Chaol held his breath for the entire walk as he and Aedion gripped the half-conscious Ren between them, the three of them swaying and staggering, looking for all the world like drunkards out for a night of thrills in the slums. e streets were still teeming despite the hour, and one of the women they passed slouched over and gripped Aedionโs tunic, spewing a slur of sultry words. But the general used a gentle hand to disengage her and said, โI donโt pay for what I can get for free.โ
Somehow, it felt like a lie, since Chaol hadnโt seen or heard of Aedion sharing anyoneโs bed all these weeks. But perhaps knowing that Aelin was alive changed his priorities.
ey reached the opium den Ren had named in between spurts of unconsciousness just as the shouts of soldiers storming into boardinghouses, inns, and taverns echoed from down the street. Chaol didnโt wait to see who they were and shoved through the carved wooden door. e reek of unwashed bodies, waste, and sweet smoke clotted in Chaolโs nostrils. Even Aedion coughed and gave Ren, who was almost a dead weight in their arms, a disapproving stare.
But the aging madam swept forward to greet them, her long tunic and over-robe owing on some phantom wind, and ushered them down the wood-paneled hallway, her feet soft on the worn, colorful rugs. She began prattling o prices and the nightโs specials, but Chaol took one look in her green, cunning eyes and knew she was familiar with Renโsomeone who had probably built herself her own empire here in Rifthold.
She set them up in a veiled-o alcove littered with worn silk cushions that stank of sweet smoke and sweat, and after she lifted her brows at Chaol, he handed over three gold pieces. Ren groaned from where he was sprawled on the cushions between Aedion and Chaol, but before Chaol could so much as say a word, the madam returned with a bundle in her arms. โ ey are next door,โ she said, her accent lovely and strange. โHurry.โ
Sheโd brought a tunic. Aedion made quick work of stripping Ren, whose face was deathly pale, lips bloodless. e general swore as they beheld the woundโa slice low in his belly. โAny deeper and his damn intestines would be hanging out,โ Aedion said. He took a strip of clean fabric from the madam and wrapped it around the young lordโs muscled abdomen. ere were scars all over Ren already. If he survived, this probably would not be the worst of them.
e madam knelt before Chaol and opened the box in her hands. ree pipes now lay on the low–lying table before them. โYou need to play the part,โ she breathed, glancing over her shoulder through the thick black veil, no doubt calculating how much time they had left.
Chaol didnโt even try to object as she used rouge to redden the skin around his eyes, applied some paste and powder to leech the color from his face, shook free a few buttons on his tunic, and mussed his hair. โLay back, limp and loose, and keep the pipe in your hand. Smoke it if you need to take the edge o .โ at was all she told him before she got to work on Aedion, who had nished stu ng Ren into his clean clothes. In moments, the three of them were reclined on the reeking cushions, and the madam had bustled o with Renโs bloody tunic.
e lordโs breathing was labored and uneven, and Chaol fought the shaking in his own hands as the front door banged open. e soft feet of the madam hurried past to greet the men. ough Chaol strained to hear, Aedion seemed to be listening without a problem.
โFive of you, then?โ the madam chirped loudly enough for them to hear. โWeโre looking for a fugitive,โ was the growled response. โClear out of the way.โ
โSurely you would like to restโwe have private rooms for groups, and you are all such big men.โ Each word was purred, a sensual feast. โIt is extra for bringing in swords and daggersโa liability, you see, when the drug takes youโโ
โWoman,ย enough,โ the man barked. Fabric ripped as each veiled alcove was inspected. Chaolโs heart thundered, but he kept his body limp, even as he itched to reach for his blade.
โ en I shall leave you to your work,โ she said demurely.
Between them, Ren was so dazed that he truly could have been drugged out of his mind. Chaol just hoped his own performance was convincing as the curtain ripped back.
โIs that the wine?โ Aedion slurred, squinting at the men, his face wan and his lips set in a loose grin. He was hardly recognizable. โWeโve been waiting twenty minutes, you know.โ
Chaol smiled blearily up at the six men peering into the room. All in those dark uniforms, all unfamiliar. Who the hell were they? Why had Ren been targeted?
โWine,โ Aedion snapped, a spoiled son of a merchant, perhaps. โNow.โ
e men just swore at them and continued on. Five minutes later, they were gone.
โข
e den must have been a meeting point, because Murtaugh found them there an hour later. e madam had brought them to her private o ce, and theyโd been forced to pin Ren to the worn couch as sheโwith surprising adeptnessโdisinfected, stitched, and bound up his nasty wound. He would survive, she said, but the blood loss and injury would keep him incapacitated for a while. Murtaugh paced the entire time, until Ren collapsed into a deep sleep, courtesy of some tonic the woman made him choke down.
Chaol and Aedion sat at the small table crammed in amongst the crates upon crates of opium stacked against the walls. He didnโt want to know what was in the tonic Ren had ingested.
Aedion was watching the locked door, head cocked as if listening to the sounds of the den, as he said to Murtaugh, โWhy were you being followed, and who were those men?โ
e old man kept pacing. โI donโt know. But they knew where Ren and I would be. Ren has a network of informants throughout the city. Any one of them could have betrayed us.โ
Aedionโs attention remained on the door, a hand on one of his ghting knives. โ ey wore uniforms with the royal sigilโeven the captain didnโt recognize them. You need to lay low for a while.โ
Murtaughโs silence was too heavy. Chaol asked quietly, โWhere do we bring him when he can be moved?โ
Murtaugh paused his pacing, his eyes full of grief. โ ere is no place. We have no home.โ Aedion looked sharply at him. โWhere the hell have you been staying all this time?โ
โHere and there, squatting in abandoned buildings. When we are able to take work, we stay in boardinghouses, but these days . . .โ
ey would not have access to the Allsbrook co ers, Chaol realized. Not if they had been in hiding for so many years. But to be homeless . . .
Aedionโs face was a mask of disinterest. โAnd you have no place in Rifthold safe enough to hold himโto see to his mending.โ Not a question, but Murtaugh nodded all the same. Aedion examined Ren, sprawled on the dark sofa against the far wall. His throat bobbed once, but then he said, โTell the captain your theory about magic.โ
โข
In the long hours that passed as Ren regained his strength enough to be moved, Murtaugh explained everything he knew. His entire story came out, the old man almost whispering at timesโof the horrors theyโd ed, and how Ren had gotten each and every scar. Chaol understood why the young man had been so close-lipped until now. Secrecy had kept them alive.
All together, Murtaugh and Ren had learned, the various waves the day magic had vanished formed a rough triangle across the continent. e rst line went right from Rifthold to the Frozen Wastes. e second went down from the Frozen Wastes to the edge of the Deserted Peninsula. e third line went from there back to Rifthold. A spell, they believed, had been the cause of it.
Standing around the map Aedion had produced, the general traced a nger over the lines again and again, as if sorting out a battle strategy. โA spell sent from speci c points, like a beacon.โ
Chaol thumped his knuckles on the table. โIs there some way of undoing it?โ
Murtaugh sighed. โOur work was interrupted by the disturbance with Archer, and our sources vanished from the city for fear of their lives. But there has to be a way.โ
โSo where do we start looking?โ Aedion asked. โ ereโs no chance in hell the king would leave clues lying around.โ
Murtaugh nodded. โWe need eyewitnesses to con rm what we suspect, but the places we think the spell originated are occupied by the kingโs forces. Weโve been waiting for an in.โ
Aedion gave him a lazy grin. โNo wonder you kept telling Ren to be nice to me.โ
As if in response, Ren groaned, struggling to rise to consciousness. Had the young lord ever felt safe or at peace at any point in the past ten years? It would explain that angerโthe reckless anger that coursed through all the young, shattered hearts of Terrasen, including Celaenaโs.
Chaol said, โ ere is an apartment hidden in a warehouse in the slums. Itโs secure, and has all the amenities you need. Youโre welcome to stay there for however long you require.โ
He felt Aedion watching him carefully. But Murtaugh frowned. โHowever generous, I cannot accept the o er to stay in your house.โ
โItโs not my house,โ Chaol said. โAnd believe me, the owner wonโt mind one bit.โ