A Court of Mist and Fury

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Authors: Sarah J. Maas
Tags: Romance, Fantasy, Magic, Young Adult, new adult, Retellings
too?”
    Silence.
    I pushed, “After—after what happened—” I couldn’t mention specifics on what had occurred Under the Mountain, what he’d done for me during that fight with Amarantha, what he’d done after— “I think we can agree that I owe you nothing, and you owe me nothing.”
    His gaze was unflinching.
    I blazed on, “Isn’t it enough that we’re all free?” I splayed my tattooed hand on the table. “By the end, I thought you were different, thought that it was all a mask, but taking me away, keeping me here … ” I shook my head, unable to find the words vicious enough, clever enough to convince him to end this bargain.
    His eyes darkened. “I’m not your enemy, Feyre.”
    “Tamlin says you are.” I curled the fingers of my tattooed hand into a fist. “Everyone else says you are.”
    “And what do you think?” He leaned back in his chair again, but his face was grave.
    “You’re doing a damned good job of making me agree with them.”
    “Liar,” he purred. “Did you even tell your friends about what I did to you Under the Mountain?”
    So that comment at breakfast had gotten under his skin. “I don’t want to talk about anything related to that. With you or them.”
    “No, because it’s so much easier to pretend it never happened and let them coddle you.”
    “I don’t let them coddle me—”
    “They had you wrapped up like a present yesterday. Like you were his reward.”
    “So?”
    “So?” A flicker of rage, then it was gone.
    “I’m ready to be taken home,” I merely said.
    “Where you’ll be cloistered for the rest of your life, especially once you start punching out heirs. I can’t wait to see what Ianthe does when she gets her hands on them .”
    “You don’t seem to have a particularly high opinion of her.”
    Something cold and predatory crept into his eyes. “No, I can’t say that I do.” He pointed to a blank piece of paper. “Start copying the alphabet. Until your letters are perfect. And every time you get through a round, lower and raise your shield. Until that is second nature. I’ll be back in an hour.”
    “What?”
    “Copy. The. Alphabet. Until—”
    “I heard what you said.” Prick. Prick, prick, prick .
    “Then get to work.” Rhys uncoiled to his feet. “And at least have the decency to only call me a prick when your shields are back up.”
    He vanished into a ripple of darkness before I realized that I’d let the wall of adamant fade again.

    By the time Rhys returned, my mind felt like a mud puddle.
    I spent the entire hour doing as I’d been ordered, though I’d flinched at every sound from the nearby stairwell: quiet steps of servants, the flapping of sheets being changed, someone humming a beautiful and winding melody. And beyond that, the chatter of birds that dwelled in the unnatural warmth of the mountain or in the many potted citrus trees. No sign of my impending torment. No sentries, even, to monitor me. I might as well have had the entire place to myself.
    Which was good, as my attempts to lower and raise that mental shield often resulted in my face being twisted or strained or pinched.
    “Not bad,” Rhys said, peering over my shoulder.
    He’d appeared moments before, a healthy distance away, and if I hadn’t known better, I might have thought it was because he didn’t want to startle me. As if he’d known about the time Tamlin had crept up behind me, and panic had hit me so hard I’d knocked him on his ass with a punch to his stomach. I’d blocked it out—the shock on Tam’s face, how easy it had been to take him off his feet, the humiliation of having my stupid terror so out in the open …
    Rhys scanned the pages I’d scribbled on, sorting through them, tracking my progress.
    Then, a scrape of claws inside my mind—that only sliced against black, glittering adamant.
    I threw my lingering will into that wall as the claws pushed, testing for weak spots …
    “Well, well,” Rhysand purred, those mental claws

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