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Page 12

Kingdom of Ash (Throne of Glass, 7)

Pain clouded the kingโ€™s face. Pain, and regret, as Gavin finally said, โ€œThe key is at Morath.โ€

Dorianโ€™s mouth went dry. โ€œWhere in Morath?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ Dorian believed him. The raw dread in Gavinโ€™s eyes confirmed it. The ancient king nodded to Damaris. โ€œThat sword is not ornamental. Let it guide you, if you cannot trust yourself.โ€

โ€œIt really tells the truth?โ€

โ€œIt was blessed by the All-Seeing One himself, after I swore myself to him.โ€ Gavin shrugged, a half-tamed gesture. As if the man had never really left the wilds of Adarlan where heโ€™d risen from war leader to High King. โ€œYouโ€™ll still have to learn for yourself what is truth and what is lie.โ€

โ€œBut Damaris will help me find the key at Morath?โ€ To break into Erawanโ€™s stronghold, where all those collars were made โ€ฆ

Gavinโ€™s mouth tightened. โ€œI cannot say. But I will tell you this: do not venture toward Morath just yet. Until you are ready.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m ready now.โ€ A foolโ€™s lie. Gavin knew it, too. It was an effort not to touch his neck, the pale band forever marring his skin.

โ€œMorath is no mere keep,โ€ Gavin said. โ€œIt is a hell, and it is not kind to reckless young men.โ€ Dorian stiffened, but Gavin went on, โ€œYou will know when you are truly ready. Remain at this camp, if you can convince your companions. The path will find you here.โ€

Gavinโ€™s edges warped further, his face turning murky.

Dorian dared a step forward. โ€œAm I human?โ€

Gavinโ€™s sapphire eyes softenedโ€”just barely. โ€œIโ€™m not the person who can answer that.โ€

And then the king was gone.

 

 

CHAPTER 5

The commander in the alley had claimed his latest orders had been dispatched from Doranelle.

None of them knew whether to believe him.

Sitting around a tiny fire in a dusty field on the outskirts of a ramshackle city, the blood long since washed from his hands, Lorcan Salvaterre again mulled over the logic of it.

Had they somehow overlooked the simplest option? For Maeve to have been in Doranelle this entire time, hidden from her subjects?

But that commander had been lying filth. Heโ€™d spat in Lorcanโ€™s face before theyโ€™d ended it.

The other commander theyโ€™d found today, however, after a week of hunting him down at the nearest seaport, had claimed heโ€™d received orders from a distant kingdom theyโ€™d searched three weeks ago. In the opposite direction of Doranelle.

Lorcan toed at the dirt.

None of them had felt like speaking since the commander this afternoon had contradicted the firstโ€™s claim.

โ€œDoranelle is Maeveโ€™s stronghold,โ€ Elide said at last, her steady voice filling the heavy quiet. โ€œSimple as it is, it would make sense for her to bring Aelin there.โ€

Whitethorn only stared into the fire. He hadnโ€™t washed the blood from his dark gray jacket.

โ€œIt would be impossible, even for Maeve, to keep her hidden in Doranelle,โ€ Lorcan countered. โ€œWe would have heard about it by now.โ€

He wasnโ€™t sure when heโ€™d last spoken to the woman before him.

She hadnโ€™t balked from how heโ€™d broken Maeveโ€™s commanders, though. Sheโ€™d cringed during the worst of it, yes, but sheโ€™d listened to every word Rowan and Lorcan had wrung from them. Lorcan supposed sheโ€™d seen worse at Morathโ€”hated that she had. Hated that her monster of an uncle still breathed.

But that hunt would come later. After they found Aelin. Or whatever remained of her.

Elideโ€™s eyes grew cold, so cold, as she said, โ€œMaeve managed to conceal Gavriel and Fenrys from Rowan in Skullโ€™s Bay. And somehow hid and spirited away her entire fleet.โ€

Lorcan didnโ€™t reply. Elide went on, her gaze unwavering, โ€œMaeve knows Doranelle would be the obvious choiceโ€”the choice weโ€™d likely reject because itโ€™s too simple. She anticipated that weโ€™d believe sheโ€™d haul Aelin to the farthest reaches of Erilea, rather than right back home.โ€

โ€œMaeve would have the advantage of an easily summoned army,โ€ Gavriel added, his tattooed throat bobbing. โ€œWhich would make rescue difficult.โ€

Lorcan refrained from telling Gavriel to shut his mouth. He hadnโ€™t failed to notice how often Gavriel went out of his way to help Elide, to talk to her. And yes, some small part of him was grateful for it, since the gods knew she wouldnโ€™t accept any sort of help from him.

Hellas damn him, heโ€™d had to resort to giving his cut-up shirt to Whitethorn and Gavriel to hand to her for her cycle. Heโ€™d threatened to skin them alive if theyโ€™d said it was his, and Elide, with her human sense of smell, hadnโ€™t scented him on the fabric.

He didnโ€™t know why he bothered. He hadnโ€™t forgotten her words that day on the beach.

I hope you spend the rest of your miserable, immortal life suffering. I hope you spend it alone. I hope you live with regret and guilt in your heart and never find a way to endure it.

Her vow, her curse, whatever it had been, had held true. Every word of it.

Heโ€™d broken something. Something precious beyond measure. Heโ€™d never cared until now.

Even the severed blood oath, still gaping wide within his soul, didnโ€™t come close to the hole in his chest when he looked at her.

Sheโ€™d offered him a home in Perranth knowing heโ€™d be a dishonored male. Offered him a home with her.

But it hadnโ€™t been Maeveโ€™s sundering of the oath that had rescinded that offer. It had been a betrayal so great he didnโ€™t know how to fix it.

Where is Aelin? Where is my wife?

Whitethornโ€™s wifeโ€”and his mate. Only this mission of theirs, this endless quest to find her, kept Lorcan from plunging into a pit from which he knew he would not emerge.

Perhaps if they found her, if there was still enough left of Aelin to salvage after Cairnโ€™s ministrations, heโ€™d find a way to live with himself. To endure this โ€ฆ person heโ€™d become. It might take him another five hundred years to do so.

He didnโ€™t let himself consider that Elide would be little more than dust by then. The thought alone was enough to turn the paltry dinner of stale bread and hard cheese in his stomach.

A foolโ€”he was an immortal, stupid fool for starting down this path with her, for forgetting that even if she forgave him, her mortality beckoned.

Lorcan said at last, โ€œIt would also make sense for Maeve to go to the Akkadians, as the commander today claimed. Maeve has long maintained ties with that kingdom.โ€ He, Whitethorn, and Gavriel had been to war and back in that sand-blasted territory. Heโ€™d never wished to set foot in it again. โ€œTheir armies would shield her.โ€

For it would take an army to keep Whitethorn from reaching his mate.

He turned toward the prince, who gave no indication heโ€™d been listening. Lorcan didnโ€™t want to consider if Whitethorn would soon need to add a tattoo to the other side of his face.

โ€œThe commander today was much more forthcoming,โ€ Lorcan went on to the prince heโ€™d fought beside for so many centuries, who had been as cold-hearted a bastard as Lorcan himself until this spring. โ€œYou barely threatened him and he sang for us. The one who claimed Maeve was in Doranelle was still sneering by the end.โ€

โ€œI think sheโ€™s in Doranelle,โ€ Elide cut in. โ€œAnneith told me to listen that day. She didnโ€™t the other two times.โ€

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