Sarah J. Maas

Empire of Storms

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  • Hannah Burrowshas quoted7 years ago
    Dramatic rescues give him purpose and fulfillment in his dull, immortal life.”
  • aicirtaPhas quoted4 days ago
    The males shifted as Aelin Galathynius indeed strode into the room, clad in a dark green tunic of equal wear and dirt, her golden hair unbound, her turquoise-and-gold eyes laughing as she strode past a slack-jawed Rolfe and perched on the arm of Aelin’s chair.
  • aicirtaPhas quoted6 days ago
    Then Manon Blackbeak whirled and brought Wind-Cleaver down upon her grandmother.
  • aicirtaPhas quoted6 days ago
    Forgiveness shone in the faces of her Thirteen. Forgiveness and understanding and loyalty that was not blind obedience, but forged in pain and battle, in shared victory and defeat. Forged in hope for a better life—a better world.
  • aicirtaPhas quoted6 days ago
    “Your Second, Asterin Blackbeak, shall pay the blood debt between our clans. She dies at sunrise tomorrow.”
  • ᴀᴜɢᴜsᴛɪɴᴇ 🦋has quotedlast month
    The Queen of Flame and Shadow, the Heir of Fire, Aelin of the Wildfire, Fireheart …

    She burned through each title, even as she became them, became what those foreign ambassadors had hissed when they reported on a child-queen’s growing, unstable power in Terrasen. A promise that had been whispered into the blackness.

    The pressure began to build in her head, in her veins.

    Far behind, safely out of her range, she felt the flickers of Rowan’s and Dorian’s magic as they rallied the blasts that would answer her own.

    Aelin soared into the uncharted core of her power.

    The inferno went on and on.
  • ᴀᴜɢᴜsᴛɪɴᴇ 🦋has quotedlast month
    “Then that does not seem like love at all.”

    “And what do you know of love?” He was so close—had neared without her realizing it.

    “I think love should make you happy,” Elide said, remembering her mother and father. How often they had smiled and laughed, how they had gazed at each other. “It should make you into the best possible version of yourself.”

    “Are you implying I am neither of those things?”

    “I don’t think you even know what happiness is.”

    His face grew grave—thoughtful. “I do not mind … being around you.”

    “Is that a compliment?”

    A half smile cut across his granite-hewn face. And she wanted … wanted to touch it. That smile, that mouth. With her fingers, her own lips. It made him younger, made him … handsome.

    So she reached up with trembling fingers and touched his lips.

    Lorcan froze, still half above her, his eyes solemn and intent.

    But she traced the contours of his mouth, finding the skin there soft and warm, such a contrast to the harsh words that usually came out of it.

    She reached the outer corner of his lips, and he turned his face into her hand, resting his rough cheek against her palm. His eyes grew heavy-lidded as she brushed a thumb over the hard plane of his cheekbone.

    Elide whispered, “I would hide you. In Perranth. If you … if you do what you need to do, and need somewhere to go … You would have a place there. With me.”

    His eyes snapped open, but there was nothing hard, nothing cold, about the light shining in them. “I would be a dishonored male—it’d reflect poorly upon you.”

    “If anyone thinks that, they would have no place in Perranth.”

    His throat bobbed. “Elide, you need to—”

    But she rose up slightly, replacing her mouth where her fingers had been.

    The kiss was soft, and quiet, and brief. Barely a grazing of her lips against his.

    She thought Lorcan might have been trembling as she pulled back. As heat bloomed across her cheeks. But she made herself say, surprised to find her voice steady, “You don’t need to answer me now. Or ever. You could show up on my doorstep in ten years, and the offer would still stand. But there is a place for you, in Perranth—if you should ever need or wish for it.”

    Something like agony rippled in his eyes, the most human expression she’d seen him make.

    But he leaned forward, and despite the marshes, despite what gathered in the world, for the first time in ten years, Elide found herself not at all afraid as Lorcan caressed her lips with his own. Not afraid of anything as he did it again, kissing one corner of her mouth, then the other.

    Such gentle, patient kisses—his hands equally so as they stroked the hair back from her brow, as they trailed over her hips, her ribs. She lifted her own hands to his face and dragged her fingers into his silken hair as she arched up into him, craving the weight of his body on hers.
  • ᴀᴜɢᴜsᴛɪɴᴇ 🦋has quotedlast month
    She didn’t know why she said it, why she felt a need or like it was worth anything to him at all, but Elide stood on her toes, kissed his stubble-rough cheek, and said, “I will always find you, too, Lorcan.”

    She felt him staring at her, even when she’d climbed into bed minutes later.

    When she awoke, clean strips of linen for her cycle were next to the bed.

    His own shirt, washed and dried overnight—now cut up for her to use as she would.
  • ᴀᴜɢᴜsᴛɪɴᴇ 🦋has quotedlast month
    Lorcan reached out, grasping her chin and forcing her to look at him. Hopeless, bleak eyes met his. He brushed away a stray tear with his thumb. “I made a promise to protect you. I will not break it, Elide.”

    She made to pull away, but he gripped her a little harder, keeping her eyes on him.

    “I will always find you,” he swore to her.

    Her throat bobbed.

    Lorcan whispered, “I promise.”
  • ᴀᴜɢᴜsᴛɪɴᴇ 🦋has quotedlast month
    She was still seething at the door when it opened again.

    Dorian leaned against the aged wood, his eyes still glazed in a way she couldn’t tell was lust or hatred or both. He slid the lock shut without looking at it.

    Her heartbeat picked up, her entire immortal focus narrowed to his steady, unhurried breathing, the unreadable face.

    His voice was rough as he said, “I won’t waste my breath telling you how stupid it would be to try to take me hostage.”

    “I won’t waste mine telling you to take only what I offer you and nothing more.”

    Her ears strained to listen, but even his damned heart was a solid beat. Not a whiff of fear. He said, “I need to hear you say yes.” His eyes flicked to the chains.

    It took her a moment to comprehend, but she let out a low laugh. “So considerate, princeling. But yes. I do this of my own free will. It can be our little secret.”

    She was nothing and no one now anyway. Sharing a bed with her enemy was nothing compared to the Crochan blood that flowed in her veins.

    She began to unbutton the white shirt she’d been wearing for gods knew how long, but he growled, “I’ll do it myself.”

    Like hell he would. She touched the second button.

    Invisible hands wrapped around her wrists, tightly enough that she dropped the shirt.

    Dorian prowled to her. “I said that I’d do it.” Manon took in each inch of him as he towered over her, and a shiver of pleasure rippled through her. “I suggest you listen.”

    The pure male arrogance in that statement alone—

    “You’re courting death if you—”

    Dorian lowered his mouth to hers.

    It was a featherlight graze, barely a whisper of touch. Intent, calculated, and so unexpected she arched into it a bit.

    He kissed the corner of her mouth with the same silken gentleness. Then the other corner. She didn’t move, didn’t even breathe—like every part of her body was waiting to see what he’d do next.

    But Dorian pulled back, studying her eyes with a cool detachment. Whatever he beheld there made him step away.

    The invisible fingers on her wrists vanished. The door unlatched. And that cocky grin returned as Dorian shrugged with one shoulder and said, “Maybe another night, witchling.”

    Manon almost bellowed as he slipped out the door—and didn’t return.
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