The High Fae art of folding distance — vanishing from one known place and arriving, an instant later, in another.
Winnowing
The High Fae fold the world and step across the seam. One known place to another, in the breath between two steps. We've wished we could do it for years.
A shadow-blur, a whip of air, an ozone tang where someone stood a heartbeat ago. Older than the High Lord lines. In the Inner Circle's hands it's escape, ambush, and the only door fast enough to outrun a war.
At a glance
The fold in the world
The magic
The fold itself
Not flight. Not a portal you walk through. A body is simply no longer here, and an instant later it's there. The tells are small and quiet — a shadow-blur, a wind-disturbance where the wielder stood, the faint ozone of air rushing to fill the gap. For anyone carried along, it's the stomach-drop: the floor of the world falling out and re-forming in a heartbeat. Ancient-magic, older than the High Lord lines, and it runs in the blood of most High Fae of lineage rather than being learned. No wonder they make it look easy.
The rules
The three rules that make it fair
Three iron rules, and they're the whole point. First: you must know the destination. Fold toward a place you've never seen and you fold into nothing. Second: you cannot winnow into wards — warded ground, warded bodies, warded buildings seal the fold shut, which is exactly why anyone bleeds to raise them. Third: distance exhausts. A leap across a room is effortless for a strong wielder; long-range burns through power and leaves even High Lords spent. Which is why it's a tactic, not a cheat. A winnowing Fae is only ever as fast as the places they already hold in their mind.
In war
Why the line breaks
In a fight it's a weapon, not a shortcut. It's snatching a wounded comrade out of a killing blow and setting them down safe. It's the fold that turns certain death into a vanished target. It's blinking from one flank to another faster than a line can wheel to meet you. It's arriving inside an enemy's guard, at the one spot they couldn't have braced for. Against fighters who can't fold, a winnowing warrior is a problem with no clean answer — you can't hold a line against someone who's never where your blade is.
The wielders
The ones who fold the world
Most High Fae of lineage can do it. The Inner Circle turns it into an art. Rhysand, Mor, and Azriel winnow like breathing; Cassian can too, it just costs him more than it costs the rest — and we love him for trying anyway. Beyond Velaris, Helion of the Day Court is among the strongest practitioners alive, and through the bond Helion shares with Lucien, Lucien comes into the gift himself. Their folds trace a private map of the Night Court: Velaris to the Hewn City, the Illyrian camps to the Prison, out to any known place beyond. Point to point. Never the road between.
Who wields it