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Chapter no 6 – Nikolai

King of Scars

โ€ŒNIKOLAI AND TOLYA BROUGHT David and Nadia back to the capital by way of the underground tunnel that stretched from the Gilded Bog all the way to the grounds of the Grand Palaceโ€”fifteen miles of travel far beneath the surface of the earth. Poor Tolya muttered to himself the entire way. In verse.โ€Œ

Nikolai would have liked to spare Tolya and his own ears the trauma of the journey, but his head of security had insisted he was fine. Besides, Nikolai had received word that the crowd of pilgrims camped outside the city walls had grown in recent days and that some were demanding an audience with the king. All he needed was for an overzealous zealot to hurl himself beneath the hooves of one of the royal riders. Nikolai didnโ€™t intend to make any martyrs today.

They emerged behind a noisy manmade waterfall not far from the royal stables, the path to it monitored by two of Nikolaiโ€™s most trusted palace guards. In their white-and-gold uniforms, dark hair parted neatly on the side, both of their faces cast in the solemn disinterest of soldiers at attention, the guards might have been brothers, but they couldnโ€™t have been less alike in disposition. Trukhin was always laughing and full of bravado; Isaak was so shy he often struggled to make eye contact.

The guards registered no surprise as Nikolaiโ€™s party appeared from between the hedges.

โ€œTrukhin,โ€ Nikolai said. โ€œWhat excitement did I miss on my travels?โ€ Trukhinโ€™s stern expression gave way instantly to an easy smile.

โ€œWelcome back, Your Highness. Not much to report here, though an Inferni did set fire to the woods behind the lake.โ€

Sounds like Kuwei. Nikolai admired the Shu boyโ€™s gift for mayhem. Especially because the young Inferni was Zoyaโ€™s problem to manage.

โ€œThat doesnโ€™t sound too bad.โ€

Trukhinโ€™s grin turned rueful. โ€œI believe the minister of defense was caught in the blaze. But he suffered no injuries.โ€

โ€œAs long as no one set fire to the minister of finance.ย Cav anenye?โ€ Nikolai asked Isaak in Zemeni. He had discovered the guardโ€™s gift for languages during his service at Halmhend and encouraged Isaak to foster those talents.

Isaak bowed slightly. โ€œYour accent is coming along nicely, Your Majesty.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t coddle me, Isaak.โ€

The guard cleared his throat. โ€œWell, the Zemeni word forย dayย isย can, notย cav. Unless you meant to ask how my donkey is going.โ€

โ€œI wish your donkey well, but you should always feel free to correct me when I make mistakes.โ€

โ€œYes, Your Highness,โ€ Isaak said uncomfortably.

โ€œDonโ€™t worry,โ€ said Nikolai as they turned their backs on the gardens and headed toward the Grand Palace. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t happen often.โ€

Easy words. Old words. Harder to prove true with every passing day. Through the trees, Nikolai glimpsed the gilded terraces of the Grand

Palace, stacked like the frosted layers of the worldโ€™s most expensive tea cake. His ancestors had enjoyed an excess of everythingโ€”except good taste. But he would not be stopping there just yet. He veered left toward the Little Palace instead, passing through the woods and emerging to the sight of its golden domes, the gleaming blue lake with a tiny island at its center visible just beyond.

Nikolai had spent plenty of time here, and yet there was something about this placeโ€”the soaring towers, the ancient wooden walls inlaid with mother-of-pearl and carved with every manner of flower and beast. He always felt he was traveling into foreign territory, leaving the new world behind for someplace where dark bargains might be struck. He should probably stop reading novels.

Grisha were everywhere in their brightly coloredย keftaโ€”uniforms Tolya and Tamar had resolutely refused to wear, opting for the olive drab of First Army soldiers instead. The twins kept their arms bare, their deep bronze skin tattooed with the markings of the Sun Saint.

Zoya and Genya were already waiting in the war room. โ€œYouโ€™re late,โ€ said Zoya.

โ€œIโ€™m the king,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œThat means youโ€™re early.โ€

For most state matters, the Grisha Triumvirate attended Nikolai at the Grand Palace, in the same room where he met with his ministers and governors. But when they needed to talkโ€”really talk without fear of being overheardโ€”they came here, to the chambers the Darkling had built. He was a man who had excelled at keeping secrets; the war room had no windows and only a single entrance that couldnโ€™t be accessed without breaching the Little Palace itself. The walls were lined with maps of Ravka made in the old style. They would have enchanted Nikolai as a childโ€”had he ever been allowed anywhere near the place.

โ€œWeโ€™re in trouble,โ€ Nikolai said without preamble, and settled himself in a chair at the head of the table with a cup of tea perched on his knee.

โ€œSaying weโ€™re in trouble is like saying Tolya is hungry,โ€ replied Zoya, ignoring Tolyaโ€™s scowl and pouring herself tea from the samovar. โ€œAm I supposed to be surprised?โ€

She had dressed in the blue woolย keftaย that most Etherealki wore in cold weather, silver embroidery at its cuffs and hem, gray fox fur at its collar. She showed little sign of fatigue despite the days and nights of travel that had brought them back to Os Alta. Zoya was always a general, and her impeccable appearance was part of her armor. Nikolai glanced at his perfectly shined boots. It was a trait he respected.

โ€œBut this is particularly delicious trouble,โ€ he said.

โ€œOh no,โ€ groaned Genya. โ€œWhen you talk that way, things are always about to go horribly wrong.โ€ Herย keftaย was Corporalki red, only a shade darker than her hair, its cuffs embroidered in dark blueโ€”a combination worn only by Genya and her regiment of Tailors. But the cuffs and hem of Genyaโ€™sย keftaย were also detailed with golden thread to match the sun emblazoned over her eyepatch in remembrance of Alina Starkov. Nikolai had added the sun in ascendance to his own Lantsov heraldry, a gesture he could admit had been driven by the need to court public opinion as much as by personal sentiment. Still, it sometimes felt like Alina was trailing them from room to room, her presence as tangible as the heat of a summer sun, though the girl was long gone.

Nikolai tapped his spoon against his cup. โ€œDavid and Nadia are close to perfecting the weapons system on theย izmarsโ€™ya.โ€

David didnโ€™t bother to look up from the reading heโ€™d brought with him

โ€”a treatise on osmotic filters that Nikolai had found most helpful. โ€œYouโ€™re right, Genya. This must be very serious trouble.โ€

Genya cocked her head to the side. โ€œWhy do you say that?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s starting with the good news.โ€

Nikolai and Zoya exchanged a glance, and Zoya said, โ€œHiram Schenck approached the king at the trade summit in Ivets. The Kerch Merchant Council knows about our underwater fleet.โ€

Tamar pushed back her chair in frustration. โ€œDamn it. I knew we had a leak at the old facility. We should have moved to Lazlayon sooner.โ€

โ€œThey were going to find out eventually,โ€ said Tolya.

David mumbled, โ€œThere are peaceable applications for the submersibles. Research, exploration.โ€

Heโ€™d never liked to think of himself as a maker of weapons. But they couldnโ€™t afford to be so naive.

Tamar leaned against the wall and propped up her heel. โ€œLetโ€™s not pretend we donโ€™t know what the Kerch intend to use our sharks for.โ€

Hiram Schenck and the merchants of the Kerch Council claimed they wanted theย izmarsโ€™yaย as a defensive measure against their Shu neighbors and the possibility of Fjerdan blockades. But Nikolai knew better. They all did. The Kerch already had a target in mind: Zemeni ships.

The Zemeni had been building up their navy and establishing their own trade routes. They no longer needed Kerch ports or Kerch vessels, and for the first time, the mighty Kerch, who had ruled the seas and the worldโ€™s trade undisputed for so long, had competition to worry about. Not only that, but the Zemeni had advantages the Kerch couldnโ€™t match

โ€”extensive farmland, timber, and mines of their own. If Nikolai was honest, he was jealous of the way the young country had thrived. This was what a nation could do without enemies at their borders, unburdened by the constant threat of war.

But if the Kerch Merchant Council obtained the plans to Ravkaโ€™s fleet of sharks, there would be no quarter for Zemeni ships. They could be attacked anywhere, and the Kerch would regain their monopoly of the seasโ€”a monopoly that had made them one of the wealthiest and most powerful nations in the world, despite their tiny size.

โ€œThe Zemeni have been strong allies,โ€ said Tolya. โ€œTheyโ€™ve lent us aid, stood with us when no one else would.โ€

Tamar folded her arms. โ€œBut they canโ€™t forgive our loans. The Kerch control Ravkaโ€™s debt. They could cripple us with the stroke of a pen.โ€

Nikolai contemplated the map before him. Shu Han to the south. Fjerda to the north. Ravka caught between them. If Ravka couldnโ€™t maintain its borders, his nation would become little more than a

battleground between two great powersโ€”and Nikolai had promised his people peace, a chance to rebuild. Both the Fjerdans and the Shu possessed vast standing armies, while the Ravkan army was depleted from years of waging war on two fronts. When Nikolai had taken command of Ravkaโ€™s forces after the civil war, he had known they could not match their enemiesโ€™ numbers. Ravka could only survive by using innovation to stay one step ahead. His country did not want to be at war again.ย Heย did not want to be at war again. But to build flyers, ships, or weapons in any quantity that would matter, they needed money and access to resources that only Kerch loans could provide. The decision seemed simpleโ€”except no decision was ever simple, even if one was willing to put thoughts of honor and allies aside.

โ€œYouโ€™re both right,โ€ Nikolai said. โ€œWe need the Zemeni and we need the Kerch. But we canโ€™t choose two partners in this dance.โ€

โ€œAll right,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œWho do we want to go home with when the music stops?โ€

Tamar tapped her heel against the wall. โ€œIt has to be the Kerch.โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s not make any rash decisions,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œPick the wrong partner and we could be in for a disappointing night.โ€

He removed a vial of cloudy green liquid from his pocket and set it on the table.

Zoya drew in a sharp breath and Genya leaned forward. โ€œIs that what I think it is?โ€ asked Zoya.

Nikolai nodded. โ€œBecause of the information we gleaned from Kuwei Yul-Bo, our Alkemi are close to perfecting an antidote toย parem.โ€

Genya pressed her hands together. There were tears in her single amber eye. โ€œThenโ€”โ€

Nikolai hated to quell her hope, but they all needed to understand the reality of the situation. โ€œUnfortunately, the formula for the antidote requires huge amounts ofย jurdaย stalks. Ten times the number of plants it would take to create an ounce ofย jurda parem.โ€

Zoya picked up the vial, turned it over in her hands. โ€œJurdaย only grows in Novyi Zem. No other climate will sustain it.โ€

โ€œWe need an antidote,โ€ said Tamar. โ€œAll of our intelligence points to the Shu and the Fjerdans being closer to developing a usable strain ofย parem.โ€

โ€œMore Grisha enslaved,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œMore Grisha used as weapons against Ravka. More Grisha dead.โ€ She set the vial back on the table. โ€œIf

we give the Kerch the plans to theย izmarsโ€™ya, weโ€™ll lose Novyi Zem as an ally and our chance to protect our Grishaโ€”maybe the worldโ€™s Grishaโ€” fromย parem.โ€ With a tap of her finger, she set the vial spinning in a slow circle. โ€œIf we say no to the Kerch, then we wonโ€™t have the money to adequately arm and equip the First Army. Either way we lose.โ€

Genya turned to Nikolai. โ€œYouโ€™ll make a diplomatic trip, then. Visit the Kerch, visit the Zemeni. Do that thing you do where you use too many words to say something simple and confuse the issue.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d like nothing better than another opportunity to talk,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œBut Iโ€™m afraid I have more bad news.โ€

Genya slumped in her chair. โ€œThereโ€™s more?โ€

โ€œThis is Ravka,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œThereโ€™s always more.โ€

Nikolai had known this moment was coming, and yet he still wished he could make some kind of excuse and bring the meeting to a halt.ย So sorry, friends. Iโ€™m needed in the greenhouses on a matter of national security. No one else can prune the peonies.ย Though everyone here knew what had been happening to him, it still felt like a dirty secret. He did not want to let the demon into the room. But this had to be said.

โ€œWhile Zoya and I were away, the monster took hold of me again. I broke free at the dukeโ€™s estate and made a delightful sojourn to a local goose farm.โ€

โ€œBut the sleeping tonicโ€”โ€ Genya began.

โ€œThe monster is getting stronger.โ€ There, now. Heโ€™d said it. Not a bit of waver to his voice, not even the barest note of worry, though he wanted to choke on the words.

Genya shuddered. Better than anyone, she understood the darkness living inside Nikolai. It was tied to theย nichevoโ€™ya, to the very monsters that had terrorized her. The Darkling had set his shadow soldiers upon her when she betrayed him. She had lost an eye to his creatures, and their bites had left her body covered in scars that could not be tailored away. Nikolai still marveled at the particular cruelty of it. The Darkling had known that Genya valued beauty as her shield, so he had taken it from her. He had known that Nikolai relied on his mind, his talent for thinking his way out of any situation, so heโ€™d let the demon steal Nikolaiโ€™s ability to speak and think rationally. The Darkling could have killed either of them, but he had wanted to punish them instead. He might have been an ancient power, but he certainly had a petty streak.

โ€œDavid,โ€ Genya said, her skin pale beneath her scars. โ€œIs that

possible? Could it be getting stronger?โ€

David brushed his shaggy brown hair back from his eyes. โ€œIt shouldnโ€™t be,โ€ he said. โ€œNot after it was dormant for so long. But the power that created the presence inside the king wasnโ€™t ordinary Grisha power. It wasย merzost.โ€

โ€œAbomination,โ€ murmured Tolya.

โ€œAre we calling it a presence now?โ€ asked Nikolai. โ€œI preferred โ€˜monster.โ€™ Or โ€˜demon.โ€™ Even โ€˜fiendโ€™ has a nice ring.โ€ย The monster is me and I am the monster.ย And if Nikolai didnโ€™t laugh at it, he was fairly sure heโ€™d go mad.

โ€œWe can name it Maribel if it suits you,โ€ Zoya said, pushing away her empty cup. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter what we call it, only what it can do.โ€

โ€œIt matters if weโ€™re misunderstanding its nature,โ€ said David. โ€œYouโ€™ve read Grisha theory, Morozovaโ€™s journals. Grisha power cannot create life or animate matter, only manipulate it. Every time those limits are breached, there are repercussions.โ€

โ€œThe Shadow Fold,โ€ said Nikolai. The swath of darkness crawling with monsters had split Ravka in two, until Alina Starkov had destroyed it during the civil war. But the wound remainedโ€”a wasteland of dead sand where nothing green took hold, as if the Darklingโ€™s power had leached the very life from the land.ย Merzostย had created the Fold, the creatures inside it, as well as the Darklingโ€™s shadow soldiersโ€”and it was the same power that the Darkling had used to infect Nikolai.

David shrugged. โ€œThat power is unpredictable.โ€

โ€œWe donโ€™t know what may happen next,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œUsually a thrilling proposition, less so when a demon may take over my consciousness and try to rule Ravka by gnawing on my subjects.โ€ How did the words come so easilyโ€”even as he contemplated losing his mind and his will? Because they always had. And he needed them. He needed to build a wall of words and wit and reason to keep the beast at bay, to remember who he was.

To rid himself of the monster, Nikolai had allowed himself to be subjected to extreme heat and cold. He had brought in bewildered Sun Summoners to use their power on him with no discernible result except the sensation that he was being gently roasted from the inside. His agents had scoured libraries the world over and retrieved the journals of the legendary Fabrikator Ilya Morozova after months of excavation in the rubble of the Spinning Wheelโ€”all with nothing to show for it but

frustration. That frustration had led him to Ivets, to the bone bridge, in some futile attempt to draw a connection between the darkness within him and the strange happenings around Ravka. Maybe heโ€™d been hoping the Saints would present him with a miracle. But thus far, divine intervention had been in short supply.

โ€œSo you see the problem,โ€ he said now. โ€œI cannot travel without risking exposure, but I cannot stay in hiding at the capital without drawing suspicion and risking Ravkaโ€™s future with the Zemeni and the Kerch. Did I not promise particularly delicious trouble?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ said Genya. โ€œExactly what is delicious about this?โ€

โ€œThe way weโ€™re going to get out of it.โ€ Nikolai slouched back in his chair and stretched his legs, crossing them at the ankle. โ€œWeโ€™re going to throw a party.โ€

โ€œI see,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œHow drunk am I expected to get before this all starts looking better?โ€

โ€œI fear there isnโ€™t enough wine in all of Kiriginโ€™s cellars,โ€ conceded Nikolai. โ€œAnd I regret to say weโ€™ll need to be sober for this. The Kerch, the Zemeni, the Fjerdans, and the Shuโ€”weโ€™re going to bring them all here. Weโ€™re going to stage a little performance so that they know Ravka and its king are in perfect health.โ€

โ€œIs that all?โ€ said Zoya. โ€œWill you be taking up juggling as well?โ€ โ€œDonโ€™t be ridiculous,โ€ Nikolai replied. โ€œI already know how to juggle.

Literally and figuratively. Weโ€™ll renew our alliance with the Zemeniโ€”โ€ โ€œBut the Kerchโ€”โ€ Genya began.

โ€œAnd weโ€™ll give the Kerch a secret look at our prototype of the

izmarsโ€™ya.โ€

โ€œWe will?โ€ asked David.

โ€œIt will be an utter catastrophe, of course. Perhaps a nice explosion, some flying metal. Maybe we can pretend to drown a few sailors. Whatever will convince the Kerch our sharks arenโ€™t seaworthy and buy us the most time.โ€ Nikolai could almost feel the demon recede, feel its claws retract, driven back by the prospect of a course of action. โ€œWeโ€™re going to get all of those diplomats and merchants and politicians under our roof. We get everyone talking, and then we listen. Zoya, weโ€™ll need your Squallers to create an acoustic map so we have ears everywhere.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t like that,โ€ said Tolya.

โ€œI knew you wouldnโ€™t,โ€ said Nikolai.

โ€œIt isnโ€™t ethical to spy on oneโ€™s own guests.โ€

โ€œAnd that is why your sister is the head of my intelligence network. Kings need spies, and spies canโ€™t afford to fiddle about with ethics. Do you have a problem with overseeing an eavesdropping campaign, Tamar?โ€

โ€œNot in the least.โ€ โ€œThere you have it.โ€

Tamar considered. โ€œI like the idea of tackling them all at once, but what possible reason could we have for bringing our enemies and allies beneath this roof that wonโ€™t draw even more suspicion?โ€

โ€œWe could celebrate your Saintโ€™s day,โ€ said Genya enthusiastically. โ€œSledding, bonfiresโ€”โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œI donโ€™t want to wait for the Feast of Sankt Nikolai.โ€ He certainly couldnโ€™t count on the demon to delay. โ€œThe party will take place six weeks from now. Weโ€™ll call it โ€ฆ the Festival of Autumn Nonsense or something like that. Celebrate the equinox, gifts of the harvest, very symbolic.โ€

โ€œSix weeks?โ€ exclaimed Genya. โ€œWe canโ€™t possibly organize an event of that size in such a short time. The security concerns aloneโ€”โ€

Nikolai winked at her. โ€œIf I had anyone but Genya Safin in charge, I might be worried.โ€

Zoya rolled her eyes. โ€œShe doesnโ€™t need your flattery. She already thinks enough of herself.โ€

โ€œLet him go on,โ€ said Genya. โ€œDavid never gives me pretty compliments.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t I?โ€ asked David. He patted his pocket absently. โ€œI have the list of your good qualities you gave me somewhere.โ€

โ€œYou see what I endure.โ€

โ€œI need to keep Genya happy,โ€ said Nikolai, โ€œor she may turn on me.โ€ โ€œIย may turn on you,โ€ said Zoya.

โ€œOh, thatโ€™s unavoidable. But youโ€™re immune to compliments.โ€

Zoya lifted a shoulder. โ€œThen I suggest gifts of jewels and cash.โ€ She rose, and he could see her mind at work, the general contemplating her attack. She paced slowly before the map, the Fold appearing and disappearing behind her. โ€œIf weโ€™re going to bring these powers here, we need to have a better reason than a festival of gourds and wheat sheaves.โ€

โ€œZoya,โ€ Nikolai warned. He knew exactly what she was thinking. โ€œThis is the perfect opportunity for you to find a bride.โ€

โ€œAbsolutely not.โ€

But Zoya had the smug look of a woman who had won an argument before it had begun. โ€œAs you said, you can no longer travel, so itโ€™s essential that prospective brides come to you.โ€

He shook his head. โ€œI cannot take a bride. The risks are too great.โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s exactly why you must,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œWe can bring these

powers together. I even believe you have the charm and guile to outmaneuver our enemies. But how much time can you buy us? Six months? A year? Then what, Your Highness?โ€

โ€œItย isย an ideal reason to bring them all here,โ€ said Genya.

Nikolai grimaced. โ€œIย knewย you would turn on me. I just didnโ€™t think it would be so soon.โ€

โ€œNikolai,โ€ Zoya said quietly, โ€œyou said the monster is getting stronger.

If thatโ€™s true, this may be your best chance.โ€ย Yourย onlyย chance.ย The words hung unsaid. Ravka needed a queen. Nikolai needed an heir.

And yet every part of him rebelled at the thought of marriage. He did not have time to properly court someone with so much work to be done. He did not want to wed someone he barely knew. He did not dare reveal his secrets to a stranger. The danger to the woman he chose would be too great. All good reasons. All convincing excuses. But the monster had set the clock ticking.

Nikolai looked around the room. These people knew him as no one else did. They trusted him. But the demon lurking inside him might change all that. What if it grew stronger and continued to erode his control, to eat at the will that had guided him for so long?ย Abomination.ย He remembered the way Genya had shuddered. What ifย heย was the drowning man and it was Ravka he would drag down with him?

Nikolai drew in a long breath. Why put off the inevitable? Surely there was something to be said for the firing squad instead of slow torture. โ€œWeโ€™ll need to come up with a list of candidates,โ€ he said.

Zoya grinned. โ€œDone.โ€ She really was ready to be rid of him. โ€œYouโ€™re going to manage this like a military campaign, arenโ€™t you?โ€ โ€œItย isย a military campaign.โ€

โ€œMy ministers and ambassadors will have their suggestions too.โ€ โ€œWeโ€™ll invite them all,โ€ said Genya, drawing pen and ink toward her,

unable to disguise her excitement. โ€œWe can house everyone at the palace. Just think of all the dinners and teas and dancing.โ€

โ€œJust think of all the dinners and teas and dancing,โ€ said David glumly.

Genya set her pen aside and seized his hands. โ€œI promise to let you hide in your workshop. Just give me five events and one banquet.โ€

โ€œThree events and one banquet.โ€ โ€œFour.โ€

โ€œVery well.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re a dreadful negotiator,โ€ said Nikolai. โ€œShe would have settled for two.โ€

David frowned. โ€œIs that true?โ€

โ€œAbsolutely not,โ€ said Genya. โ€œAnd do shut up, Your Highness.โ€ โ€œWeโ€™ll need to run additional checks on all palace security,โ€ Nikolai

said to Tolya. โ€œAnticipate that every servant, every guard, every lady-in- waiting will be a potential spy or assassin.โ€

โ€œSpeaking of which,โ€ said Tamar. โ€œDunyasha Lazareva is dead.โ€ The Lantsov pretender. โ€œWho got her?โ€

โ€œNot one of ours. All I know is they found her splattered on the cobblestones outside the Church of Barter after the auction.โ€

Troubling. Had she been in Ketterdam to hunt him? She wasnโ€™t the only pretender to the Lantsov throne. Every few months it seemed a new person cropped up to declare that they were a lost Lantsov heir, someone who insisted theyโ€™d escaped the Darklingโ€™s slaughter of the royal family, or who claimed to be a by-blow of Nikolaiโ€™s fatherโ€”which, given the old kingโ€™s behavior, was entirely plausible. Of course, Nikolai might very well have less right to the Ravkan throne than half of them. He was the greatest pretender of them all.

โ€œThere will be another,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œSomeone else to claim the Lantsov name. All the more reason to produce an heir and secure the throne.โ€

โ€œI said I would choose a bride, and I will,โ€ Nikolai said, trying not to sound quite as petulant as he felt. โ€œIโ€™ll even get down on one knee and recite some love poetry if you like.โ€

โ€œI could make some selections,โ€ offered Tolya, looking genuinely happy for the first time since theyโ€™d gone underground at the Gilded Bog.

โ€œAn excellent idea. Keep it short and make sure it rhymes.โ€

Nikolai looked again at the old map of Ravkaโ€”violent, hopeless, unappeasable in its constant need. Ravka was his first love, an

infatuation that had begun in his lonely boyhood and that had only deepened with age. Whatever it demanded, he knew he would give. Heโ€™d been reckless with this country he claimed to love, and he could no longer let his fear dictate Ravkaโ€™s future.

โ€œSend the invitations,โ€ he said. โ€œLet the great royal romance begin.โ€

The rest of the day was spent in meetings with ministers, making plans for roads and aqueducts they could not afford, writing letters to the Kerch to request extensions on their loans, and finishing correspondence with everyone from the ruling Marchal of the Wandering Isle to the admirals in his navy requesting funds for repairs to the existing Ravkan fleet. All of it required concentration, finesse, and infinite patienceโ€”and all of it was less onerous than the work of finding a queen. But eventually evening came and Nikolai was forced to face Zoya and her army of prospective brides.

Nikolai and his general worked alone in his sitting room, a fire crackling in the tiled grate. The chamber still bore his fatherโ€™s stampโ€” the double eagle wrought in gold, the heavy carpets, the curtains so laden with brocade they looked as if they could be melted down and pressed into coins.

Zoyaโ€™s list went on and on, girl after girl, a march of willing maidens. โ€œThe brides are meant to be cover for our meetings with the Kerch and

the Zemeni,โ€ he said. โ€œPerhaps we could make this an opening gambit, less an engagement than a prelude to an engagement.โ€

Zoya straightened the papers before her. โ€œTwo birds with one stone, Your Highness. Itโ€™s a matter of efficiency. And expectation. You need a bride, and right now, youโ€™re still a worthy prospect.โ€

โ€œRight now?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re still young. You have all of your teeth. And Ravkaโ€™s military hasnโ€™t yet been trounced into the ground. Your hesitation is distinctly unkingly. It isnโ€™t like you.โ€

It wasnโ€™t. He excelled at decisions. He enjoyed them. It was like clearing the deadfall from a forest so that you could see an open path. But when he thought of choosing a wife, the branches crowded in on him and he found himself glad to be left alone in the dark. Perhaps not alone, precisely. He very much enjoyed the quiet of this room, the warmth of the fire, and the steel-spined harpy seated across from him.

Zoya snapped the paper she was holding to get his attention. โ€œPrincess

Ehri Kir-Taban.โ€

โ€œSecond in line for the Shu throne, yes?โ€

โ€œYes, and one of our most ideal prospects. Sheโ€™s young, amiable, and wildly popular among her own people. Very gifted on theย khatuur.โ€

โ€œTwelve strings or eighteen?โ€ โ€œWhy does it matter?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s important to have standards, Nazyalensky. Are you so sure the Shu will send her?โ€

โ€œThe invitation will be to the royal family. But given the way the people adore Princess Ehri, I suspect her older sister wouldnโ€™t be sorry to see her out of the country. If they send one of the younger sisters โ€ฆโ€ She shrugged. โ€œWeโ€™ll know they arenโ€™t serious about an alliance. But a Shu bride would free us from the need for Kerch gold.โ€

โ€œAnd how long do you suppose Ravka would remain independent after such a marriage? The Shu wouldnโ€™t need to invade. Weโ€™d be hand- lettering an invitation.โ€

โ€œThere is no perfect choice,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œWhoโ€™s next?โ€

She sighed and handed him another dossier. โ€œElke Marie Smit.โ€ Nikolai glanced down at the file. โ€œSheโ€™s barely sixteen!โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s from one of the most powerful families in Kerch. Besides, Alina was only a few years older when you threw away the Lantsov emerald on her.โ€

โ€œAnd so was I at the time.โ€ Thinking of Alina always smarted. He knew heโ€™d been a fool to propose to her. But at the time heโ€™d been more in need of a friend than a political ally. Or at least it had felt that way.

Zoya leaned back and cast him a long look. โ€œDonโ€™t tell me youโ€™re still mourning the loss of our little Sun Saint?โ€

Of course he was. Heโ€™d liked Alina, maybe heโ€™d even started to love her. And maybe some arrogant part of him had simply expected her to say yes. He was a king, after all, and a passable dancer. But sheโ€™d known the Darkling better than anyone. Maybe sheโ€™d sensed what was festering inside him. Years had passed, and yet her rejection still stung.

โ€œNever had a gift for pining,โ€ Nikolai said. โ€œThough I do like to show off my profile by staring mournfully out of windows.โ€

โ€œElke Marie Smitโ€™s parents will still marry her off, probably to some merchant. Iโ€™m sure sheโ€™d be better pleased with a king.โ€

โ€œNo. Next?โ€

โ€œNatasha Beritrova,โ€ said Zoya. โ€œThe Baroness Beritrova?โ€

Zoya looked studiously at the paper. โ€œThatโ€™s the one.โ€ โ€œSheโ€™sย fifty.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s a very well-off widow with lands near Caryeva that could prove essential in any southern campaign.โ€

โ€œNo, Zoya.โ€

Zoya rolled her eyes but picked up another paper. โ€œLinnea Opjer.โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œOh, for all the Saints and their suffering, Nikolai. Now youโ€™re just being difficult. Sheโ€™s twenty-three and, by all accounts, beautiful, even- tempered, has a talent for mathematicsโ€”โ€

Nikolai flicked a piece of lint from his cuff. โ€œIโ€™d expect nothing less of my half sister.โ€

Zoya stilled. She glowed like a painted icon in herย kefta, the firelight clinging to her like a halo. He swore no woman had ever looked better in blue. โ€œSo itโ€™s true, then?โ€

โ€œAs true as any story,โ€ Nikolai said. The rumors of his bastardy had circulated since well before his birth, and heโ€™d done his best to make peace with them. But heโ€™d only ever spoken the truth of his parentage to one personโ€”Alina Starkov. Why was he telling Zoya now? When heโ€™d told Alina, sheโ€™d reassured him, said he would still make a great king. Zoya would offer no such kindness. But still he unlocked the top of his desk and removed the miniature his mother had passed along to him. Sheโ€™d given it to him before sheโ€™d been forced into exile, when sheโ€™d told him who his father really wasโ€”a Fjerdan shipping magnate who had once served as emissary to the Grand Palace.

โ€œSaints,โ€ Zoya said as she stared down at the portrait. โ€œThe likeness

โ€”โ€

โ€œStriking, I know.โ€ Only the eyes were differentโ€”tiny daubs of blue instead of hazelโ€”and the beard, of course. But looking at the miniature was like gazing into the future, at a Nikolai grown a bit older, a bit graver, with lines at the corners of his eyes.

Zoya hurled it into the fire.

โ€œZoya!โ€ Nikolai shouted, lunging toward the grate. โ€œWhat kind of fool are you?โ€ she spat.

He reached his hand out, but the flames were too high, and he

recoiled, his rage igniting at the sight of the tiny canvas melting in its frame.

He whirled on her. โ€œYou forget yourself.โ€

โ€œThat portrait was as good as a loaded gun pointed at your heart.โ€ She jabbed her finger into his chest. โ€œRavkaโ€™s heart. And you would risk it all for what? Stupid sentiment?โ€

He seized her hand before she could jab him again. โ€œI am not one of your boys to be trifled with and lectured to. I am your king.โ€

Zoyaโ€™s blue eyes flashed. Her chin lifted as if to say,ย What is a mortal king to a queen who can summon storms?ย โ€œYou are my king. And I wish you toย remainย my king. Even if youโ€™re too daft to protect your claim to the throne.โ€

Maybe so, but he didnโ€™t want to hear it. โ€œYou had no right.โ€

โ€œI am sworn to protect you. To protect this realm. I had every right.โ€ She yanked her hand from his. โ€œWhat if Magnus Opjer came to this palace? Or was invited to some banquet with you in Kerch? All it would take is a single glance for people to knowโ€”โ€

โ€œThey already know,โ€ Nikolai said, feeling suddenly weary. โ€œOr theyโ€™ve guessed. There have been whispers since before I was born.โ€

โ€œWe should consider eliminating him.โ€

He clenched his fists. โ€œZoya, you will do no such thing. I forbid it. And if I find youโ€™ve acted without my consent, you will lose your rank and can spend the rest of your days teaching Grisha children how to make cloud animals.โ€

For a moment, it looked like she might lift her hands and raise a storm to blow the whole palace down. But then she bobbed a perfect curtsy that still somehow conveyed her contempt. โ€œOf course,ย moi tsar.โ€

โ€œAre you really so ruthless, Zoya? He is an innocent man. His only crime was loving my mother.โ€

โ€œNo, his crime was bedding your mother.โ€

Nikolai shook his head. Leave it to Zoya to cut right to the truth. Of course, he had no way of knowing if there had ever been love between his mother and his true father, but he hoped there had been something more than lust and regret.

He plucked his wineglass from his abandoned dinner tray and drank it to the dregs. โ€œOne day you will overstep and I will not be so forgiving.โ€

โ€œOn that day you may clap me in irons and throw me in your dungeons.โ€ She crossed the room, took the glass from his hands, and set

it on the table. โ€œBut tonight it is you who wears chains.โ€ Her voice was almost kind.

Nikolai released a sigh. โ€œAfter the business of this evening, it will be a relief.โ€

He unlocked his bedchamber. Servants were allowed access to clean only under Tolya and Tamarโ€™s supervision and only once a week. He had no personal valet and attended to his own bath.

Though it had become his nightly prison, the room itself was a sanctuary, maybe the only place in the palace that truly felt like it belonged to him. The walls were painted the deep blue of the sea, and the map above the mantel had been taken from the cabin heโ€™d once occupied as Sturmhond, when heโ€™d disguised himself as a privateer and sailed the worldโ€™s oceans aboard theย Volkvolny.ย A long glass stood propped on a tripod by the bank of windows. He couldnโ€™t see much through itโ€”the stars, the houses of the upper townโ€”but even having it there gave him some sense of peace, as if he might one day put his eye to it and see the heaving shoulders of a great gray sea.

โ€œSalt water in the veins,โ€ one of his crewmen had told him. โ€œWe go mad if weโ€™re too long onshore.โ€ Nikolai would not go mad, at least not from being landlocked. He had been born to be a king, even if his blood told a different story, and he would see his country to victory again. But first he had to make it through the night.

He sat down at the edge of the bed, removed his boots, and clamped the iron fetters around each of his ankles, then lay back. Zoya waited and he was grateful for it. It was a small thing to be the one to chain himself, but it allowed him to keep control for a short time longer. Only when Nikolai had fastened the fetter to his left wrist did she approach.

โ€œReady?โ€

He nodded. In these moments, her ruthlessness made it all a bit more bearable. Zoya would never indulge him, never shame him with pity.

She tugged on the special lock that David had rigged. With a sudden clanking whir, three chains shot across his body at the knees, midriff, and shoulders. He was strong when the beast came upon him, and they could take no chances. He knew this, should be used to the experience of restraint, and still all he wanted was to struggle.

Instead, he kept his easy demeanor and offered up his right wrist to Zoya. โ€œAnd what are your plans for the evening, darling jailer? Headed to a secret rendezvous?โ€

Zoya blew out a disgruntled breath as she bent to fasten the last fetter and check the security of the locks. โ€œAs if I have the time.โ€

โ€œI know you go somewhere late at night, Zoya,โ€ he prodded. He was curious but also eager for distraction. โ€œYouโ€™ve been seen on the grounds, though no one seems to know where you go.โ€

โ€œI go a lot of places, Your Highness. And if you keep prying into my personal life, Iโ€™ll have some suggestions as to whereย youย can go.โ€

โ€œWhy keep your dalliance a secret? Is he an embarrassment?โ€ Nikolai flexed his fingers, trying to even his breathing. Zoya turned her head and the lamplight caught the crescent of her cheekbone, gilding the dark waves of her hair. Heโ€™d never quite managed to make himself immune to her beauty, and he was glad his arms were chained to the bed or he might have been tempted to reach for her.

โ€œKeep still,โ€ she snapped. โ€œYouโ€™re worse than a child given too many cakes.โ€

Bless her poison tongue. โ€œYou could stay, Zoya. Entertain me with lively tales of your childhood. I find your spite very soothing.โ€

โ€œWhy donโ€™t I ask Tolya to soothe you by reciting some poetry?โ€ โ€œThere it is. So sharp, so acerbic. Better than any lullaby.โ€ As the last

lock clicked home, her sleeve slid back, revealing the silver cuff that circled her wrist, pieces of bone or what might have been teeth fused with the metal. He had never seen her without it and wasnโ€™t even sure if it could be removed. He knew a bit about amplifiers. He had even helped Alina secure the scales of the sea whip, the second of Morozovaโ€™s legendary amplifiers. But he could admit there was a whole universe he didnโ€™t know. โ€œTell me something, Nazyalensky. David said transgressing the boundaries of Grisha power has repercussions. But doesnโ€™t an amplifier do just that? Isย paremย any different?โ€

Zoya brushed her fingers over the metal, her face thoughtful. โ€œIโ€™m not sureย paremย is so different fromย merzost. Likeย merzost, the drug requires a terrible sacrifice for the power it grantsโ€”a Grishaโ€™s will. Even her life. But amplifiers are something else. Theyโ€™re rare creatures, tied to the making at the heart of the world, the source of all creation. When an amplifier gives up its life, that is the sacrifice the universe requires. The bond is forever forged with the Grisha who deals the killing blow. Itโ€™s a terrible thing, but beautiful as well.ย Merzostย isโ€”โ€

โ€œAbomination. I know. Itโ€™s a good thing I have such a fondness for myself.โ€

โ€œAll Grisha feel the pull towardย merzost, the hunger to see just what we might do if we had no limits.โ€

โ€œEven you?โ€

A small smile touched Zoyaโ€™s lips. โ€œEspecially me. Power is protection.โ€ Before Nikolai could ask what she meant, she added, โ€œBut the price for that particular kind of power is too high. When the Darkling tried to create his own amplifiers, the result was the Fold.โ€ She held up her arm, the cuff glinting in the lamplight. โ€œThis is enough for me.โ€

โ€œThe shark teeth worn by the twins,โ€ mused Nikolai. โ€œGenyaโ€™s kestrel bones. Iโ€™ve heard the stories behind all of them. But youโ€™ve never told me the tale of the amplifier you wear.โ€

Zoya raised a brow. In the space of a breath, the contemplative girl was gone and the distant general had returned. โ€œSteel is earned, Your Highness. So are stories.โ€ She rose. โ€œAnd I believe youโ€™re stalling.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve found me out.โ€ He was sorry to see her leave, whatever guise she wore. โ€œGood night, Commander.โ€

โ€œGood night, King Wretch.โ€

He would not beg Zoya to stay. It was not in his nature to plead with anyone, and that was not the pact they shared. They did not look to each other for comfort. They kept each other marching. They kept each other strong. So he would not find another excuse to get her talking again. He would not tell her he was afraid to be left alone with the thing he might become, and he would not ask her to leave the lamp burning, a childโ€™s bit of magic to ward off the dark.

But he was relieved when she did it anyway.

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