The Assassin and the Empire

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Authors: Sarah J. Maas
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that thought, though crippling nausea gripped her as she scanned the banks and docks and sewer depositories.
    He would be waiting for her at home. And then he’d chide her and laugh at her and kiss her. And then she’d dispatch Jayne tonight, and then they’d set sail on this river and then out to the nearby sea, and then be gone.
    He would be waiting at home.
    He’d be home.
    Home.
    Noon.
    It couldn’t be noon, but it was. Her pocket watch was properly wound, and hadn’t once failed her in the years she’d had it.
    Each of her steps up the stairs to her apartment was heavy and light—heavy and light, the sensation shifting with each heartbeat. She’d stop by the apartment only long enough to see if he’d returned.
    A roaring silence hovered around her, a cresting wave that she’d been trying to outrun for hours. She knew that the moment the silence finally hit her, everything would change.
    She found herself atop the landing, staring at the door.
    It had been unlocked and left slightly ajar.
    A strangled sort of noise broke out of her, and she ran the last few feet, barely noticing as she threw open the door and burst into the apartment. She was going to scream at him. And kiss him. And scream at him some more. A
lot
more. How
dare
he make her—
    Arobynn Hamel was sitting on her couch.
    Celaena halted.
    The King of the Assassins slowly got to his feet. She saw the expression in his eyes and knew what he was going to say long before he opened his mouth and whispered, “I’m sorry.”
    The silence struck.

Chapter Eight
    Her body started moving, walking straight toward the fireplace before she really knew what she was going to do.
    “They thought he was still living in the Keep,” Arobynn said, his voice still pitched at that horrible whisper. “They left him as a message.”
    She reached the mantel and grabbed the clock from where it rested.
    “Celaena,” Arobynn breathed.
    She hurled the clock across the room so hard it shattered against the wall behind the dining table.
    Its fragments landed atop the buffet table against the wall, breaking the decorative dishes displayed there, scattering the silver tea set she’d bought for herself.
    “Celaena,” Arobynn said again.
    She stared at the ruined clock, the ruined dishes and tea set. There was no end to this silence. There would never be an end, only this beginning.
    “I want to see the body.” The words came from a mouth she wasn’t sure belonged to her anymore.
    “No,” Arobynn said gently.
    She turned her head toward him, baring her teeth. “
I want to see the body
.”
    Arobynn’s silver eyes were wide, and he shook his head. “No, you don’t.”
    She had to start moving, had to start walking
anywhere
, because now that she was standing still … Once she sat down …
    She walked out the door. Down the steps.
    The streets were the same, the sky was clear, the briny breeze off the Avery still ruffled her hair. She had to keep walking. Perhaps … perhaps they’d sent the wrong body. Perhaps Arobynn had made a mistake. Perhaps he was lying.
    She knew Arobynn followed her, staying a few feet behind as she strode across the city. She also knew that Wesley joined them at some point, always looking after Arobynn, always vigilant. The silence kept flickering in and out of her ears. Sometimes it’d stop long enough for her to hear the whinny of a passing horse, or the shout of a peddler, or the giggle of children. Sometimes none of the noises in the capital could break through.
    There had been a mistake.
    She didn’t look at the assassins guarding the iron gates to the Keep, or at the housekeeper who opened the giant double doors of the building for her, or at the assassins who milled about the grand entrance and who stared at her with fury and grief mingling in their eyes.
    She slowed long enough for Arobynn—trailed by Wesley—to step in front of her, to lead the rest of the way.
    The silence peeled back, and thoughts tumbled in. It had been a

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