Long Live the Queen
Not an official throne—just a larger, finer chair that had been selected from the sad lot of candidates. Darrow, too, stared toward the open doors, face impassive. Yet his eyes glowed. The trumpets rang out. A four-note summons. Repeated three times. Pews groaned as everyone twisted to the doors. Behind the dais, hidden beyond a painted wooden screen, a small group of musicians began playing a processional. Not the grand, sprawling orchestra that might accompany an event of this magnitude, but better than nothing. It didn’t matter anyway. Not as Elide appeared in a lilac gown, a garland of ribbons atop her braided black hair. Every step limped, and Rowan knew it was because she had asked Lorcan not to brace her foot. She’d wanted to make this walk down the long aisle on her own two feet. Poised and graceful, the Lady of Perranth kept her shoulders thrown back as she clutched the bouquet of holly before her and walked to the dais. Lady of Perranth—and one of Aelin’s handmaidens. For today. For Aelin’s coronation. Elide was halfway down the aisle when Lysandra appeared, clad in green velvet. People murmured. Not just at the remarkable beauty, but what she was. The shape-shifter who had defended their kingdom. Had helped take down Erawan. Lysandra’s chin remained high as she glided down the aisle, and Aedion’s own head lifted at the sight of her. The Lady of Caraverre. Then came Evangeline, green ribbons in her red-gold hair, beaming, those scars stretched wide in utter joy. The young Lady of Arran. Darrow’s ward. Who had somehow melted the lord’s heart enough for
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She did it
The Wyrdmarks faded into the rocky ground as the sun rose over Endovier. Rowan was on his knees before Aelin, readying for her last breaths, for the end that he hoped would somehow take him, too. He’d make it his end. When she went, he’d go. But then he’d felt it. As the sun rose, he’d felt it, that surge down the frayed mating bond. A blast of heat and light that welded the broken strands. He didn’t dare to breathe. To hope. Even as Aelin collapsed to her knees where the Wyrdmarks had been. Rowan was instantly there, reaching for her limp body. A heartbeat echoed in his ears, into his own soul. And that was her chest, rising and falling. And those were her eyes, opening slowly. The scent of Dorian’s and Chaol’s tears replaced the salt of Endovier as Aelin stared up at Rowan and smiled. Rowan held her to his chest and wept in the light of the rising sun. A weak hand landed on his back, running over the tattoo he’d inked. As if tracing the symbols he’d hidden there, in a desperate, wild hope. “I came back,” she rasped. She was warm, but … cold, somehow. A stranger in her own body. Aelin sat up, groaning at the ache along her bones. “What happened?” Dorian asked, held upright by the arm Chaol had around his waist. Aelin cupped her palms before her. A small lick of flame appeared within them. Nothing more. She looked at Rowan, then Chaol, and Dorian, their faces so haggard in the rising light of day. “It’s gone,” she said quietly. “The power.” She turned her hands, the
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See you next book
Fight it, he willed her, sending the words down the bond—the mating bond, which perhaps had settled into place that first moment they’d become carranam, hidden beneath flame and ice and hope for a better future. Fight her. I am coming for you. Even if it takes me a thousand years. I will find you, I will find you, I will find you. Only salt and wind and water answered him. Rowan rose to his feet. And slowly turned to face them. But their attention snagged on the ships now sailing out of the west— from the battle site. His cousins’ ships, with what remained of the fleet Ansel of Briarcliff had won for them, and Rolfe’s three ships. But it was not those boats that made him pause. It was the one that rounded the eastern tip of the land—a longboat. It swept closer on a phantom wind, too fast to be natural. Rowan braced himself. The boat’s shape didn’t belong to any of the fleets assembled. But its style nagged at his memory. From their own fleet, Ansel of Briarcliff and Enda were soaring over the waves in a longboat, aiming for this beach. But Rowan and the others watched in silence as the foreign boat crested through the surf and slid onto the sand. Watched the olive-skinned sailors haul it up the beach. A broadshouldered young man nimbly leaped out, his slightly curling dark hair tossed in the sea breeze. He did not emit a whiff of fear as he stalked for them—didn’t even go for the comforting touch of the fine sword at his side. “Where is Aelin Galathynius?” the stranger asked a bit breathlessly as he scanned them. And his accent … “Who are you,” Rowan ground out. But the young man was now close enough that Rowan could see the color of his eyes. Turquoise—with a core of gold. Aedion breathed as if in a trance, “Galan.”
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How is this rational?
Darrow ignored her and jerked his chin at Aedion. “You’re rather quiet tonight.” “I don’t think you particularly want to hear my thoughts right now, Darrow,” Aedion replied. “Your blood oath is stolen by a foreign prince, your queen is an assassin who appoints common whores to serve her, and yet you have nothing to say?” Aedion’s chair groaned, and Aelin dared a look—to find him gripping the sides of it so hard his knuckles were white. Lysandra, though stiff-backed, did not give Darrow the pleasure of blushing with shame. And she was done. Sparks danced at her fingertips beneath the table. But Darrow went on before Aelin could speak or incinerate the room. “Perhaps, Aedion, if you hope to still gain an official position in Terrasen, you could see if your kin in Wendlyn have reconsidered the betrothal proposition of so many years ago. See if they’ll recognize you as family. What a difference it might have made, if you and our beloved Princess Aelin had been betrothed—if Wendlyn had not rejected the offer to formally unite our kingdoms, likely at Maeve’s behest.” A smile in Rowan’s direction. Her world tilted a bit. Even Aedion had paled. No one had ever hinted that there had been an official attempt at betrothing them. Or that the Ashryvers had truly left Terrasen to war and ruin. “Whatever will the adoring masses say of their savior princess,” Darrow mused, putting his hands flat on the table, “when they hear of how she has spent her time while they suffered?” A slap in the face, one after another. “But,” Darrow added, “you’ve always been good at whoring yourself out, Aedion. Though I wonder if Princess Aelin knows what—” Aelin lunged. Not with flame, but steel.
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Chaol ona doğru bir adım attı.bir tek adım. Ardından “seni seviyorum “ dedi. Cealena boğazına düğümlenen hıçkırığı boğdu” üzgünüm” dedi. Sözcükleri Çağıl un ileride anımsamasını diledi. İleride herşeyi öğrendiğinde..
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Alıntı
I love a Woman who can Fight
Rowan had taught her a few new tricks. She was a whirling cloud of death, a queen of shadows, and these men were already carrion. Slashing and ducking and twirling, Aelin gave herself completely to that killing calm, until the blood was a mist around her and the gravel was slick with it. Four of Chaol’s men came racing up—then ran the other way. Allies or just smart, she didn’t care. And when the last of those black-uniformed guards had slumped to the bloody ground, she surged for Aedion. He’d been gaping—but he let out a low, dark laugh as he stumbled into a sprint beside her, into the hedges. Archers—they had to clear the archers who were sure to begin firing as soon as the smoke vanished. They dashed around and between the hedges she’d traversed dozens of times during her stay here, when she’d run every morning with Chaol. “Faster, Aedion,” she breathed, but he was already lagging. She paused and sliced into her blood-soaked wrist with a dagger before sketching the unlocking Wyrdmarks on each of his manacles. Again, light flared and burned. But then the cuffs sprang open silently. “Nice trick,” he panted, and she yanked the chains off him. She was about to chuck the metal aside when the gravel crunched behind them. Not the guards, and not the king. It was with no small amount of horror that she found Dorian strolling toward them
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