CHAPTER 107
Rowan’s breath was a steady rasp in his throat as he charged through the lines of Valg soldiers, screaming ringing out around him. Nearby, cutting a swath through Morath’s masses, Aelin and the Lord of the North fought. Soldiers swarmed, but neither queen nor stag balked.
Not when Aelin’s flame, reduced as it was, kept any in her blind spots from landing a blow.
The Darghan cavalry shoved Morath back, and above them, ruks and wyverns clashed.
Beasts, feathered and scaled, crashed to the earth.
Still Borte fought above the queen, guarding her from the Ironteeth who spotted that white stag, as good as a banner amid the sea of darkness, and aimed for her. At Borte’s side, her betrothed guarded their flank, and Falkan Ennar, in ruk form, guarded her other.
His Darghan horse fearless, Rowan swept out his left arm, hatchet singing. A Valg head tumbled away, but Rowan was already slashing with his sword at his next opponent.
The odds were against them, even with the planning they’d done. Yet if they could liberate the city, regroup and restock, before Erawan and Maeve arrived, they might stand a chance.
For Erawan and Maeve would come. At some point, they would come, and Aelin would want to face them. Rowan had no intention of letting her do so alone.
Rowan glanced toward Aelin. She had plowed farther ahead, the front line spreading out, swarms of Morath soldiers between them. Stay close. He had to stay close.
A Crochan swept by, shooting past Rowan to rise up, up, up—right to the unprotected underbelly of an Ironteeth witch’s wyvern.
Sword raised, the witch raced along its underside, swift and brutal.
Where she passed, blood and gore rained.
The beast groaned, wings splaying, and Rowan threw out a gust of wind. The wyvern crashed onto Morath’s ranks with a boom that sent his own damned horse plowing away.
When the shuddering wings had stilled, when Rowan had steadied his horse and felled the soldiers rushing at him, he again searched for Aelin.
But his mate was no longer near him.
No, charging ahead, a vision of gold and silver, Aelin had gotten so far away that she was nearly beyond sight. There was no sign of Gavriel, either.
Yet Fenrys battled near Rowan’s other side, Lorcan on his left—a dark, deadly wind lashing out in time with his sword.
Once, they had been little more than slaves to a queen who had unleashed them across the world. Together, they had taken on armies and decimated cities.
He had not cared then whether he walked off those distant battlefields. Had not cared whether those kingdoms fell or survived. He had been given his orders, and had executed them.
But here, today … Aelin had given them no order, no command other than the very first they’d sworn to obey: to protect Terrasen.
So they would. And together, they would do so, cadre once more.
They would fight for this kingdom—their new court. Their new home.
He could see it in Fenrys’s eyes as he cut a soldier in two with a deep slice to the middle. Could see that vision of a future on Lorcan’s raging face as the warrior wielded magic and blade to rip through the enemy ranks.
Cadre, yet more than that. Brothers—the warriors fighting at his side were his brothers. Had stayed with him through all of it. And would continue to do so now.
It steeled him as much as the thought of his mate, still fighting ahead. He had to get to her, keep close. They all did. Orynth depended upon it.
No longer slaves. No longer raging and broken.
A home. This would be their home. Their future. Together.
Morath soldiers fell before them. Some outright ran as they beheld who battled closer.
Perhaps why Maeve had gathered them in the first place. Yet she had never been able to fully harness it—their potential, their true might. Had chosen shackles and pain to control them. Unable to comprehend, to even consider, that glory and riches only went so far.
But a true home, and a queen who saw them as males and not weapons … Something worth fighting for. No enemy could withstand it.
Lorcan and Fenrys battling at his side, Rowan gritted his teeth and urged his horse after Aelin, into the chaos and death that raged and raged and did not stop.
Aelin had come.
Had escaped Maeve, and had come.
Aedion couldn’t believe it. Even as he saw the army that fought with her. Even as he saw Chaol and Dorian leading the right flank, charging with the front lines and wild men of the Fangs, the king’s magic blasting in plumes of ice into the enemy.
Chaol Westfall had not failed them. And had somehow convinced the khagan to send what appeared to be the majority of his armies.
But that army was inching toward Orynth, still far across Theralis.
Morath did not halt its assault on Orynth’s two gates. The southern held strong. But the western gate—it was beginning to buckle.
Lysandra had shifted into a wyvern and soared with the desperate, final push of Manon Blackbeak and the Crochans toward the Ironteeth legion, hoping to crush it between them and the ruks. The shifter now fought there, lost amid the fray.
So Aedion charged down to the western gate, a battle cry on his lips as his men let him right up to the iron doors and the enemy army just visible through the sundering plates. The moment the gate opened, it would be over.
Aedion’s drained legs shook, his arms strained, but he held his ground. For whatever few breaths he had left.
Aelin had come. It was enough.
Dorian’s magic snapped out of him, felling the charging soldiers. Side by side with Chaol, the wild men of the Fangs around them, they cleared a path through Morath’s ranks, their swords plunging and lifting, their breath a burn in their throats.
He had never seen battle. Knew he never wished to again. The chaos, the noise, the blood, the horses screaming—
But he was not afraid. And Chaol, riding near him, breaking soldiers between them, did not hesitate. Only slaughtered onward, teeth gritted.
For Adarlan—for what had been done to it and what it might become.
The words echoed in his every panting breath. For Adarlan.
Morath’s army stretched ahead, still between them and the battered walls of Orynth.
Dorian didn’t let himself think of how many remained. He only thought of the sword and shield in his hands, Damaris already bathed in blood, of the magic he wielded to supplement his strikes. He wouldn’t shift—not yet. Not until his weapons and magic began to fail him. He’d never fought in another form, but he’d try. As a wyvern or a ruk, he’d try.
Somewhere above him, Manon Blackbeak flew. He didn’t dare look up long enough to hunt for a gleam of silver-white hair, or for the shimmer of Spidersilk-grafted wings.
He did not see any of the Thirteen. Or recognize any of the Crochans as they swept overhead.
So Dorian kept fighting, his brother in soul and in arms beside him.
He’d only let himself count at the end of the day. If they survived. If they made it to the city walls.
Only then would he tally the dead.
There was only Aelin’s besieged city, and the enemy before it, and the ancient sword in her hand.
Siege towers neared the walls, three clustering near the southern gate, each teeming with soldiers.
Still too far away to reach. And too distant for her magic.
Magic that was already draining, swift and fleeting, from her veins.
No more endless well of power. She had to conserve it, wield it to her best advantage.
And use the training that had been instilled in her for the past ten years. She had been an assassin long before she’d mastered her power.
It was no hardship to fall back on those skills. To let Goldryn draw blood, to engage multiple soldiers and leave them bleeding out behind her.
The Lord of the North was a storm beneath her, his white coat stained crimson and black.
That immortal flame between his antlers didn’t so much as flutter.
Overhead the skies rained blood, witch and wyvern and ruk alike dying and fighting.
Borte still covered her, engaging any Ironteeth who swooped from above.
Minutes were hours, or perhaps the opposite was true. The sun peaked and began its descent, shadows lengthening.
Rowan and the others had been scattered across the field, but an icy blast of wind every now and then told her that her mate still fought, still killed his way through the ranks. Still attempted to reach her side once more.
Slowly, Orynth began to loom closer. Slowly, the walls went from a distant marker to a towering presence.
The siege towers reached the walls, and soldiers poured unchecked over the battlements.
Yet the gates still held.
Aelin lifted her head to give the order to Borte and Yeran to bring the siege towers down.
Just in time to see the six Ironteeth wyverns and riders slam into the ruks.
Sending Borte, Falkan, and Yeran scattering, ruk and wyvern screaming as they hit the earth and rolled.
Clearing the path overhead for a gargantuan wyvern to come diving for Aelin.
She blasted a wall of flame skyward as the wyvern stretched out its claws for her, for the Lord of the North.
The wyvern banked, rising, and dove again.
The Lord of the North reared, holding his ground as the wyvern aimed for them.
But Aelin leaped from his back, and slapped his flank with the flat of her sword, throat so broken from roaring that she couldn’t form the words. Go.
The Lord of the North only lowered his head as the wyvern barreled toward them.
She did not have enough magic—not to turn the thing into ashes.
So Aelin threw her magic around the stag. And stepped from the orb of flame, shield up and sword angled.
She braced herself for the impact, took in every detail on the wyvern’s armor, where it was weakest, where she might strike if she could dodge the snapping jaws.
The carrion on its breath was a hot blast as its maw opened wide.
Its head went tumbling to the ground.
Not tumbling so much as smashing.
Beneath a spiked, massive tail. Belonging to an attacking wyvern with emerald eyes.
Aelin crouched as the riderless wyvern whirled on the gaping Ironteeth witch, still atop her beheaded mount.
With one slamming sweep of the tail, the green-eyed wyvern impaled the witch on its spikes—and sent her body hurling across the field.
Then the flash and shimmer. And a ghost leopard now hurtled toward her, and Aelin toward it.
She flung her arms around the leopard as it rose up, massive body almost knocking her to the ground. “Well met, my friend,” was all Aelin could manage to say as she embraced Lysandra.
A horn blared from the city—a frantic call for help.
Aelin and Lysandra whirled toward Orynth. Toward the three siege towers against the walls by the southern gate.
Emerald eyes met those of turquoise and gold. Lysandra’s tail bobbed.
Aelin grinned. “Shall we?”
He had to get to her side again.
A battlefield separating them, Rowan slaughtered his way toward Aelin, Fenrys and Lorcan keeping close.
Pain had become a dull roar in his ears. He’d long since lost track of his wounds. He remembered them only because of the iron shard an arrow to his shoulder had left when he wrenched it free.
A foolish, hasty mistake. The iron shard was enough to keep him from shifting, from flying to her. He hadn’t dared to pause long enough to fish it from him, not with the teeming enemy. So he kept fighting, his cadre with him. Their horses charged bold and dauntless beneath them, gaining ground, but he could not see Aelin.
Only the Lord of the North, bounding across the battlefield, aiming for Oakwald.
As if he had been set free.
Fenrys, face splattered with black blood, shouted, “Where is she?”
Rowan scanned the field, heart thundering. But the bond in his chest glowed strong, fire-bright.
Lorcan only pointed ahead. To the city walls by the southern gate.
To the ghost leopard tearing through the droves of Morath soldiers, spurts of flame accompanying her as a golden-armored warrior raced at her side.
To the three siege towers wreaking havoc on the walls.
With the towers’ open sides, Rowan could see everything as it unfolded.
Could see Aelin and Lysandra charge up the ramp within, slicing and shredding soldiers between them, level after level after level. Where one missed a soldier, the other felled him. Where one struck, the other guarded.
All the way up, to the small catapult near its top.
Soldiers screamed, some leaping from the tower as Lysandra shredded into them.
While Aelin threw herself at the rungs lining the catapult’s wheeled base, and began pushing.
Turning it. Away from Orynth, from the castle. Precisely as Aelin had told him Sam Cortland had done in Skull’s Bay, the catapult’s mechanisms allowed her to rotate its base. Rowan wondered if the young assassin was smiling now—smiling to see her heaving the catapult into position.
All the way to the siege tower at its left.
On the second tower, a red-haired figure had fought her way onto the upper level. And was turning the catapult toward the third and final tower.
Ansel of Briarcliff.
A flash of Ansel’s sword, and the catapult snapped, hurling the boulder it contained. Just as Aelin brought down Goldryn upon the catapult before her.
Twin boulders soared.
And slammed into the siege towers beside them.
Iron groaned; wood shattered.
And the two towers began to topple. Where Ansel of Briarcliff had gone to escape the destruction, even Rowan could not follow.
Not as Aelin remained atop the first siege tower, and leaped upon the now-outstretched arm of the catapult, jutting over the battlefield below. Not as she shouted to Lysandra, who shifted again, a wyvern rising up from a ghost leopard’s leap.
Grabbing the catapult’s outstretched arm in one taloned foot while plucking up Aelin in another.
With a mighty flap, Lysandra ripped the catapult from its bolts atop the tower. And twisting, she swung it into the final siege tower.
Sending it crashing to the ground. Right onto a horde of Morath soldiers trying to batter their way through the southern gate.
Wide-eyed, the three Fae warriors blinked.
“That’s where Aelin is,” was all Fenrys said.
Salkhi remained airborne. So did Sartaq, Kadara with him.
That was all Nesryn knew, all she cared about, as they took on wyvern after wyvern after wyvern.
They were so much worse in battle than she’d anticipated. As swift and fearless as the ruks might be, the wyverns had the bulk. The poisoned barbs in their tails. And soulless riders who weren’t afraid to destroy their mounts if it meant bringing down a ruk with them.
Close now. The khaganate’s army had pushed closer and closer to besieged Orynth, flaming and shattered. If they could continue to hold their advantage, they might very well break them against the walls, as they had destroyed Morath’s legion in Anielle.
They had to act swiftly, though. The enemy swarmed both city gates, determined to break in. The southern gate held, the siege towers that had been attacking it moments ago now in ruins.
But the western gate—it would not remain sealed for long.
Salkhi rising up from the melee to catch his breath, Nesryn dared to gauge how many rukhin still flew. Despite the Crochans and rebel Ironteeth, they were outnumbered, but the rukhin were fresh. Ready and eager for battle.
It was not the number of remaining rukhin that snatched the breath from her chest.
But what came up behind them.
Nesryn dove. Dove for Sartaq, Kadara ripping the throat from a wyvern midflight.
The prince was panting, splattered with blue and black blood, as Nesryn fell into flight beside him. “Put out the call,” she shouted over the din, the roar of the wind. “Get to the city walls! To the southern gate!”
Sartaq’s eyes narrowed beneath his helmet, and Nesryn pointed behind them.
To the secondary dark host creeping at their backs. Right from Perranth, where they had no doubt been hidden.
The rest of Morath’s host. Ironteeth witches and wyverns with them.
This battle had been a trap. To lure them here, to expend their forces defeating this army.
While the rest snuck behind and trapped them against Orynth’s walls.
The western gate sundered at last.
Aedion was ready when it did. When the battering ram knocked through, iron screaming as it yielded. Then there were Morath soldiers everywhere.
Shield to shield, Aedion had arranged his men into a phalanx to greet them.
It was still not enough. The Bane could do nothing to stop the tide that poured from the battlefield, pushing them back, back, back up the passageway. And even Ren, leading the men atop the walls, could not halt the flow that surged over them.
They had to shut the gate again. Had to find a way to get it shut.
Aedion could barely draw breath, could barely keep his legs under him.
A warning horn rang out. Morath had sent a second army. Darkness shrouded the full extent of their ranks.
Valg princes—lots of them. Morath had been waiting.
Ren shouted down to him over the fray, “They cleared the southern gate! They’re getting as many of our forces as they can behind the walls!”
To regroup and rally before meeting the second army. But with the western gate still open, Morath teeming through, they’d never stand a chance.
He had to get the gate shut. Aedion and the Bane stabbed and slashed, a wall for Morath to break against. But it would not be enough.
A wyvern came crashing toward the gate, flipping across the ground as it rolled toward them. Aedion braced for the impact, for that huge body to shatter through the last of the gate.
Yet the felled beast halted, squashing soldiers beneath its bulk, right at the archway.
Blocking the way. A barricade before the western gate.
Intentionally so, Aedion realized as a golden-haired warrior leaped from the wyvern’s saddle, the dead Ironteeth witch still dangling there, throat gushing blue blood down the leathery sides.
The warrior ran toward them, a sword in one hand, the other drawing a dagger. Ran toward Aedion, his tawny eyes scanning him from head to toe.
His father.