05.01.2021 Views

2_-_court_of_mist_and_fury_a_-_sarah_j._maas

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

CHAPTER

23

It had been a year since I had stalked through that labyrinth of snow and ice and killed a

faerie with hate in my heart.

My family’s emerald-roofed estate was as lovely at the end of winter as it had been in

the summer. A different sort of beauty, though—the pale marble seemed warm against the

stark snow piled high across the land, and bits of evergreen and holly adorned the

windows, the archways, and the lampposts. The only bit of decoration, of celebration,

humans bothered with. Not when they’d banned and condemned every holiday after the

War, all a reminder of their immortal overseers.

Three months with Amarantha had destroyed me. I couldn’t begin to imagine what

millennia with High Fae like her might do—the scars it’d leave on a culture, a people.

My people—or so they had once been.

Hood up, fingers tucked into the fur-lined pockets of my cloak, I stood before the

double doors of the house, listening to the clear ringing of the bell I’d pulled a heartbeat

before.

Behind me, hidden by Rhys’s glamours, my three companions waited, unseen.

I’d told them it would be best if I spoke to my family first. Alone.

I shivered, craving the moderate winter of Velaris, wondering how it could be so

temperate in the far north, but … everything in Prythian was strange. Perhaps when the

wall hadn’t existed, when magic had flowed freely between realms, the seasonal

differences hadn’t been so vast.

The door opened, and a merry-faced, round housekeeper—Mrs. Laurent, I recalled—

squinted at me. “May I help … ” The words trailed off as she noticed my face.

With the hood on, my ears and crown were hidden, but that glow, that preternatural

stillness … She didn’t open the door wider.

“I’m here to see my family,” I choked out.

“Your—your father is away on business, but your sisters … ” She didn’t move.

She knew. She could tell there was something different, something off—

Her eyes darted around me. No carriage, no horse.

No footprints through the snow.

Her face blanched, and I cursed myself for not thinking of it—

“Mrs. Laurent?”

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!