Did Rhysand Betray Feyre Under The Mountain?

2026-04-16 08:35:57 83
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3 Answers

Oliver
Oliver
2026-04-17 05:09:43
Reading 'A Court of Thorns and Roses' for the first time, I was totally conflicted about Rhysand's actions Under the Mountain. On one hand, he played the villain so convincingly—forcing Feyre to drink that wine, making her dance, all while wearing that infuriating smirk. But then there were those tiny moments where his mask slipped, like when he subtly helped her during the trials or shielded her from Amarantha’s worst whims. It felt like watching a chess game where every move had three hidden layers.

Now, after finishing the series, I see it differently. Betrayal implies malice, and Rhys was never malicious—just trapped in an impossible position. His ‘cruelty’ was performative survival, a way to keep Feyre alive while convincing Amarantha he was loyal. The real brilliance of his character is how Sarah J. Maas makes you question everything once you learn his perspective. That duality still gives me chills—it’s why I’ve reread those scenes a dozen times, noticing new nuances each pass.
Mia
Mia
2026-04-17 15:44:16
Ugh, Rhysand Under the Mountain is such a morally gray whirlwind! At first glance, yeah, he seems like a traitor—especially when he lets Feyre suffer publicly. But here’s the thing: his ‘betrayals’ were always strategic. He couldn’t openly defy Amarantha without getting them both killed, so he worked the system. The wine? Drugged to dull Feyre’s pain. The humiliating dances? A way to keep her close where he could protect her. Even the bargain he forced was a lifeline disguised as a chain.

What fascinates me is how this mirrors real-life survival tactics—sometimes kindness has to wear a villain’s face to be effective. Rhys’s actions remind me of characters like Snape or Kaz Brekker, where ‘betrayal’ is just the ugly side of loyalty. Honestly, the more I think about it, the more I admire Maas for writing a ‘villain’ whose worst acts become his redemption.
Yasmine
Yasmine
2026-04-18 15:17:08
Let’s cut straight to the emotional core: no, Rhys didn’t betray Feyre—he saved her in the only way he could. Imagine being forced to watch someone you care about endure torture, knowing any visible compassion would doom them further. His every harsh word, every theatrical cruelty, was a shield. Even the infamous bargain tattoo was a way to ensure her survival beyond Amarantha’s games.

The brilliance of their dynamic is how it subverts the ‘betrayal’ trope. Real betrayal requires broken trust, but Feyre later realizes Rhys’s trust was never truly broken—just buried under layers of necessity. It’s a masterclass in writing love stories where the ‘villain’ was the hero all along, whispering secrets through poisoned wine.
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