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Chapter no 31

Throne of Glass (Throne of Glass, 1)

Someone was standing at the foot of her bed.

Celaena knew this long before she opened her eyes, and she eased her hand beneath her pillow, pulling out the makeshift knife sheโ€™d crafted of pins, string, and soap.

โ€œThatโ€™s unnecessary,โ€ a woman said, and Celaena sat upright at the sound of Elenaโ€™s voice. โ€œAnd would be wholly ineffective.โ€

Her blood went cold at the sight of the shimmering specter of the first Queen of Adarlan. Though Elena looked fully formed, the edges of her body gleamed as though made from starlight. Her long, silver hair flowed around her beautiful face, and she smiled as Celaena set down her miserably pathetic knife. โ€œHello, child,โ€ the queen said.

โ€œWhat do you want?โ€ Celaena demanded, but kept her voice down. Was she dreaming, or could the guards hear her? She tensed, her legs preparing to leap from the bedโ€”perhaps toward the balcony, since Elena stood between her and the door.

โ€œSimply to remind you that youย mustย win this competition.โ€

โ€œI already plan to.โ€ Sheโ€™d been woken up forย this? โ€œAnd itโ€™s not for you,โ€ she added coldly. โ€œIโ€™m doing it for my freedom. Do you have anything useful to say, or are you just here to bother me? Or maybe you could justย tellย me more about this evil thing thatโ€™s hunting the Champions down one by one.โ€

Elena sighed, lifting her eyes to the ceiling. โ€œI know as little as you.โ€ When Celaenaโ€™s frown didnโ€™t disappear, Elena said, โ€œYou donโ€™t trust me yet. I understand. But you and I are on the same side, whether you allow yourself to believe it or not.โ€ She lowered her gaze to the assassin, pinning her with the intensity of it. โ€œI came here to warn you to keep an eye on your right.โ€

โ€œExcuse me?โ€ Celaena cocked her head. โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€ โ€œLook to your right. Youโ€™ll find the answers there.โ€

Celaena looked to her right, but all she saw was the tapestry that concealed the tomb. She opened her mouth to snap a response, but when she looked back at Elena, the queen was gone.

โ€ข

At her Test the next day, Celaena studied the small table before her and all the goblets it contained. It had been over two weeks since Samhuinn, and while sheโ€™d passed yet another Testโ€”knife-throwing, to her reliefโ€”another Champion

had been found dead just two days ago. To say she was getting little sleep these days was an understatement. When she wasnโ€™t searching for an indication of what the Wyrdmarks around the corpses had meant, she spent most of the night wide awake, watching her windows and doors, listening for the scrape of claw on stone. The royal guards outside her rooms didnโ€™t help; if this beast was capable of gouging marble, it could take down a few men.

Brullo stood at the front of the sparring hall, his hands clasped behind his back, watching the thirteen remaining competitors standing at thirteen individual tables. He glanced at the clock. Celaena looked at it, too. She had five minutes leftโ€”five minutes during which she not only had to identify the poisons in seven goblets, but arrange them in the order of the most benign to the deadliest.

The true test, however, would come at the end of the five minutes, when they were to drink from the goblet they deemed the most harmless. If they got the answer wrong . . . Even with antidotes on hand, it would be unpleasant. Celaena rolled her neck and lifted one of the goblets to her nose, sniffing. Sweetโ€”too sweet. She swirled the dessert wine theyโ€™d used to conceal the sweetness, but in the bronze goblet, it was difficult to see the color. She dipped her finger into the cup, studying the purple liquid as it dripped off her nail. Definitely belladonna.

She looked at the other goblets sheโ€™d identified. Hemlock. Bloodroot. Monkshood. Oleander. She shifted the goblets into order, squeezing in belladonna just before the goblet containing a lethal dose of oleander. Three minutes left.

Celaena picked up the penultimate goblet and sniffed. And sniffed again. It didnโ€™t smell like anything.

She shifted her face away from the table and sniffed the air, hoping to clear her nostrils. When trying perfumes, people sometimes lose their sense of smell after sniffing too many. Which was why perfumers usually kept something on site to help clear the scent from the nose. She sniffed the goblet again, and dunked her finger. It smelled like water, looked like water . . .

Perhaps itย wasย just water. She set down the glass and picked up the final goblet. But when she sniffed it, the wine inside didnโ€™t have any unusual smell. It seemed fine. She bit her lip and glanced at the clock. Two minutes left.

Some of the other Champions were cursing under their breath. Whoever got the order most wrong went home.

Celaena sniffed the water goblet again, racing through a list of odorless poisons. None of them could be combined with water, not without coloring it. She picked up the wine goblet, swirling the liquid. Wine could conceal any number of advanced poisonsโ€”but which one was it?

At the table to the left of her, Nox ran his hands through his dark hair. He had

three goblets in front of him, the other four in line behind them. Ninety seconds left.

Poisons, poisons, poisons. Her mouth went dry. If she lost, would Elena haunt her from spite?

Celaena glanced to the right to find Pelor, the gangly young assassin, watching her. He was down to the same two goblets that she struggled with, and she watched as he put the water glass at the very end of the spectrumโ€”the most poisonousโ€”and the wine glass at the other.

His eyes flicked to hers, and his chin drooped in a barely detectible nod. He put his hands in his pockets. He was done. Celaena turned to her own goblets before Brullo could catch her.

Poisons. Thatโ€™s what Pelor had said during their first Test. He was trained in poisons.

She glanced at him sidelong. He stood to her right.

Look to your right. Youโ€™ll find the answers there.

A chill went down her spine. Elena had been telling the truth.

Pelor stared at the clock, watching it count down the seconds until the Test was over. But why help her?

She moved the water glass to the end of the line, and put the wine glass first.

Because aside from her, Cainโ€™s favorite Champion to torment was Pelor. And because when sheโ€™d been in Endovier, the allies sheโ€™d made hadnโ€™t been the darlings of the overseers, but the ones the overseers had hated most. The outsiders looked out for each other. None of the other Champions had bothered to pay attention to Pelorโ€”even Brullo, it seemed, had forgotten Pelorโ€™s claim that first day. If heโ€™d known, he never would have allowed them to do the Test so publicly.

โ€œTimeโ€™s up. Make your final order,โ€ Brullo said, and Celaena stared at her line of goblets for a moment longer. On the side of the room, Dorian and Chaol watched with crossed arms. Had they noticed Pelorโ€™s help?

Nox cursed colorfully and shoved his remaining glasses into the line, many of the competitors doing the same. Antidotes were on hand in case mistakes were madeโ€”and as Brullo began going through the tables, telling the Champions to drink, he handed them out frequently. Most of them had assumed the wine with nothing in it was a trap and placed it toward the end of the spectrum. Even Nox wound up chugging a vial of antidote; heโ€™d put monkshood first.

And Cain, to her delight, wound up going purple in the face after consuming belladonna. As he guzzled down the antidote, she wished Brullo had somehow run out. So far, no one had won the Test. One Champion drank the water and was on the ground before Brullo could hand him the antidote. Bloodbaneโ€”a

horrible, painful poison. Even consuming just a little could cause vivid hallucinations and disorientation. Thankfully, the Weapons Master forced him to swallow the antidote, though the Champion still had to be rushed to the castle infirmary.

At last, Brullo stopped at her table to survey her line of goblets. His face revealed nothing as he said, โ€œOn with it, then.โ€

Celaena glanced at Pelor, whose hazel eyes shone as she lifted the glass of wine to her lips and drank a sip.

Nothing. No strange taste, no immediate sensation. Some poisons could take longer to affect you, but . . .

Brullo extended a fist to her, and her stomach clenched. Was the antidote inside?

But his fingers splayed, and he only clapped her on the back. โ€œThe right oneโ€” just wine,โ€ he said, and the Champions murmured behind him.

He moved on to Pelorโ€”the last Championโ€”and the youth drank the glass of wine. Brullo grinned at him, grasping his shoulder. โ€œAnother winner.โ€

Applause rippled through the sponsors and trainers, and Celaena flashed an appreciative grin in the assassinโ€™s direction. He grinned back, going red from his neck to his copper hair.

So sheโ€™d cheated a little, but sheโ€™d won. She could handle sharing the victory with an ally. And, yes, Elena was looking out for herโ€”but that didnโ€™t change anything. Even if her path and Elenaโ€™s demands were now tied closely together, she wouldnโ€™t become the Kingโ€™s Champion just to serve some ghostโ€™s agendaโ€” an agenda that Elena had twice now failed to reveal.

Even if Elena had told her how to win the Test.

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