then, Iâve got my reasons to stay.â
Celaena asked, âWhat courts do the dignitaries hail from?â
âNone in Adarlanâs grip, if thatâs what youâre asking.â Mikhail scratched the dayâs worth of stubble on his face. âOur Master knows well enough that everything from Eyllwe to Terrasen is
your
Masterâs territory.â
âIt certainly is.â She didnât know why she said it. Given what Arobynn had done to her, she hardly felt defensive of the assassins in Adarlanâs empire. But . . . but to see all these assassins gathered here, so much collective power and knowledge, and to know that they wouldnât dare intrude on Arobynnâsâon
her
âterritory . . .
Celaena went on eating in silence as Ansel and Mikhail and a few others around them talked quietly. Vows of silence, Ansel had explained earlier, were taken for as long as each person saw fit. Some spent weeks in silence; others, years. Ansel claimed sheâd once sworn to be silent for a month, and had only lasted two days before she gave up. She liked talking too much. Celaena didnât have any trouble believing that.
A few of the people around them were pantomiming. Though it often took them a few tries to discern the vague gestures, it seemed like Ansel and Mikhail could interpret the movements of their hands.
Celaena felt someoneâs attention on her, and tried not to blink when she noticed a dark-haired, handsome young man watching her from a few seats down. Stealing glances at her was more like it, since his sea-green eyes kept darting to her face, then back to his companions. He didnât open his mouth once, but pantomimed to his friends. Another silent one.
Their eyes met, and his tan face spread into a smile, revealing dazzlingly white teeth. Well, he was certainly desirableâas desirable as Sam, maybe.
Samâwhen had she ever thought of him as
desirable
? Heâd laugh until he died if he ever knew she thought of him like that.
The young man inclined his head slightly in greeting, then turned back to his friends.
âThatâs Ilias,â Ansel whispered, leaning closer than Celaena would like. Didnât she have any sense of personal space? âThe Masterâs son.â
That explained the sea-green eyes. Though the Master had an air of holiness, he must not be celibate.
âIâm surprised you caught Iliasâs eye,â Ansel teased, keeping her voice low enough for only Celaena and Mikhail to hear. âHeâs usually too focused on his training and meditating to notice anyoneâeven pretty girls.â
Celaena raised her brows, biting back a reply that she didnât want to know
any
of this.
âIâve known him for years, and heâs never been anything but aloof with me,â Ansel continued. âBut maybe he has a thing for blondes.â Mikhail snorted.
âIâm not here for anything like that,â Celaena said.
âAnd I bet you have a flock of suitors back home, anyway.â
âI certainly do not.â
Anselâs mouth popped open. âYouâre lying.â
Celaena took a long, long sip of water. It was flavored with slices of lemonâand was unbelievably delicious. âNo, Iâm not.â
Ansel gave her a quizzical look, then fell back into conversation with Mikhail. Celaena pushed around the food on her plate. It wasnât that she wasnât romantic. Sheâd been infatuated with a few men beforeâfrom Archer, the young male courtesan whoâd trained with them for a few months when she was thirteen, to Ben, Arobynnâs now-deceased Second, back when she was too young to really understand the impossibility of such a thing.
She dared another look at Ilias, who was laughing silently at something one of his companions had said. It was flattering that he even considered her worthy of second thought; sheâd avoided looking in the mirror in the month
Janwillem van de Wetering