Crochanâs corpse in that snow-Âblasted mountain pass, sheâd taken the cloak as a trophyâÂand still wore it, over a hundred years later. No other Ironteeth witch could have done itâÂbecause no other Ironteeth witch would have dared incur the wrath of the three Matrons by wearing their eternal enemyâs color. But from the day Manon stalked into Blackbeak Keep wearing the cloak and holding that Crochan heart in a boxâÂa gi ft for her grandmotherâÂit had been her sacred duty to hunt them down, one by one, until there Âwere none le ft .
Th is was her latest rotationâÂsix months in Fenharrow while the rest of her coven was spread through Melisande and northern Eyllwe under similar orders. But in the months that sheâd prowled from village to village, she hadnât discovered a single Crochan. Th ese farmers Âwere the fi rst bit of fun sheâd had in weeks. And she would be damned if she didnât enjoy it.
Manon walked into the fi eld, sucking the blood o ff her nails as she went. She slipped through the grasses, no more than shadow and mist.
She found the farmer lost in the middle of the fi eld, so ft ly bleating with fear. And when he turned, his bladder loosening at the sight of the blood and the iron teeth and the wicked, wicked smile, Manon let him scream all he wanted.
5
Celaena and Rowan rode down the dusty road that meandered between the boulder-Âspotted grasslands and into the southern foothills. Sheâd memorized enough maps of Wendlyn to know that theyâd pass through them and then over the towering Cambrian Mountains that marked the border between mortal-Âruled Wendlyn and the immortal lands of Queen Maeve.
Th e sun was setting as they ascended the foothills, the road growing rockier, bordered on one side by rather harrowing ravines. For a mile, she debated asking Rowan where he planned to stop for the night. But she was tired. Not just from the day, or the wine, or the riding.
In her bones, in her blood and breath and soul, she was so, so tired. Talking to anyone was too taxing. Which made Rowan the perfect companion: he didnât say a single word to her.
Twilight fell as the road brought them through a dense forest that spread into and over the mountains, the trees turning from cypress to oak, from narrow to tall and proud, full of thickets and scattered mossy boulders. Even in the growing dark, the forest seemed to be breathing. Th e warm air hummed, leaving a metallic taste coating her tongue. Far behind them, thunder grumbled.
ÂWouldnât that be wonderful. Especially since Rowan was fi nally dismounting to make camp. From the look of his saddlebags, he didnât have a tent. Or bedrolls. Or blankets.
Perhaps it was now fair to assume that her visit with Maeve Âwasnât to be pleasant.
Neither of them spoke as they led their Âhorses into the trees, just far enough o ff the road to be hidden from any passing travelers. Dumping their gear at the camp heâd selected, Rowan brought his mare to a nearby stream he must have heard with those pointed ears. He didnât falter one step in the growing dark, though Celaena certainly stubbed her toes against a few rocks and roots. Excellent eyesight, even in the darkâÂanother Fae trait. One she could have if sheâ
No, she Âwasnât going to think about that. Not a ft er what had happened on the other side of that portal. Sheâd shi ft ed thenâÂand it had been awful enough to remind her that she had no interest in ever doing it again.
A ft er the Âhorses drank, Rowan didnât wait for her as he took both mares back to the camp. She used the privacy to see to her own needs, then dropped to her knees on the grassy bank and drank her fi ll of the stream. Gods, the water tasted . . . new and ancient and powerful and delicious.
She drank until she understood the hole in her belly might very well be from hunger, then