was a performance, an orgy, and a call to worship at the altar of excess. Celaena was a willing sacrifice.
The music shifted again, a riot of pounding drums and the staccato notes of the twins. Sam kept a respectful distanceâdancing alone, occasionally detangling himself from the arms of a girl who saw his beautiful face and tried to seize him for her own. Celaena tried not to smirk when she saw him politely, but firmly, telling the girl to find someone else.
Many of the older partygoers had long since left, ceding the dance floor to the young and beautiful. Celaena focused long enough to check on Donevalâand to see Arobynn sitting with Bardingale in another one of the nearby alcoves. A few others sat with them, and though glasses of wine littered their table, they all had lowered brows and tight-lipped expressions. While Doneval had come here to feast off his former wifeâs fortune, it seemed like she had other thoughts on how to enjoy her party. What sort of strength had it taken to accept that assassinating her former husband was the only option left? Or was it weakness?
The clock struck threeâthree! How had so many hours passed? A glimmer of movement caught her eye by the towering doors atop the stairs. Four young men wearing masks stood atop the steps, surveying the crowd. It took all of two heartbeats for her to see that the dark-haired youth was their ringleader, and that the fine clothes and the masks they wore marked them as nobility. Probably nobles looking to escape a stuffy function and savor the delights of Rifthold.
The masked strangers swaggered down the steps, one of them keeping close to the dark-haired youth. That one had a sword, she noticed, and from his tensed shoulders, she could tell he wasnât entirely pleased to be here. But the lips of the ringleader parted in a grin as he stalked into the crowd. Gods above, even with the mask obscuring half of his features, he was handsome.
She danced as she watched him, and, as if he had somehow sensed her all this time, their eyes met from across the room. She gave him a smile, then deliberately turned back toward the singers, her dancing a little more careful, a little more inviting. She found Sam frowning at her. She gave him a shrug.
It took the masked stranger a few minutesâand a knowing smile from her to suggest that she, too, knew exactly where he wasâbut soon she felt a hand slide around her waist.
âSome party,â the stranger whispered in her ear. She twisted to see sapphire eyes gleaming at her. âAre you from Melisande?â
She swayed with the music. âPerhaps.â
His smile grew. She itched to pull off the mask. Any young nobles who were out at this hour were certainly not here for innocent purposes. Stillâwho was to say that she couldnât have some fun, too? âWhatâs your name?â he asked above the roar of the music.
She leaned close. âMy name is Wind,â she whispered. âAnd Rain. And Bone and Dust. My name is a snippet of a half-remembered song.â
He chuckled, a low, delightful sound. She was drunk, and silly, and so full of the glory of being young and alive and in the capital of the world that she could hardly contain herself.
âI have no name,â she purred. âI am whoever the keepers of my fate tell me to be.â
He grasped her by her wrist, running a thumb along the sensitive skin underneath. âThen let me call you Mine for a dance or two.â
She grinned, but someone was suddenly between them, a tall, powerfully built person. Sam. He ripped the strangerâs hand off of her wrist. âSheâs spoken for,â he growled, all too close to the young manâs masked face. The strangerâs friend was behind him in an instant, his bronze eyes fixed on Sam.
Celaena grabbed Samâs elbow. âEnough,â she warned him.
The masked stranger looked Sam up and down, then held up his hands. âMy
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