within the question was clear enough: You've seen everything? Every inexplicable injury?
"We keep records of our patients," Sorscha said softly—so no one else passing by the
open doorway could hear. "But sometimes we forget to write down everything."
She hadn't told anyone what she'd seen, the things that didn't add up. Dorian gave her
a swift bow of thanks and strode from the room. How many others, he wondered, had seen
more than they let on? He didn't want to know.
Sorscha's fingers, thankfully, had stopped shaking by the time the Crown Prince left the
catacombs. By some lingering grace of Silba, goddess of healers and bringer of peace—
and gentle deaths—she'd managed to keep them from trembling while she patched up his
hand, too. Sorscha leaned against the counter and loosed a long breath.
The cuts hadn't merited a bandage, but she'd been selfish and foolish and had wanted
to keep the beautiful prince in that chair for as long as she could manage.
He didn't even know who she was.
She'd been appointed full healer a year ago, and had been called to attend to the prince,
the captain, and their friend countless times. And the Crown Prince still had no idea who
she was.
She hadn't lied to him—about failing to keep records of everything. But she
remembered it all. Especially that night a month ago, when the three of them had been
bloodied up and filthy, the girl's hound injured, too, with no explanation and no one
raising a fuss. And the girl, their friend …
The King's Champion. That's who she was.
Lover, it seemed, of both the prince and his captain at one time or another. Sorscha had
helped Amithy tend to the young woman after the brutal duel to win her title.
Occasionally, she'd checked on the girl and found the prince holding her in bed.
She'd pretended it didn't matter, because the Crown Prince was notorious where
women were involved, but … it hadn't stopped the sinking ache in her chest. Then things
had changed, and when the girl was poisoned with gloriella, it was the captain who stayed
with her. The captain who had acted like a beast in a cage, prowling the room until
Sorscha's own nerves had been frayed. Not surprisingly, several weeks later, the girl's
handmaid, Philippa, came to Sorscha for a contraceptive tonic. Philippa hadn't said whom
it was for, but Sorscha wasn't an idiot.
When she'd attended the captain a week after that, four brutal scratches down his face
and a dead look in his eyes, Sorscha had understood. And understood again the last time,
when the prince, the captain, and the girl were all bloodied along with the hound, that
whatever had existed between the three of them was broken.
The girl especially. Celaena, she'd heard them say accidentally when they thought she
was already out of the room. Celaena Sardothien. World's greatest assassin and now the
King's Champion. Another secret Sorscha would keep without them ever knowing.She was invisible. And glad of it, most days. Sorscha frowned at her table of supplies. She had half a dozen tonics and poultices to
make before dinner, all of them complex, all of them dumped on her by Amithy, who
pulled rank whenever she could. On top of it, she still had her weekly letter to write to her
friend, who wanted every little detail about the palace. Just thinking of all the tasks gave
her a headache.
Had it been anyone other than the prince, she would have told them to go find another
healer.
Sorscha returned to her work. She was certain he'd forgotten her name the moment he
left. Dorian was heir to the mightiest empire in the world, and Sorscha was the daughter of
two dead immigrants from a village in Fenharrow that had been burned to ash—a village
that no one would ever remember.
But that didn't stop her from loving him, as she still did, invisible and secret, ever since
she'd first laid eyes on him six years ago.Nothing else approached Celaena and Rowan after that first night. He certainly didn't say
anything to her about it, or offer his cloak or any sort of protection against the chill. She
slept curled on her side, turning every other minute from some root or pebble digging into
her back or jolting awake at the screech of an owl—or something worse.
By the time the light had turned gray and mist drifted through the trees, Celaena felt
more exhausted than she'd been the night before. After a silent breakfast of bread, cheese,
and apples, she was nearly dozing atop her mare as they resumed their ride up the forested
foothill road.
They passed few people—mostly humans leading wagons down to some market, all of
whom glanced at Rowan and gave them the right of way. Some even muttered prayers for
mercy.
She'd long heard the Fae existed peacefully with the humans in Wendlyn, so perhaps
the terror they encountered was due to Rowan himself. The tattoo didn't help. She had
debated asking him what the words meant, but that would involve talking. And talking
meant building some sort of … relationship. She'd had enough of friends. Enough of them
dying, too.
So she'd kept her mouth shut the entire day they rode through the woods up into the
Cambrian Mountains. The forest turned lusher and denser, and the higher they rode, the
mistier it became, great veils of fog drifting past to caress her face, her neck, her spine.
Another cold, miserable night camped off the road later and they were riding again
before dawn. By then, the mist had seeped into her clothes and skin, and settled right
along her bones.
On the third evening, she'd given up hoping for a fire. She'd even embraced the chill
and the insufferable roots and the hunger whose edge she couldn't dull no matter how
much bread and cheese she ate. The aches and pains were soothing somehow.
Not comforting, but … distracting. Welcome. Deserved.
She didn't want to know what that meant about her. She couldn't let herself look that
far inward. She'd come close, that day she'd seen Prince Galan. And it had been enough.
They veered from the path in the dwindling afternoon hours, cutting across mossy earth
that cushioned each step. She hadn't seen a town in days, and the granite boulders were
now carved with whorls and patterns. She supposed they were markers—a warning to
humans to stay the hell away.
They had to be another week from Doranelle, but Rowan was heading along the
mountains, not over them, climbing higher still, the ascent broken by occasional plateaus
and fields of wildflowers. She hadn't seen a lookout, so she had no sense of where they
were, or how high. Just the endless forest, and the endless climb, and the endless mist