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AliNovel > A Court of Mist and Fury > Chapter 24

Chapter 24

    Chapter 24


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    An unusually polite reminder that I probably looked like the dead. I felt like it. But I said, “Where are we going?”


    Rhys’s smile widened into a grin. “To Vris—the City of Starlight.”


    The moment I entered my room, the hollow quiet returned, washing away with it any questions I might have had


    about—about a city.


    Everything had been destroyed by Amarantha. If there were a city in Prythian, I would no doubt be visiting a ruin.


    I jumped into the bath, scrubbing down as swiftly as I could, then hurried into the Night Court clothes that had


    been left for me. My motions were mindless, each one some feeble attempt to keep from thinking about what had


    happened, what—what Tamlin had tried to do and had done, what I had done—


    By the time I returned to the main atrium, Rhys was leaning against a moonstone pir, picking at his nails. He


    merely said, “That was fifteen minutes,” before extending his hand.


    I had no glimmering ember to even try to look like I cared about his taunting before we were swallowed by the


    roaring darkness.


    Wind and night and stars wheeled by as he winnowed us through the world, and the calluses of his hand


    scratched against my own fading ones before—


    Before sunlight, not starlight, greeted me. Squinting at the brightness, I found myself standing in what was


    unmistakably a foyer of someone’s house.


    The ornate red carpet cushioned the one step I staggered away from him as I surveyed the warm, wood-paneled


    walls, the artwork, the straight, wide oak staircase ahead.


    nking us were two rooms: on my left, a sitting room with a ck marble firece, lots offortable, elegant,


    but worn furniture, and bookshelves built into every wall. On my right: a dining room with a long, cherrywood table


    big enough for ten people—small,pared to the dining room at the manor. Down the slender hallway ahead


    were a few more doors, ending in one that I assumed would lead to a kitchen. A town house.


    I’d visited one once, when I was a child and my father had brought me along to thergest town in our territory: it’d


    belonged to a fantastically wealthy client, and had smelled like coffee and mothballs. A pretty ce, but stuffy—


    formal.


    This house … this house was a home that had been lived in and enjoyed and cherished.


    And it was in a city.


    PART TWO


    THE HOUSE OF WIND


    CHAPTER


    14


    “Wee to my home,” Rhysand said.


    A city—a worldy out there.


    Morning sunlight streamed through the windows lining the front of the town house. The ornately carved wood door


    before me was inset with fogged ss that peeked into a small antechamber and the actual front door beyond it,


    shut and solid against whatever city lurked beyond.


    And the thought of setting foot out into it, into the leering crowds, seeing the destruction Amarantha had likely


    wreaked upon them … A heavy weight pressed into my chest.


    I hadn’t dredged up the focus to ask until now, hadn’t given an ounce of room to consider that this might be a


    mistake, but … “What is this ce?”


    Rhys leaned a broad shoulder against the carved oak threshold that led into the sitting room and crossed his


    arms. “This is my house. Well, I have two homes in the city. One is for more … official business, but this is only for


    me and my family.”


    I listened for any servants but heard none. Good—maybe that was good, rather than have people weeping and


    gawking.


    “Nu and Cerridwen are here,” he said, reading my nce down the hall behind us. “But other than that, it’ll just


    be the two of us.”


    I tensed. It wasn’t that things had been any different at the Night Court itself, but—this house was much, much


    smaller. There would be no escaping him. Save for the city outside.


    There were no cities left in our mortal territory. Though some had sprung up on the main continent, full of art and


    learning and trade. in had once wanted to go with me. I didn’t suppose I’d ever get that chance now.


    Rhysand opened his mouth, but then the silhouettes of two tall, powerful bodies appeared on the other side of the


    front door’s fogged ss. One of them banged on it with a fist.


    “Hurry up, youzy ass,” a deep male voice drawled from the antechamber beyond. Exhaustion drugged me so


    heavily that I didn’t particrly care that there were wings peeking over their two shadowy forms.


    Rhys didn’t so much as blink toward the door. “Two things, Feyre darling.”


    The pounding continued, followed by the second male murmuring to hispanion, “If you’re going to pick a fight


    with him, do it after breakfast.” That voice—like shadows given form, dark and smooth and … cold.


    “I wasn’t the one who hauled me out of bed just now to fly down here,” the first one said. Then added, “Busybody.”


    I could have sworn a smile tugged on Rhys’s lips as he went on, “One, no one—no one—but Mor and I are able to


    winnow directly inside this house. It is warded, shielded, and then warded some more. Only those I wish—and you


    wish—may enter. You are safe here; and safe anywhere in this city, for that matter. Vris’s walls are well


    protected and have not been breached in five thousand years. No one with ill intent enters this city unless I allow


    it. So go where you wish, do what you wish, and see who you wish. Those two in the antechamber,” he added,


    eyes sparkling, “might not be on that list of people you should bother knowing, if they keep banging on the door


    like children.”


    Another pound, emphasized by the first male voice saying, “You know we can hear you, prick.”


    “Secondly,” Rhys went on, “in regard to the two bastards at my door, it’s up to you whether you want to meet them


    now, or head upstairs like a wise person, take a nap since you’re still looking a little peaky, and then change into


    city-appropriate clothing while I beat the hell out of one of them for talking to his High Lord like that.”


    There was such light in his eyes. It made him look … younger, somehow. More mortal. So at odds with the icy


    rage I’d seen earlier when I’d awoken …


    Awoken on that couch, and then decided I wasn’t returning home.


    Decided that, perhaps, the Spring Court might not be my home.


    I was drowning in that old heaviness, wing my way up to a surface that might not ever exist. I’d slept for the


    Mother knew how long, and yet … “Juste get me when they’re gone.”


    That joy dimmed, and Rhys looked like he might say something else, but a female voice—crisp and edged—now


    sounded behind the two males in the antechamber. “You Illyrians are worse than cats yowling to be let in the back


    door.” The knob jangled. She sighed sharply. “Really, Rhysand? You locked us out?”


    Fighting to keep that immense heaviness at bay a bit longer, I made for the stairs—at the top of which now stood


    Nu and Cerridwen, wincing at the front door. I could have sworn Cerridwen subtly gestured me to hurry up. And


    I might have kissed both twins for that bit of normalcy.


    I might have kissed Rhys, too, for waiting to open the front door until I was halfway down the cerulean-blue


    hallway on the second level.


    All I heard was that first male voice dere, “Wee home, bastard,” followed by the shadowy male voice


    saying, “I sensed you were back. Mor filled me in, but I—”


    That strange female voice cut him off. “Send your dogs out in the yard to y, Rhysand. You and I have matters to


    discuss.”


    That midnight voice said with quiet cold that licked down my spine, “As do I.”


    Then the cocky one drawled to her, “We were here first. Wait your turn, Tiny Ancient One.”


    On either side of me, Nu and Cerridwen flinched, either from holding inughter or some vestige of fear, or


    perhaps both. Definitely both as a feminine snarl sliced through the house—albeit a bit halfheartedly.


    The upstairs hall was punctuated with chandeliers of swirled, colored ss, illuminating the few polished doors on


    either side. I wondered which belonged to Rhysand—and then wondered which one belonged to Mor as I heard h


    er yawn amid the fray below:


    “Why is everyone here so early? I thought we were meeting tonight at the House.”


    Below, Rhysand grumbled—grumbled—“Trust me, there’s no party. Only a massacre, if Cassian doesn’t shut his


    mouth.”


    “We’re hungry,” that first male—Cassianined. “Feed us. Someone told me there’d be breakfast.”


    “Pathetic,” that strange female voice quipped. “You idiots are pathetic.”


    Mor said, “We know that’s true. But is there food?”


    I heard the words—heard and processed them. And then they floated into the ckness of my mind.


    Nu and Cerridwen opened a door, leading to a fire-warmed, sunlit room. It faced a walled, winter-kissed garden


    in the back of the town house, therge windows peering over the sleeping stone fountain in its center, drained for


    the season. Everything in the bedroom itself was of rich wood and soft white, with touches of subtle sage. It felt,


    strangely enough, almost human.


    And the bed—massive, plush, adorned in quilts and duvets of cream and ivory to keep out the winter chill—that


    looked the most weing of all.


    But I wasn’t so far gone that I couldn’t ask a few basic questions—to at least give myself the illusion of caring a bit


    about my own welfare.


    “Who was that?” I managed to say as they shut the door behind us.


    Nu headed for the small attached bathing room—white marble, a w-foot tub, more sunny windows that


    overlooked the garden wall and the thick line of cypress trees that stood watch behind it. Cerridwen, already


    Exclusive ? material by N?(/v)elDrama.Org.


    stalking for the armoire, cringed a bit and said over a shoulder, “They’re Rhysand’s Inner Circle.”


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