could not fight the demon, stop it when … when it did those things. I kept that knowledge safe.”
“He’s a liar,” Dorian said, turning on his heel. There was no mercy in his voice. “I still wound up able to use my magic—it didn’t protect me at all. He’ll say anything.”
The wicked will tell us anything to haunt our thoughts long after, Nehemia had warned her.
“I didn’t know,” the king pleaded. “Using my blood in the spell must have made my line immune. It was a mistake. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. My boy—Dorian—”
“You don’t get to call him that,” Aelin snapped. “You came to my home and murdered my family.”
“I came to find you. I came to have you burn it out of me!” the king sobbed. “Aelin of the Wildfire. I tried to get you to do it. But your mother knocked you unconscious before you could kill me, and the demon … The demon became devoted to wiping out your line after that, so no fire could ever cleanse him from me.”
Aelin’s blood turned to ice. No—no, it couldn’t be true, couldn’t be right.
“All of it was to find you,” the king said to her. “So you could save me—so you could end me at last. Please. Do it.” The king was weeping now, and his body seemed to waste away bit by bit, his cheeks hollowing out, his hands thinning.
As if his life force and the demon prince inside him had indeed been bonded—and one could not exist without the other.
“Chaol is alive,” the king murmured through his emaciated hands, lowering them to reveal red-rimmed eyes, already milky with age. “Broken, but I didn’t make the kill. There was—a light around him. I left him alive.”
A sob ripped from her throat. She had hoped, had tried to give him a shot at survival—
“You are a liar,” Dorian said again, his voice cold. So cold. “And you deserve this.” Light sparked at Dorian’s fingertips.
Aelin mouthed his name, trying to reel herself back in, gather her wits. The demon inside the king had hunted her not because of the threat Terrasen posed—but for the fire in her veins. The fire that could end them both.
She lifted a hand as Dorian stepped toward his father. They had to ask more, learn more—
The Crown Prince tipped his head back to the sky and roared, and it was the battle cry of a god.
Then the glass castle shattered.
79
The bridge exploded from beneath her, and the world turned into shards of flying glass.
Aelin plummeted into open air, towers crashing down around her.
She flung out her magic in a cocoon, burning through the glass as she fell and fell and fell.
People were screaming—screaming as Dorian brought the castle down for Chaol, for Sorscha, and sent a tidal wave of glass rushing toward the city lying below.
Down and down Aelin went, the ground surging up, the buildings around her rupturing, the light so bright on all the fragments—
Aelin pulled out every last drop of her magic as the castle collapsed, the lethal wave of glass cascading toward Rifthold.
Wildfire raced for the gates, raced against the wind, against death.
And as the wave of glass crested the iron gates, shredding through the corpses tied there as if they were paper, a wall of fire erupted before it, shooting sky-high, spreading wide. Halting it.
A wind shoved against her, brutal and unforgiving, her bones groaning as it pushed her up, not down. She didn’t care—not when she yielded the entirety of her magic, the entirety of her being, to holding the barrier of flame now shielding Rifthold. A few more seconds, then she could die.
The wind tore at her, and it sounded like it was roaring her name.
Wave after wave of glass and debris slammed into her wildfire.
But she kept that wall of flame burning—for the Royal Theater. And the flower girls at the market. For the slaves and the courtesans and the Faliq family. For the city that had offered her joy and pain, death and rebirth, for the city that had given her music, Aelin kept that wall of fire burning bright.
There was blood raining down among the glass—blood that sizzled on her little cocoon of flame, reeking of darkness and pain.
The wind kept blowing until it swept that dark blood away.
Still Aelin held the shield around the city, held on to the final promise she’d made to Chaol.
I’ll make it count.
She held on until the ground rose up to meet her—
And she landed softly in the