha said, picking at a fleck of dust on her blood-red gown. Her black hair shone, a gleaming darkness that threatened to swallow up her golden crown. âAnd only one more awaits. I wonder if it will be worse to fail nowâwhen you are so close.â She gave me a pout, and we both awaited the laughter of the faeries.
But only a few laughs hissed from the red-skinned guards. Everyone else remained silent. Even Lucienâs miserable brothers. Even Rhysand, wherever he was in the crowd.
I blinked to clear my burning eyes. Perhaps, like Rhysandâs, their oaths of allegiance and betting on my life and nastiness had been a show. And perhaps nowânow that the end was imminentâthey, too, would face my potential death with whatever dignity they had left.
Amarantha glared at them, but when her gaze fell upon me, she smiled broadly, sweetly. âAny words to say before you die?â
I came up with a plethora of curses, but I instead looked at Tamlin. He didnât reactâhis features were like stone. I wished that I could glimpse his faceâif only for a moment. But all I needed to see were those green eyes.
âI love you,â I said. âNo matter what she says about it, no matter if itâs only with my insignificant human heart. Even when they burn my body, Iâll love you.â My lips trembled, and my vision clouded before several warm tears slipped down my chilled face. I didnât wipe them away.
He didnât reactâhe didnât even grip the arms of his throne. I supposed that was his way of enduring it, even if it made my chest cave in. Even if his silence killed me.
Amarantha said sweetly, âYouâll be lucky, my darling, if we even have enough left of you to burn.â
I stared at her long and hard. But her words were not met with jeers or smiles or applause from the crowd. Only silence.
It was a gift that gave me courage, that made me bunch my fists, that made me embrace the tattoo on my arm. I had beaten her until now, fairly or not, and I would not feel alone when I died. I would not die alone. It was all I could ask for.
Amarantha propped her chin on a hand. âYou never figured out my riddle, did you?â I didnât respond, and she smiled. âPity. The answer is so lovely.â
âGet it over with,â I growled.
Amarantha looked at Tamlin. âNo final words to her?â she said, quirking an eyebrow. When he didnât respond, she grinned at me. âVery well, then.â She clapped her hands twice.
A door swung open, and three figuresâtwo male and one femaleâwith brown sacks tied over their heads were dragged in by the guards. Their concealed faces turned this way and that as they tried to discern the whispers that rippled across the throne room. My knees bent slightly as they approached.
With sharp jabs and blunt shoves, the red-skinned guards forced the three faeries to their knees at the foot of the dais, but facing me. Their bodies and clothes revealed nothing of who they were.
Amarantha clapped her hands again, and three servants clad in black appeared at the side of each of the kneeling faeries. In their long, pale hands, they each carried a dark velvet pillow. And on each pillow lay a single polished wooden dagger. Not metal for a blade, but ash. Ash, becauseâ
âYour final task, Feyre,â Amarantha drawled, gesturing to the kneeling faeries. âStab each of these unfortunate souls in the heart.â
I stared at her, my mouth opening and closing.
âTheyâre innocentânot that it should matter to you,â she went on, âsince it wasnât a concern the day you killed Tamlinâs poor sentinel. And it wasnât a concern for dear Jurian when he butchered my sister. But if itâs a problem ⦠well, you can always refuse. Of course, Iâll take your life in exchange, but a bargainâs a bargain, is it not? If you ask me, though, given your history with murdering our kind, I do believe Iâm offering you a gift.â
Refuse and die. Kill three innocents and live. Three innocents, for my own future. For my own happiness. For Tamlin and his court and the freedom of an entire land.
The wood of the razor-sharp daggers had been polished so expertly that it gleamed beneath the colored glass chandeliers.
âWell?â she asked. She lifted her hand, letting Jurianâs eye get a good look at me, at the ash daggers, and purred to it, âI wouldnât want you to miss this, old friend.â
I couldnât. I couldnât do it. It wasnât like hunting; it wasnât for survival or defense. It was cold-blooded murderâthe murder of them, of my very soul. But for Prythianâfor Tamlin, for all of them here, for Alis and her boys ⦠I wished I knew the name of one of our forgotten gods so that I might beg them to intercede, wished I knew any prayers at all to plead for guidance, for absolution.
But I did not know those prayers, or the names of our forgotten godsâonly the names of those who would remain enslaved if I did not act. I silently recited those names, even as the horror of what knelt before me began to swallow me whole. For Prythian, for Tamlin, for their world and my own ⦠These deaths would not be wastedâeven if it would damn me forever.
I stepped up to the first kneeling figureâthe longest and most brutal step Iâd ever taken. Three lives in exchange for Prythianâs liberationâthree lives that would not be spent in vain. I could do this. I could do this, even with Tamlin watching. I could make this sacrificeâsacrifice them ⦠I could do this.
My fingers trembled, but the first dagger wound up in my hand, its hilt cool and smooth, the wood of the blade heavier than Iâd expected. There were three daggers, because she wanted me to feel the agony of reaching for that knife again and again. Wanted me to mean it.
âNot so fast.â Amarantha chuckled, and the guards who held the first kneeling figure snatched the hood off its face.
It was a handsome High Fae youth. I didnât know him, Iâd never seen him, but his blue eyes were pleading. âThatâs better,â Amarantha said, waving her hand again. âProceed, Feyre, dear. Enjoy it.â
His eyes were the color of a sky Iâd never see again if I refused to kill him, a color Iâd never get out of my mind, never forget no matter how many times I painted it. He shook his head, those eyes growing so large that white showed all around. He would never see that sky, either. And neither would these people, if I failed.
âPlease,â he whispered, his focus darting between the ash dagger and my face. âPlease.â
The dagger shook between my fingers, and I clenched it tighter. Three faeriesâthatâs all that stood between me and freedom, before Tamlin would be unleashed upon Amarantha. If he could destroy her ⦠Not in vain, I told myself. Not in vain.
âDonât,â the faerie youth begged when I lifted the dagger. âDonât!â
I took a gasping breath, my lips shaking as I quailed. Saying âIâm sorryâ wasnât enough. Iâd never been able to say it to Andrasâand now ⦠now â¦
âPlease!â he said, and his eyes lined with silver.
Someone in the crowd began weeping. I was taking him away from someone who possibly loved him as much as I loved Tamlin.
I couldnât think about it, couldnât think about who he was, or the color of his eyes, or any of it. Amarantha was grinning with wild, triumphant glee. Kill a faerie, fall in love with a faerie, then be forced to kill a faerie to keep that love. It was brilliant and cruel, and she knew it.
Darkness rippled near the throne, and then Rhysand was there, arms crossedâas if heâd moved to better see. His face was a mask of disinterest, but my hand tingled. Do it, the tingling said.
âDonât,â the young faerie moaned. I began shaking my head. I couldnât listen to him. I had to do it now, before he convinced me otherwise. âPlease!â His voice rose to a shriek.
The sound jarred me so much that I lunged.
With a ragged sob, I plunged the dagger into his heart.
He screamed, thrashing in the guardsâ grip as the blade cleaved through flesh and bone, smooth as if it were real metal and not ash, and bloodâhot and slickâshowered my hand. I wept, yanking out the dagger, the reverberations of his bones against the blade stinging my hand.
His eyes, full of shock and hate, remained on me as he sagged, damning me, and that person in the crowd let out a keening wail.
My bloody dagger clacked on the marble floor as I stumbled back several steps.
âVery good,â Amarantha said.
I wanted to get out of my body; I had to escape the stain of what Iâd done; I had to get outâI couldnât endure the blood on my hands, the sticky warmth between my fingers.
âNow the next. Oh, donât look so miserable, Feyre. Arenât you having fun?â
I faced the second figure, still hooded. A female this time. The faerie in black extended the pillow with the clean dagger, and the guards holding her tore off her hood.
Her face was simple, and her hair was gold-brown, like mine. Tears were already rolling down her round cheeks, and her bronze eyes tracked my bloody hand as I reached for the second knife. The cleanness of the wooden blade mocked the blood on my fingers.
I wanted to fall to my knees to beg her forgiveness, to tell her that her death wouldnât be for naught. Wanted to, but there was such a rift running through me now that I could hardly feel my hands, my shredded heart. What Iâd doneâ
âCauldron save me,â she began whispering, her voice lovely and evenâlike music. âMother hold me,â she went on, reciting a prayer similar to one Iâd heard once before, when Tamlin eased the passing of that lesser faerie whoâd died in the foyer. Another of Amaranthaâs victims. âGuide me to you.â I was unable to raise my dagger, unable to take the step that would close the distance between us. âLet me pass through the gates; let me smell that immortal land of milk and honey.â
Silent tears slid down my face and neck, where they dampened the filthy collar of my tunic. As she spoke, I knew I would be forever barred from that immortal land. I knew that whatever Mother she meant would never embrace me. In saving Tamlin, I was to damn myself.
I couldnât do thisâcouldnât lift that dagger again.
âLet me fear no evil,â she breathed, staring at meâinto me, into the soul that was cleaving itself apart. âLet me feel no pain.â
A sob broke from my lips. âIâm sorry,â I moaned.
âLet me enter eternity,â she breathed.
I wept as I understood. Kill me now, she was saying. Do it fast. Donât make it hurt. Kill me now. Her bronze eyes were steady, if not sorrowful. Infinitely, infinitely worse than the pleading of the dead faerie beside her.
I couldnât do it.
But she held my gazeâheld my gaze and nodded.
As I lifted the ash dagger, something inside me fractured so completely that there would be no hope of ever repairing it. No matter how many years passed, no matter how many times I might try to paint her face.
More faeries wailed nowâher kinsmen and friends. The dagger was a weight in my handâmy hand, shining and coated with the blood of that first faerie.
It would be more honorable to refuseâto die, rather than murder innocents. But ⦠but â¦
âLet me enter eternity,â she repeated, lifting her chin. âFear no evil,â she whisperedâjust for me. âFeel no pain.â
I gripped her delicate, bony shoulder and drove the dagger into her heart.
She gasped, and blood spilled onto the ground like a splattering of rain. Her eyes were closed when I looked at her face again. She slumped to the floor and didnât move.
I went somewhere far, far away from myself.
The faeries were stirring nowâshifting, many whispering and weeping. I dropped the dagger, and the knock of ash on marble roared in my ears. Why was Amarantha still smiling, with only one person left between myself and freedom? I glanced at Rhysand, but his attention was fixed upon Amarantha.
One faerieâand then we were free. Just one more swing of my arm.
And maybe one more after thatâmaybe one more swing, up and inward and into my own heart.
It would be a reliefâa relief to end it by my own hand, a relief to die rather than face this, what Iâd done.
The faerie servant offered the last dagger, and I was about to reach for it when the guard removed the hood from the male kneeling before me.
My hands slackened at my sides. Amber-flecked green eyes stared up at me.
Everything came crashing down, layer upon layer, shattering and breaking and crumbling, as I gazed at Tamlin.
I whipped my head to the throne beside Amaranthaâs, still occupied by my High Lord, and she laughed as she snapped her fingers. The Tamlin beside her transformed into the Attor, smiling wickedly at me.
Trickedâdeceived by my own senses again. Slowly, my soul ripping further from me, I turned back to Tamlin. There was only guilt and sorrow in his eyes, and I stumbled away, almost falling as I tripped over my feet.
âSomething wrong?â Amarantha asked, cocking her head.
âNot ⦠Not fair,â I got out.
Rhysandâs face had gone paleâso, so pale.
âFair?â Amarantha mused, playing with Jurianâs bone on her necklace. âI wasnât aware you humans knew of the concept. You kill Tamlin, and heâs free.â Her smile was the most hideous thing Iâd ever seen. âAnd then you can have him all to yourself.â
My mouth stopped working.
âUnless,â Amarantha went on, âyou think it would be more appropriate to forfeit your life. After all: Whatâs the point? To survive only to lose him?â Her words were like poison. âImagine all those years you were going to spend together ⦠suddenly alone. Tragic, really. Though a few months ago, you hated our kind enough to butcher usâsurely youâll move on easily enough.â She patted her ring. âJurianâs human lover did.â
Still on his knees, Tamlinâs eyes turned so brightâdefiant.
âSo,â Amarantha said, but I didnât look at her. âWhat will it be, Feyre?â
Kill him and save his court and my life, or kill myself and let them all live as Amaranthaâs slaves, let her and the King of Hybern wage their final war against the human realm. There was no bargain to get out of thisâno part of me to sell to avoid this choice.
I stared at the ash dagger on that pillow. Alis had been right all those weeks ago: no human who came here ever walked out again. I was no exception. If I were smart, I would indeed stab my own heart before they could grab me. At least then I would die quicklyâI wouldnât endure the torture that surely awaited me, possibly a fate like Jurianâs. Alis had been right. Butâ
AlisâAlis had said something ⦠something to help me. A final part of the curse, a part they couldnât tell me, a part that would aid me ⦠And all sheâd been able to do was tell me to listen. To listen to what Iâd heardâas if Iâd already learned everything I needed.
I slowly faced Tamlin again. Memories flashed, one after another, blurs of color and words. Tamlin was High Lord of the Spring Courtâwhat did that do to help me? The Great Rite was performedâno.
He lied to me about everythingâabout why Iâd been brought to the manor, about what was happening on his lands. The curseâhe hadnât been allowed to tell me the truth, but he hadnât exactly pretended that everything was fine. Noâheâd lied and explained as best he could and made it painfully obvious to me at every turn that something was very, very wrong.
The Attor in the gardenâas hidden from me as I was from it. But Tamlin had hidden meâheâd told me to stay put and then led the Attor right toward me, let me overhear them.
Heâd left the dining room doors open when heâd spoken with Lucien aboutâabout the curse, even if I hadnât realized it at the time. Heâd spoken in public places. Heâd wanted me to eavesdrop.
Because he wanted me to know, to listenâbecause this knowledge ⦠I ransacked each conversation, turning over words like stones. A part of the curse I hadnât grasped, that they couldnât explicitly tell me, but Tamlin had needed me to know â¦
Milady makes no bargains that are not advantageous to her.
She would never kill what she desired mostânot when she wanted Tamlin as much as I did. But if I killed him ⦠she either knew I couldnât do it, or she was playing a very, very dangerous game.
Conversation after conversation echoed in my memory, until I heard Lucienâs words, and everything froze. And that was when I knew.
I couldnât breathe, not as I replayed the memory, not as I recalled the conversation Iâd overheard one day. Lucien and Tamlin in the dining room, the door wide open for all to hearâfor me to hear.
âFor someone with a heart of stone, yours is certainly soft these days.â
I looked at Tamlin, my eyes flicking to his chest as another memory flashed. The Attor in the garden, laughing.
âThough you have a heart of stone, Tamlin,â the Attor said, âyou certainly keep a host of fear inside it.â
Amarantha would never risk me killing himâbecause she knew I couldnât kill him.
Not if his heart couldnât be pierced by a blade. Not if his heart had been turned to stone.
I scanned his face, searching for any glimmer of truth. There was only that bold rebellion within his gaze.
Perhaps I was wrongâperhaps it was just a faerie turn of phrase. But all those times Iâd held Tamlin ⦠Iâd never felt his heartbeat. Iâd been blind to everything until it came back to smack me in the face, but not this time.
That was how she controlled him and his magic. How she controlled all the High Lords, dominating and leashing them just as she kept Jurianâs soul tethered to that eye and bone.
Trust no one, Alis had told me. But I trusted Tamlinâand more than that, I trusted myself. I trusted that I had heard correctlyâI trusted that Tamlin had been smarter than Amarantha, I trusted that all I had sacrificed was not in vain.
The entire room was silent, but my attention was upon only Tamlin. The revelation must have been clear on my face, for his breathing became a bit quicker, and he lifted his chin.
I took a step toward him, then another. I was right. I had to be.
I sucked in a breath as I grabbed the dagger off the outstretched pillow. I could be wrongâI could be painfully, tragically wrong.
But there was a faint smile on Tamlinâs lips as I stood over him, ash dagger in hand.
There was such a thing as Fateâbecause Fate had made sure I was there to eavesdrop when theyâd spoken in private, because Fate had whispered to Tamlin that the cold, contrary girl heâd dragged to his home would be the one to break his spell, because Fate had kept me alive just to get to this point, just to see if I had been listening.
And there he wasâmy High Lord, my beloved, kneeling before me.
âI love you,â I said, and stabbed him.