Manon finished with her boots and lay back on her bedroll, sliding the blanket over her as she stared up at the tentโs low ceiling. โDid they teach you these things in your glass castle?โ
โYes.โ Before heโd shattered that castle into shards and dust.
Manon turned on her side, propping her head with a hand, her white hair spilling from its braid to frame her face. โYou canโt use that magic of yours to simply โฆ compel them, can you?โ
Dorian huffed a laugh. โNot that I know of.โ
โMaeve wormed her way into Prince Rowanโs mind to convince him to take a false mate.โ
โI donโt even know what Maeveโs power is,โ Dorian said, cringing. What the Fae Queen had done to Rowan, what she was now doing to the Queen of Terrasen โฆ โAnd Iโm not entirely certain I want to start experimenting on potential allies.โ
Manon sighed through her nose. โMy training did not include these things.โ
He wasnโt surprised. โYou want my honest opinion?โ Her golden eyes pinned him to the spot as she gave a curt nod. โFind the thing they need, and use it to your advantage. What would prompt them to rally behind you, to see you as their Crochan Queen? Fighting in battle tonight won some degree of trust, but not immediate acceptance. Perhaps Glennis might know.โ
โIโd have to risk asking her.โ
โYou donโt trust her.โ
โWhy should I?โ
โSheโs your great-grandmother. And didnโt order you executed on sight.โ
โMy grandmother didnโt until the end, either.โ No emotion passed over her face, but her fingers dug into her scalp at her words.
So Dorian said, โAelin needed Captain Rolfe and his people shaken out of centuries of hiding in order to rally the Mycenian fleet. She learned they would only return to Terrasen when a sea dragon reappeared at last, one of their long-lost allies on the waves. So she engineered it to happen: provoked a small Valg fleet to attack Skullโs Bay while it lay mostly defenseless, and then used the battle to showcase the sea dragon that arrived to aid them, summoned from air and magic.โ
โThe shifter,โ Manon said. Dorian nodded. โAnd the Mycenians bought it?โ
โAbsolutely,โ Dorian drawled. โAelin learned what the Mycenians needed in order to be convinced to join her cause. What sort of thing might the Crochans require to do the same?โ
Manon lay back onto her bedroll, as graceful as a dancer. She toyed with the end of her braid, the red strip there. โIโll ask Ghislaine in the morning.โ
โI donโt think Ghislaine is going to know.โ
Those gold eyes slid to his. โYou truly believe I should ask Glennis?โ
โI do. And I think she will help you.โ
โWhy bother?โ
He wondered if the Thirteen could ever see itโthat hint of self-loathing that sometimes flickered across her face. โHer mother willingly abandoned her city, her people, her queen in their last hours so she might preserve the royal bloodline. Your bloodline. I think she told you that story tonight so you might realize she will do the same as well.โ
โWhy not say it outright, then?โ
โBecause, in case you didnโt notice, youโre not exactly a popular person in this camp, despite your ploy with the Ironteeth. Glennis knows how to play the game. You just need to catch up with her. Find out why theyโre even here, then plan your next move.โ
Her mouth tightened, then relaxed. โYour tutors taught you well, princeling.โ
โBeing raised by a demon-infested tyrant did have its benefits, it seems.โ His words rang flat, even as an edge sharpened inside him.
Her gaze drifted to his throat, to the pale line across it. He could almost feel her stare like a phantom touch.
โYou still hate him.โ
He arched an eyebrow. โAm I not supposed to?โ
Her moon-white hair gleamed in the dim light. โYou told me he was human. Deep down, heโd remained human, and tried to protect you as best he could. Yet you hate him.โ
โYouโll forgive me if I find his methods of protecting me to be unpalatable.โ
โBut it was the demon, not the man, who killed your healer.โ
Dorian clenched his jaw. โIt makes no difference.โ
โDoesnโt it?โ Manon frowned. โMost can barely withstand a few months of Valg infestation. You barely withstood it.โ He tried not to flinch at the blunt words. โYet he held on for decades.โ
He held her stare. โIf youโre trying to cast my father as some sort of noble hero, youโre wasting your breath.โ He debated ending it there, but he asked, โIf someone told you that your grandmother was secretly good, that she hadnโt wanted to murder your parents and so many others, that sheโd been forced to make you kill your own sister, would you find it so easy to believe? To forgive her?โ
Manon glanced down at her abdomenโat the scar hidden beneath her leathers. He braced himself for the answer. But she only said, โIโm tired of talking.โ
Good. So was he.
โIs there something youโd rather do instead, witchling?โ His voice turned rough, and he knew she could hear his heartbeat as it began hammering.
Her only answer was to slide over him, strands of her hair falling around them in a curtain. โI said I donโt want to talk,โ she breathed, and lowered her mouth to his neck. Dragged her teeth over it, right through that white line where the collar had been.
Dorian groaned softly, and shifted his hips, grinding himself into her. Her breath became jagged in answer, and he ran a hand down her side.
โShut me up, then,โ he said, a hand drifting southward to cup her backside as she nipped at his neck, his jaw. No hint of those iron teeth, but the promise of them lingered, an exquisite sword over his head.
Only with her did he not need to explain. Only with her did he not need to be a king, or anything but what he was. Only with her would there be no judgment for what heโd done, who heโd failed, what he might still have to do.
Just thisโpleasure and utter oblivion.
Manonโs hand found his belt buckle, and Dorian reached for hers, and neither spoke for some time after that.
The release she found that nightโtwiceโcouldnโt entirely dull the edge when morning broke, gray and bleak, and Manon approached Glennisโs larger tent.
Sheโd left the king sleeping, bundled in the blankets theyโd shared, though she hadnโt allowed him to hold her. Sheโd simply turned onto her side, putting her back to him, and closed her eyes. He hadnโt seemed to care, sated and drowsy after sheโd ridden him until theyโd both found their pleasure, and had been quickly asleep. Had stayed asleep, while Manon had contemplated how, exactly, she was to have this meeting.
Perhaps she should have brought Dorian. He certainly knew how to play these games. To think like a king.
Heโd killed that spider like a blue-blooded witch, though. Not an ounce of mercy.
It shouldnโt have thrilled her the way it did.
But Manon knew her pride would never recover, and sheโd never again be able to call herself a witch, if she let him do this task for her.
				




