โNINA AND HANNE TOOK TURNS DOZING, shoulders pressed together, making a show of sleeping as their โguardsโ stood by. When both of them were in danger of giving in to exhaustion, they asked each other questions: favorite sweet, favorite book, favorite pastime. Nina learned that Hanne loved cream buns filled with vanilla custard; had a secret taste for the gruesome novels popular in Ketterdam, the gorier the better, though translations were hard to find; and that she was fond of โฆ sewing.โ
โSewing?โ Nina had whispered incredulously, remembering the way Hanne had ridden into the clearing the previous night, rifle at the ready. โI thought you liked hunting and brawling and โฆโ She wrinkled her nose. โNature.โ
โItโs a useful skill,โ Hanne said defensively. โWho darned your husbandโs socks?โ
โI did, of course,โ Nina lied. Though soldiers were supposed to learn their way around a needle and thread, sheโd never managed it. Sheโd always just gone with holes in her socks. โBut I didnโt enjoy it. The Wellmother must approve.โ
Hanne rested her head against the wall. Her hair had dried in thick, rosy brown waves. โYouโd think that, wouldnโt you? But apparently needlework is for ladies and sewing should be left to the servants. So should knitting and baking.โ
โYou can bake?โ said Nina. โYou have my attention.โ
In the morning, Nina beamed at the men crowded into the room and insisted that they make sure to visit Lennart Bjordโs house on their way through Overรผt.
โWhy canโt we escort you now?โ asked the bearded man. โWeโd be delighted, of course,โ Nina said through gritted teeth.
To Ninaโs surprise, Hanne chimed in, โWe didnโt think youโd want to stop over with us to do our penance with the Women of the Well. But how wonderful! I understand the sisters there are happy to perform theย skadย on any male visitors for only a small fee.โ Nina had read about theย skad. Enduring it was a stamp of Fjerdan manhood but also occasionally a death sentence. It required a three-month vow of celibacy and ritual purging with lye to cleanse the spirit.
The bearded man blanched. โWeโll take you to the outskirts of Gรคfvalle, but then we have duties โฆ uh โฆ elsewhere.โ
โYes,โ added the man with the tufty brows. โMany duties.โ
โWhere exactly will we find Lennart Bjordโs house?โ another asked as he followed them outside. A thick layer of snow had covered the ground, though Nina could already see some of it melting away with the rising sun. The hard wind had dwindled to a soft breeze. The Brute must have tired himself out.
โJust head to the main square in Overรผt,โ Nina said. โItโs the grandest house on the boulevard.โ
โLook for the one with the biggest gables,โ added Hanne. โThe pointiest in town.โ
โIs that your horse?โ he said. โWhere is your sidesaddle?โ
โIt must have been lost in the snow,โ said Nina, glad Hanne rode bareback and they didnโt have a manโs saddle to explain. โWeโll just walk him to Gรคfvalle.โ
When they were well out of view of the lodge, they mounted Hanneโs horse.
โTheย skad?โ Nina asked, resting her hands lightly at Hanneโs lean waist as their thighs braced together.
Hanne glanced over her shoulder and cast Nina a surprisingly wicked smile. โMy religious education should be good for something.โ
They circled back toward camp, and now that the snow had stopped they had no trouble spotting the yellow flag and Adrikโs tent.
He waved to them, and Nina knew his relief that she had survived the storm was real, even as he made a great show of seeming incensed about Hanneโs trousers.
โI thought the Zemeni didnโt care about such things,โ Hanne grumbled.
โHis wife is Zemeni. Heโs Kaelish, and heโs concerned about why you were out on your own. Actually โฆ whatย wereย you doing out here yesterday?โ
Hanne tilted her face up to the sky, closing her eyes. โI needed to ride. When the weather is about to turn is the best time. The fields are empty then.โ
โWonโt you be in trouble for spending a night away from the convent?โ
โI volunteered to fetch fresh water. The Wellmother will just be glad she doesnโt have to tell my father his daughter died of exposure in the middle of a storm.โ
โAnd your friends? They didnโt come with you?โ
Hanne kept her gaze on the white horizon. โItโs a game to them. A childish bit of dress-up, a chance to be daring. For me โฆโ She shrugged. It was survival. There was something solitary in Hanne. Nina couldnโt pretend to really understand it. She loved company, noise, the bustle of a crowded room. But for a girl like this? To be forever trapped in the convent, watched by the sisters, and constantly forced to perform pious Fjerdan womanhood? It was a dismal thought. Even so, Hanneโs presence at the convent meant she might be a source of information about the factory. Though she was only a novitiate, she had to hear about
the Springmaidensโ visits up the mountain.
โRide with us a little longer,โ Nina said to Hanne as she mounted her own horse.
Hanne looked like she wanted to bolt, but Nina knew the other girl didnโt want to risk offense when she was still desperate to ensure Ninaโs silence.
โCome on,โ Nina urged gently. โI wonโt keep you long.โ
They set a moderate pace, Adrik trailing them with the sledge. โHow old are you anyway?โ Nina asked.
Hanneโs jaw set, her profile sharp against the silvery sky. โNineteen.
And yes, thatโs old for a novitiate.โ
So Nina was right; they were almost the same age. โYou arenโt ready to take vows.โ Hanne gave a curt shake of her head. โBut you canโt go home.โ Another shake of the head. โSo what, then?โ
Hanne said nothing, her gaze fixed on the snow. She didnโt want to talk, or perhaps she felt sheโd already said too much.
Nina cut her a sidelong look. โI can tell youโre eager for a last chance
to ride before you go back.โ โIs it that obvious?โ
โI can see it in the way your eyes stray to the horizon, the way you hold the reins.โ Nina hesitated, then added, โThe trick of acting is to believe the lie yourself, at least a little. Acting begins in the body. If you want to convince anyone of anything, you start with the way the body moves. It tells a thousand stories before you ever open your mouth.โ
โAnd what stories am I telling?โ
โAre you sure you want to know?โ It was one thing to see the truth of someone. It was another to speak it back to them.
โGo on,โ said Hanne, but her hands were tight on the reins.
โYouโre strong, but youโre afraid of anyone seeing it, so you hunch and try to make yourself smaller. Youโre only at ease when you think no one is watching. But then โฆโ She reached out and tapped Hanneโs thigh. โThen youโre glorious.โ
Hanne shot her a wary glance. โI know what I look like.โ
Do you?ย Nina would have liked to tell Hanne that she could stroll into Os Alta, all six feet of her, with her chestnut-dipped-in-strawberry-syrup hair and her copper-coin eyes, and a thousand Ravkan courtiers would write songs to her beauty. Nina might be the first. But that would lead to a few questions.
At least she could offer Hanne something. โI wonโt tell anyone what you are.โ
Hanneโs eyes turned hard. โWhy? Theyโd reward you. Informing on Grisha carries a weight of silver. Why would you be that kind?โ
Iโm not being kind. Iโm earning your trust. But I wonโt sentence you to death if I can help it.
โBecause you dove in to save my life when you might have ridden by,โ Nina said, then took the leap. โAnd because I donโt believe that Grisha power makes you evil.โ
โItโs a sin,โ Hanne hissed. โItโs poison. If I could rid myself of it, I would.โ
โI understand,โ said Nina, though every part of her wanted to protest. โBut you canโt. So the question is whether you want to hate what you are and put yourself at greater risk of discovery, or accept this thing inside you and learn to control it.โย Or abandon this Saintsforsaken country altogether.
โWhat if โฆ what if I only make it stronger?โ
โI donโt think it works that way,โ said Nina. โBut I know that if Grisha donโt use their power, eventually they begin to sicken.โ
Hanne swallowed. โI like using it. I hate myself every time, but I just want to do it again.โ
โThere are some,โ Nina said cautiously, โwho believe that such power is a gift from Djel and not some kind of calamity.โ
โThose are the whisperings of heretics and heathens.โ When Nina didnโt reply, Hanne said, โYou never told me what happened to your sister.โ
โShe learned to contain her power and found happiness. Sheโs married now and lives on the Ravkan border with her handsome husband.โ
โReally?โ
No, not really. Any sister of mine would be a Heartrender waging war on your ignorant, shortsighted government. โYes,โ Nina lied. โI remember a great deal from the lessons she received. There was some concern that I might have a latent โฆ corruption, and so I was taught alongside her. I may be able to help you learn to control your power too.โ
โWhy would you ever take such a risk?โ
Because I intend to pump you for information while I do it and knock some sense into you at the same time. After all, Nina had managed to get through to one thickheaded Fjerdan. Maybe sheโd prove to have a talent for it.
โBecause someone once did the same for my sister,โ she said. โItโs the least I can do. But weโll need a pretext for spending time together at the convent. How do you feel about learning Zemeni?โ
โMy parents would prefer I continue to work on my Kerch.โ โI donโt know Kerch,โ Nina lied.
โI donโt wish to owe you a debt,โ Hanne protested.
Sheโs afraid of her power, Nina thought.ย But I can take away that fear.
โWeโll find a way for you to make it up to me,โ she said. โPromise.
Now go, get a last ride in before the next snow comes.โ
Hanne looked startled, almost disbelieving. Then she dug her heels into her horseโs flanks and took off at a hard gallop, body low, face turned to the wind, as if she and the animal were one, a hybrid creature born of the wild. How few people had been kind to Hanne that she would be so surprised by a small gesture of generosity?
Except youโre not being generous, Nina reminded herself as she nudged her own mount forward.ย Youโre not being kind.ย She was going to
use Hanne. If she could help her in the process, so be it. But Ninaโs duty was to the lost girls on the mountain, the women in their graves.ย Justice.
All Nina could do was throw this girl a rope. Hanne would have to be the one to seize it.
An hour later, Nina and Adrik entered the stables at the convent. Theyโd been gone one night, but to Nina it seemed as if a long season had passed. Her mind felt overburdened with emotion and new information. Matthias. Trassel. Hanne. The women buried at the factory. The puncture marks throbbing on her forearm. Sheโd been attacked by wolves, for Saintsโ sake. She needed a hot bath, a plate of waffles, and about twelve hours of sleep.
Leoni waved when she saw them. She was perched on a low stool in a shadowy corner of the stables, hidden from the curious eyes of passersby by a few of the crates Nina and Adrik had left behind. Sheโd set up a small camp stove, and the space around her was littered with the pots and glass vials she must have been using to test the water samples.
โI thought youโd be back sooner,โ she said with a smile.
Adrik led his horse to a stall. โNina decided to have an adventure.โ โA good one?โ asked Leoni.
โAn informative one,โ said Nina. โHow long have you been at this?โ โAll night,โ Leoni admitted. She didnโt look well.
โLetโs go to town for lunch,โ said Nina. โI canโt handle another meal of convent mush.โ
Leoni stood, then braced her hand against the wall. โIโโ Her eyes rolled back in her head and she swayed sharply.
โLeoni!โ Nina cried as she and Adrik rushed to her side, just managing to reach her before she collapsed. They laid her gently back beside the camp stove. She was soaked in sweat and her skin felt like fire.
Leoniโs eyes fluttered open. โThat was unexpected,โ she said, and then she had the gall to smile.
โThis is no time to be in a good mood,โ said Adrik. โYour pulse is racing and youโre burning up.โ
โIโm not dead, though.โ
โStop looking on the bright side and tell me when this started.โ
โI think I botched the testing,โ said Leoni, her voice thready. โI was trying to pull the pollutants from the samples, isolate them. I may have
absorbed some into my body. I told you poisons are tricky work.โ
โIโll take you back to the dormitories,โ said Nina. โI can get clean waterโโ
โNo. I donโt want the Springmaidens getting suspicious.โ
โWe can tend to her here,โ said Adrik. โGet her settled behind the sledge. I can make a fire and brew clean water for tea.โ
โThereโs a tincture of charcoal in my kit,โ said Leoni. โAdd a few drops. It will absorb the toxins.โ
Nina arranged a bed of blankets for Leoni out of sight of the main courtyard and tried to make her comfortable there.
โThereโs something else,โ Leoni said as she lay back.
Nina did not like the gray tinge to her skin or the way her eyelids fluttered. โJust rest. It can wait.โ
โThe Wellmother came to see me.โ
โWhat happened?โ Adrik said, kneeling beside her with a steaming cup of tea. โHere, try to take a sip. Did one of the novitiates talk about seeing us in the woods?โ
โNo, one of them died.โ
Nina stilled. โThe girl who fell from her horse?โ
โI didnโt realize her injuries were so serious,โ said Adrik.
โThey werenโt,โ said Leoni, sipping slowly. โI think it was the river.
She was in the water for a while, and she had an open wound.โ
โAll Saints,โ Adrik said. โWhat the hell are they doing up at that factory?โ
โI donโt know, butโโ Nina hesitated, then plowed ahead. โBut there are graves all over that mountain. Behind the reservoir, all over the factory yards. I felt them everywhere.โ
โWhat?โ said Adrik. โWhy didnโt you tell us? How do you know?โ
Leoniโs eyes had closed. Her speeding pulse seemed to have slowed a bitโa good sign.
โIs there more clean water?โ asked Nina. โWe should try to ease the fever. And will you see if thereโs some carbolic in her kit?โ
โWhy?โ Adrik asked as he fetched his canteen and the disinfectant. โIs she wounded?โ
โNo, I am. I got bitten by a wolf last night.โ โOf course you did.โ
Nina shrugged off her coat, revealing her torn and bloodied sleeve. โWait,โ said Adrik. โYouโre serious?โ He sat down beside Leoni and
rubbed his temples with his fingers. โOne soldier poisoned, another attacked by wolves. This mission is going swimmingly.โ
Nina pulled a length of cloth from the sledge and tore it in two. She used one half to make a compress for Leoni and the other to clean and bind the wound on her arm.
โThen that girl Hanne rescued you from a wolf attack?โ Adrik asked. โSomething like that.โ Nina wasnโt ready to talk about Trassel. The
last thing she needed was Adrikโs skepticism. โI think itโs possible there wasย paremย in the bite.โ
โWhat?โ
Nina glanced at Leoni, whose eyelids fluttered. โI canโt be sure, but the wolves werenโt behaving normally. Itย feltย likeย parem.โ
โThen your addictionโโ
Nina shook her head. โIโm okay so far.โ That wasnโt entirely true. Even the suggestion ofย paremย was enough to make her feel the pull of that animal hunger. But the edge of need seemed duller than she would have expected.
โSaints,โ said Adrik, leaning forward. โIf itโs in the water and Leoni was dosed with itโโ
โLeoni isnโt acting like a Grisha exposed toย parem.ย She would be clawing at the walls, desperate for another dose.โ Nina knew that all too well. โBut her other symptoms are similar to exposure, and enoughย paremย could kill someone without Grisha powers, like the novitiate.โ
โIt wasnโtย parem,โ Leoni mumbled. โI donโt think.โ โI thought you were asleep.โ
โI am,โ said Leoni. โThereโs something corrosive in the water.โ โCan you drink some more tea?โ asked Adrik.
She nodded and managed to push up to her elbows. โI havenโt isolated it yet. Why didnโt you tell us about the graves when you found them, Nina?โ
โYouโre sure you donโt want to go back to sleep?โ Nina asked, then sighed. She looked down at the folded compress in her hands. โI donโt know why. I think โฆ They led me to the eastern entrance.โ
โWhoย led you?โ
Nina cleared her throat and patted Leoniโs brow gently with the cloth. โI heard the dead โฆ speak. I heard them all the way back in Elling.โ
โOkay,โ Leoni said cautiously. โWhat exactly did they say?โ โThey need our help.โย Myย help.
โThe dead,โ repeated Adrik. โNeed our help.โ
โI realize I sound like Iโve gone loopy, but we need to get inside that factory. And I think I know someone who can help.โ
Nina brought Leoni back to the dormitories before nightfall and got her tucked into bed. Her fever had broken and she was already feeling betterโfurther proof that whatever sheโd found in the water was notย parem.ย So what was wrong with those wolves, and what had been in their bite? And what had killed the novitiate?
She took a plate of kitchen scraps out to the woods and set them at the base of a tree in the silly hope that Trassel might find his way to her again. Theyโd probably be eaten by some ungrateful rodent.
Standing at the edge of the forest, Nina looked up at the factory, its lights glowing gold in the gathering dusk, the windows of the eastern wing dark. She thought of the twisting roots of Djelโs ash, carved into the walls of the reservoir.
Thereโs poison in this place.ย She could almost taste it, bitter on her tongue.ย But just how deep does it go?
The next morning, Nina was pleased to find a summons to the Wellmotherโs office had been slid beneath their door. Nina was to meet with her and Hanne after morning prayers to discuss the possibility of language lessons. So Hanne did want to learn more about her Grisha giftsโeven if it was only to control them.
Of course, Adrik had been wary of her plan.
โWeโre better off using our time to gather intelligence here and in the neighboring towns,โ he complained. โFjerda is gearing up for something. With the right information, our forces may be able to waylay a wagon or shipment or shut this place down entirely, but not if the Fjerdans catch wind of our activities and move their operations. You donโt know how easy it is to ruin your cover, Nina. This is a dangerous game.โ
Nina wanted to scream. Sheโd been a spy for Zoya Nazyalensky on the Wandering Isle. Sheโd spent a year on her own in Ketterdam doing jobs for Kaz Brekker. Sheโd infiltrated the Ice Court as a girl from the Menagerie. She might be new to this particular game, but sheโd played for high stakes plenty of times.
โI can manage this, Adrik,โ she said as calmly as she could. โYou know sheโs our best possible asset.ย Weย can find out whatโs happening in that factory. We donโt need someone else to do it.โ
โWhat do we really know about this girl?โ
โSheโs Grisha and sheโs miserable. Arenโt we here to save people exactly like her?โ
โFrom what youโve told me, she doesnโt want rescue.โ
โMaybe Iโll change her mind. And in the meantime, I can get access to the rest of the convent.โ Nina and Leoni were quartered in a room abutting the kitchens and locked off from the bulk of the building and the dormitories. โThe Springmaidens are the only locals allowed into the factory. I may actually be able to figure out a way to get us inside.โ
โYouโll take no action without my say-so,โ said Adrik. โAnd first you have to get past the Wellmother.โ
Nina left Adrik and Leoni in the stables and crossed the courtyard to the chapel, passing through the heavy door covered in its elaborate knots of ash bough. The sweet, loamy scent of the timber walls enveloped her, and she took a moment to let her eyes adjust to the gloom. The air was cold and still, the pews lit by the glow of lanterns and weak sunlight from a few slender windows set high above the transept. There was no altar, no painted scene of Saintsโinstead a massive tree sprawled across the apse of the chapel, its roots extending to the first row of pews. Djelโs ash, fed by the Wellspring.
Whose prayers do you hear?ย Nina wondered.ย Do you hear the words of soldiers? Of Fjerdan Grisha locked in Jarl Brumโs cells?ย The whispers in her head seemed to sighโin regret? In longing? She didnโt know. She smoothed her skirts and hurried down the side aisle to the Wellmotherโs office.
โEnke Jandersdat,โ the older woman said when Nina entered, addressing her by the titleย widow.ย โHanne tells me youโre willing to offer lessons in Zemeni. I hope you realize the convent cannot provide a tutorโs fees.โ
Hanne remained silent, dressed in her pale blue pinafore and tidy white blouse, eyes on her impractical felt slippers. Her ruddy brown hair had been neatly braided and twisted into a tight corona on her head. The uniform didnโt suit her. Nina had the urge to seize the pins from Hanneโs braids and see all that glorious hair come down again.
โOf course,โ said Nina. โI would require no payment. All I ask is that you let us partake of your hospitality a bit longer and, if you have a copper cookpot, that my employers might have the loan of it.โ Leoni felt sure she could continue her experiments safely now that she knew what
she was dealing with, but copper instruments would be a help.
โIt seems a too-generous offer,โ said the Wellmother, her lips pressed into a suspicious line.
โYouโve caught me,โ said Nina, and saw Hanneโs eyes widen. Saints, if Hanne intended to continue living in this wretched country, she was going to need an education in deception. Maybe an internship in Ketterdam. Nina hadnโt been caught at anything, but she could tell the Wellmother thought she had some kind of angle, so she intended to give her one. โThe truth is that I cannot continue my work as a guide much longer. The travel is a hardship, and at some point I need to seek a more permanent position to provide for myself.โ
โWe do not hire outside of the orderโโ
โOh no, of course, I understand. But a reference from the Wellmother of Gรคfvalle would mean so much to other Fjerdans seeking a teacher for their children.โ
The Wellmother preened, her chin lifting. Piety was little defense against flattery. โWell. I can see how that might be a boon. We shall see what good you can do with our Hanne. Itโs a bit late for her to be taking up a new language. But to be frank, itโs a relief to see her interested in anything that doesnโt involve a muddy romp in the woods.โ
The Wellmother escorted them to an empty classroom and told them they were free to work until lunchtime. โI expect you to keep up with your other work, Hanne. Your father will not like it if you become a burden to this institution.โ
โYes, Wellmother,โ she replied dutifully. But as the older woman departed, Hanne cast a black look at the door and slumped into one of the desks.
โShe agreed to the lessons,โ said Nina. โIt could be worse.โ
โShe considers me one of her failures. Unmarried at nineteen, with no prospects and no signs of a true calling to Djel.โ
โAre all of the Springmaidens supposed to be called?โ Nina asked as she picked up a piece of chalk and began to conjugate a Zemeni verb on the slate board that covered most of one wall.
โI donโt know. Some say they are, claim to have visions. But Iโm not sure Djel is interested in girls like me. Do you really mean to give up your life as a guide?โ
โNo,โ said Nina, trying to keep her chalk letters straight. โIโm not ready to live in one place just yet.โ Only when she said the words did she
realize that might be true. Sheโd been restless in Ravka, and now she wondered if she might be restless anywhere she tried to settle.
Nina took a sheaf of papers from her pocket. โThese are rudimentary Zemeni lessons. Youโll need to copy them into your notebook so it looks like weโre actually doing some work.โ
โYou mean Iโm really going to have to learn Zemeni?โ
โA little. You donโt have to be good at it.โ She gestured to the board. โWeโll start with this verb:ย bes adawa.โ She raised her hands and planted her legs in the first stance each Grisha was taught. โTo fight.โ
The lesson lasted two hours. Nina started just as her own education had begun at the Little Palace: by teaching Hanne to use her Heartrender power on herself.
โHave you ever tried it?โ Nina asked.
โNo โฆ Iโm not sure. Sometimes, when I canโt sleep, Iโll think of my heart slowingโโ
Nina winced. โYouโre lucky you didnโt put yourself into a coma.โ
Nina talked her through rudimentary breathing techniques and basic fighting stances. She had Hanne slow her own heart, then make it race. She touched only briefly on Grisha theory and how amplifiers worked, and she steered well clear of any talk ofย jurda parem.
โHow do you know all of this?โ Hanne said. Her cheeks were flushed from using her power, and her hair had escaped her braids to curl at her temples. โYou really learned everything from your sisterโs teacher?โ
Nina turned her back to erase the board and to hide her expression. It was possible sheโd gotten carried away.ย You donโt know how easy it is to ruin your cover, Nina.ย She could just imagine Adrikโs singsongย What did I tell you?
โYes,โ she said. โI paid close attention. But youโre also a natural. Youโre picking up on the work very quickly.โ That at least was true. Hanne had an ease with her power that was something special. But her face was troubled. โWhat is it?โ Nina asked.
โThat word.ย Natural.โ Hanne ran her finger over one of the sheets where sheโd scrawled the conjugation of another Zemeni verb. Her penmanship was tragic. โWhen I was younger, my father took me everywhere. To ride. To hunt. It was unorthodox, but he longed for a son, and I think he believed there was no harm in it. I loved it. Fighting, horsemanship, running free. But when I got older and it was time to
present me at court โฆ I couldnโt shake it off.โ
And why should you have to?ย Nina thought. She didnโt have any great love for horses and preferred not to run anywhere unless being chased, but at least she was allowed those opportunities.
Hanne folded her arms, her shoulders hunching, looking like she wanted to crumple into herself. โUnnatural, they called me. A womanโs body is meant to be soft, but mine was hard. A lady is meant to take small, graceful steps, but I strode. I was a laughingstock.โ Hanne gazed up at the ceiling. โMy father blamed himself for corrupting me. I couldnโt sing or paint, but I could clean a deer and string a bow. I could build a shelter. All I wanted was to escape to the woods. Sleep beneath the stars.โ
โThat sounds โฆ well, that sounds horrible,โ admitted Nina. โBut I think I can understand the appeal.โ
โIย triedย to change. I really did.โ Hanne shrugged. โI failed. If I fail againโฆโ
Her gaze was bleak, and Nina wondered what grim future she was seeing. โWhat happens if you fail again?โ
โThe school was supposed to make me presentable. Good marriage material. If the Wellmother canโt fix me, Iโll never be allowed to go home, never be presented at court. It should have happened two years ago.โ
โWould it be so bad not to go back?โ
โAnd never see my parents? Live like an exile?โ โAre those the choices?โ
โI find a way to fit in, or I take vows and live the rest of my life out here, in service to Djel among Women of the Well.โ She scowled. โI wish I was an Inferni instead of a Heartrender.โ
โThatโs ridiculous,โ Nina said without thinking, her pride bristling. How could anyone want to be a Summoner instead of Corporalki?ย Everyone knows weโre the best Order.ย โI mean โฆ why would anyoneย wantย to be an Inferni?โ
Hanneโs bright eyes flashed as if in challenge. โSo I could melt the Ice Court from the inside out. Wash the whole big mess into the sea.โ
Dangerous words. And maybe Nina should have pretended to be scandalized. Instead she grinned. โThe grandest puddle in the world.โ
โExactly,โ said Hanne, returning her smile, that wicked edge curling her lips
Suddenly, Nina wanted to tell Hanne all of it.ย My friends and I blew a hole in the Ice Court wall! We stole a Fjerdan tank!ย All Saints, did she want toย brag? Nina gave her head a shake.ย This is a chance to gain her confidence, she told herself.ย Take it.
She sat down at the desk next to Hanneโs and said, โIf you could go anywhere, do anything, what would you choose for yourself?โ
โNovyi Zem,โ Hanne said instantly. โIโd get a job, make my own money, hire myself out as a sharpshooter.โ
โYouโre that good?โ
โI am,โ Hanne said without a hint of hesitation. โI think about it every time I ride out. Just disappearing. Making everyone believe I was lost in a storm or that I was carried away by the river.โ
Beastly idea. Come to Ravka.ย โThen why not do it? Why not just go?โ
Hanne stared at her, shocked. โI couldnโt do that to my parents. I couldnโt shame them that way.โ
Nina narrowly avoided rolling her eyes.ย Fjerdans and their honor. โOf course not,โ she said swiftly. But she couldnโt help but think of Hanne riding into the clearing, rifle raised, braids loose, a warrior born. There was gold in her, Nina could see it, the shine dimmed by years of being told there was something wrong in the way she was made. Those glimpses of the real Hanne, the Hanne who was meant to be, were driving her to distraction.ย Youโre not here to make a new friend, Zenik, she chastised herself.ย Youโre here for information.
โWhat if the Wellmother casts you out?โ she asked. โShe wonโt. My father is a generous donor.โ
โAnd if she catches you flouncing about in menโs trousers?โ Nina prodded.
โSheย wonโt.โ
โIf my friends and I had been less generous, she might have.โ
Now Hanne leaned back and grinned with easy confidence.ย There you are, thought Nina. โIt would have been your word against mine. I would have been dressed neatly in my pinafore and back behind the convent walls before youโd knocked on the Wellmotherโs door.โ
Interesting.ย Nina put all the condescension she could summon in her tone and said, โOf course you would have.โ
Hanne sat up straighter and jabbed her finger into the surface of the desk. โI know every step that creaks in this place. I know just where the cook stashes the key to the west kitchen door, and I have pinafores and
changes of clothes stowed everywhere from the chapel to the roof. I donโt get caught.โ
Nina held up her hands to make peace. โI just think you might consider more caution.โ
โSays the girl teaching me Grisha skills in the halls of Djel.โ โMaybe I have less to lose than you do.โ
Hanne raised a brow. โOr maybe you just think youโre better at being bold.โ
Try me, thought Nina. But all she said was, โBack to work. Letโs see if you can make my heart race.โ