Dorian Havilliard stood before his fatherโs breakfast table, his hands held behind his back. e king had arrived moments ago but hadnโt told him to sit. Once Dorian might have already said something about it. But having magic, getting drawn into whatever mess Celaena was in, seeing that other world in the secret tunnels . . . all of that had changed everything. e best he could do these days was maintain a low pro leโto keep his father or anyone else from looking too long in his direction. So Dorian stood before the table and waited.
e King of Adarlan nished o the roast chicken and sipped from whatever was in his bloodred glass. โYouโre quiet this morning, Prince.โ e conqueror of Erilea reached for a platter of smoked
sh.
โI was waiting for you to speak, Father.โ
Night-black eyes shifted toward him. โUnusual, indeed.โ
Dorian tensed. Only Celaena and Chaol knew the truth about his magicโand Chaol had shut him out so completely that Dorian didnโt feel like attempting to explain himself to his friend. But this castle was full of spies and sycophants who wanted nothing more than to use whatever knowledge they could to advance their position. Including selling out their Crown Prince. Who knew whoโd seen him in the hallways or the library, or who had discovered that stack of books heโd hidden in Celaenaโs rooms? Heโd since moved them down to the tomb, where he went every other nightโnot for answers to the questions that plagued him but just for an hour of pure silence.
His father resumed eating. Heโd been in his fatherโs private chambers only a few times in his life.
ey could be a manor house of their own, with their library and dining room and council chamber.
ey occupied an entire wing of the glass castleโa wing opposite from Dorianโs mother. His parents had never shared a bed, and he didnโt particularly want to know more than that.
He found his father watching him, the morning sun through the curved wall of glass making every scar and nick on the kingโs face even more gruesome. โYouโre to entertain Aedion Ashryver today.โ
Dorian kept his composure as best he could. โDare I ask why?โ
โSince General Ashryver failed to bring his men here, it appears he has some spare time while awaiting the Baneโs arrival. It would be bene cial to you both to become better acquaintedโ-especially when your choice of friends of late has been so . . . common.โ
e cold fury of his magic clawed its way up his spine. โWith all due respect, Father, I have two meetings to prepare for, andโโ
โItโs not open for debate.โ His father kept eating. โGeneral Ashryver has been noti ed, and you will meet him outside your chambers at noon.โ
Dorian knew he should keep quiet, but he found himself asking, โWhy do you tolerate Aedion? Why keep him aliveโwhy make him a general?โ Heโd been unable to stop wondering about it since the manโs arrival.
His father gave a small, knowing smile. โBecause Aedionโs rage is a useful blade, and he is capable of keeping his people in line. He will not risk their slaughter, not when he has lost so much. He has quelled many a would-be rebellion in the North from that fear, for he is well aware that it would be his own peopleโthe civiliansโwho su ered rst.โ
He sharedย bloodย with a man this cruel. But Dorian said, โItโs still surprising that youโd keep a general almost as a captiveโas little more than a slave. Controlling him through fear alone seems
potentially dangerous.โ
Indeed, he wondered if his father had told Aedion about Celaenaโs mission to Wendlynโ-homeland of Aedionโs royal bloodline, where Aedionโs cousins the Ashryvers still ruled. ough Aedion trumpeted about his various victories over rebels and acted like he practically owned half the empire himself . . . How much did Aedion remember of his kin across the sea?
His father said, โI have my ways of leashing Aedion should I need to. For now, his brazen irreverence amuses me.โ His father jerked his chin toward the door. โI will not be amused, however, if you miss your appointment with him today.โ
And just like that, his father fed him to the Wolf.
โข
Despite Dorianโs o ers to show Aedion the menagerie, the kennels, the stablesโeven the damned libraryโthe general only wanted to do one thing: walk through the gardens. Aedion claimed he was feeling restless and sluggish from too much food the night before, but the smile he gave Dorian suggested otherwise.
Aedion didnโt bother talking to him, too preoccupied with humming bawdy tunes and inspecting the various women they passed. Heโd dropped the half-civilized veneer only once, when theyโd been striding down a narrow path anked by towering rosebushesโstunning in the summer, but deadly in the winterโand the guards had been a turn behind, blind for the moment. Just enough time for Aedion to subtly trip Dorian into one of the thorny walls, still humming his lewd songs.
A quick maneuver had kept Dorian from falling face- rst into the thorns, but his cloak had ripped, and his hand stung. Rather than give the general the satisfaction of seeing him hiss and inspect his cuts, Dorian had tucked his barking, freezing ngers into his pockets as the guards rounded the corner.
ey spoke only when Aedion paused by a fountain and braced his scarred hands on his hips, assessing the garden beyond as though it were a battle eld. Aedion smirked at the six guards lurking behind, his eyes brightโso bright, Dorian thought, and so strangely familiar as the general said, โA prince needs an escort in his own palace? Iโm insulted they didnโt send more guards to protect you from me.โ
โYou think you could take six men?โ
e Wolf had let out a low chuckle and shrugged, the scarred hilt of the Sword of Orynth catching the near-blinding sunlight. โI donโt think I should tell you, in case your father ever decides my usefulness is not worth my temperament.โ
Some of the guards behind them murmured, but Dorian said, โProbably not.โ
And that was itโthat was all Aedion said to him for the rest of the cold, miserable walk. Until the general gave him an edged smile and said, โBetter get that looked at.โ at was when Dorian realized his right hand was still bleeding. Aedion just turned away. โ anks for the walk, Prince,โ the general said over his shoulder, and it felt more like a threat than anything.
Aedion didnโt act without a reason. Perhaps the general had convinced his father to force this excursion. But for what purpose, Dorian couldnโt grasp. Unless Aedion merely wanted to get a feel for what sort of man Dorian had become and how well Dorian could play the game. He wouldnโt put it past the warrior to have done it just to assess a potential ally or threatโAedion, for all his arrogance, had a cunning mind. He probably viewed court life as another sort of battle eld.
Dorian let Chaolโs hand-selected guards lead him back into the wonderfully warm castle, then
dismissed them with a nod. Chaol hadnโt come today, and he was gratefulโafter that conversation about his magic, after Chaol refused to speak about Celaena, Dorian wasnโt sure what else was left for them to talk about. He didnโt believe for one moment that Chaol would willingly sanction the deaths of innocent men, no matter whether they were friends or enemies. Chaol had to know, then, that Celaena wouldnโt assassinate the Ashryver royals, for whatever reasons of her own. But there was no point in bothering to talk to Chaol, not when his friend was keeping secrets, too.
Dorian mulled over his friendโs puzzle-box of words again as he walked into the healersโ catacombs, the smell of rosemary and mint wafting past. It was a warren of supply and examination rooms, kept far from the prying eyes of the glass castle high above. ereย wasย another ward high in the glass castle, for those who wouldnโt deign to make the trek down here, but this was where the best healers in Riftholdโand Adarlanโhad honed and practiced their craft for a thousand years.
e pale stones seemed to breathe the essence of centuries of drying herbs, giving the subterranean halls a pleasant, open feeling.
Dorian found a small workroom where a young woman was hunched over a large oak table, a variety of glass jars, scales, mortars, and pestles before her, along with vials of liquid, hanging herbs, and bubbling pots over small, solitary ames. e healing arts were one of the few that his father hadnโt completely outlawed ten years agoโthough once, heโd heard, theyโd been even more powerful. Once, healers had used magic to mend and save. Now they were left with whatever nature provided them.
Dorian stepped into the room and the young woman looked up from the book she was scanning, a
nger pausing on the page. Not beautiful, butโpretty. Clean, elegant lines, chestnut hair woven in a braid, and golden-tan skin that suggested at least one family member came from Eyllwe. โCan Iโโ She got a good look at him, then, and dropped into a bow. โYour Highness,โ she said, a ush creeping up the smooth column of her neck.
Dorian held up his bloodied hand. โ ornbush.โย Rosebushย made his cuts seem that much more pathetic.
She kept her eyes averted, biting her full bottom lip. โOf course.โ She gestured a slender hand toward the wooden chair before the table. โPlease. Unlessโunless youโd rather go to a proper examination room?โ
Dorian normally hated dealing with the stammering and scrambling, but this young woman was still so red, so soft-spoken that he said, โ is is ne,โ and slid into the chair.
e silence lay heavy on him as she hurried through the workroom, rst changing her dirty white apron, then washing her hands for a good long minute, then gathering all manner of bandages and tins of salve, then a bowl of hot water and clean rags, and then nally, nally pulling a chair around the table to face his.
ey didnโt speak, either, when she carefully washed and then examined his hand. But he found himself watching her hazel eyes, the sureness of her ngers, and the blush that remained on her neck and face. โ e hand isโvery complex,โ she murmured at last, studying the cuts. โI just wanted to make sure that nothing was damaged and that there werenโt any thorns lodged in there.โ She swiftly added, โYour Highness.โ
โI think it looks worse than it actually is.โ
With a feather-light touch, she smeared a cloudy salve on his hand, and, like a damn fool, he winced. โSorry,โ she mumbled. โItโs to disinfect the cuts. Just in case.โ She seemed to curl in on
herself, as if heโd give the order to hang her merely for that. He fumbled for the words, then said, โIโve dealt with worse.โ
It sounded stupid coming out, and she paused for a moment before reaching for the bandages. โI know,โ she said, and glanced up at him.
Well, damn. Werenโt those eyes just stunning. She quickly looked back down, gently wrapping his hand. โIโm assigned to the southern wing of the castleโand Iโm often on night duty.โ
at explained why she looked so familiar. Sheโd healed not only him that night a month ago but also Celaena, Chaol, Fleetfoot . . . had been there forย allย of their injuries these past seven months. โIโm sorry, I canโt remember your nameโโ
โItโs Sorscha,โ she said, though there was no anger in it, as there should have been. e spoiled prince and his entitled friends, too absorbed in their own lives to bother learning the name of the healer who had patched them up again and again.
She nished wrapping his hand and he said, โIn case we didnโt say it often enough, thank you.โ
ose green- ecked brown eyes lifted again. A tentative smile. โItโs an honor, Prince.โ She began gathering up her supplies.
Taking that as his cue to leave, he stood and exed his ngers. โFeels good.โ
โ eyโre minor wounds, but keep an eye on them.โ Sorscha dumped the bloodied water down the sink in the back of the room. โAnd you neednโt come all the way down here the next time. Justโjust send word, Your Highness. Weโre happy to attend to you.โ She curtsied low, with the long-limbed grace of a dancer.
โYouโve been responsible for the southern stone wing all this time?โ e question within the question was clear enough:ย Youโve seen everything? Every inexplicable injury?
โWe keep records of our patients,โ Sorscha said softlyโso no one else passing by the open doorway could hear. โBut sometimes we forget to write down everything.โ
She hadnโt told anyone what sheโd seen, the things that didnโt add up. Dorian gave her a swift bow of thanks and strode from the room. How many others, he wondered, had seen more than they let on? He didnโt want to know.
โข
Sorschaโs ngers, thankfully, had stopped shaking by the time the Crown Prince left the catacombs. By some lingering grace of Silba, goddess of healers and bringer of peaceโand gentle deathsโsheโd managed to keep them from trembling while she patched up his hand, too. Sorscha leaned against the counter and loosed a long breath.
e cuts hadnโt merited a bandage, but sheโd been sel sh and foolish and had wanted to keep the beautiful prince in that chair for as long as she could manage.
He didnโt even know who she was.
Sheโd been appointed full healer a year ago, and had been called to attend to the prince, the captain, and their friend countless times. And the Crown Prince still had no idea who she was.
She hadnโt lied to himโabout failing to keep records of everything. But she remembered it all. Especially that night a month ago, when the three of them had been bloodied up and lthy, the girlโs hound injured, too, with no explanation and no one raising a fuss. And the girl, their friend . . .
e Kingโs Champion. atโs who she was.
Lover, it seemed, of both the prince and his captain at one time or another. Sorscha had helped Amithy tend to the young woman after the brutal duel to win her title. Occasionally, sheโd checked
on the girl and found the prince holding her in bed.
Sheโd pretended it didnโt matter, because the Crown Prince was notorious where women were involved, but . . . it hadnโt stopped the sinking ache in her chest. en things had changed, and when the girl was poisoned with gloriella, it was the captain who stayed with her. e captain who had acted like a beast in a cage, prowling the room until Sorschaโs own nerves had been frayed. Not surprisingly, several weeks later, the girlโs handmaid, Philippa, came to Sorscha for a contraceptive tonic. Philippa hadnโt said whom it was for, but Sorscha wasnโt an idiot.
When sheโd attended the captain a week after that, four brutal scratches down his face and a dead look in his eyes, Sorscha had understood. And understood again the last time, when the prince, the captain, and the girl were all bloodied along with the hound, that whatever had existed between the three of them was broken.
e girl especially.ย Celaena, sheโd heard them say accidentally when they thought she was already out of the room. Celaena Sardothien. Worldโs greatest assassin and now the Kingโs Champion. Another secret Sorscha would keep without them ever knowing.
She was invisible. And glad of it, most days.
Sorscha frowned at her table of supplies. She had half a dozen tonics and poultices to make before dinner, all of them complex, all of them dumped on her by Amithy, who pulled rank whenever she could. On top of it, she still had her weekly letter to write to her friend, who wanted every little detail about the palace. Just thinking of all the tasks gave her a headache.
Had it been anyone other than the prince, she would have told them to go nd another healer.
Sorscha returned to her work. She was certain heโd forgotten her name the moment he left. Dorian was heir to the mightiest empire in the world, and Sorscha was the daughter of two dead immigrants from a village in Fenharrow that had been burned to ashโa village that no one would ever remember.
But that didnโt stop her from loving him, as she still did, invisible and secret, ever since sheโd rst laid eyes on him six years ago.