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Page 19

Kingdom of Ash (Throne of Glass, 7)

Manon blinked. Just once. The Thirteen had gone equally still. Asterin asked, โ€œYouโ€™ve seen the Crochans?โ€

The spiderโ€™s massive head bobbed in a nod before she sighed again. โ€œThe Crochans always tasted of what I imagine summer wine to be like. What chocolate, as you call it, would taste like.โ€

โ€œWhere,โ€ Manon demanded.

The spider named the locationโ€”vague and unfamiliar. โ€œI will show you where,โ€ she said. โ€œI will guide you.โ€

โ€œIt could be a trap,โ€ Sorrel said.

โ€œItโ€™s not,โ€ Dorian said, his hand still on the hilt of his sword. Manon studied the clarity of his eyes, the squared shoulders. The pitiless face, yet inquisitive angle to his head. โ€œLetโ€™s see if her information holds trueโ€”and decide her fate afterward.โ€

Manon blurted, โ€œWhat.โ€ The Thirteen shifted at the denied kill.

Dorian jerked his chin to the shuddering spider. โ€œDonโ€™t kill her. Not yet. Thereโ€™s more she might know beyond the Crochansโ€™ whereabouts.โ€

The spider hissed, โ€œI do not need a boyโ€™s mercyโ€”โ€

โ€œIt is a kingโ€™s mercy you receive,โ€ Dorian said coldly, โ€œand Iโ€™d suggest being quiet long enough to receive it.โ€ Rarely, so rarely did Manon hear that voice from him, the tone that sent a thrill through her blood and bones. A kingโ€™s voice.

But he was not her king. He was not the coven leader of the Thirteen. โ€œWe let her live and sheโ€™ll sell us to the highest bidder.โ€

Dorianโ€™s sapphire eyes churned, the hand on his sword tightening. Manon tensed at that contemplative, cold stare. The hint of the calculating predator beneath the kingโ€™s handsome face. He only said to the spider, โ€œYou mastered shape-shifting in a matter of months, it seems.โ€

 

A path would find him here, Gavin had said.

A path into Morath. Not a physical road, not a course of travel, but this.

The unholy terror remained quiet for a beat before she said, โ€œOur gifts are strange and hungry things. We feed not just on your life, but your powers, too, if you possess them. Once magic was freed, I learned to wield the abilities the shape-shifter had transferred to me.โ€

Damaris warmed in his hand. Truth. Every word the spider had spoken had been truth. And this โ€ฆ A way into Morathโ€”as something else entirely. In anotherโ€™s skin.

Perhaps a human slave, like Elide Lochan. Someone whose presence would go unmarked.

His raw power had lent itself to every other form of magic, able to move between flame and ice and healing. To shape-shift โ€ฆ might he learn it, too?

Dorian only asked the spider, โ€œDo you have a name?โ€

โ€œA king without his crown asks for a lowly spiderโ€™s name,โ€ she murmured, her depthless eyes setting on him. โ€œYou cannot pronounce it in your tongue, but you may call me Cyrene.โ€

Manon ground her teeth. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter what we call you, as youโ€™ll be dead soon.โ€

But Dorian cut her a sidelong glance. โ€œThe Ruhnns are a part of my kingdom. As such, Cyrene is one of my subjects. I think that gives me the right to decide whether she lives or dies.โ€

โ€œYou are both at the mercy of my coven,โ€ Manon snarled. โ€œStep aside.โ€

Dorian gave her a slight smile. โ€œAm I?โ€ A wind colder than the mountain air filled the pass.

He could kill them all. Whether by choking the air from them or snapping their necks. He could kill them all, and the wyverns included. The knowledge carved out another hollow within him. Another empty spot. Had it ever troubled his father, or Aelin, to bear such power? โ€œBring her with usโ€”question her more thoroughly at the next camp.โ€

Manon snapped, โ€œYou plan to bring that with us?โ€

In answer, the spider shifted, donning the form of a pale-skinned, dark-haired woman. Small and unremarkable, save for those unnerving black eyes. Not pretty, but with a deadly, ancient sort of allure that even a new hide couldnโ€™t conceal. And utterly naked. She shivered, rubbing her hands down her thin arms. โ€œShall this form suffice to travel lightly?โ€

Manon ignored the spider. โ€œAnd when she shifts in the night to rip us apart?โ€

Dorian only inclined his head, ice dancing at his fingertips. โ€œShe wonโ€™t.โ€

Cyrene sucked in a breath. โ€œA rare gift of magic.โ€ Her stare turned ravenous as she took in Dorian. โ€œFor a rare king.โ€

Dorian only frowned with distaste.

Manon glanced to Asterin. Her Secondโ€™s eyes were wary, her mouth a tight line. Sorrel, a few feet behind, glowered at the spider, but her hand had dropped from her sword.

The Thirteen, on some unspoken signal, peeled away to their wyverns. Only Cyrene watched them, those horrible, soulless eyes blinking every now and then as her teeth began to clack.

Manon angled her head at him. โ€œYouโ€™re โ€ฆ different today.โ€

He shrugged. โ€œIf you want someone to warm your bed who cowers at your every word and obeys every command, look elsewhere.โ€

Her stare drifted to the pale band around his throat. โ€œIโ€™m still not convinced, princeling,โ€ she hissed, โ€œthat I shouldnโ€™t just kill her.โ€

โ€œAnd what would it take, witchling, to convince you?โ€ He didnโ€™t bother to hide the sensual promise in his words, nor their edge.

A muscle flickered in Manonโ€™s jaw. Things from legendsโ€”thatโ€™s who surrounded him. The witches, the spider โ€ฆ He might as well have been a character in one of the books heโ€™d lent Aelin last fall. Though none of them had ever endured such a yawning pit inside them.

Scowling at her bare feet in the snow, Cyreneโ€™s hands twitched at her sides, an echo of the pincers sheโ€™d borne moments before.

Dorian tried not to shudder. Suicide to sneak into Morathโ€”once he learned what he needed from this thing.

The weight of Manonโ€™s gaze fell upon him again, and Dorian didnโ€™t balk from it. Didnโ€™t balk from Manonโ€™s words as she said, โ€œIf you find so little value in your existence that it compels you to trust this thing, then by all means, bring her along.โ€ A challenge to look not toward Morath or the spider, but inward. She saw exactly what gnawed on his empty chest, if only because a similar beast gnawed on her own. โ€œWeโ€™ll find out soon enough whether she spoke true about the Crochans.โ€

The spider had. Damaris had warmed in his hand when Cyrene had spoken.

And when they found the Crochans, when the Thirteen were distracted, heโ€™d learn what he needed from the spider, too.

Manon turned to the Thirteen, the witches thrumming with impatience. โ€œWe fly now. We can reach the Crochans by nightfall.โ€

โ€œAnd what then?โ€ Asterin asked. The only one of them who had permission to do so.

Manon stalked for Abraxos, and Dorian followed, tossing Cyrene a spare cloak as his magic tugged her with him. โ€œAnd then we make our move,โ€ Manon hedged. And for once, she did not meet anyoneโ€™s stare. Didnโ€™t do anything but gaze southward.

The witch was keeping secrets, too. But were hers as dire as his?

 

 

CHAPTER 8

Blackness greeted Aelin as she rose to consciousness. Tight, contained blackness.

A shift of her elbows had them digging into the sides of the box, chains reverberating through the small space. Her bare feet could graze the end if she wriggled slightly.

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