โIT WOULDNโT BE SAFE FOR THE GRISHA women and their children, or for Adrik and Leoni, to remain in Gรคfvalle, no matter how the townspeople felt. The surviving soldiers at the factory would rally. Troops would be sent to impose order in the aftermath of the disaster. They all had to be gone before then.โ
In the chaos, Hanne returned to the convent to restore her features and change back into her pinafore, pretending to be just as startled as the others at the terrors visited upon the town. No one could find the Wellmother, so it was easy for Hanne to slip away once more and return to the crossroads, where she found Nina instructing a young fisherman who had agreed to drive the wagon to port.
Nina had known this reckoning was coming, and as soon as the fisherman had gone to see his sister resettled in the wagon, she turned to face Hanneโs anger.
But Hanne was calm. Her voice was steady. โI havenโt been asking the right questions, have I? I asked what you were, not who.โ
Nina had changed back into one of Milaโs dresses. She smoothed her hands over the heavy skirts. โI think you know.โ
โNina Zenik.โ Hanneโs copper eyes were hard. โThe girl who maimed my father. The Corpsewitch.โ
โIs that what the Fjerdans are calling me now?โ โAmong other things.โ
โIโm an agent working for the Ravkan government. I came to this country to free people like you, people with Grisha power living in fear.โ
โWhy didnโt my father recognize you?โ Hanne asked.
โI was tailored before I came here. This,โ Nina said, gesturing to
herself, โisnโt me.โ
โIsย anythingย about you real?โ
โThe skills I taught you. Everything I told you about the way this country works, about the corruption at its core.โ Nina took a breath and tapped her hand to her heart. โThis is real, Hanne.โ
Hanne looked away. โYou used me.โ โI did,โ said Nina. โI wonโt deny it.โ
Hanneโs gaze swung back to Nina. She folded her arms. โYouโre not sorry, are you?โ
โIโm sorry for the hurt I caused. Iโm sorry to have lost your trust. But we are soldiers, Hanne, warriors born. And we do what has to be done. There were lives at stake. There still are. I donโt believe this is the only place where your fatherโs men are experimenting on Grisha.โ
Hanne swallowed, and Nina knew she was remembering the girls in their beds on the ward, the babies in the cribs, their suffering. โThere are more?โ
โMore bases. More factories. More laboratories. I wonโt pretend that all Grisha are good. Or all Ravkans. They arenโt. Maybe Iโm not. All I know is that what your father and his men are doing is wrong. They have to be stopped.โ She laid her hand on Hanneโs shoulder, afraid she might pull away. โWe could stop them.โ
Hanne looked up at the factory, at the wagon full of prisoners, at the great ash towering over the road with its finger-bone branches. She ran a hand over her shorn scalp, the stubborn lines of her face more pronounced without the thick cloud of her hair to soften them. When her gaze returned to Nina, there was new fire in her eyes. โSave them all,โ she said.
Despite the sorrows and dangers of the day, despite the challenges that lay ahead, Nina felt a new lightness overtake her. โSave them all.โ
โBut Nina,โ Hanne said. โNo more lies.โ
โNo more lies,โ she agreed, and Nina wished, with all her heart, that could be true.
โWhat do we do first?โ asked Hanne. โWe see to your father.โ
โI wonโt kill him.โ
Nina felt a smile curling her lips. โThat is the very last thing Iโd have you do.โ
When Hanne had gone to drag the still-unconscious Brum up the hill into the woods, Adrik turned to Nina.
โNo more lies?โ he said.
โEavesdropping, Adrik?โ She looked over his shoulder. โIs Leoni in the wagon? Is she all right?โ
โShe is. No thanks to you. Leoni didnโt make a mistake with the fuses. You caused that accident,โ he said. โYou rigged those explosions to blow the dam. You put me and Leoni and countless innocent civilians at risk.โ
It was true. Sheโd done a contemptible thing. So where was her regret? โDo you know what I learned in Ketterdam?โ Nina asked, gazing at the tree of bones she had built. โNo one is innocent. You turned the tide today, Adrik. You didnโt just hold back the watersโyou changed the
way these people see Grisha. You performed a miracle.โ
โIt wasnโt a miracle. It was skill and luck and a fancy prop you built out of body parts.โ
Nina shrugged. โThe Fjerdans wonโt accept us as people, so maybe itโs time they saw us as Saints. And this is how weโll do it, town by town, miracle by miracle. Theyโre already whispering your name here, just as they whisper Sankta Alinaโs name. I guarantee tomorrow there will be shrines dedicated to you all along this road.โ She raised a brow. โYou might not like what theyโre calling you, though.โ
โI donโt like any of this,โ he said, but then his curiosity got the better of him. โTell me.โ
โSankta Leoni of the Waters.โ She paused. โAnd Sankt Adrik the Uneven.โ
Adrik rolled his eyes. โWe need to go, Nina. Time is short.โ
โThereโs something else,โ said Nina, though she knew Adrik would never forgive what she told him next. โI didnโt share all of the information in Brumโs letter.โ
Adrik went very still. โWhat have you done, Nina?โ โThere was talk of an assassination plan against the king.โ โBy the Fjerdans?โ
โIt wasnโt clear. It only said that Lantsov wouldnโt be a problem for someone named Demidov. That their spies believed the situation would resolve itself without interference soon.โ
Adrik cursed. โWe have to get to Hjar as soon as possible. How could you keep a threat to the kingโs life to yourself?โ
What difference could it make? There were always threats to the
kingโs life. Nikolai had Tolya and Tamar to watch over him, and Adrik would have insisted on calling off the plan so they could travel to Hjar and locate a member of the network with access to a flyer who could get word to the capital. The king of Ravka had plenty of people to protect him. The girls on the mountaintop had only Nina.
โIt was one day lost,โ she said. โThereโs time to get word to the king.โ โThat was not your call to make. But I wonโt debate it with you now.
You can answer for what youโve done back in Ravka.โ โIโm not going with you.โ
โNinaโโ
โI know what I need to do, Adrik, and I wonโt get a chance like this again. Ravka made me a soldier. Ketterdam made me a spy. Hanne can help me become something else entirely.โ
โNina, you canโt mean toโโ โI do.โ
โWeโll have no way to reach you there. Youโll be without allies, without resources. If things go wrong, you wonโt have any way out.โ
Nina glanced up at the smoldering wreckage of the factory. โThen Iโll just have to blow a hole in the wall.โ