The closer they drew to the town, the harder it was to ignore the rustling whispers in her head. Sometimes Nina could swear she heard voices, the dim shapes of words just beyond understanding. Other times the sound dwindled to the rush of wind through reeds.
Tell them, my love.
But what was there to tell? The sound might be nothing. It might be an auditory hallucination, some remnant of her bout withย parem.
Or it might be the dead, drawing her on.
The town itself was located in the shadow of a low mountain range, beneath the hulking shape of what had once been a fort and then a munitions factory lodged into the cliffside high above it. It didnโt take long to realize that the old factory had been recommissioned for something newโthe traffic of wagons and men traveling in and out of the facility made that clearโbut for what?
There were no proper inns, only a public house with two guest rooms that were already occupied. The owner told them that the convent up the hill sometimes boarded lodgers.
โLadies at the convent there take in washing for the soldiers,โ he said. โThey donโt mind having a few extra hands around for chores.โ
โMust be busy these days with the old factory running,โ said Nina in Fjerdan. โGood for business.โ
The owner shook his head. โSoldiers came in about a year ago. Didnโt hire any locals, poured their filth into the river.โ
โYou donโt know that,โ said a heavyset woman shelling peas at the bar. โThe river was full of runoff from the mines before the soldiers
started up the smokestacks again.โ She cut a long glance at Nina and the others. โDonโt pay to speak trouble to strangers.โ
They took the hint and headed out to the main street. It was a surprisingly pretty town, the buildings small and snug, their roofs peaked, their doors brightly painted in yellow, pink, and blue.
Leoni gazed up the mountain to where the old factory loomed, its big square buildings pocked with dark windows. โThey could just be manufacturing rifles or ammunition.โ
Adrikโs expression was bleaker than usual. โOr some of those new armored tanks theyโre so fond of.โ
โIf thatโs the case, weโll have some intelligence to pass along to the capital,โ Nina said. She hoped that wouldnโt be all.
Nina was surprised to glimpse signs of the Saints here, in places she knew were not dedicated to the Hringsa network. She had seen them on the road tooโaltars bearing the symbol of Sankta Alina instead of Djelโs sacred ash tree, an icon of Sankt Demyan of the Rime perched in a shop window, two thorny boughs crossed above a door to signify the blessing of Sankt Feliks. There had been talk of miracles and strange happenings throughout Ravka, and it seemed new fervor for the Saints had taken hold in Fjerda as well. It was risky to be so public about heresy with soldiers close by, but perhaps these were small acts of rebellion for the townspeople who resented the military men standing watch up at the factory.
The convent was located on the northern outskirts of town, almost directly down the slope from the factory. It was a round slab of milk- white stone with a turreted roof that made the building look like a tower in search of a castle. The large chapel it abutted was constructed of sturdy, rough-hewn logs and fronted by an entrance of ash branches woven into complicated knots.
They left their sledge in the stables and rang the bell at the conventโs side door. A young woman in the embroidered pale blue pinafore of a novitiate answered, and a moment later they were meeting the Wellmother. The older woman wore dark blue wool and had a round, apple-cheeked face, her skin deeply lined, as if it had been pleated into neat, pallid folds instead of wrinkled by age.
Nina made the introductions, explaining that she was serving as a translator for a merchant couple selling their wares, and asked if they might stay somewhere on the property while exploring the area.
โDo they have any Fjerdan at all?โ โBine,โ said Adrik.ย Some.
โDe forenen,โ added Leoni with a smile.ย Weโre learning.
โAnd where is your husband?โ the Wellmother asked Nina.
โGone to the waters,โ Nina said, dropping her eyes to the silver ring on her hand. โMay Djel watch over him.โ
โNot a soldier, then?โ โA fisherman.โ
โAh. Well,โ she said, as if dissatisfied with such a bloodless death. โI can give you and the Zemeni woman rooms on the bottom floor near the kitchens. But her husband will have to stay in the stables. I doubt heโd be much harm to the girls,โ she said with a glance at the pinned sleeve of Adrikโs coat, โbut even so.โ
It was the kind of thoughtless comment people often made around Adrik, but all he did was smile pleasantly and offer up payment for the week with his remaining hand.
The Wellmother instructed them on the routine of the convent as she led them through the dining hall and then down to the stable. โThe doors are locked at ten bells every night and are not reopened until the morning. We ask that you keep to reading or silent meditation at that time so as not to disturb the girls at their studies.โ
โAre they all novitiates?โ Nina asked.
โSome will become Springmaidens. Others are here to be educated until they return to their families or husbands. What are you transporting under there anyway?โ the Wellmother asked, lifting the corner of the tarp attached to the sledge.
Ninaโs instinct was to slap the womanโs hand away. Instead, she stepped forward eagerly and reached for the ties securing the tarp. โThis couple has invented a new form of rifle loader.โ
Right on cue, Leoni drew a colorful pamphlet from her coat. โTheyโre affordably priced, and weโre projecting big sales in the new year,โ she said. โWeโre looking for a few small investors. If youโd like a demonstrationโโ
โNo, indeed,โ the Wellmother said quickly. โIโm sure theyโre most impressive, but Iโm afraid the conventโs finances are simply too tight for, uh โฆ speculative ventures.โ
It never failed.
โWe serve our meals at six bells following morning prayersโwhich
you are of course encouraged to joinโand in the evening again at six bells. Bread and salt are available in the kitchens. Water is rationed.โ
โRationed?โ asked Nina.
โYes, we draw from the well at Felsted, and that requires quite a journey.โ
โIsnโt Gjela closer?โ
The Wellmotherโs plump lips pursed. โThere are many ways in which we show service to Djel. The trip provides good opportunity for quiet contemplation.โ
Riverโs gone sour up by the old fort.ย So the Wellmother didnโt want her charges drinking from this tributary of the river, but she also wasnโt willing to discuss it. It was possible the Springmaidens were just laundering soldiersโ uniforms, but it was also likely they knew what was happening at the factory.
As soon as the Wellmother had gone, Adrik said, โLetโs walk.โ
Nina checked the lashings of the tarp and they headed up the side of the mountain, setting a leisurely pace and making a show of chattering loudly in Zemeni. They paralleled the road that led to the factory, but they took time to point out birds and stop at vistas overlooking the valley. Three tourists out for a walk and nothing more.
โWill you be all right in the stables?โ Leoni asked as they made their way through a grove of pines.
โIโll manage,โ said Adrik. โA one-armed lecher can still prey upon the horses. The Wellmother never thought of that.โ
Leoni laughed and said, โItโs the wolves who go unseen that eat the most sheep.โ Adrik snorted but he looked almost pleased.
Behind them, Nina rolled her eyes. If she was going to be forced to continue a mission with two people starting this dance of cautious compliments and sudden blushes, it might well kill her. It was one thing to find happiness and lose it, quite another to have someone elseโs happiness thrust at you like an unwanted second slice of cake. Then again, sheโd never refused a second slice of cake.ย This will be good for me, she told herself.ย Like green vegetables and lessons in arithmetic. And Iโll probably enjoy it just as much.
Eventually they picked their way to a gap in the trees that overlooked the entrance to the factory. At the sight of it, the rustling of voices rose in her mind, louder than the wind shaking the pines. Two soldiers were posted at the huge double doors, and there were more stationed along the
parapets.
โIt was a fort before it was a factory,โ Nina said, pointing to what looked like old niches carved into the stone walls. A large reservoir sat behind the main building, and she wondered if the water was used for cooling whatever machinery was operating inside.
โItโs a good strategic vantage, I suppose,โ said Adrik in his dreary voice. โHigh ground. A safe place to shelter in an attack or when the river spills its banks.โ
The might of Djel, thought Nina.ย The Wellspring, the wrath of the river.
Two smokestacks belched gray-blue smoke into the late-afternoon sky as they watched a covered wagon roll up to the gate. It was impossible to tell what passed between the guards and the driver.
โWhat do you think is in that wagon?โ asked Adrik.
โCould be anything,โ said Leoni. โOre from the mines. Fish. Bushels ofย jurda.โ
Nina ran her hands over her arms and glanced at the smokestacks. โNotย jurda.ย I would smell it.โ Small doses of ordinaryย jurdaย had helped her to survive her ordeal withย paremย but had left her with an acute sensitivity to it. โWhat do you think?โ she asked Adrik. โDo we stay?โ
โI think I want a look inside that fort, but Iโll settle for knowing what the hell they leaked into the water.โ
โIt could be from the mines,โ said Leoni.
โIf it were the mines, the fishermen would have rioted to have them shut down. Fear is keeping the townspeople quiet.โ
โLetโs draw samples of the water,โ Leoni said. โIf I can isolate the pollutants, we might be able to figure out what theyโre doing inside the fort.โ
โYouโre equipped for that?โ Adrik said.
โNot exactly. I came prepared to forge documents, not test for poisons.
But I could probably rig something up.โ
โIf I told you we needed magical dust to make me vomit peppermints, youโd probably say you couldย rig something up.โ
โProbably,โ Leoni replied with a grin. โIโd just have to try.โ
Adrik shook his head in disbelief. โIโm getting tired even contemplating it.โ
โIโll need time,โ said Leoni, and Nina saw a troubled shadow pass over her face. โPoisons are tricky work.โ
โWe canโt stay here too long without drawing suspicion,โ said Adrik. โThereโs not enough trade passing through to justify it. And I donโt want us snowbound if a bad storm hits.โ
โI know,โ Nina said. She had pushed them to come here, and she hoped they had more to find than a recommissioned munitions factory. โGive it a week.โ
A silence followed, and Nina sensed the shared concern that passed between Leoni and Adrik.
Leoni touched Ninaโs hand gently. โNina โฆโ she began, and Nina knew what she was going to say.
The whispering rose in her head again, but Nina ignored it. Instead, she looked out at the valley, at the dense forest, the gleaming tributary slicing through the trees like a glittering chain in a jewel box, the tidy little town bisected by the road. It did not feel like enemy territory here. It felt like a quiet place where people came to build their homes and try to make a life for themselves, where the business of soldiers and wars was nothing but an intrusion.
In another life, she and Matthias might have made their home in a place like this.ย They would have argued about how close they should live to a city. Nina would have longed for people and excitement; Matthias would have grumbled for quiet. They would have found a way to compromise. They would have argued and kissed to make up. But where would they have ever felt safe together? In Fjerda? In Ravka? Was there anyplace they would have truly been free and happy? Another life, another world.
Itโs time, Nina. Return me to my god.
Nina drew in a long breath and said, โIโll need two days to take him where the water is clean.โ
Saying the words was like feeling her heart split, the heavy swing of the axe, the blade sinking past bark to the soft white wood.
โYou shouldnโt go alone,โ said Adrik without enthusiasm. He sounded like he was contemplating putting on a sodden pair of socks.
โI can go by myโโ
A noise sounded from somewhere below. They stilled, bodies tense, waiting. Silence, and then a shout.
โThe meadow,โ whispered Nina.
Adrik started down the hill and signaled for them to follow, his glum demeanor vanishing in an instant as the hardened fighter emerged. They
kept to the shadows, moving with care, creeping closer. โSoldiers,โ hissed Leoni, peering through the branches.
A group of young men in gray Fjerdan uniforms were gathered around the stream, shouting at one another. Two were on horseback; the others had dismounted and were trying to calm a horse that had somehow gotten spooked and thrown its rider. Nina could see the soldierโs boot had caught in the stirrup and he was being dragged through the stream as the horse cantered back and forth in the shallows, barely missing the soldierโs head with its hooves. All it would take was a single heavy strike and the boyโs skull would be crushed.
โWe should help them,โ said Leoni.
โWe should get back to the safety of the town,โ said Adrik. โTheyโll manage.โ
โAnd thatโs one less Fjerdan soldier to plague us,โ Nina said beneath her breath.
Nina.
Adrik and Leoni stared at her. Adrik looked like a mourner in search of a wake, and even Leoniโs usual sunshine was clouded with worry.
She didnโt approve. Adrik didnโt approve. Hell, in her heart, Nina didnโt approve either.
But since Matthias had left herโbeenย takenย from herโNina had lost the part of her that cared. What was the point of it all? You saved one life only to see another taken. The good perished. And the bad? Nina looked at the young Fjerdans in their uniforms, killers in the making. What right did they have to survive when her Matthias, her beautiful barbarian, was gone?
Nina.
She wished she could clap her hands over her ears and tell him to leave her alone. But that was the last thing she wanted.
Must you insist I stay human?ย she complained silently.
I know how strong you are, Nina. My death will not be the thing that defeats you.
โWhat are we even supposed to do?โ Nina said aloud. โI know my way around horses,โ Leoni offered.
Adrik rolled his eyes. โHere we go.โ
โIt will ingratiate us with the locals,โ insisted Leoni, already pushing through the trees. โWe could use some soldier friends.โ
โSoldier friends?โ Nina asked incredulously.
โCome on,โ said Adrik. โIf we leave Leoni to her own devices, she may invite them to a slumber party.โ
โGedrenen,โ yelled one of the soldiers as they entered the clearing.
Strangers.ย He sounded like a child.
โCan we be of help?โ Nina called in Fjerdan. โNo!โ he cried from the riverbank. โStay back!โ
That was when Nina realized they werenโt men at allโthey were young women dressed as Fjerdan soldiers.
Nina held up her hands to try to make peace. โLet us help your comrade. My Zemeni friend knows horses.โ She really hoped that was the case and not just Leoniโs optimistic take onย I once pet a pony.
Leoni walked to the edge of the stream, making a low nickering sound and murmuring in Zemeni. She moved slowly left, then right, arms spread wide.
โI need rope,โ she said quietly, without looking away from the horse.
One of the riders came forward. She had to be six feet tall and was all wiry muscle. Her skin had the warm, tawny brown cast that usually indicated Hedjut ancestry this far north, and a few wisps of russet hair were visible beneath her army-issue cap. Now that they were closer Nina could see their uniforms were all too big, ill fitting.ย Stolen.
The tall girlโs chin jutted forward. She was around Ninaโs age, and whatever fear she had at being discovered, she was hiding it well. She tossed the rope to Nina, who passed it to Leoni, keeping her distance. What were these girls doing? Women didnโt serve in the Fjerdan military. They didnโt ride often, and when they did, they certainly didnโt ride astride. They didnโt even wear trousers, just heavy skirts intended to preserve their modesty.
The girl caught in the stirrups moaned, struggling to right herself in the shallows. She had straw-yellow hair that had come loose around her shoulders, and she was bleeding badly from a cut on her forehead. But she was alive and her skull was still in one pieceโfor the moment.
Leoni kept her eyes fastened on the horse as she twisted the rope into a lasso. She swung it in gentle, lazy loops, her voice continuing that low, soothing murmur as they all stood watching. Then, without breaking her rhythm, she tossed the lasso in a gentle arc. It landed perfectly over the horseโs head, and the beast reared with a high whinny. Leoni moved left and right again, turning the rope, leaning back, using her strength but not fighting. At last the horse settled.
The tall girl who had given Nina the rope stepped forward, but Leoni gave a quick shake of her head.
โLet her be,โ Nina said quietly. A flush spread over the girlโs sharp jaw.
Leoni approached the horse slowly and rested her hand on its neck, stroking its mane down to the withers. โSomething scare you?โ she said in Zemeni, cautiously making her way around the horseโs flank. She bent to the stirrup but gestured to the girl lying glazed-eyed in the water to stay still. She didnโt want to risk the horse shying again. Nina hoped the girl was conscious enough to understand. โNothing to worry about,โ murmured Leoni.
She released the girlโs boot from the stirrup, then quickly tugged on the rope and led the horse away.
For a long moment the fallen girl lay in the water. Then she released a sob and pushed herself up. Her companions ran to her, pulling her from the stream.
Leoni brought the horse to where Nina was standing with the tall girl. โAny idea what spooked him?โ she asked in Zemeni.
Nina translated, but the tall girl didnโt respond, she just narrowed her coppery eyes. โWhat are you doing out here?โ
โOther than saving your friendโs life?โ Nina replied mildly. โI hardly think she would have died.โ
โNo? Just bled until she passed out from her concussion or until that horse trampled her into a coma?โ
โWe had it under control,โ she insisted. Then she glanced up at the trees. โYou came from the northern woods. Thereโs nothing up there.โ
โSo we soon learned. Weโre new to these parts. Is exploring considered a crime in Gรคfvalle?โ
โThereโs a vantage of the factory up that way.โ
โAh!โ said Nina, and turned to Adrik and Leoni. โThe building we saw was some kind of factory.โ Best to keep to their ruse in case any of these women spoke a little Zemeni. She turned back to the tall one. โWe thought it looked a bit like a fort. What is it they make there?โ she asked innocently.
โIt isnโt my business and I doubt itโs yours. Youโre staying at the convent?โ
Just how muchย didย this girl know, and why was she so hostile? Maybe she was a soldierโs sister, raised to be suspicious. Ninaโs hands twitched,
and she felt the bone shards shift. She didnโt want to hurt this girl, but she would if she had to. The last thing they needed was someone running home to talk about the strangers in the woods who had been spying on the factory. Then the tall girl clenched her fists and said, โI โฆ Will you not tell the Wellmother you saw us here?โ
Suddenly, the girlโs defensiveness made more sense. The stolen uniforms. The excursion into the woods in the middle of the day. She had been trying to go on the attack, but she was legitimately frightened of being discovered.
โYouโre novitiates?โ Nina asked.
โWeโre all being educated at the convent. Some will marry. Some will become Springmaidens and give their lives to Djel.โ She didnโt sound like either prospect excited her.
Nina adopted a more serious mien and realized it was Matthiasโ manner she was mimicking. โRiding astride, wearing trousers, cavorting in the woods with no chaperone โฆ It would be irresponsible for us not to say something to the Wellmother, especially given the generosity of our hosts.โ
The tall girl turned ashen, and Nina felt a stab of guilt. If she really was close to Ninaโs age, she was too old to be a novitiate. All of them were. Were these the outsiders, then? The girls who hadnโt been chosen for brides? What happened to Fjerdan women who didnโt find a place as wives or mothers? Ravka was broken in many ways, but at least there Nina had been allowed to train as a soldier, to become what she was meant to be.
Free to fight and die alongside your men? Yes, Matthias. Free.
What would he have made of these girls in their stolen clothes? โWhere did you get those uniforms?โ Nina asked.
โThe laundry. The soldiers send their clothes to the convent for cleaning.โ
โThen youโre a thief too,โ said Nina. She might feel for these girls, but she wasnโt about to break cover for them.
โWe were only borrowing them! It was a lark. We wonโt do it again.โ
Nina doubted that. This wasnโt the first or the last time these girls would โborrowโ uniforms or horses. From a distance, they could maintain the ruse that they were soldiers out to train and roam the countryside with a freedom they would never otherwise enjoy. But at
what risk? Nina couldnโt imagine the punishment if they were discovered.
โWhat say you, Adrik?โ Nina asked, deferring to the man in the party as a proper Fjerdan girl wouldโeven if he was a foreigner.
Adrik cast a judgmental eye over the novitiates, pretending to consider. โVery well. Let us not speak of this day.โ
Nina nodded to the tall girl, whose shoulders sagged in relief. The others looked relieved too as they pulled their injured friend onto a saddle.
โGet her home and healed,โ Nina said with the prim superiority of a student who would never, ever break the rules. โYou should say thanks tonight in your prayers to Djel that he would tolerate such recklessness in his servants.โ
The tall girl bowed. โDjel jerendem.โ She mounted her horse.
โAnd we had better not see you out here again!โ said Adrik in clumsy Fjerdan.
โNo, sir. Of course not,โ said the girl, but as she turned, Nina glimpsed the defiant spark in her copper eyes. The others might be cowed, but not this girl. She had a different kind of heart. She would ride. She would hunt. She would fight when she could. And that was how she would stay alive.
When the novitiates had gone from the clearing, Nina said, โTheyโre not going to talk.โ
โNo,โ said Adrik. โThey were clearly terrified that weโd be the ones to speak to the Wellmother. Letโs fill our canteens. We can take the samples back to the stables.โ
But Nina wasnโt quite ready to leave the mountain. The whispering had started again, and she wasnโt going to ignore it this time. โI want to take another look at the factory.โ
โWhy?โ
How to answer that?ย โI โฆ I just think there might be more to see.โ The chorus inside her sighed.
Adrik looked skeptical. โGo, but be careful. And doย notย engage on your own, understood?โ Nina nodded, but apparently Adrik saw something he didnโt like in her expression. โNina, do not engage. If youโre caught, it will put all of our operations here in Fjerda at risk. That is an order, not a request.โ
โYes, sir,โ Nina said, and she managed it without a hint of the
frustration she felt. Obedience had never been one of her strong points, and sheโd been making her own decisions for far too long. But she wanted to be a soldier for Ravka, and that meant learning to do what she was told all over again.
Trassel didnโt like following my orders.ย I bribed him with bits of steak.
Really, Matthias? Should I just try biting Adrik the next time he annoys me? I am not aย wolf. I am a gently bred lady โฆ though steak does sound good.
โLeoni and I will take samples here and at the tributary closer to town,โ Adrik said, and Nina was glad he couldnโt read her mind. โBe back before dark.โ
Nina headed into the trees, taking her time cutting back to the factory on the off chance she was observed. She didnโt follow the road this time. Instead she listened to the whispers, and she didnโt think she was imagining their excitement as she scaled the mountain, letting them guide her farther east. Their anticipation drove her tired legs onward, the rustle growing louder, the sound of a crowd chattering its excitement before the start of a play. Or perhaps an execution.
It was almost sunset when she finally saw the fort come back into view.ย Why does adventure always involve so much hiking?ย she wondered. Sheโd somehow tracked behind the building so that she was on the far side of it, closest to the eastern wing. At this angle she could see there was a dirt road that led to another gate, two bored-looking guards bracketing it. This part of the factory seemed to have fallen into disrepair. Some of the windows were broken, and she saw no signs of occupation.
She also had a better view of the reservoir, its retaining wall carved into the shape of a giant ash tree, its branches and roots radiating in thick, twisting bulges of hewn stone. No doubt it had been blessed when the dam had been built. Wherever water was used or contained, the Fjerdans said prayers, at mills and in harbors, in the great northern mines where holy words were carved into the ice every season. A round sluice gate sat at the base of the dam, and Nina could see refuse in the mud that surrounded it. Soiling Djelโs waters was considered a crime punishable by death in Fjerda. Perhaps these soldiers werenโt particularly religious.
There was nothing to see here, but the whispering in Ninaโs head had risen to a clamor, and now she could hear that the voices were not excitedโthey were anguished.
Nina reached out with her power, the thing thatย paremย had created within her. She felt the flow of the invisible river that no man could contain. It was death, a cold and inevitable tide, and when she focused, she could sense where it rushed and where it eddied. She let her mind dive into that cold, seeking those voices.
Where are you?ย she asked the darkness.ย Who are you?
She gasped as the current seized her, as if to drag her along, to pull her into the deep. The wailing inside her rose like a terrible flood. Death wanted to claim her. She could feel it. And did some part of her want to let it have its way?
Nina, come back.
The water did not feel cold anymore. It felt kind. Like a welcome.
Nina. Do not give in to the tide.
Ninaโs eyes flashed open. The world of the living enveloped her again
โbirdsong, the wet scent of the soil beneath her boots, the sound of small creatures moving through the brush.
She looked at the hulking shape of the factory and felt a deep chill sink into her bones. The voices had receded, but she could still hear them crying. She knew who they were. Women and girls in the hundreds. All of them dead.
Here, on this mountaintop, Nina was surrounded by graves.