Celaenaโs re was still crackling, the rain still pounding beyond the cave mouth. But the forest had gone quiet. ose little watching eyes had vanished.
She uncoiled to her feet, spear in one hand and a stake in the other, and crept to the narrow cave entrance. With the rain and the re, she couldnโt make out anything. But every hair on her body was standing, and a growing reek was slithering in from the forest beyond. Like leather and carrion. Di erent from what sheโd whi ed at the barrows. Older and earthier and . . . hungrier.
Suddenly, the re seemed like the stupidest thing she had ever done.
No res. at had been Rowanโs only rule while trekking to the fortress. And they had stayed o the roadsโveering away entirely from the forgotten, overgrown ones. Ones like the path sheโd spied nearby.
e silence deepened.
She slipped into the drenched forest, stubbing her toes on rocks and roots as her eyes adjusted to the dark. But she kept moving aheadโcurving down and away from the ancient path.
Sheโd made it far enough that her cave was little more than a glow on the hill above, a icker of light illuminating the trees. A gods-damned beacon. She angled her stake and spear into better positions, about to continue on when lightning ashed.
ree tall, lanky silhouettes lurked in front of her cave.
ough they stood like humans, she knew, deep in her bones from some collective mortal memory, that they were not. ey were not Fae, either.
With expert quiet, she took another step, then another. ey were still poking around the cave entrance, taller than men, neither male nor female.
Skinwalkers are on the prowl, Rowan had warned that rst day theyโd trained,ย searching for human pelts to bring back to their caves.ย She had been too dazed to ask or care. But nowโnow that carelessness, that wallowing, was going to get her killed. Skinned.
Wendlyn. Land of nightmares made esh, where legends roamed the earth. Despite years of stealth training, each step felt like a snap, her breathing too loud.
under grumbled, and she used the cover of the sound to take a few bounding steps. She stopped behind another tree, breathing as quietly as she could, and peered around it to survey the hillside behind her. Lightning ashed again.
e three gures were gone. But the leathery, rancid smell swarmed all around her now.ย Human pelts.
She eyed the tree sheโd ducked behind. e trunk was too slick with moss and rain to scale, the branches too high. e other trees werenโt any better. And what good was being stuck up a tree in a lightning storm?
She darted to the next tree, carefully avoiding any sticks or leaves, cursing silently at the slowness of her pace, andโย Damn it all to hell.ย She burst into a run, the mossy earth treacherous underfoot. She could make out the trees, some larger rocks, but the slope was steep. She kept her feet under her, even as undergrowth cracked behind, faster and faster.
She didnโt dare take her focus o the trees and rocks as she hurtled down the slope, desperate for any at ground. Perhaps their hunting territory ended somewhereโperhaps she could outrun them until dawn. She veered eastward, still going downhill, and grabbed on to a trunk to swing herself
around, almost losing her balance as she slammed into something hard and unyielding. She slashed with her stakeโonly to be grabbed by two massive hands.
Her wrists sang in agony as the ngers squeezed hard enough that she couldnโt stab either weapon into her captor. She twisted, bringing up a foot to smash into her assailant, and caught a ash of fangs beforeโ Not fangs. Teeth.
And there was no gleam of esh-pelts. Only silver hair, shining with rain.
Rowan dragged her against him, pressing them into what appeared to be a hollowed-out tree.
She kept her panting quiet, but breathing didnโt become any easier when Rowan gripped her by the shoulders and put his mouth to her ear. e crashing footsteps had stopped.
โYou are going to listen to every word I say.โ Rowanโs voice was softer than the rain outside. โOr-else you are going to die tonight. Do you understand?โ She nodded. He let goโonly to draw his sword and a wicked-looking hatchet. โYour survival depends entirely on you.โ e smell was growing again. โYou need to shiftย now. Or your mortal slowness will kill you.โ
She sti ened, but reached in, feeling for some thread of power. ere was nothing. ere had to be some trigger, someย placeย inside her where she could command it . . . A slow, shrieking sound of stone on metal sounded through the rain. en another. And another. ey were sharpening their blades. โYour magicโโ
โ ey do not breathe, so have no airways to cut o . Ice would slow them, not stop them. My wind is already blowing our scent away from them, but not for long.ย Shift, Aelin.โ
Aelin. It was not a test, not some elaborate trick. e skinwalkers did not need air.
Rowanโs tattoo shone as lightning lled their little hiding spot. โWe are going to have to run in a moment. What form you take when we do will determine our fates. Soย breathe, andย shift.โ
ough every instinct screamed against it, she closed her eyes. Took a breath. en another. Her lungs opened, full of cool, soothing air, and she wondered if Rowan was helping with that, too.
He was helping. And he was willing to meet a horrible fate in order to keep her alive. He hadnโt left her alone. She hadnโt been alone.
ere was a mu ed curse, and Rowan slammed his body against hers, as if he could somehow shield her. No, not shield her. Cover her, the ash of light.
She barely registered the painโif only because the moment her Fae senses snapped into place, she had to shove a hand against her own mouth to keep from retching. Oh, gods, the festeringย smellย of them, worse than any corpse sheโd ever dealt with.
With her delicately pointed ears, she could hear them now, each step they took as the three of them systematically made their way down the hill. ey spoke in low, strange voicesโat once male and female, all ravenous.
โ ere are two of them now,โ one hissed. She didnโt want to know what power it wielded to allow it to speak when it had no airways. โA Fae male joined the female. I want himโhe smells of storm winds and steel.โ Celaena gagged as the smell shoved down her throat. โ e female weโll bring back with usโdawnโs too close. en we can take our time peeling her apart.โ
Rowan eased o her and said quietly, not needing to be near for her to hear while he assessed the forest beyond, โ ere is a swift river a third of a mile east, at the base of a large cli .โ He didnโt look at her as he extended two long daggers, and she didnโt nod her thanks as she silently discarded her makeshift weapons and gripped the ivory hilts. โWhen I sayย run, you run like hell. Step where I step, and donโt turn around for any reason. If we are separated, run straightโyouโll hear the river.โ Order
after orderโa commander on the battle eld, solid and deadly. He peered out of the tree. e smell was nearly overpowering now, swarming from every angle. โIf they catch you, you cannot kill them
โnot with a mortal weapon. Your best option is to ght until you can get free and run. Understand?โ
She gave another nod. Breathing was hard again, and the rain was now torrential.
โOn my mark,โ Rowan said, smelling and hearing things that were lost even to her heightened senses. โSteady . . .โ She sank onto her haunches as Rowan did the same.
โCome out, come out,โ one of them hissedโso close it could have been inside the tree with them.
ere was a sudden rustling in thebrush to the west, almost as if two people were running. Instantly, the reek of the skinwalkers lessened as they raced after the cracking branches and leaves that Rowanโs wind led in the other direction.
โNow,โ Rowan hissed, and burst out of the tree.
Celaena ranโor tried to. Even with her sharpened vision, the brush and stones and trees proved a hindrance. Rowan raced toward the rising roar of the river, swollen from the spring rains, his pace slower than sheโd expected, but . . . but he was slowing for her. Because this Fae body was di erent, and she was adjusting wrong, andโ
She slipped, but a hand was at her elbow, keeping her upright. โFaster,โ was all he said, and as soon as sheโd found her footing, he was o again, shooting through the trees like a mountain cat.
It took all of a minute before the force of that smell gnawed on her heels and the snapping of the brush closed in. But she wouldnโt take her eyes o Rowan, and the brightening aheadโthe end of the tree line. Not much farther until they could jump, andโ
A fourth skinwalker leapt out of where it had somehow been lurking undetected in the brush. It lunged for Rowan in a ash of leathery, long limbs marred with countless scars. No, not scarsโย stitches. e stitches holding its various hides together.
She shouted as the skinwalker pounced, but Rowan didnโt falter a step as he ducked and twirled with inhuman speed, slashing down with his sword and viciously slicing with the hatchet.
e skinwalkerโs arm severed at the same moment its head toppled o its neck.
She might have marveled at the way he moved, the way he killed, but Rowan didnโt stop sprinting, so Celaena raced after him, glancing once at the body the Fae warrior had left in pieces.
Sagging bits of leather on the wet leaves, like discarded clothes. But still twitching and rustlingโ-as if waiting for someone to stitch it back together.
She ran faster, Rowan still bounding ahead.
e skinwalkers closed in from behind, shrieking with rage. en they fell silent, untilโ
โYou think the river can save you?โ one of them panted, letting out a laugh that raked along her bones. โYou think if we get wet, weโll lose our form? I have worn the skins of shes when mortals-were scarce, female.โ
She had an image then, of the chaos waiting in that riverโa ipping and near-drowning and dizzinessโand something pulling her down, down, down to the still bottom.
โRowan,โ she breathed, but he was already gone, his massive body hurtling straight o the cli edge in a mighty leap.
ere was no stopping the pursuit behind her. e skinwalkers were going to jump with them. And there would be nothing they could do to kill them, no mortal weapon they could use.
A well ripped open inside of her, vast and unyielding and horrible. Rowan had claimed no mortal
weapon could kill them. But what of immortal ones?
Celaena broke through the line of trees, sprinting for the ledge that jutted out, bare granite beneath her as she threw her strength into her legs, her lungs, her arms, andย jumped.
As she plummeted, she twisted to face the cli , to face them. ey were no more than three lean bodies leaping into the rainy night, shrieking with primal, triumphant, anticipated pleasure.
โShift!โ was the only warning she gave Rowan. ere was a ash of light to tell her heโd obeyed.
en she ripped everything from that well inside her, ripped it out with both hands and her entire raging, hopeless heart.
As she fell, hair whipping her face, Celaena thrust her hands toward the skinwalkers. โSurprise,โ she hissed. e world erupted in blue wild re.
โข
Celaena shuddered on the riverbank, from cold and exhaustion and terror. Terror at the skinwalkers
โand terror at what she had done.
His clothes dry thanks to shifting, Rowan stood a few feet away, monitoring the smoldering cli s upriver. Sheโd incinerated the skinwalkers. ey hadnโt even had time to scream.
She hunched over her knees, arms wrapped around herself. e forest was burning on either side of the riverโa radius that she didnโt have the nerve to measure. It was a weapon, her power. A di erent sort of weapon than blades or arrows or her hands. A curse.
It took several attempts, but at last she spoke. โCan you put it out?โ
โYou could, if you tried.โ When she didnโt respond, he said, โIโm almost done.โ In a moment the
ames nearest the cli s went out. How long had he been working to su ocate them? โWe donโt need something else attracted to your res.โ
She might have bothered to respond to the jab, but she was too tired and cold. e rain lled the world, and for a while, silence reigned.
โWhy is my shifting so vital?โ she asked at last.
โBecause it terri es you,โ he said. โMastering it is the rst step toward learning to control your power. Without that control, with a blast like that, you could easily have burnt yourself out.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
Another stormy look. โWhen you access your power, what does it feel like?โ She considered. โA well,โ she said. โ e magic feels like a well.โ
โHave you felt the bottom of it?โ
โIs there a bottom?โ She prayed there was.
โAll magic has a bottomโa breaking point. For those with weaker gifts, itโs easily depleted and easily re lled. ey can access most of their power at once. But for those with stronger gifts, it can take hours to hit the bottom, to summon their powers at full strength.โ
โHow long does it take you?โ
โA full day.โ She jolted. โBefore battle, we take the time, so that when we walk onto the killing
eld, we can be at our strongest. You can do other things at the same time, but some part of you is down in there, pulling up more and more, until you reach the bottom.โ
โAnd when you pull it all out, it justโreleases in some giant wave?โ
โIf I want it to. I can release it in smaller bursts, and go on for a while. But it can be hard to hold it back. People sometimes canโt tell friend from foe when theyโre handling that much magic.โ
When sheโd drawn her power on the other side of the portal months ago, sheโd felt that lack of
controlโknown she was almost as likely to hurt Chaol as she was to hurt the demon he was facing. โHow long does it take you to recover?โ
โDays. A week, depending on how I used the power and whether I drained every last drop. Some make the mistake of trying to take more before theyโre ready, or holding on for too long, and they either burn out their minds or just burn up altogether. Your shaking isnโt just from the river, you know. Itโs your bodyโs way of telling you not to do that again.โ
โBecause of the iron in our blood pushing against the magic?โ
โ atโs how our enemies will sometimes try to ght against us if they donโt have magicโiron everything.โ He must have seen her brows rise, because he added, โI was captured once. While on a campaign in the east, in a kingdom that doesnโt exist anymore. ey had me shackled head to toe in iron to keep me from choking the air out of their lungs.โ
She let out a low whistle. โWere you tortured?โ
โTwo weeks on their tables before my men rescued me.โ He unbuckled his vambrace and pushed back the sleeve of his right arm, revealing a thick, wicked scar curving around his forearm and elbow. โCut me open bit by bit, then took the bones here andโโ
โI can see very well what happened, and know exactly how itโs done,โ she said, stomach tightening. Not at the injury, butโSam. Sam had been strapped to a table, cut open and broken by one of the most sadistic killers sheโd ever known.
โWas it you,โ Rowan said quietly, but not gently, โor someone else?โ
โI was too late. He didnโt survive.โ Again silence fell, and she cursed herself for a fool for telling him. But then she said hoarsely, โ ank you for saving me.โ
A slight shrug, barely a movement at all. As if her gratitude were harder to endure than her hatred and reticence. โI am bound by an unbreakable blood oath to my Queen, so I had no choice but to ensure you didnโt die.โ A bit of that earlier heaviness settled in her veins again. โBut,โ he went on, โI would not have left anyone to a fate at the hands of the skinwalkers.โ
โA warning would have been nice.โ
โI said they were on the looseโweeks ago. But even if Iโd warned you today, you would not have listened.โ
It was true. She shivered again, this time so violently that her body shifted back, a ash of light and pain. If sheโd thought she was cold in her Fae body, it was nothing compared to the cold of being human again.
โWhat was the trigger when you shifted earlier?โ he asked, as if this moment were a reprieve from the real world, where the freezing storm and the surging river could mu e their words from the gods. She rubbed at her arms, desperate for any kind of warmth.
โIt was nothing.โ His silence demanded information for informationโa fair trade. She sighed. โLetโs just say it was fear and necessity and impressively deep-rooted survival instincts.โ
โYou didnโt lose control immediately upon shifting. When you nally used your magic, your clothes didnโt burn; neither did your hair. And the daggers didnโt melt.โ As if just now remembering that she still had them, he swiped them from her.
He was right. e magic hadnโt swarmed her the moment sheโd shifted, and even in the explosion that had spread out in every direction, sheโd had enough control to preserve herself. Not a single hair had burned.
โWhy was it di erent this time?โ he pressed.
โBecause I didnโt want you to die to save me,โ she admitted. โWould you have shifted to save yourself ?โ
โYour opinion of me is pretty much identical to my own, so you know the answer.โ
He was quiet for long enough that she wondered if he was piecing the bits of her together. โYouโre not leaving,โ Rowan said at last, arms crossed. โIโm not letting you o double duty in the kitchens, but youโre not leaving.โ
โWhy?โ
He unfastened his cloak. โBecause I said so, thatโs why.โ And she might have told him it was the worst gods-damned reason she had ever heard, and that he was an arrogant prick, had he not tossed her his cloakโdry and warm. en he dropped his jacket in her lap, too.
When he turned to go back to the fortress, she followed him.