Chapter 6
Chapter 6
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“You should head to bed,” Ianthe said, both of us watching the assembled revelers packing the great hall. I’d
spotted her by the open doors thirty minutes ago, and was grateful for the excuse to leave the gaggle of Tamlin’s
friends I’d been stuck talking to. Or not talking to. Either they outright stared at me, or they tried so damn hard to
come up with common topics. Hunting, mostly. Conversation usually stalled after three minutes.
“I’ve another hour before I need to sleep,” I said. Ianthe was in her usual pale robe, hood up and that circlet of
silver with its blue stone atop it.
High Fae males eyed her as they meandered past where we stood by the wood-paneled wall near the main doors,
either from awe or lust or perhaps both, their gazes occasionally snagging on me. I knew the wide eyes had
nothing to do with my bright green gown or pretty face (fairly bland compared to Ianthe’s). I tried to ignore them.
“Are you ready for tomorrow? Is there anything I can do for you?” Ianthe sipped from her glass of sparkling wine.
The gown I wore tonight was a gift from her, actually—Spring Court green, she’d called it. Alis had merely lingered
while I dressed, unnervingly silent, letting Ianthe claim her usual duties.
“I’m fine.” I’d already contemplated how pathetic it would be if I asked her to permanently stay after the wedding. If
I revealed that I dreaded her leaving me to this court, these people, until Nynsar—a minor spring holiday to
celebrate the end of seeding the fields and to pass out the first flower clippings of the season. Months and months
from now. Even having her live at her own temple felt too removed.
Two males that had circled past twice already finally worked up the courage to approach us—her.
I leaned against the wall, the wood digging into my back, as they flanked Ianthe. Handsome, in the way that most
of them were handsome, armed with weapons that marked them as two of the High Fae who guarded Tamlin’s
lands. Perhaps they even worked under Ianthe’s father. “Priestess,” one said, bowing deep.
By now, I’d become accustomed to people kissing her silver rings and beseeching her for prayers for themselves,
their families, or their lovers. Ianthe received it all without that beautiful face shifting in the slightest.
“Bron,” she said to the one on her left, brown-haired and tall. “And Hart,” she said to the one on her right, black-
haired and built a bit more powerfully than his friend. She gave a coy, pretty tilt of her lips that I’d learned meant
she was now on the hunt for nighttime companionship. “I haven’t seen you two troublemakers in a while.”
They parried with flirtatious comments, until the two males began glancing my way.
“Oh,” Ianthe said, hood shifting as she turned. “Allow me to introduce Lady Feyre.” She lowered her eyes, angling
her head in a deep nod. “Savior of Prythian.”
“We know,” Hart said quietly, bowing with his friend at the waist. “We were Under the Mountain with you.”
I managed to incline my head a bit as they straightened. “Congratulations on tomorrow,” Bron said, grinning. “A
fitting end, eh?”
A fitting end would have been me in a grave, burning in hell.
“The Cauldron,” Ianthe said, “has blessed all of us with such a union.” The males murmured their agreement,
bowing their heads again. I ignored it.
“I have to say,” Bron went on, “that trial—with the Middengard Wyrm? Brilliant. One of the most brilliant things I
ever saw.”
It was an effort not to push myself wholly flat against the wall, not to think about the reek of that mud, the gnashing
of those flesh-shredding teeth bearing down upon me. “Thank you.”
“Oh, it sounded terrible,” Ianthe said, stepping closer as she noted I was no longer wearing that bland smile. She
put a hand on my arm. “Such bravery is awe-inspiring.”
I was grateful, so pathetically grateful, for the steadying touch. For the squeeze. I knew then that she’d inspire
hordes of young Fae females to join her order—not for worshipping their Mother and Cauldron, but to learn how
she lived, how she could shine so brightly and love herself, move from male to male as if they were dishes at a
banquet.
“We missed the hunt the other day,” Hart said casually, “so we haven’t had a chance to see your talents up close,
but I think the High Lord will be stationing us near the estate next month—it’d be an honor to ride with you.”
Tamlin wouldn’t allow me out with them in a thousand years. And I had no desire to tell them that I had no interest
in ever using a bow and arrow again, or hunting anything at all. The hunt I’d been dragged on two days ago had
almost been too much. Even with everyone watching me, I hadn’t drawn an arrow.
They were still waiting for a reply, so I said, “The honor would be mine.”
“Does my father have you two on duty tomorrow, or will you be attending the ceremony?” Ianthe said, putting a
distracting hand on Bron’s arm. Precisely why I sought her out at events.
Bron answered her, but Hart’s eyes lingered on me—on my crossed arms. On my tattooed fingers. He said, “Have
you heard from the High Lord at all?”
Ianthe stiffened, and Bron immediately cut his gaze toward my inked flesh.
“No,” I said, holding Hart’s gaze.
“He’s probably running scared now that Tamlin’s got his powers back.”
“Then you don’t know Rhysand very well at all.”
Hart blinked, and even Ianthe kept silent. It was probably the most assertive thing I’d said to anyone during these
parties.
“Well, we’ll take care of him if need be,” Hart said, shifting on his feet as I continued to hold his gaze, not bothering
to soften my expression.
Ianthe said to him, to me, “The High Priestesses are taking care of it. We will not allow our savior to be treated so
ill.”
I schooled my face into neutrality. Was that why Tamlin had initially sought out Ianthe? To make an alliance? My
chest tightened a bit. I turned to her. “I’m going up. Tell Tamlin I’ll see him tomorrow.”
Tomorrow, because tonight, Ianthe had told me, we’d spend apart. As dictated by their long-held traditions.
Ianthe kissed my cheek, her hood shielding me from the room for a heartbeat. “I’m at your disposal, Lady. Send
word if you need anything.”
I wouldn’t, but I nodded.
As I slipped from the room, I peered toward the front—where Tamlin and Lucien were surrounded by a circle of
High Fae males and females. Perhaps not as refined as some of the others, but … They had the look of people
who had been together a long time, fought at each other’s sides. Tamlin’s friends. He’d introduced me to them, Text © by N0ve/lDrama.Org.
and I’d immediately forgotten their names. I hadn’t tried to learn them again.
Tamlin tipped his head back and laughed, the others howling with him.
I left before he could spot me, easing through the crowded halls until I was in the dim, empty upstairs of the
residential wing.
Alone in my bedroom, I realized I couldn’t remember the last time I’d truly laughed.
The ceiling pushed down, the large, blunt spikes so hot I could see the heat rippling off them even from where I
was chained to the floor. Chained, because I was illiterate and couldn’t read the riddle written on the wall, and
Amarantha was glad to let me be impaled.
Closer and closer. There was no one coming to save me from this horrible death.
It’d hurt. It’d hurt and be slow, and I’d cry—I might even cry for my mother, who had never cared for me, anyway. I
might beg her to save me—
My limbs flailed as I shot upright in bed, yanking against invisible chains.
I would have lurched for the bathing room had my legs and arms not shook so badly, had I been able to breathe,
breathe, breathe—
I scanned the bedroom, shuddering. Real—this was real. The horrors, those were nightmares. I was out; I was
alive; I was safe.
A night breeze floated through the open windows, ruffling my hair, drying the cold sweat on me. The dark sky
beckoned, the stars so dim and small, like speckles of frost.
Bron had sounded
as if watching my encounter with the Middengard Wyrm was a sporting match. As if I hadn’t been one mistake
away from being devoured whole and my bones spat out.
Savior and jester, apparently.
I stumbled to the open window, and pushed it wider, clearing my view of the star-flecked darkness.
I rested my head against the wall, savoring the cool stones.
In a few hours, I’d be married. I’d have my happy ending, whether I deserved it or not. But this land, these people
—they would have their happy ending, too. The first few steps toward healing. Toward peace. And then things
would be fine.
Then I’d be fine.
I really, truly hated my wedding gown.
It was a monstrosity of tulle and chiffon and gossamer, so unlike the loose gowns I usually wore: the bodice fitted,
the neckline curved to plump my breasts, and the skirts … The skirts were a sparkling tent, practically floating in
the balmy spring air.
No wonder Tamlin had laughed. Even Alis, as she’d dressed me, had hummed to herself, but said nothing. Most
likely because Ianthe had personally selected the gown to complement whatever tale she’d weave today—the
legend she’d proclaim to the world.
I might have dealt with it all if it weren’t for the puffy capped sleeves, so big I could almost see them glinting from
the periphery of my vision. My hair had been curled, half up, half down, entwined with pearls and jewels and the
Cauldron knew what, and it had taken all my self-control to keep from cringing at the mirror before descending the
sweeping stairs into the main hall. My dress hissed and swished with each step.
Beyond the shut patio doors where I paused, the garden had been bedecked in ribbons and lanterns in shades of
cream, blush, and sky blue. Three hundred chairs were assembled in the largest courtyard, each seat occupied by
Tamlin’s court. I’d make my way down the main aisle, enduring their stares, before I reached the dais at the other
end—where Tamlin would be waiting.
Then Ianthe would sanction and bless our union right before sundown, as a representative of all twelve High
Priestesses. She’d hinted that they’d pushed to be present—but through whatever cunning, she’d managed to
keep the other eleven away. Either to claim the attention for herself, or to spare me from being hounded by the
pack of them. I couldn’t tell. Perhaps both.
My mouth went paper-dry as Alis fluffed out the sparkling train of my gown in the shadow of the garden doors. Silk
and gossamer rustled and sighed, and I gripped the pale bouquet in my gloved hands, nearly snapping the stems.
Elbow-length silk gloves—to hide the markings. Ianthe had delivered them herself this morning in a velvet-lined
box.
“Don’t be nervous,” Alis clucked, her tree-bark skin rich and flushed in the honey-gold evening light.
“I’m not,” I rasped.
“You’re fidgeting like my youngest nephew during a haircut.” She finished fussing over my dress, shooing away
some servants who’d come to spy on me before the ceremony. I pretended I didn’t see them, or the glittering,
sunset-gilded crowd seated in the courtyard ahead, and toyed with some invisible fleck of dust on my skirts.
“You look beautiful,” Alis said quietly. I was fairly certain her thoughts on the dress were the same as my own, but I
believed her.
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