The Illyrian war-camp deep in the northern mountains was freezing. Apparently, spring was still little more than a whisper in the region.
Mor winnowed us all in, Rhysand and Cassian flanking us.
We had danced. All of us together. And I had never seen Rhys so happy, laughing with Azriel, drinking with Mor, bickering with Cassian. I’d danced with each of them, and when the night had shifted toward dawn and the music became soft and honeyed, I had let Rhys take me in his arms and dance with me, slowly, until the other guests had left, until Mor was asleep on a settee in the dining room, until the gold disc of the sun gilded Velaris.
He’d flown me back to the town house through the pink and purple and gray of the dawn, both of us silent, and had kissed my brow once before walking down the hall to his own room.
I didn’t lie to myself about why I waited for thirty minutes to see if my door would open. Or to at least hear a knock. But nothing.
We were bleary-eyed but polite at the lunch table hours later, Mor and Cassian unusually quiet, talking mostly to Amren and Azriel, who had come to bid us farewell. Amren would continue working on the Book until we received the second halfโif we received it; the shadowsinger was heading out to gather information and manage his spies stationed at the other courts and attempting to break into the human one. I managed to speak to them, but most of my energy went intoย notย looking at Rhysand, or thinking about the feeling of his body pressed to mine as we’d danced for hours, that brush of his mouth on my skin.
I’d barely been able to fall asleep because of it.
Traitor. Even if I’d left Tamlin, I was a traitor. I’d been gone for two monthsโjust two. In faerie terms, it was probably considered less than a day.
Tamlin had given me so much, done so many kind things for me and my family. And here I was, wanting another male, even as I hated Tamlin for what he’d done, how he’d failed me.ย Traitor.
The word continued echoing in my head as I stood at Mor’s side, Rhys and Cassian a few steps ahead, and peered out at the wind-blown camp. Mor had barely given Azriel more than a brief embrace before bidding him good-bye. And for all the world, the spymaster looked like he didn’t careโuntil he gave me a swift, warning look. I was still torn between amusement and outrage at the assumption I’d stick my nose intoย hisย business. Indeed.
Built near the top of a forested mountain, the Illyrian camp was all bare rock and mud, interrupted only by crude, easy-to-pack tents centered around large fire pits. Near the tree line, a dozen permanent buildings had been erected of the gray mountain stone. Smoke puffed from their chimneys against the brisk cloudy morning, occasionally swirled by the passing wings overhead.
So many winged males soaring past on their way to other camps or in training.
Indeed, on the opposite end of the camp, in a rocky area that ended in a sheer plunge off the mountain, were the sparring and training rings. Racks of weapons were left out to the elements; in the chalk-painted rings males of all ages now trained with sticks and swords and shields and spears. Fast, lethal, brutal. No complaints, no shouts of pain.
There was no warmth here, no joy. Even the houses at the other end of the camp had no personal touches, as if they were used only for shelter or storage.
And this was where Rhys, Azriel, and Cassian had grown upโwhere Cassian had been cast out to survive on his own. It was so cold that even bundled in my fur-lined leather, I was shivering. I couldn’t imagine a child going without adequate clothingโor shelterโfor a night, much less eight years.
Mor’s face was pale, tight. โI hate this place,โ she said under her breath, the heat of it clouding the air in front of us. โIt should be burned to the ground.โ
Cassian and Rhys were silent as a tall, broad-shouldered older male approached, flanked by five other Illyrian warriors, wings all tucked in, hands within casual reach of their weapons.
No matter that Rhys could rip their minds apart without lifting a finger.
They each wore Siphons of varying colors on the backs of their hands, the stones smaller than Azriel and Cassian’s. And only one. Not like the seven apiece that my two friends wore to manage their tremendous power.
The male in front said, โAnother camp inspection? Your dog,โ he jerked his chin at Cassian, โwas here just the other week. The girls are training.โ
Cassian crossed his arms. โI don’t see them in the ring.โ
โThey do chores first,โ the male said, shoulders pushing back and wings flaring slightly, โthen when they’ve finished, they get to train.โ
A low snarl slipped past Mor’s mouth, and the male turned our way.
He stiffened. Mor flashed him a wicked smile. โHello, Lord Devlon.โ The leader of the camp, then.
He gave her a dismissive once-over and looked back to Rhys.
Cassian’s warning growl rumbled in my stomach.
Rhys said at last, โPleasant as it always is to see you, Devlon, there are two matters at hand: First, the girls, as you were clearly told by Cassian, are to trainย beforeย chores, not after. Get them out on the pitch. Now.โ I shuddered at the pure command in that tone. He continued, โSecond, we’ll be staying here for the time being. Clear out my mother’s old house. No need for a housekeeper. We’ll look after ourselves.โ
โThe house is occupied by my top warriors.โ
โThen un-occupy it,โ Rhysand said simply. โAnd have them clean it before they do.โ
The voice of the High Lord of the Night Courtโwho delighted in pain, and made his enemies tremble.
Devlon sniffed at me. I poured every bit of cranky exhaustion into holding his narrowed gaze. โAnother like that โฆ creature you bring here? I thought she was the only one of her ilk.โ
โAmren,โ Rhys drawled, โsends her regards. And as forย thisย one โฆ โ I tried not to flinch away from meeting his stare. โShe’s mine,โ he said quietly, but viciously enough that Devlon and his warriors nearby heard. โAnd if any of you lay a hand on her, you lose that hand. And then you lose your head.โ I tried not to shiver, as Cassian and Mor showed no reaction at all. โAnd once Feyre is done killing you,โ Rhys smirked, โthen I’ll grind your bones to dust.โ
I almost laughed. But the warriors were now assessing the threat Rhys had established me asโand coming up short with answers. I gave them all a small smile, anyway, one I’d seen Amren make a hundred times. Let them wonder what I could do if provoked.
โWe’re heading out,โ Rhys said to Cassian and Mor, not even bothering to dismiss Devlon before walking toward the tree line. โWe’ll be back at nightfall.โ He gave his cousin a look. โTry to stay out of trouble, please. Devlon hates us the least of the war-lords and I don’t feel like finding another camp.โ
Mother above, the others must be โฆ unpleasant, if Devlon was the mildest of them.
Mor winked at us both. โI’ll try.โ
Rhys just shook his head and said to Cassian, โCheck on the forces, then make sure those girls are practicing like they should be. If Devlon or the others object, do what you have to.โ
Cassian grinned in a way that showed he’d be more than happy to do exactly that. He was the High Lord’s general โฆ and yet Devlon called him a dog. I didn’t want to imagine what it had been like for Cassian without that title growing up.
Then finally Rhys looked at me again, his eyes shuttered. โLet’s go.โ โYou heard from my sisters?โ
A shake of the head. โNo. Azriel is checking today if they received a response. You and I โฆ โ The wind rustled his hair as he smirked. โWe’re going to train.โ
โWhere?โ
He gestured to the sweeping land beyondโto the forested steppes he’d once mentioned. โAway from any potential casualties.โ He offered his hand as his wings flared, his body preparing for flight.
But all I heard were those two words he’d said, echoing against the steady beat ofย traitor, traitor:
Sheโs mine.
Being in Rhys’s arms again, against his body, was a test of stubbornness. For both of us. To see who’d speak about it first.
We’d been flying over the most beautiful mountains I’d ever seenโ snowy and flecked with pinesโheading toward rolling steppes beyond them when I said, โYou’re training female Illyrian warriors?โ
โTrying to.โ Rhys gazed across the brutal landscape. โI banned wing-clipping a long, long time ago, but โฆ at the more zealous camps, deep within the mountains, they do it. And when Amarantha took over, even the milder camps started doing it again. To keep their women safe, they claimed. For the past hundred years, Cassian has been trying to build an aerial fighting unit amongst the females, trying to prove that they have a place on the battlefield. So far, he’s managed to train a few dedicated warriors, but the males make life so miserable that many of them left. And for the girls in training โฆ โ A hiss of breath. โIt’s a long road. But Devlon is one of the few who even lets the girls train without a tantrum.โ
โI’d hardly call disobeying orders โwithout a tantrum.’ โ
โSome camps issued decrees that if a female was caught training, she was to be deemed unmarriageable. I can’t fight against things like that, not without slaughtering the leaders of each camp and personally raising each and every one of their offspring.โ
โAnd yet your mother loved themโand you three wear their tattoos.โ โI got the tattoos in part for my mother, in part to honor my brothers,
who fought every day of their lives for the right to wear them.โ โWhy do you let Devlon speak to Cassian like that?โ
โBecause I know when to pick my fights with Devlon, and I know Cassian would be pissed if I stepped in to crush Devlon’s mind like a grape when he could handle it himself.โ
A whisper of cold went through me. โHave you thought about doing it?โ
โI did just now. But most camp-lords never would have given the three of us a shot at the Blood Rite. Devlon let a half-breed and two bastards take itโand did not deny us our victory.โ
Pines dusted with fresh snow blurred beneath us. โWhat’s the Blood Rite?โ
โSo many questions today.โ I squeezed his shoulder hard enough to hurt, and he chuckled. โYou go unarmed into the mountains, magic banned, no Siphons, wings bound, with no supplies or clothes beyond what you have on you. You, and every other Illyrian male who wants to move from novice to true warrior. A few hundred head into the mountains at the start of the weekโnot all come out at the end.โ
The frost-kissed landscape rolled on forever, unyielding as the warriors who ruled over it. โDo youโkill each other?โ
โMost try to. For food and clothes, for vengeance, for glory between feuding clans. Devlon allowed us to take the Riteโbut also made sure Cassian, Azriel, and I were dumped in different locations.โ
โWhat happened?โ
โWe found each other. Killed our way across the mountains to get to each other. Turns out, a good number of Illyrian males wanted to prove they were stronger, smarter than us. Turns out they were wrong.โ
I dared a look at his face. For a heartbeat, I could see it: blood-splattered, savage, fighting and slaughtering to get to his friends, to protect and save them.
Rhys set us down in a clearing, the pine trees towering so high they seemed to caress the underside of the heavy, gray clouds passing on the swift wind.
โSo, you’re not using magicโbut I am?โ I said, taking a few steps from him.
โOur enemy is keyed in on my powers. You, however, remain invisible.โ He waved his hand. โLet’s see what all your practicing has amounted to.โ
I didn’t feel like it. I just said, โWhenโwhen did you meet Tamlin?โ
I knew what Rhysand’s father had done. I hadn’t let myself think too much about it.
About how he’d killed Tamlin’s father and brothers. And mother.
But now, after last night, after the Court of Nightmares โฆ I had to know.
Rhys’s face was a mask of patience. โShow me something impressive, and I’ll tell you. Magicโfor answers.โ
โI know what sort of game you’re playingโโ I cut myself off at the hint of a smirk. โVery well.โ
I held out my hand before me, palm cupped, and willed silence into my veins, my mind.
Silence and calm and weight, like being underwater. In my hand, a butterfly of water flapped and danced.
Rhys smiled a bit, but the amusement died as he said, โTamlin was younger than meโborn when the War started. But after the War, when he’d matured, we got to know each other at various court functions. He
โฆ โ Rhys clenched his jaw. โHe seemed decent for a High Lord’s son. Better than Beron’s brood at the Autumn Court. Tamlin’s brothers were equally as bad, though. Worse. And they knew Tamlin would take the
title one day. And to a half-breed Illyrian who’d had to prove himself, defend his power, I saw what Tamlin went through โฆ I befriended him. Sought him out whenever I was able to get away from the war-camps or court. Maybe it was pity, but โฆ I taught him some Illyrian techniques.โ
โDid anyone know?โ
He raised his browsโgiving a pointed look to my hand.
I scowled at him and summoned songbirds of water, letting them flap around the clearing as they’d flown around my bathing room at the Summer Court.
โCassian and Azriel knew,โ Rhys went on. โMy family knew. And disapproved.โ His eyes were chips of ice. โBut Tamlin’s father was threatened by it. By me. And because he was weaker than both me and Tamlin, he wanted to prove to the world that he wasn’t. My mother and sister were to travel to the Illyrian war-camp to see me. I was supposed to meet them halfway, but I was busy training a new unit and decided to stay.โ
My stomach turned over and over and over, and I wished I had something to lean against as Rhys said, โTamlin’s father, brothers, and Tamlin himself set out into the Illyrian wilderness, having heard from Tamlinโfrom meโwhere my mother and sister would be, that I had plans to see them. I was supposed to be there. I wasn’t. And they slaughtered my mother and sister anyway.โ
I began shaking my head, eyes burning. I didn’t know what I was trying to deny, or erase, or condemn.
โIt should have been me,โ he said, and I understoodโunderstood what he’d said that day I’d wept before Cassian in the training pit. โThey put their heads in boxes and sent them down the riverโto the nearest camp. Tamlin’s father kept their wings as trophies. I’m surprised you didn’t see them pinned in the study.โ
I was going to vomit; I was going to fall to my knees and weep.
But Rhys looked at the menagerie of water-animals I’d crafted and said, โWhat else?โ
Perhaps it was the cold, perhaps it was his story, but hoarfrost cracked in my veins, and the wild song of a winter wind howled in my heart. I felt it thenโhow easy it would be to jump between them,ย joinย them together, my powers.
Each one of my animals halted mid-air โฆ and froze into perfectly carved bits of ice.
One by one, they dropped to the earth. And shattered.
They were one. They had come from the same, dark origin, the same eternal well of power. Once, long agoโbefore language was invented and the world was new.
Rhys merely continued, โWhen I heard, when my father heard โฆ I wasn’t wholly truthful to you when I told you Under the Mountain that my father killed Tamlin’s father and brothers. I went with him. Helped him. We winnowed to the edge of the Spring Court that night, then went the rest of the way on footโto the manor. I slew Tamlin’s brothers on sight. I held their minds, and rendered them helpless while I cut them into pieces, then melted their brains inside their skulls. And when I got to the High Lord’s bedroomโhe was dead. And my father โฆ my father had killed Tamlin’s mother as well.โ
I couldn’t stop shaking my head.
โMy father had promised not to touch her. That we weren’t the kind of males who would do that. But he lied to me, and he did it, anyway. And then he went for Tamlin’s room.โ
I couldn’t breatheโcouldn’t breathe as Rhys said, โI tried to stop him. He didn’t listen. He was going to kill him, too. And I couldn’t โฆ After all the death, I was done. I didn’t care that Tamlin had been there, had allowed them to kill my mother and sister, that he’d come to kill me because he didn’t want to risk standing against them. I was done with death. So I stopped my father before the door. He tried to go through me. Tamlin opened the door, saw usโsmelled the blood already leaking into the hallway. And I didn’t even get to say a word before Tamlin killed my father in one blow.
โI felt the power shift to me, even as I saw it shift to him. And we just looked at each other, as we were both suddenly crowned High Lordโ and then I ran.โ
He’d murdered Rhysand’s family. The High Lord I’d lovedโhe’d murdered his friend’s family, and when I’d asked howย hisย family died, he’d merely told me a rival court had done it.ย Rhysandย had done it, and
โ
โHe didn’t tell you any of that.โ
โIโI’m sorry,โ I breathed, my voice hoarse. โWhat do you possibly have to be sorry for?โ
โI didn’t know. I didn’t know that he’d done thatโโ
And Rhys thought I’d been comparing himโcomparingย himย against Tamlin, as if I held him to be some paragon โฆ
โWhy did you stop?โ he said, motioning to the ice shards on the pine-needle carpet.
The people he’d loved mostโgone. Slaughtered in cold blood.
Slaughtered byย Tamlin.
The clearing exploded in flame.
The pine needles vanished, the trees groaned, and even Rhys swore as fire swept through the clearing, my heart, and devoured everything in its path.
No wonder he’d made Tamlin beg that day I’d been formally introduced to him. No wonder he’d relished every chance to taunt Tamlin. Maybe my presence here was just toโ
No. I knew that wasn’t true. I knew my being here had nothing to do with what was between him and Tamlin, though he no doubt enjoyed interrupting our wedding day. Saved me from that wedding day, actually.
โFeyre,โ Rhys said as the fire died.
But there it wasโcrackling inside my veins. Crackling beside veins of ice, and water.
And darkness.
Embers flared around us, floating in the air, and I sent out a breath of soothing dark, a breath of ice and water, as if it were a windโa wind at dawn, sweeping clean the world.
The power did not belong to the High Lords. Not any longer.
It belonged to meโas I belongedย onlyย to me, as my future wasย mineย to decide, to forge.
Once I discovered and mastered what the others had given me, I could weave them togetherโinto something new, something of every court and none of them.
Flame hissed as it was extinguished so thoroughly that no smoke remained.
But I met Rhys’s stare, his eyes a bit wide as he watched me work. I rasped, โWhy didn’t you tell me sooner?โ
The sight of him in his Illyrian fighting gear, wings spread across the entire width of the clearing, his blade peeking over his shoulder โฆ
There, in that hole in my chestโI saw the image there. At first interpretation, he’d look terrifying, vengeance and wrath incarnate. But if
you came closer โฆ the painting would show the beauty on his face, the wings flared not to hurt, but to carry me from danger, to shield me.
โI didn’t want you to think I was trying to turn you against him,โ he said.
The paintingโI could see it;ย feelย it. I wanted to paint it. I wanted to paint.
I didn’t wait for him to stretch out his hand before I went to him. And looking up into his face I said, โI want to paint you.โ
He gently lifted me into his arms. โNude would be best,โ he said in my ear.