Kingdom of Ash Page 171
Rowan lifted his head. “Then fight for it. One more time. Fight for that future.”
She gazed at him, at the life she saw in his face. All that he offered.
All that she might have, too.
“I need to ask you to do something.”
Aelin’s voice roused Dorian from a fitful sleep. He sat up on his cot. From the silence of the camp, it had to be the dead of night. “What?”
Rowan was standing guard behind her, watching the army camp beneath the trees. Dorian caught his emerald gaze—saw the answer he already needed.
The prince had come through on his silent promise earlier.
Aelin’s throat bobbed. “Together,” she said, her voice cracking. “What if we forged the Lock together?”
Dorian knew her plan, her desperate hope, before she laid it out. And when she finished, Aelin only said, “I am sorry to even ask you.”
“I am sorry I didn’t think of it,” he replied, and pushed to his feet, tugging on his boots.
Rowan turned toward them now. Waiting for an answer that he knew Dorian would give.
So Dorian said to them both, “Yes.”
Aelin closed her eyes, and he couldn’t tell if it was from relief or regret. He laid a hand on her shoulder. He didn’t want to know what the argument had been like between her and Rowan to get her to agree, to accept this. For Aelin to have even said yes …
Her eyes opened, and only bleak resolve lay within. “We do it now,” she said hoarsely. “Before the others. Before good-byes.”
Dorian nodded. She only asked, “Do you want Chaol to be there?”
He thought about saying no. Thought about sparing his friend from another good-bye, when there was such joy on Chaol’s face, such peace.
But Dorian still said, “Yes.”
CHAPTER 93
The four of them strode in silence through the trees. Down the ancient road to the salt mines.
It was the only place the scouts weren’t watching.
Every step closer made her queasy, a slow sweat breaking down her spine. Rowan kept his hand gripped around hers, his thumb brushing over her skin.
Here, in this horrible, dead place of so much suffering—here was where she would face her fate. As if she had never escaped it, not really.
Under the cover of darkness, the mountains in which the mines were carved were little more than shadows. The great wall that surrounded the death camp was nothing but a stain of blackness.
The gates had been left open, one broken on its hinges. Perhaps the freed slaves had tried to rip it down on their way out.
Aelin’s fingers tightened on Rowan’s as they passed beneath the archway and entered the open grounds of the mines. There, in the center—there stood the wooden posts where she had been whipped. On her first day, on so many days.
And there, in the mountain to her left—that was where the pits were. The lightless pits they’d shoved her into.
The buildings of the mines’ overseers were dark. Husks.
It took all her self-control to keep from looking at her wrists, where the shackle scars had been. To not feel the cold sweat sliding down her back and know no scars lay there, either. Just Rowan’s tattoo, inked over smooth skin.
As if this place were a dream—some nightmare conjured by Maeve.
The irony wasn’t lost on her. She’d escaped shackles twice now—only to wind up back here. A temporary freedom. Borrowed time.
She’d left Goldryn in their tent. The sword would be of little use where they were going.
“I never thought we’d see this place again,” Dorian murmured. “Certainly not like this.” None of the king’s steps faltered, his face somber as he gripped Damaris’s hilt. Ready to meet whatever awaited them.
The pain she knew was coming.
No, she had not ever really escaped at all, had she?
They halted near the center of the dirt yard. Elena had walked her through forging the Lock, putting the keys back into the gate. Though there would be no great display of magic, no threat to any around them, she had wanted to be away. Far from anyone else.
In the moonlight, Chaol’s face was pale. “What do you need us to do?”
“Be here,” Aelin said simply. “That is enough.”
It was the only reason she was still able to endure standing here, in this hateful place.
She met Dorian’s inquiring stare and nodded. No use in wasting time.
Dorian embraced Chaol, the two of them speaking too quietly for Aelin to hear.
Aelin only began to sketch a Wyrdmark in the dirt, large enough for her and Dorian to stand in. There would be two, overlapping with each other: Open. Close.
Lock. Unlock.
She’d learned them from the start. Had used them herself.
“No sweet farewells, Princess?” Rowan asked as she traced the mark with her foot.
“They seem dramatic,” Aelin said. “Far too dramatic, even for me.”
But Rowan halted her, the second symbol half-finished. Tipped back her chin. “Even when you’re … there,” he said, his pine-green eyes so bright under the moon. “I am with you.” He laid a hand on her heart. “Here. I am with you here.”
She laid her own hand on his chest, and breathed his scent deep into her lungs, her heart. “As I am with you. Always.”
Rowan kissed her. “I love you,” he whispered onto her mouth. “Come back to me.”
Then Rowan retreated, just beyond the unfinished marks.
The absence of his scent, his heat, filled her with cold. But she kept her shoulders back. Kept her breathing steady as she memorized the lines of Rowan’s face.
Dorian, eyes shining bright, stepped onto the marks. Aelin said to Rowan, “Seal the last one when we’re done.”
Her prince, her mate, nodded.
Dorian drew out a folded bit of cloth from his jacket. Opened it to reveal two slivers of black stone. And the Amulet of Orynth.
Her stomach roiled, nausea at their otherworldliness threatening to bring her to her knees. But she took the Amulet of Orynth from him.
“I thought you might be the one who wished to open it,” Dorian said quietly.
Here in the place where she’d suffered and endured, here in the place where so many things had begun.
Aelin weighed the ancient amulet in her palms, ran her thumbs along the golden seam of its edges. For a heartbeat, she was again in that cozy room in a riverside estate, her mother beside her, bequeathing the amulet into her care.
Aelin traced her fingers over the Wyrdmarks on the back. The runes that spelled out her hateful fate: Nameless is my price.
Written here, all this time, for so many centuries. A warning from Brannon, and a confirmation. Their sacrifice. Her sacrifice.
Brannon had raged at those gods, had marked the amulet and laid all those clues for her to one day find. So she might understand. As if she could somehow defy this fate. A fool’s hope.
Aelin turned the amulet back over, brushing her fingers along the immortal stag on its front.
Borrowed time. It had all been borrowed time.
The gold sealing the amulet melted away in her hands, hissing as it dropped onto the icy dirt. With a twist, she pulled apart the two sides of the amulet.
The unearthly reek of the third key hit her, beckoning. Whispered in languages that did not exist in Erilea and never would.