Zafira wanted to believe he had been waiting for her, but delusions were for dreamers. Sheโd gotten quite friendly with the wide mirror in their room in Alderamin, and equally annoyed with herself for even caring about how she looked, but being back in Sultanโs Keep meant sheโd see Nasir, and seeing Nasir reminded her of the girl in the yellow shawl.
When he leaped his way down from the palace wall, dropping in a crouch and a stirring of sand, it was delusional to believe he made his way to them without once looking away from her, dressed in luxury only a prince could afford with an onyx-hilted dagger against his thigh and a scimitar sheathed at his hip. Armed, always armed. Inside and out. It was delusional to think he would let himself be seen without his mask, his gray eyes apologetic and rimmed in sleeplessness.
Because when he spoke, he didnโt look at her, he didnโt direct words at her, and it certainly felt like he spokeย atย her.
Still. Sweet snow below, the ache in her chest. The fervor in her blood.
She couldnโt care less that she was here, standing before the Sultanโs Palace, a place she had seen through Babaโs tales and never expected to witness herself.
The ornate gates swung inward, granting them entrance. Each of the guards swept a bow as Nasir passed. Zafira tried to ignore their scrutiny, at once insignificant and powerful. The path to the palace was set with interlacing stones that swelled and tapered like the scales on a maridโs tail, umber glittering gold. Under the watchful gaze of the stone lion fountain in the center, Nasir told them he had broken the sultanโs medallion.
โAnd you presumed it something to boast about?โ Seif dismissed with no shortage of scorn. โMerely removing a chain while we were out there neck to neck with death?โ
Zafira knew no one else understood Nasirโs pride. It wasnโt forย whatย heโd done, but that heโd done it at all: Taken control. Acted of his own accord.
She opened her mouth, blood burning, but Kifah beat her to it, spear flashing in the early light.
โEnough,โ Kifah snapped. โDid it work?โ she asked Nasir, ever practical.
โI thoโI thinkโโ Nasir stopped. Seif scoffed. โYou think.โ
Zafira knew no one saw his bare flinch either. The world could be remade, but abuse could never be undone.
โHe suspects weโll use dum sihr to find the Lion, and he was not pleased. Heโs forbidden it. The man I killedโโ
โYouโll have to be more specific.โ
Nasir didnโt respond, and Zafira saw the exact moment when his mask fitted back into place. His back steeled, his jaw hardened. The Prince of Death.
โIโm hungry,โ she said suddenly.
The tension snapped like a bowstring. Kifah snorted. The palace doors groaned open beyond the arched entrances.
โMortals,โ Seif muttered, crossing his arms as Aya joined them in a flutter of lilac.
โYou need this mortal, safi,โ Zafira bit out. She felt Nasir watching her, now that she wasnโt watching him. โAnd if Iโm to slit my hand and find Altair and the heart, I need to eat.โ
Oblivious, Aya ushered them inside the palace as confident as if she were its queen. She took one glance at the vial of blood hanging from Zafiraโs neck and beamed, quickly hiding
a warble of her lips. โWe must mark this occasion, my loves. Every victory must be celebrated, however small.โ
Zafira couldnโt smile back, not when the sheath at her thigh hung achingly empty. Why was it that victories were forever riddled with loss?
That, and the palace made her feel out of place. The halls were bathed in golden light, heaving with shadows that danced, eager for the Lion. She saw extravagance at her every glance, dripping from the suspended lanterns, gilding the intricate, arching walls. Columns twisting with interlacing florals, pots overflowing with greenery too lush to be real, gossamer curtains fluttering shyly in the dry breeze of the wide windows, and beckoning balconies.
People filed in and out of the great double doors, dignitaries arriving for the ominous feast. Servants polished the ornate floors to a shine, and majlis after majlis was readied by nimble-fingered needlewomen. Chandeliers were brought down and lined with fresh oil wicks, and goats bleated from deeper inside where she presumed the kitchens would be, oblivious to their impending slaughter.
Servants led Zafira away from the others, and like a fool, she glanced at him, to see if heโd turn. Look at her. Acknowledge her.
He continued on, deep in conversation with Kifah. And it was as if, suddenly, they were strangers again. The cloaked Hunter, the aloof Prince of Death.
She didnโt think it was possible to stand footsteps away and miss him even more.
Zafira hurried after the servants to her quarters, as large as her and Yasmineโs houses combined, spacious enough to host an entire village for a feast. The ornaments alone could feed them for a year. There was a mirror wider than any sheโd seen, an assortment of vials in front of it that Zafira deemed useless because she never understood what ointment was meant to
accentuate which part of her face and in which order. Another low table held lidded bowls, one with almonds, another with pistachio-studded nougat, and the third with dates.
She stepped farther into the room and knelt to touch the stupendously large platform bed, softer than the fur of the supplest of rabbits. Her mind flashed to the Lion wearing Nasirโs face and her head spun, weariness tugging at her eyelids. But she was too guilty to climb beneath the covers knowing he was out there and that she could find him, the Jawarat, the heart, Altairโdaamaย everythingย by losing yet another part of herself.
Sweet snow, she was tired. She lowered her cheek to the sheets, and didnโt think she had ever felt something so glorious in her life.
โHuntress.โ
Zafira turned. The room was dark, unfamiliar.
The Silver Witch greeted her with a twist of her lips. โThe first time is always the hardest.โ
Umm had once said that about something far more mundane than what she was going to do. Ah, right. To Yasmine, when sheโd snuck away with a boy once. A pang ripped through her heart.
โWe have no choice,โ Zafira replied.
Anadil canted her head. โYou are the girl who triumphed without the forbidden.โ
Zafira smiled sadly. โTimes are desperate.โ
The Silver Witch studied her. โVery well,โ she said. โDum sihr in its base form will allow you to use your affinity. You will be a daโira again. And while you may easily use your own affinity, you must locate a spellbook should you require another, as dum sihr requires an incantation in the old tongue. Established centers, such as the Great Library, may have some
in their collection, though Iโm certain the Jawarat contains a few of its own.โ
โIโve lost it,โ Zafira said softly. โSo find it.โ
The words were so simple, Zafira wanted to curl into a ball and laugh.
โHave a care,โ the Silver Witch continued. โToo much magic outside oneโs affinity, and some part of you will pay the price.โ
She touched a lock of her unnaturally bone-white hair, and before Zafira could say once was enough and that she would never practice any magic other than her own, Anadil shook her head. As if echoing what the Lion had said about brash promises.
โOkhti?โ
Zafira bolted upright. Faint sunlight slanted over her, a breeze stirring the gauzy curtains.ย Noon.ย A dream. The Silver Witch wasnโt here; Zafira had daama slept.ย A dreamwalk?
Lana peered down at her.
โThese are my rooms, but now we can share! Can you believe I slept in the princeโs chambers last night?โ She lowered her voice, brown eyes glittering. โIn a little room dedicated for his lady friends.โ
There were a thousand words she could have said then:
Hello, or
Bait ul-Ahlaamย doesย have everything, or
I found the vial at theย costย of everything, or
How are the repercussions of the riots?
But she said none of them.
โLady friends,โ she echoed. Like the girl in the yellow shawl. Like the women whose gazes followed him shamelessly through the palace.
โYou know, when they want toโโ
โI know what itโs for,โ Zafira snapped. Her neck burned. Other parts of her burned, too. In ways theyโd never done before.
Lana grinned. โI missed your grumpiness.โ
Zafira folded her legs beneath her and reached for the vial shimmering in the light, the geometric patterns reminding her of the Silver Witchโs letter from forever ago.ย Thatโs it. Focus on what needs to be done.
โSweet snow, itโs beautiful,โ Lana exclaimed. โDid it cost a lot?โ
โYes.โ
Not of coin, she didnโt say, but something else. Something no amount of dinars could ever buy. But Aya was right: Thisย wasย a victory. For Lana, too. They had traveled to Alderamin and Bait ul-Ahlaam because of her suggestion. Because of Lana, Zafira might have lost the last she had of Baba, but they could find Altair and the Lion. Track down the heart and the Jawarat. That was what mattered.
Lana moved to a corner of the room where she had been poring over a sheaf of papyrus on a low table with a tray of tools and an array of ointments along the edge.
โThereโs an entire section of the palace dedicated to medicine,โ she explained. โIโve been transcribing remedies for Ammah Aya.โ She wrinkled her nose. โI donโt think she needs them any more than she hopes Iโll commit them to memory.โ
Only then did Zafira realize what Aya had taught Lana that their mother never had: confidence. A surety that Demenhune women lacked, even those who had fathers or brothers like the Iskandars once had Baba.
โOh, and Kifah came. She wasnโt happy to know you were asleep, but I took care of it. None of us are any use half-dead.โ
Zafira pursed her lips at the word โusโ and the reminder that her sister was no longer a little girl. She hadnโtย beenย a little girl in a long time, but that was all Zafira saw: Her small figure tucked against Babaโs side. Her eyes wide in wonder, her nose in a book.
And yet she had kept their Umm alive. She had kept herself sane when Zafira disappeared into the Arz for hours on end. She might not have wielded a bow, but she had done just as much as Zafira. She had goneย throughย as much as Zafira had.
โYou didnโt have to do that, you know,โ Zafira said, rolling off the bed. She tossed her one of the coins Kifah had given her.
Her sister gave her a half smile. โNo one ever has to, and yet someone always must.โ
โLana, the philosopher,โ Zafira teased, disappearing into the adjoining bath. She poked her head out in the silence. โLana, the pensive?โ
The beautiful. The burdened.ย The girl who had grown up without Zafira knowing it.
โI saw the sultan,โ Lana said, turning the coin over in her hands. โWhen you think of him, Okhti, do you ever want to kill him?โ
Zafira hid her surprise behind a blink.
โIt wasnโt he who killed Ummi,โ she said carefully. She had told Lana about the sultan being steered like a puppet by the Lion. โYou know this.โ
Lanaโs eyes were ablaze. โIf being controlled was his mistake, then it was his mistake all the same.โ
Lana, the girl with murder in her lungs.
โNasir said the sultan doesnโt want us using dum sihr,โ Zafira found herself saying.
Lanaโs brow furrowed. โOh? Does this mean youโve forgiven him?โ
It took Zafira a moment to realize Lana was speaking of Nasir. Was she that obvious? Why did she have to be the one to forgive first? Skies, she felt like an old married woman. She shrugged. โHe didnโt tellย meย that.โ
โI see,โ Lana said, a laugh in her voice. โBut you will, wonโt you? Use dum sihr?โ
Zafira nodded as she changed out of her tunic.
Lana flopped on the bed. โYouโre being rebellious. I like
it.โ
โIโve always been rebellious. I hunted in the Arzโโ
โFor years, yes, I know. Youโve only repeated that a
thousand and one times. But you were never rebellious. You wereย secretive. If the caliph had forbidden you from hunting, you wouldnโt have gone.โ
Zafira considered her words as she threw open the window. A crop of orange trees ranged outside, tender white flowers in bloom reminding her of Yasmine every time she inhaled.
โSee? Youโre changing.โ
But it wasnโt about rebelling against the man who had murdered their mother. It was the act of dum sihr itself, something strictly forbidden for good reason. Lana didnโt know about the Jawaratโs vision and the force of Zafiraโs newfound rage. About how it seemed to be draining the good out of her, leaving only the vilest paths to follow.
Sheย wasย changing, but it wasnโt for the better, and when Lana flashed her a grin, Zafira couldnโt smile back.
There were claims that the Lion had been seen in Sarasin, asserting he was climbing the Dancali Mountains, heading for Demenhur with a horde of ifrit at his back. A few had seen clusters of darkness racing for the ether, blanketing whole villages and creating havens for his ifrit kin. Others swore they saw a black lion bounding through crowds, leaving behind bloody entrails.
How the people knew the Lion of the Night was here at all, alive and well, Zafira couldnโt tell. She wouldnโt be surprised if the rumors could be traced back to the tiny Zaramese captain. Secrets were like mold, Zafira had learned. They found a way to spread no matter how diligently they were contained.
โI donโt trust any of it,โ Zafira said airily as she and Aya waited for the others. Night had steeped across Arawiya long enough for the sky to brighten, and she had spent most of it in her room, hearing a soft knock every so often only for disappointment to flood afresh when she found the hall empty.
Ayaโs sky-blue abaya was out of place in the war roomโs dark dressings. Lana was dozing on the majlis with a papyrus in hand, the sheaf detailing some mixture or another that stanched the flow of blood. Apparently, the materials could no longer be found, but Lana swore she had seen them in Ummโs cabinet in Demenhur.
Aya studied Zafira. โYou know the Lion well for such a young mortal.โ
Something weighted her dreamy tone.ย Envy.
โI didnโt have much of a choice,โ Zafira said dryly.
Aya stared at the vial. โThe whispers escalate. They claim he is here to help us.โ
They had more to worry about than crazed claims, but Zafira could see how they were made logical. With the freeing of the hearts came the Arzโs disappearance, and Arawiya was returning to what it once was: Sarasinโs darkness was
receding, Demenhurโs snow melting. The Lion had only to seize opportunity.
She fastened the vialโs chain around her neck and opened her mouth, about to ask how dum sihr worked. Aside from knowing it was forbidden and required the slitting of oneโs palm, she didnโt know much else.
โโHe will fix our broken worldโ they say,โ Aya murmured.
Zafira paused, brow furrowing. She remembered what Aya had said in that moment of hysteria, when sheโd protested dum sihr.ย What he wants can never be as terrible.
โThe Lion wants vengeance,โ Zafira said, as if Aya didnโt know. โAnd the knowledge that brings power.โ
He might still want a home for his ifrit. He might still be driven by the pain of his fatherโs loss, but neither were as prevalent among his desires as his thirst for knowledge and the throne. Laa, that was greed.
Ayaย hmmed and touched a hand to her tattoo, turmoil on her face, and Zafira realized the Lion she remembered was different from the one Zafira knew. He had to be, if Benyamin had welcomed him,ย befriendedย him when none of the other safin could look past their pride.
The door opened and Nasir strode inside, Kifah and Seif at his heels. Zafira struggled to meet his eyes, nodding at Kifah and tossing a fleeting glance at Seif instead.
โYouโre not following me,โ Zafira told Lana, who had bolted awake.
She started to protest, but slumped back when Zafira lifted a brow. โFine.โ
Zafira didnโt know if sheโd be wholly conscious once she slit her palm and melded the bloods together. She didnโt feel particularly inclined to stoop low enough to ask Seif, or even Aya, who was still lost in her strange thoughts.
โIโve received word from Demenhur. The heart has been restored to the minaret there. Nothing from the others as yet,โ Seif said.
No one rejoiced. The maridsโ hungry eyes flashed in her thoughts, but Zafira shoved them away. No word from the others only meant they were still on their way, she reassured herself. They were prideful creatures. They wouldnโt write letters detailing their whereabouts every half day.
Two hearts had been restored, two more were on their way. It was the fifth the zumra needed to focus on. When Zafira said as much, Kifah nodded sharply.
โWeโre working on it,โ she said, armed and ready. โWillย it work?โ Aya asked.
โDid word of the Hunter not reach Alderamin?โ Kifah asked with a raised brow. Zafira ducked under the sudden praise. โNot only will it work, but if all goes well, weโll catch the Lion unaware. Now, shall we?โ
Zafira tightened her hand around the vial of siโlah blood. Kifah was right, thisย wouldย work. It was theย actย of dum sihr that scared her. The line down her palm from when she had fortuitously slit it on Sharr was still pink, the skin barely knotted together, reminding her of the Jawaratโs vision. How much more of herself would she lose before this was through?
A chorus rose in her veins when she gripped the knife Aya handed her, a barely contained excitement born from her bond with the Jawarat. But her hand shook with the weight of ten eyes boring into her, judging her. The tip of the knife meandered across her palm. Skies, couldnโt they leave? She opened her mouth, heat tight across her skin.
Then her insides screeched to a halt when a hand closed around the knife.
Nasirโs shadow draped over her, reassuring. He slid his palm beneath hers and brought the blade to her skin. Zafira
forgot to breathe. Her heart forgot to beat.
She relaxed her hand, as every part of her longed to lift her gaze up to the gray abyss of his. To remember what it felt like to be assessed by him. Watched. Revered.ย Understood.
โForgive me,โ he said softly, and drew the knife across her palm with a flex of his wrist. She hissed at the sudden pain. Red swelled along the bladeโs path.
She heard voices in the hall, but they were distant and muffled, dreamlike. Perhaps sheย wasย dreaming and not tearing at the seams. Seif came forward and carefully measured out three drops of siโlah blood into her palm, murmuring something she couldnโt catch, before he closed the vial and dropped it back against her chest.
The effect was instant.
Zafira swayed. A strange and sweeping cold rushed through her, a hundred things hurtling too fast and heavy to comprehend. Everything suddenly burned shinier, bolder,ย brighter. As if she had drunk something that had fermented too long. She was aware of every little piece of herselfโthe blood racing beneath her skin, pulsing at her fingers, throbbing at her neck, at her temple.
Power.
From somewhere far, far away, the Jawarat hummed in approval. She felt the cool press of it deep inside her. She felt full and free.ย She felt like herself.ย The wind from the open window tousled her hair, hurtling freely as a bird. If she closed her eyes, the looming trees of the Arz crowded around her, whispering limbs greeting her. She missed the whiz of her heart, pulling her in a direction she couldnโt see. She missed magic.
โHuntress?โ
Zafira opened her eyes to startling clarity. Kifah and the others watched her warily. In her mindโs eye, she saw Altairโs
grin. She saw the bloody mass of the final siโlah heart, beating faintly.
She smiled. โFollow me.โ