Heir of Fire

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Heir of Fire Page 24

by Sarah J. Maas


  She didn’t dare a by-­your-­leave or farewell or anything that would keep her in that room a moment longer. And he didn’t try to stop her as she walked out and shut the door behind her.

  She leaned against the stone wall of the narrow landing, a hand on her thundering heart. It was the smart thing to do, the right thing to do. She had survived this long, and would only survive the road ahead if she continued to be unnoticed, reliable, quiet.

  But she didn’t want to be unnoticed—­not with him, not forever.

  He made her want to laugh and sing and shake the world with her voice.

  The door swung open, and she found him standing in the doorway, solemn and wary.

  Maybe there could be no future, no hope of anything more, but just looking at him standing there, in this moment, she wanted to be selfish and stupid and wild.

  It could all go to hell tomorrow, but she had to know what it was like, just for a little while, to belong to someone, to be wanted and cherished.

  He did not move, didn’t do anything but stare—­seeing her exactly how she saw him—­as she grabbed the lapels of his tunic, pulled his face down to hers, and kissed him fiercely.

  •

  Chaol had been barely able to concentrate for the past few days thanks to the meeting he was moments away from having. It had taken longer than he had anticipated before Ren and Murtaugh ­were finally ready to meet him—­their first encounter since that night in the slums. Chaol had to wait for his next night off, Aedion had to find a secure location, and then they had to coordinate with the two lords from Terrasen. He and the general had left the castle separately, and Chaol had hated himself when he lied to his men about where he was going—­hated that they wished him fun, hated that they trusted him, the man who was meeting with their mortal enemies.

  Chaol shoved those thoughts aside as he approached the dim alley a few blocks from the decrepit boarding ­house where they ­were to meet. Under his heavy-­hooded cloak he was armed more heavily than he usually bothered. Every breath he took felt too shallow. A two-­note whistle sounded down the alley, and he echoed it. Aedion stalked through the low-­lying mist coming off the Avery, his face concealed in the cowl of his own cloak.

  He ­wasn’t wearing the Sword of Orynth. Instead, an assortment of blades and fighting knives ­were strapped to the general—­a man able to walk into hell itself and come out grinning.

  “Where are the others?” Chaol said softly. The slums ­were quiet tonight—­too quiet for his liking. Dressed as he was, few would dare approach him, but the walk through the crooked and dark streets had been harrowing. Such poverty and despair—­and desperation. It made people dangerous, willing to risk anything to scratch out another day of living.

  Aedion leaned against the crumbling brick wall behind them. “Don’t get your undergarments in a twist. They’ll be ­here soon.”

  “I’ve waited long enough for this information.”

  “What’s the rush?” Aedion drawled, scanning the alley.

  “I’m leaving Rifthold in a few weeks to return to Anielle.” Aedion didn’t look directly at him, but he could feel the general staring at him from beneath his dark hood.

  “So get out of it—­tell them you’re busy.”

  “I made a promise,” Chaol said. “I’ve already bargained for time, but I want to have . . . done something for the prince before I leave.”

  The general turned to him then. “I’d heard you ­were estranged from your father; why the sudden change?”

  It would have been easier to lie, but Chaol said, “My father is a powerful man—­he has the ear of many influential members at court and is on the king’s council.”

  Aedion let out a low laugh. “I’ve butted heads with him in more than a few war councils.”

  That Chaol would have paid good money to see, but he ­wasn’t smiling as he said, “It was the only way I could get her sent to Wendlyn.” He quickly explained the bargain he’d made, and when he was finished, Aedion loosed a long breath.

  “Damn,” the general said, then shook his head. “I didn’t think that kind of honor still existed in Adarlan.”

  He supposed it was a compliment—­and a high one, coming from Aedion. “And what of your father?” Chaol said, if only to shift conversation away from the hole in his chest. “I know your mother was kin to—­to her, but what of your father’s line?”

  “My mother never admitted who my father was, even when she was wasting away on her sickbed,” Aedion said flatly. “I don’t know if it was from shame, or because she ­couldn’t even remember, or to protect me somehow. Once I was brought over ­here, I didn’t really care. But I’d rather have no father than your father.”

  Chaol chuckled and might have asked another question had boots not scraped on stone at the other end of the alley, followed by a rasping breath.

  That fast, Aedion had palmed two fighting knives, and Chaol drew his own sword—­a bland, nondescript blade he’d swiped from the barracks—­as a man staggered into view.

  He had an arm wrapped around his middle, the other bracing himself against the brick wall of an abandoned building. Aedion was instantly moving, knives sheathed again. It ­wasn’t until Chaol heard him say, “Ren?” that he also hurried toward the young man.

  In the moonlight, the blood on Ren’s tunic was a shining, deep stain.

  “Where is Murtaugh?” Aedion demanded, slinging an arm under Ren’s shoulders.

  “Safe.” Ren panted, his face dealthy pale. Chaol scanned either end of the alley. “We ­were—­followed. So we tried losing them.” He heard, more than saw, Ren’s wince. “They cornered me.”

  “How many?” Aedion said softly, though Chaol could almost feel the violence simmering off the general.

  “Eight,” Ren said, and hissed in pain. “Killed two, then got free. They’re following me.”

  Leaving six. If they ­were unharmed, they ­were probably close behind. Chaol examined the stones beyond Ren. The wound to his abdomen ­couldn’t be deep, if he’d managed to keep the blood flow from leaving a trail. But it still had to be agonizing—­potentially fatal, if it had pierced the wrong spot.

  Aedion went rigid, hearing something that Chaol ­couldn’t. He quietly, gently passed the sagging Ren into Chaol’s arms. “There are three barrels ten paces away,” the general said with lethal calm as he faced the alley entrance. “Hide behind them and keep your mouths shut.”

  That was all Chaol needed to hear as he took Ren’s weight and hauled him to the large barrels, then eased him onto the ground. Ren stifled a groan of pain, but kept still. There was a small crack between two of the barrels where Chaol could see the alley, and the six men who stalked into it almost shoulder-­to-­shoulder. He ­couldn’t make out much more than dark tunics and cloaks.

  The men paused when they beheld Aedion standing before them, still hooded. The general drew his fighting knives and purred, “None of you are leaving this alley alive.”

  •

  They didn’t.

  Chaol marveled at Aedion’s skill—­the speed and swiftness and utter confidence that made it like watching a brutal, unforgiving dance.

  It was over before it really started. The six assailants seemed at ease with weapons, but against a man with Fae blood surging in his veins, they ­were useless.

  No wonder Aedion had risen to such high ranking so quickly. He’d never seen another man fight like that. Only—­only Celaena had come close. He ­couldn’t tell which of them would win if they ­were ever matched against each other, but together . . . Chaol’s heart went cold at the thought. Six men dead in a matter of moments—­six.

  Aedion ­wasn’t smiling as he came back over to Chaol and dropped a scrap of fabric on the ground before them. Even Ren, panting through clenched teeth, looked.

  It was a black, heavy material—­and emblazoned on it in dark thread, nearl
y invisible save for the glint of the moonlight, was a wyvern. The royal sigil.

  “I don’t know these men,” Chaol said, more to himself than to protest his innocence. “I’ve never seen that uniform.”

  “From the sound of it,” Aedion said, that rage still simmering in his voice as he cocked his head toward noises that Chaol could not hear with his human ears, “there are more of them out there, and they’re combing the slums door-to-door for Ren. We need a place to hide.”

  Ren held on to consciousness long enough to say, “I know where.”

  30

  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. The streets ­were still teeming despite the hour, and one of the women they passed slouched over and gripped Aedion’s tunic, spewing a slur of sultry words. But the general used a gentle hand to disengage her and said, “I don’t pay for what I can get for free.”

  Somehow, it felt like a lie, since Chaol hadn’t seen or heard of Aedion sharing anyone’s bed all these weeks. But perhaps knowing that Aelin was alive changed his priorities.

  They 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 didn’t wait to see who they ­were and shoved through the carved wooden door. The reek of unwashed bodies, waste, and sweet smoke clotted in Chaol’s 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 flowing on some phantom wind, and ushered them down the wood-­paneled hallway, her feet soft on the worn, colorful rugs. She began prattling off prices and the night’s specials, but Chaol took one look in her green, cunning eyes and knew she was familiar with Ren—­someone who had probably built herself her own empire ­here in Rifthold.

  She set them up in a veiled-­off 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. “They are next door,” she said, her accent lovely and strange. “Hurry.”

  She’d brought a tunic. Aedion made quick work of stripping Ren, whose face was deathly pale, lips bloodless. The general swore as they beheld the wound—­a slice low in his belly. “Any deeper and his damn intestines would be hanging out,” Aedion said. He took a strip of clean fabric from the madam and wrapped it around the young lord’s muscled abdomen. There ­were scars all over Ren already. If he survived, this probably would not be the worst of them.

  The madam knelt before Chaol and opened the box in her hands. Three pipes now lay on the low-­lying table before them. “You need to play the part,” she breathed, glancing over her shoulder through the thick black veil, no doubt calculating how much time they had left.

  Chaol didn’t 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. “Lay back, limp and loose, and keep the pipe in your hand. Smoke it if you need to take the edge off.” That was all she told him before she got to work on Aedion, who had finished stuffing Ren into his clean clothes. In moments, the three of them ­were reclined on the reeking cushions, and the madam had bustled off with Ren’s bloody tunic.

  The lord’s breathing was labored and uneven, and Chaol fought the shaking in his own hands as the front door banged open. The soft feet of the madam hurried past to greet the men. Though Chaol strained to hear, Aedion seemed to be listening without a problem.

  “Five of you, then?” the madam chirped loudly enough for them to hear.

  “We’re looking for a fugitive,” was the growled response. “Clear out of the way.”

  “Surely you would like to rest—­we have private rooms for groups, and you are all such big men.” Each word was purred, a sensual feast. “It is extra for bringing in swords and daggers—­a liability, you see, when the drug takes you—”

  “Woman, enough,” the man barked. Fabric ripped as each veiled alcove was inspected. Chaol’s heart thundered, but he kept his body limp, even as he itched to reach for his blade.

  “Then I shall leave you to your work,” 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.

  “Is that the wine?” Aedion slurred, squinting at the men, his face wan and his lips set in a loose grin. He was hardly recognizable. “We’ve been waiting twenty minutes, you know.”

  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?

  “Wine,” Aedion snapped, a spoiled son of a merchant, perhaps. “Now.”

  The men just swore at them and continued on. Five minutes later, they were gone.

  •

  The den must have been a meeting point, because Murtaugh found them there an hour later. The madam had brought them to her private office, and they’d been forced to pin Ren to the worn couch as she—­with surprising adeptness—­disinfected, 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 didn’t 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, “Why ­were you being followed, and who ­were those men?”

  The old man kept pacing. “I don’t 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.”

  Aedion’s attention remained on the door, a hand on one of his fighting knives. “They wore uniforms with the royal sigil—­even the captain didn’t recognize them. You need to lay low for a while.”

  Murtaugh’s silence was too heavy. Chaol asked quietly, “Where do we bring him when he can be moved?”

  Murtaugh paused his pacing, his eyes full of grief. “There is no place. We have no home.”

  Aedion looked sharply at him. “Where the hell have you been staying all this time?”

  “Here and there, squatting in abandoned buildings. When we are able to take work, we stay in boarding­houses, but these days . . .”

  They would not have access to the Allsbrook coffers, Chaol realized. Not if they had been in hiding for so many years. But to be homeless . . .

  Aedion’s face was a mask of disinterest. “And you have no place in Rifthold safe enough to hold him—­to see to his mending.” 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, “Tell the captain your theory about magic.”

  •

  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 times—­of the horrors they’d fled, 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. The first li
ne went right from Rifthold to the Frozen Wastes. The second went down from the Frozen Wastes to the edge of the Deserted Peninsula. The 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 finger over the lines again and again, as if sorting out a battle strategy. “A spell sent from specific points, like a beacon.”

  Chaol thumped his knuckles on the table. “Is there some way of undoing it?”

  Murtaugh sighed. “Our 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.”

  “So where do we start looking?” Aedion asked. “There’s no chance in hell the king would leave clues lying around.”

  Murtaugh nodded. “We need eyewitnesses to confirm what we suspect, but the places we think the spell originated are occupied by the king’s forces. ­We’ve been waiting for an in.”

  Aedion gave him a lazy grin. “No wonder you kept telling Ren to be nice to me.”

  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 anger—­the reckless anger that coursed through all the young, shattered hearts of Terrasen, including Celaena’s.

  Chaol said, “There is an apartment hidden in a ware­house in the slums. It’s secure, and has all the amenities you need. You’re welcome to stay there for however long you require.”

  He felt Aedion watching him carefully. But Murtaugh frowned. “However generous, I cannot accept the offer to stay in your ­house.”

  “It’s not my ­house,” Chaol said. “And believe me, the own­er won’t mind one bit.”

  31

  “Eat it,” Manon said, holding out the raw leg of mutton to Abraxos. The day was bright, but the wind off the snowy peaks of the Fangs still carried a brutal chill. They’d been going outside the mountain for little spurts to stretch his legs, using the back door that opened onto a narrow road leading into the mountains. She’d guided him by the giant chain—­as if it would do anything to stop him from taking off—­up a sharp incline, and then onto the meadow atop a plateau.

 

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