โWhat is it, Nox,โ Darrow growled. The messenger straightened, and hurried to the lordโs side, murmuring something in his ear. โSend him in,โ was Darrowโs only answer.
Nox stalked out, graceful despite his height, and a shorter, pale-skinned man entered.
Darrow extended a hand for the letter. โYou had a message from Eldrys?โ
Lysandra smelled the stranger the moment Aedion did.
A moment before the stranger smiled and said, โErawan sends his regards.โ
And unleashed a blast of black wind right at her.
CHAPTER 17
Lysandra ducked, but not fast enough to avoid the lash of power that sliced down her arm.
She hit the ground, rolling, as sheโd learned under Arobynnโs careful tutelage. But Aedion was already in front of her, sword out. Defending his queen.
A flash of light and coldโfrom Enda and Selleneโand the Morath messenger was pinned to his knees, his dark power lashing against an invisible barrier of ice-kissed wind.
Around the tent, all had fallen back, weapons glinting. Flanking the downed man, Ilias and Ansel had their swords already angled toward him, their defensive poses mirror images. Trained into their very bones by the same master, under the same blistering sun. Neither looked at the other, though.
Ren, Sol, and Ravi had slipped into position at Lysandraโsโat Aelinโsโside, their own blades primed to spill blood. A fledgling court closing ranks around its queen.
Never mind that the older lords had stumbled behind the safety of the refreshment table, their weathered faces ashen. Only Galan Ashryver had taken up a place near the tent exit, no doubt to intercept their assailant should he try to flee. A bold moveโand a foolโs one, considering what knelt in the center of the tent.
โDid no one smell that he was a Valg demon?โ Aedion demanded, hauling Lysandra to her feet with her uninjured arm. But there was no collar on the stranger, no ring on his bare, pale hands.
Lysandraโs stomach churned as she clasped a hand to the throbbing gash on her upper arm. She knew what beat within the manโs chest. A heart of iron and Wyrdstone.
The messenger laughed, hissing. โRun to your castle. Weโreโโ
He sniffed the air. Looked right at Lysandra. At the blood leaking down her left arm, seeping into the ocean blue of Aelinโs worn tunic.
His dark eyes widened with surprise and delight, the word taking form on his lips. Shifter.
โKill him,โ she ordered the silver-haired Fae royals, her heart thundering.
No one dared tell her to burn him herself.
Endymion raised a hand, and the Valg-possessed man began gasping. Yet not before his eyes darkened wholly, until no white shone.
Not from the death sweeping over him. But as he seemed to convey a message down a long, obsidian bond.
The message that might doom them: Aelin Galathynius was not here.
โEnough of this,โ Aedion snarled, and fearโreal fear blanched his face as he, too, realized what the messenger had just relayed to his master.
The Sword of Orynth flashed, black blood spraying, and the manโs head tumbled to the rug-covered ground.
In the silence, Lysandra panted, lifting her hand from her arm to survey the wound. The cut was not deep, but it would be tender for a few hours.
Ansel of Briarcliff sheathed her wolf-headed sword and gripped Lysandraโs shoulder, her red hair swaying as she assessed the injury, then the corpse. โNasty little pricks, arenโt they?โ
Aelin would have had some swaggering answer to set them all chuckling, but Lysandra couldnโt find the words. She just nodded as the black stain inched over the tent floor. The Fae royals sniffed at the reek, grimacing.
โClean up this mess,โ Darrow ordered no one in particular. Even as his hands shook slightly.
By the tent flaps, Nox was gaping at the decapitated Valg. His gray eyes met hers, searching, and then lowered. โHe didnโt have a ring,โ Nox murmured.
Snatching up a dangling edge of tablecloth from the untouched refreshment table, Aedion wiped the Sword of Orynth clean. โHe didnโt need one.โ
Erawan knew Aelin was not with them. That a shifter had taken her place.
Aedion stalked through the camp, Lysandra-as-Aelin at his heels. โI know,โ he said over his shoulder, for once ignoring the warriors who saluted him.
She kept following him anyway. โWhat should we do?โ
He didnโt stop until he reached his own tent, the reek of that Valg messenger clinging in his nose. That whip of blackness spearing for Lysandra still burning behind his eyes. Her cry of pain ringing in his ears.
His temper roiled, howling for an outlet.
She followed him into the tent. โWhat should we do?โ she asked again.
โHow about we start with making sure there arenโt any other messengers lurking in the camp,โ he snarled, pacing. The Fae royals had already conveyed that order, and were sending out their best scouts.
โHe knows,โ she breathed. He whirled to face her, finding his cousinโfinding Lysandra shaking. Not Aelin, though sheโd been plenty convincing today. Better than usual. โHe knows what I am.โ
Aedion rubbed his face. โHe also seems to know weโre going to Orynth. Wants us to do just that.โ
She slumped onto his cot, as if her knees couldnโt hold her upright. For a heartbeat, the urge to sit beside her, to pull her to him, was so strong he nearly yielded to it.
The tang of her blood filled the space, along with the wild, many-faced scent of her. It dragged a sensual finger down his skin, whetting his rage into something so deadly he might have very well killed the next male who entered this tent.
โErawan might hear the news and worry,โ Aedion said when he could think again. โHe might wonder why she isnโt here, and if sheโs about to do something that will hurt him. It could force him to show his hand.โ
โOr to strike us now, with his full might, when he knows weโre weakest.โ
โWeโll have to see.โ
โOrynth will be a slaughterhouse,โ she whispered, her shoulders curving beneath the weightโnot just of being a woman thrust into this conflict, but a woman playing another, who might be able to pretend, but only so far. Who did not truly have the power to halt the hordes marching north. Sheโd been willing to shoulder that burden, though. For Aelin. For this kingdom.
Even if sheโd lied to him about it, sheโd been willing to accept this weight.
Aedion slumped down beside her and stared blankly at the tent walls. โWeโre not going to Orynth.โ
Her head lifted. Not just at the words, but at how close he sat. โWhere are we going, then?โ
Aedion surveyed his suit of armor, oiled and waiting on a dummy across the tent. โSol and Ravi will take some of their men back to the coast to make sure that we donโt encounter any more attacks from the sea. Theyโll rendezvous with whatโs left of the Wendlynian fleet while Galan and his soldiers stay with us. Weโll march as one army down to the border.โ
โThe other lords voted against it.โ Indeed they had, the old fools.
Heโd danced with treason for the past decade. Had made it an art form. Aedion smiled slightly. โLeave that to me.โ





