A Court of Thorns and Roses

by Sarah J. Maas

Tamlin/the Beast Character Analysis

Tamlin (whom Feyre refers to as “the beast” until she learns his name) is the High Lord of the Spring Court. He’s extremely attractive, with golden hair in his more human form and the ability to shapeshift into a golden wolf. Raised by a cruel father to be a warrior, Tamlin resented having to take over as High Lord, though he takes the responsibility seriously and cares deeply for his subjects. As a youngling during the War, Tamlin saw enough of human slavery to understand that it was wrong and worth fighting against. Indeed, one reason he resisted trying to break Amarantha’s curse for so long was his belief that it would be akin to slavery to bring a human girl to his estate against her will and then try to woo her. As he and Feyre get to know each other and eventually fall in love, Tamlin shows himself to be caring to the point of being self-sacrificing. This wins him Feyre’s heart, but he chooses to condemn himself and his court rather than risk Feyre’s life. Under the Mountain, he resists Amarantha by refusing to react to anything she does or says, even to Feyre. When Feyre breaks the curse, Tamlin kills Amarantha and helps to turn Feyre into a High Fae.

Tamlin/the Beast Quotes in A Court of Thorns and Roses

The A Court of Thorns and Roses quotes below are all either spoken by Tamlin/the Beast or refer to Tamlin/the Beast . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Love and Pain Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

Once it had been second nature to savor the contrast of new grass against dark, tilled soil, or an amethyst brooch nestled in folds of emerald silk; once I’d dreamed and breathed and thought in color and light and shape. Sometimes I would even indulge in envisioning a day when my sisters were married and it was only me and Father, with enough food to go around, enough money to buy some paint, and enough time to put those colors and shapes down on paper and canvas or the cottage walls.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Nesta , Andras/the Wolf , Tamlin/the Beast , Elain , Father
Page Number: 3
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

The few stories I’d heard had been wrong—or five hundred years of separation had muddled them. Yes, I was still prey, born weak and useless compared to them, but this place was…peaceful. Calm. Unless that was an illusion, too, and the loophole in the Treaty was a lie—a trick to set me at ease before they destroyed me. The High Fae liked to play with their food.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Lucien , Alis , Tamlin/the Beast
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

A half-wild beast, Nesta had called me. But compared to him, compared to this place, compared to the elegant, easy way they held their goblets, the way the golden-haired one had called me human…we were all half-wild beasts to the High Fae. Even if they were the ones who could don fur and claws.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Tamlin/the Beast , Nesta , Lucien
Page Number: 58
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

I swallowed hard. Andras had a place here, and friends here—he hadn’t been just some nameless, faceless faerie. No doubt he was more missed than I was. “I’m…sorry,” I said—and meant it. “I didn’t know what—what he meant to you all.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Lucien , Andras/the Wolf , Tamlin/the Beast , Father , Nesta , Elain
Page Number: 85
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

“And there’s no one who can help him at all?”

“He would probably shred them for disobeying his order to stay away.”

A brush of ice slithered across my nape. “He would be that brutal?”

Lucien studied the wine in his goblet. “You don’t hold on to power by being everyone’s friend. And among the faeries, lesser and High Fae alike, a firm hand is needed. We’re too powerful, and too bored with immortality, to be checked by anything else.”

It seemed like a cold, lonely position to have, especially when you didn’t particularly want it. I wasn’t sure why it bothered me so much.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Lucien (speaker), Father , Nesta , Elain , Tamlin/the Beast , The Bogge
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

I truly had nothing to fret about, save for the fact that they’d probably forget me sooner than expected. I couldn’t entirely blame them. My vow fulfilled, my task complete—what was left for me?

The firelight danced on his mask, warming the gold, setting the emeralds glinting. Such color and variation—color I didn’t know the names of, colors I wanted to catalog and weave together. Colors I had no reason not to explore now.

“Paint,” I said, barely more than a breath. He cocked his head and I swallowed, squaring my shoulders. “If—if it’s not too much to ask, I’d like some paint, and brushes.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Nesta , Father , Tamlin/the Beast , Mother , Elain
Related Symbols: Masks
Page Number: 145-46
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 17 Quotes

I studied the faerie’s face—so unearthly, so inhuman. Who could be so cruel to him like that?

“Feyre,” Tamlin said, squeezing my shoulder. I brushed the faerie’s hair behind his long, pointed ear, wishing I’d known his name, and let him go.

Related Characters: Tamlin/the Beast (speaker), Feyre (speaker), The Summer Court Faerie , Amarantha , Andras/the Wolf
Page Number: 152-53
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 18 Quotes

He was quiet for long enough that I thought he wouldn’t reply. Just as I was about to move ahead, he spoke. “Tam told me that your first shot was to save the Suriel’s life. Not your own.”

“It seemed like the right thing to do.”

The look he gave me was more contemplative than any he’d given me before. “I know far too many High Fae and lesser faeries who wouldn’t have seen it that way—or bothered.”

Related Characters: Lucien (speaker), Feyre (speaker), The Naga , The Suriel , Tamlin/the Beast
Page Number: 166
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 19 Quotes

Some had been painted through eyes like mine, artists who saw in colors and shapes I understood. Some showcased colors I had not considered; these had a bend to the world that told me a different set of eyes had painted them. A portal into the mind of a creature so unlike me, and yet…and yet I looked at its work and understood, and felt, and cared.

“I never knew,” Tamlin said from behind me, “that humans were capable of…” He trailed off as I turned, the hand I’d put on my throat sliding down to my chest, where my heart roared with a fierce sort of joy and grief and overwhelming humility—humility before that magnificent art.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Tamlin/the Beast (speaker), The Summer Court Faerie
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:

“My mother—she loved my father deeply. Too deeply, but they were mated, and…even if she saw what a tyrant he was, she wouldn’t say an ill word against him. I never expected—never wanted—my father’s title. My brothers would have never let me live to adolescence if they had suspected that I did. So the moment I was old enough, I joined my father’s war-band and trained so that I might someday serve my father, or whichever of my brothers inherited his title.” He flexed his hands, as if imagining the claws beneath. “I’d realized from an early age that fighting and killing were about the only things I was good at.”

“I doubt that,” I said.

He gave me a wry smile. “Oh, I can play a mean fiddle, but High Lords’ sons don’t become traveling minstrels.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Tamlin/the Beast (speaker), The Summer Court Faerie
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 176-77
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 25 Quotes

“My father once told me that I should let my sisters imagine a better life—a better world. And I told him that there was no such thing.” I ran my thumb over his mouth, marveling, and shook my head. “I never understood—because I couldn’t…couldn’t believe that it was possible.” I swallowed, lowering my hand. “Until now.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Nesta , Elain , Father , Tamlin/the Beast , Tomas Mandray
Related Symbols: Flowers, Masks
Page Number: 230
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 28 Quotes

Tamlin smiled at me one last time. “I love you,” he said, and stepped away.

I should say it—I should say those words, but they got stuck in my throat, because…because of what he had to face, because he might not find me again despite his promise, because…because beneath it all, he was an immortal, and I would grow old and die. And maybe he meant it now, and perhaps last night had been as altering for him as it had been for me, but…I would not become a burden to him. I would not become another weight pressing upon his shoulders.

Related Characters: Tamlin/the Beast (speaker), Feyre (speaker), Lucien , Amarantha , Rhysand
Related Symbols: Masks
Page Number: 251
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 30 Quotes

“There is no Aunt Ripleigh.” Nesta reached into her pocket and tossed something onto the churned-up earth.

It was a chunk of wood, as if it had been ripped from something. Painted on its smooth surface was a pretty tangle of vines and—foxglove. Foxglove painted in the wrong shade of blue.

My breath hitched. All this time, all these months…

“Your beast’s little trick didn’t work on me,” she said with quiet steel. “[…] I had to listen to [Father and Elain] talk about how lucky it was for you to be taken to some made-up aunt’s house, how some winter wind had shattered our door. And I thought I’d gone mad—but every time I did, I would look at that painted part of the table, then at the claw marks farther down, and know it wasn’t in my head.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Nesta (speaker), Elain , Tamlin/the Beast , Father
Related Symbols: Flowers
Page Number: 264
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 32 Quotes

“He thought that if the human girl loved true, then bringing her here to free him was another form of slavery. And he thought that if he did indeed fall in love with her, Amarantha would do everything she could to destroy her, as her sister had been destroyed. So he spent decades refusing to do it, to even risk it. But this winter, with months to go, he just…snapped. He sent the last of his men out, one by one. And they were willing—they had begged him to go, all these years. Tamlin was desperate to save his people, desperate enough to risk the lives of his men, risk that human girl’s life to save us. Three days in, Andras finally ran into a human girl in a clearing—and you killed him with hate in your heart.”

But I had failed them. And in so doing, I had damned them all.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Alis (speaker), Andras/the Wolf , Tamlin/the Beast
Related Symbols: Masks
Page Number: 286
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 37 Quotes

I was dying. I’d known it for some time now. And Lucien had underestimated my abilities in the past—had never quite grasped my limitations as a human. He’d sent me to hunt the Suriel with a few knives and a bow. He’d even admitted to hesitating that day, when I had screamed for help. And he might not even know how bad off I was. Might not understand the gravity of an infection like this. He might come a day, an hour, a minute too late.

Rhysand’s moon-white skin began to darken into nothing but shadow.

“Wait.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Rhysand , Lucien , Tamlin/the Beast , Amarantha
Page Number: 334
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 39 Quotes

“Did—did Tamlin see it?”

Lucien nodded. “Rhys was only doing it to get a rise out of him.”

“Did it work?” I still couldn’t look Lucien in the face. I knew, at least, that I hadn’t been violated beyond touching my sides. The paint told me that much.

“No,” Lucien said, and I smiled grimly.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Lucien (speaker), Rhysand , Tamlin/the Beast , Amarantha
Related Symbols: Masks
Page Number: 351
Explanation and Analysis:

“Wait,” I said. “Is—is Tamlin all right? I mean…I mean that spell Amarantha has him under to make him so silent…”

“There’s no spell. Hasn’t it occurred to you that Tamlin is keeping quiet to avoid telling Amarantha which form of your torment affects him the most?”

No, it hadn’t.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Lucien (speaker), Amarantha , Rhysand , Tamlin/the Beast
Related Symbols: Masks
Page Number: 353
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 41 Quotes

I wanted to fade into it, wanted the light of that sun to burn me away, to fill me with such joy that I would become a ray of sunshine myself. This wasn’t music to dance to—it was music to worship, music to fill in the gaps of my soul, to bring me to a place where there was no pain.

I didn’t realize I was weeping until the wet warmth of a tear splashed upon my arm. But even then I clung to the music, gripping it like a ledge that kept me from falling. I hadn’t realized how badly I didn’t want to tumble into that deep dark—how much I wanted to stay here among the clouds and color and light.

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Elain , Nesta , Tamlin/the Beast
Page Number: 374-75
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 42 Quotes

“Why do you think I’m doing this?” He waved a hand to me.

“Because you’re a monster.”

He laughed. “True, but I’m also a pragmatist. Working Tamlin into a senseless fury is the best weapon we have against her. Seeing you enter into a fool’s bargain with Amarantha was one thing, but when Tamlin saw my tattoo on your arm…Oh, you should have been born with my abilities, if only to have felt the rage that seeped from him.”

Related Characters: Rhysand (speaker), Feyre (speaker), Tamlin/the Beast , Amarantha
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 382-83
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 44 Quotes

For so long, I had run from it. But opening myself to him, to my sisters—that had been a test of bravery as harrowing as any of my trials.

Say it, you vile beast,” Amarantha hissed. She might have lied her way out of our bargain, but she’d sworn differently with the riddle—instantaneous freedom, regardless of her will.

Blood filled my mouth, warm as it dribbled out between my lips. I gazed at Tamlin’s masked face one last time.

Love,” I breathed, the world crumbling into a blackness with no end. A pause in Amarantha’s magic. “The answer to the riddle…,” I got out, choking on my own blood, “is…love.”

Related Characters: Feyre (speaker), Amarantha (speaker), Elain , Tamlin/the Beast , Nesta
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 403
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 46 Quotes

“Be glad of your human heart, Feyre. Pity those who don’t feel anything at all.”

Related Characters: Rhysand (speaker), Feyre , Tamlin/the Beast , Amarantha
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 414
Explanation and Analysis:
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Tamlin/the Beast Character Timeline in A Court of Thorns and Roses

The timeline below shows where the character Tamlin/the Beast appears in A Court of Thorns and Roses. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 3
Love and Pain Theme Icon
Responsibility and Sacrifice Theme Icon
...Isaac. Later, after dinner, Feyre prepares to bring up Tomas with Nesta—but a giant, angry beast appears outside. (full context)
Chapter 4
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Before she knows it, Feyre has her hunting knife in her hand and the beast has entered the house. It’s the size of a horse and looks like a wolf... (full context)
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Responsibility and Sacrifice Theme Icon
...didn’t threaten her. Knowing that Nesta will try to keep Elain alive, Feyre keeps the beast talking. He reveals that per the Treaty, Feyre must die—or she can spend the rest... (full context)
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The beast snaps Feyre’s ash arrow before ordering her outside. Feyre tells her father how to ration... (full context)
Chapter 5
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The beast leads Feyre to a mare who looks shockingly calm, given that the beast could destroy... (full context)
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...with a hunting knife, but she’s too afraid for her family’s wellbeing to kill the beast. Unable to identify his weak spots anyway, she tries to ask his name. She smells... (full context)
Chapter 6
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...also unsettling that it’s spring here—daffodils are blooming—when it’s winter a short journey south. The beast leaves Feyre on her horse and leisurely enters his manor. Feyre considers running south, but... (full context)
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...eating faerie food will mean she’s stuck here forever and will be mentally enslaved. The beast, to Feyre’s shock, approaches a chair and turns into a blond, human-looking High Fae, a... (full context)
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As the beast begins to eat, another male High Fae in a mask enters and asks if Andras... (full context)
Chapter 7
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...when Feyre returns, sipping from real gold goblets. Nesta used to call Feyre a “half-wild beast” as an insult, but now, Feyre realizes that all faeries see humans as beasts. As... (full context)
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...apologized for murdering Andras and asks how she killed him. Feyre describes the murder, but Tamlin tells Lucien to leave the subject alone. Feyre returns to the subject of her starving... (full context)
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...and that she isn’t interested in women, either. But the line of questioning enrages her. Tamlin insists they just want to get to know her and tells her to ask the... (full context)
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...must be enjoying the extra room in bed. Worried for their fate, Feyre thinks of Tamlin. He’s awkward, but he doesn’t seem so evil. A scream interrupts Feyre’s thoughts—Alis entered the... (full context)
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Tamlin surprises Feyre at the door and awkwardly offers to give her a tour of the... (full context)
Chapter 8
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...Feyre decides to target him—after all, he doesn’t want her here, so he might convince Tamlin to send her home. Just then, Feyre hears two sets of feet and a quiet... (full context)
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At dinner later, Feyre steals a knife. While Lucien and Tamlin chat, she slips it into her sleeve. Tamlin and Lucien then engage her in conversation,... (full context)
Chapter 9
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The next day, Feyre hurries to the stables to join Lucien on patrol. Tamlin intercepts her, inviting to take her out to show her the grounds. Feyre blandly declines... (full context)
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...he knows exactly why Feyre joined him today. He doesn’t have the power to convince Tamlin of anything, though he’d love it if Feyre disappeared. She’ll be safer here, though. (full context)
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Feyre tries to question Lucien about the blight and where Tamlin’s court is. He says that “Something was sent from the shit-holes of Hell” to cause... (full context)
Chapter 10
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At dinner, Tamlin is clearly upset that Feyre went hunting with Lucien after telling him she wanted solitude.... (full context)
Chapter 11
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...hits the ground, her father is already heading surprisingly quickly toward the gate. Just then, Tamlin wraps a clawed hand around Feyre’s arm, stopping her. She tries to explain, but he... (full context)
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Feyre asks more about Tamlin’s sentries and his history. Tamlin explains that he trained with his father’s war-band. Governing wasn’t... (full context)
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...herself if she’s not struggling to support her family. She accompanies Lucien on patrol while Tamlin spends almost all his time hunting the Bogge. When Tamlin abruptly excuses himself from dinner... (full context)
Chapter 12
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...self-conscious about servants seeing her and knows Nesta would laugh. As she’s in the foyer, Tamlin appears in the doorway as a beast and changes to his faerie form. He killed... (full context)
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The next morning, Feyre is about to peruse a hall of paintings when she overhears Tamlin and Lucien arguing and stops to listen. She can tell they’re talking about the blight,... (full context)
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Feyre admits to Tamlin that she hates hunting, and he offers to do whatever she wants. She makes her... (full context)
Chapter 13
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Tamlin lights the candles with a wave of his hand. They illuminate walls of books, the... (full context)
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...returns to her book. Embarrassed at her illiteracy, she throws her list in the trash. Tamlin appears behind her and offers to help her write her letter, but Feyre declines, mortified... (full context)
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...family. So, she seeks out Lucien in his bedroom. They banter, and Lucien reveals that Tamlin is out dealing with a disturbance. Feyre asks, in a roundabout way, how one might... (full context)
Chapter 14
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...he says she can’t go home, or her family will be killed. He reveals that Tamlin is the High Lord of the Spring Court himself. She asks about the masks, and... (full context)
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When Feyre asks about the blight, the Suriel tells her to stay with Tamlin, don’t be nosy or interfere, and that by staying with him, it will be okay.... (full context)
Chapter 15
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...and Feyre stabs one in the neck. Just then, a roar sounds from nearby, and Tamlin bursts out of the trees. He shreds the still living naga. Feyre is terrified—but relieved... (full context)
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Feyre thanks Tamlin for saving her and follows him back to the manor, considering what the Suriel told... (full context)
Chapter 16
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...that this notion is, in fact, a lie—and iron doesn’t do anything to them, either. Tamlin, annoyed with Lucien, says the faeries have never used these misconceptions to manipulate humans. Feyre... (full context)
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Tamlin stops Feyre from leaving the dining room. He says it’s clear to him that she... (full context)
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Then, Tamlin shocks Feyre further. He says that her family remembers nothing. They believe a wealthy old... (full context)
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Staring at the colors of Tamlin’s mask, Feyre asks to paint. Tamlin agrees to find her the supplies and tells her... (full context)
Chapter 17
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...her. Then, she hears tortured screams from downstairs, and shouts. She runs out and discovers Tamlin rushing inside with a screaming faerie with blue skin, long hair, and bleeding stumps on... (full context)
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Tamlin says a prayer as the Summer Court Faerie dies. Feyre continues to hold the faerie’s... (full context)
Chapter 18
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The next morning, Feyre vows to seek Tamlin out and apologize again—better—for killing Andras. She gets distracted staring at the landscape out a... (full context)
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Lucien and Tamlin laugh, and Tamlin gets up to show Feyre something else. They hike through the trees... (full context)
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Tamlin asks what it would take to make Feyre happy. Feyre doesn’t answer, but she realizes... (full context)
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A few hours later, Feyre, Tamlin, and Lucien ride back to the manor. Feyre gives Lucien a look, and the two... (full context)
Chapter 19
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Feyre’s painting supplies arrive the next day, but Tamlin insists on showing her the gallery first. When Feyre asks why he takes providing for... (full context)
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...and tries her best to capture how it feels in her paintings. Sometimes, she paints Tamlin—whom she now can spend many happy hours with at a time. Eventually, Feyre realizes it’s... (full context)
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...is certain she’d never be able to paint the flowers well enough. She admits to Tamlin that she’s ashamed for abandoning her family, as she feels selfish—but it also hurts that... (full context)
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By the next morning, Feyre is embarrassed that she was so open with Tamlin. She takes a bow and arrows and other hunting supplies into the woods, setting a... (full context)
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Later, as Feyre and Tamlin return to the manor, Feyre asks Tamlin to elaborate on his parents’ relationship—they “mat[ed]” rather... (full context)
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Eventually, another High Lord killed Tamlin’s entire family, and he came to power. It was a rough transition, and many courtiers... (full context)
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Suddenly, Feyre recognizes a nefarious faerie is nearby. Tamlin tells her to hide and stay hidden, no matter what. He disappears. Before Feyre can... (full context)
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Lucien and Tamlin immediately turn to Feyre, who insists she understood none of what she heard. Tamlin, clearly... (full context)
Chapter 20
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...some of the fires. The drumbeats are irresistible—and Feyre is ready to follow them when Tamlin appears, shirtless. He insists flatly that he needs to go perform the Great Rite, telling... (full context)
Chapter 21
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...the land. Feyre, Lucien says, was among the females hoping to be chosen, and had Tamlin chosen her, the experience would not have been positive. Now, he has to return and... (full context)
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...a wave of magic ripples past her. Certain of what it means, she thinks of Tamlin’s face and body and hurries to the kitchen for a snack. On her way back... (full context)
Chapter 22
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In the morning, Feyre discovers a huge bruise on her neck from Tamlin’s bite. Deciding to punish him by making sure he sees it, she puts her hair... (full context)
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After dinner, Feyre leads Tamlin to her painting studio. He slowly lights the candles, and then Feyre tells him she... (full context)
Chapter 23
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The next day, Lucien excuses himself, so Tamlin takes Feyre to a gorgeous glen with a weeping willow. After they’ve been there a... (full context)
Chapter 24
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...there, too. Feyre asks where Alis is—and the faerie says she is Alis. Realizing that Tamlin must’ve glamoured everyone at the estate, Feyre has a rough morning. She notices more faeries... (full context)
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The next day, Feyre finds a High Fae’s head impaled on a statue. Tamlin and Lucien appear behind her. They don’t recognize the faerie, but he’s branded as part... (full context)
Chapter 25
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An hour later, Tamlin leaves to deal with something and is gone overnight. When Feyre wakes up the following... (full context)
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...goes to join the dancers, telling Lucien to stop being serious. Then, Feyre notices that Tamlin himself is one of the fiddlers. Tamlin insists he’s fine to look after Feyre and... (full context)
Chapter 26
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Feyre, Tamlin, and Lucien share a late breakfast later. Tamlin and Feyre flirt until Lucien calls Tamlin... (full context)
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Rhysand is here to confirm that Tamlin got his “little present” and see how Tamlin is doing, 49 years on. It doesn’t... (full context)
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Tamlin and Lucien do nothing to protect Feyre. Rhysand suggests that Feyre should leave, and he... (full context)
Chapter 27
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Tamlin sends Lucien and Feyre away while he rages. Feyre spends the day in her room,... (full context)
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Tamlin tells Feyre to sleep—she’ll leave tomorrow. He gets up to leave, but Feyre begs him... (full context)
Chapter 28
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...so their parting is short and unemotional. Lucien mocks Feyre’s clothes downstairs and then asks Tamlin if he’s really going to make her go now instead of “giv[ing] her a few... (full context)
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...no idea where she is until she realizes Nesta and Elain are coming to greet her—Tamlin certainly did take care of her family. Her sisters ask if Aunt Ripleigh is dead,... (full context)
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...and a potential ball in Feyre’s honor, while Nesta follows behind silently. Feyre thinks of Tamlin. She knows now he loves her and wants to keep her safe—but she feels like... (full context)
Chapter 29
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...to Aunt Ripleigh, who died two weeks ago and left Feyre her entire fortune (which Tamlin sent with Feyre). Father catalogs and counts the fortune. He’s happy now, and a salve... (full context)
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...Elain of her hope or generosity. One day, Feyre visits the old cottage, thinking of Tamlin. It’s falling into disrepair, and Feyre realizes that Elain was the strongest sister: she looked... (full context)
Chapter 30
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...Feyre. It’s from their old table, and it includes Feyre’s painting of foxglove. Nesta insists Tamlin’s glamour didn’t work on her, and she knew that what happened to Feyre wasn’t okay.... (full context)
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...insists Father loved Mother, but Nesta points out that Feyre would’ve done anything to save Tamlin. (full context)
Chapter 31
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...words, feeling ashamed that she stopped trying to seek answers or figure anything about regarding Tamlin’s troubles and the blight. The following morning, Feyre joins her family for lunch. Father shares... (full context)
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...realizes their family was supposed to suffer the Beddors’ fate. Feyre says she’s certain that Tamlin and the Spring Court are in danger. Nesta follows Feyre to her room and helps... (full context)
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...where she can pass through. Feyre is terrified, but she knows she has to tell Tamlin she loves him and try to help. It takes her a while to notice how... (full context)
Chapter 32
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...Feyre can tell it was a difficult fight. But there are no bodies, which suggests Tamlin is still alive. The situation in the dining room makes it look as though while... (full context)
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Turning to Feyre, Alis spits that Feyre could’ve fixed all this. Tamlin grew up close to Amarantha, and she wanted him. But he rejected her, especially after... (full context)
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Alis continues. Tamlin used to send men daily, but he stopped when there were only 12 left. He’s... (full context)
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...Feyre realizes that Amarantha was the one who ordered the Beddors murdered. She can’t believe Tamlin let her go, just to save her, knowing she loved him. Feyre asks if Tamlin... (full context)
Chapter 33
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...into another open, lit hallway. Feyre considers turning back, but she knows she must find Tamlin now. But a hand grips her arm—and it belongs to the Attor. (full context)
Chapter 34
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...floor below Amarantha’s throne. Though Amarantha is beautiful, there’s something wrong about her—she’s obviously cruel. Tamlin sits beside her and doesn’t react to seeing Feyre. The Attor explains he found Feyre... (full context)
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...Feyre tries not to vomit. That should be her. Amarantha asks if Feyre still wants Tamlin, and Feyre says she does. Amarantha asks Tamlin’s opinion, and he dully says he doesn’t... (full context)
Chapter 36
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Guards escort Feyre to a giant, muddy arena surrounded by jeering faeries. Amarantha and Tamlin sit on an elevated platform, and below them is an exposed maze. Amarantha tells Feyre... (full context)
Chapter 37
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...eat. After a few days, Rhysand materializes in her cell. He taunts her about what Tamlin would think, eventually revealing that since she made him so much money, he’s come to... (full context)
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...Rhysand insists it’s a Night Court custom, and Feyre realizes he did this to hurt Tamlin. (full context)
Chapter 39
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...to come with him to a party. The paint, he says, will smear if anyone—like Tamlin—touches her. Feyre shivers from exposure and embarrassment as they enter the throne room and approach... (full context)
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...that Rhysand made her dance and sit in his lap, an unsuccessful attempt to pester Tamlin. Lucien said he would’ve come to heal her, especially after she saved him, but Feyre... (full context)
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...trial is the following day. Feyre is dismissive, insisting she’ll win, and they discuss how Tamlin treated Feyre when Feyre lived at his manor. Rhysand suggests that had Tamlin learned anything... (full context)
Chapter 40
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The Attor stands with Feyre before Amarantha and Tamlin. It’s time for her second trial, since she hasn’t solved the riddle yet. When Amarantha... (full context)
Chapter 41
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...She looks forward to losing consciousness thanks to the wine, and she’s certain she’ll fail Tamlin and die during the third task. Nothing seems to matter anymore. But one evening, Feyre... (full context)
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...like she’s watching a sunset or sunrise, and she cries. The music reminds her of Tamlin and reminds her of what her goal is. Finally, the song ends, but Feyre doesn’t... (full context)
Chapter 42
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...to give her the wine. So used to everyone ignoring her, it’s a shock when Tamlin stands next to her and brushes her fingers. He walks away, gesturing for her to... (full context)
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...Amarantha forces him into sex, and he lays out his plan: if Feyre wins tomorrow, Tamlin will regain his power and in his fury, he’ll kill Amarantha. Rhysand making it seem... (full context)
Chapter 43
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...kind farewells to her. Amarantha asks Feyre for final words, and Feyre says she loves Tamlin. Then, guards drag in three figures with bags over their heads. They kneel in front... (full context)
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A guard removes the bag from the final faerie’s head to reveal Tamlin himself—and the Tamlin beside Amarantha reveals itself as the Attor. Amarantha taunts Feyre, and Feyre... (full context)
Chapter 44
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Tamlin cries out, but Feyre’s dagger indeed hits stone. She won, but nothing happens. Amarantha, enraged,... (full context)
Chapter 45
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...leaving her body and viewing the scene from someone else’s eyes. Lucien removes his mask—and Tamlin roars, shifts into his beast form, and pins Amarantha against the wall. Other faeries restrain... (full context)
Chapter 46
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Feyre feels like she’s swimming up, toward Tamlin and life. She returns to her body, gasping—and she realizes this means she did, in... (full context)
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A while later, Tamlin and Feyre are finally alone in a bedroom, and Tamlin heals Feyre’s remaining wounds. She... (full context)
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Tamlin and Feyre take the tunnel back to the Spring Court. Amarantha’s body will be burned,... (full context)