โZOYA HEARD THE UPROAR and ran toward it. Sheโd sensed the wrongness of the night even before she heard Tolyaโs shout. She felt it on the air, as if the crackle of lightning she controlled so easily now was everywhere, in everything. It had been that way since sheโd claimed Jurisโ scales. He was with her, all of his lives, all he had learned, the crimes heโd committed, the miracles heโd performed. His heart beat with herโthe dragonโs heartโand she could feel that rhythm linking her to everything.ย The making at the heart of the world.ย Had she really believed in it before? Maybe. But it hadnโt mattered to her. Power had been protection, the getting of it, the honing of it, the only defense she could grasp against all the pain she had known. Now it was something more.โ
Everything was different now. Her vision seemed sharper, as if light limned each object. She could smell the green grass outside, woodsmoke on the air, even the marbleโsheโd never realized marble had a scent. In this moment, running down these familiar halls toward the clamor in the conservatory, she didnโt feel fear, only a sense of urgency to make some kind of order out of the trouble she knew sheโd find.
But she couldnโt have anticipated the mess awaiting her. She closed the doors to the conservatory behind her and clouded the glass with mist in case of passersby. Security had fallen to pieces without her here. No surprise.
Tamar knelt beside a Shu girl with a dagger in her chest. Genya was crying. Tolya, David, and Nikolai, still dressed in his prisonerโs shroud, stood around another bodyโa corpse that looked very much like the king. Everyone was shouting at once.
Zoya silenced them with a thunderclap.
As one the group turned to her, and instantly they had their hands up,
ready to fight.
โHow do we know itโs really you?โ said Genya. โItโs really her,โ said Nikolai.
โHow do weย knowย itโs reallyย you?โ Tamar growled, not interrupting her work on the Shu girl. It seemed a hopeless cause. The girl still had color in her cheeks, but the dagger looked as if it had pierced her heart. Zoya refused to look more closely at the other body. It was too hard not to think of Nikolai pinned to the thorn wood, his blood watering the sands of the Fold.
โGenya,โ said Zoya calmly. โI once got drunk and insisted you make me blond.โ
โIntriguing!โ said Nikolai. โWhat were the results?โ โShe looked glorious,โ said Genya.
Zoya plucked a bit of dust from her sleeve. โI looked cheap.โ
Genya dropped her hands. โStand down. Itโs her.โ Then she was hugging Zoya fiercely as Tolya clasped Nikolai in his massive arms and lifted him off his feet. โWhere the hell have you been?โ
โItโs a long story,โ said Nikolai, and demanded Tolya set him down.
Zoya wanted to hold tight to Genya, take in the flowery scent of her hair, ask her a thousand questions. Instead, she stepped back and said, โWhat happened here?โ
โThe dagger is Fjerdan,โ said Tolya.
โMaybe so,โ said Nikolai. โBut it was wielded by a Shu girl.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ said Tamar as she worked frantically to restore the girlโs pulse. โShe was attacked too.โ
โIs it her heart?โ Zoya asked.
โNo,โ said Tamar. โThat would be beyond my skill. The dagger struck a little too far to the right.โ
โCan you save her?โ asked Genya.
โI donโt know. Iโm just trying to stabilize her. It will be up to our Healers to do the rest.โ
โI saw it all happen,โ said Nikolai. โShe attacked himโme? Him.
Then turned the blade on herself.โ
โSo the Shu are trying to frame Fjerda?โ said Tolya.
Genyaโs tears began anew. She knelt and put her hand to the impostorโs cheek. โIsaak,โ she murmured.
โWho?โ said Zoya.
โIsaak Andreyev,โ Nikolai said quietly, kneeling by the body. โPrivate
first class. Son of a schoolteacher and a seamstress.โ
Tolya brushed his hand over his eyes. โHe didnโt want any of this.โ โCan you restore his features?โ asked Nikolai.
โItโs harder without blood flow,โ said Genya. โBut I can try.โ
โWe owe that at least to his mother.โ Nikolai shook his head. โHe survived the front. He was meant to be past harm.โ
Genya bit back a sob. โWe โฆ we knew we were putting him in dangerโs way. We thought we were doing what was right.โ
โThe princess is breathing,โ Tamar said. โI need to get her to the Corporalki in the Little Palace.โ
โThis makes no sense,โ said Genya. โWhy not just murder the kingโ or the man she believed was king? Why try to kill herself too? And why would a princess sacrifice herself to do the job?โ
โShe didnโt,โ said Nikolai. โGet me fresh clothes. Iโll return to the party to close out the festivities. I want to have a word with Hiram Schenck. Heโs the highest-ranking member of the Kerch Merchant Council here, yes?โ
โYes,โ said Genya. โBut he isnโt happy with you.โ
โHeโs about to be. For a time. Keep the doors to the conservatory locked, and leave Isaakโs body here.โ
โWe shouldnโtโโ Tolya began, but Nikolai held up a hand.
โJust for now. I swear he will have the burial he deserves. Bring the Shu delegation to me in my fatherโs rooms in one hourโs time.โ
โWhat if Princess Ehriโs guards raise the alarm?โ asked Genya.
โThey wonโt,โ said Zoya. โNot until they know their plan has succeeded and the king is dead.โ
Nikolai rose, as if his wounds no longer pained him, as if the horrors of the last few days had never been, as if the demon inside him had been conquered after all. โThen long live the king.โ
Two hours later, the festivities had dwindled to a few happy drunks singing songs in the double-eagle fountain. Most of the guests had gone to their beds to sleep off their indulgences or had snuck off to some quiet corner of the gardens to indulge in more.
Zoya and the others had returned to the conservatory, and when Nikolai entered he was dragging along a terrified-looking Shu guard. She had a pinched, homely face and wore the uniform of the Tavgharad, her long black hair tied in a topknot.
โMayu Kir-Kaat,โ said Tamar. โWhat is she doing here?โ
At the sight of the body on the floor beside the lemon trees, the guard began to shake. โBut he โฆโ she said, staring at the dead king and then back at Nikolai. โBut youโwhere is the princess?โ
โWhat a fascinating question,โ said Nikolai. โI assume youโre referring to the girl we found with a dagger in her chest just half an inch shy of her aortaโdue to luck or a lack of follow-through, you be the judge. She is currently recovering with our Healers.โ
โYou must return the royal princess to our care,โ sputtered the guard. โShe is no such thing,โ said Nikolai sharply. โAnd the time has come
and gone for such deceptions. An innocent man died tonight, all so you could start a war.โ
โIs he going to explain any of this?โ whispered Genya. Zoya was wondering the same thing.
โGladly,โ said Nikolai. He gestured toward the guard. โIโd like all of you to meet the real Princess Ehri Kir-Taban, favored daughter of the Shu, second in line to their throne.โ
โLies,โ hissed the guard.
Nikolai seized her hand. โFirst of all, no member of the Tavgharad would allow a man to snatch her wrist like the last sugared plum.โ The guard gave a belated tug to try to get her hand free. โSecond, where are her calluses? A soldier should have them on the pads of her palms, like Isaak. Instead, theyโre on the tips of her fingers. These are the calluses you would get from playingโโ
โTheย khatuur,โ said Zoya. โEighteen strings. Princess Ehri is a master.โ
โSo they planted an assassin in place of the princess in order to get close to the king,โ said Tamar. โBut why would she try to kill herself off too?โ
โTo cast more suspicion on the Fjerdans?โ asked Genya.
โYes,โ said Nikolai, โand to give the Shu a reason to go to war. Ravkaโs monarch dead, a member of the Shu royal family slain. The Shu would have every excuse they needed to march their armies into our leaderless country and use it as a base to launch an attack on Fjerdaโs southern border. They would arrive in force with no intention of ever leaving.โ
Now the guardโor rather the princessโclosed her eyes as if in defeat.
But she did not weep and she did not tremble.
โWhat was to become of you, Princess?โ Nikolai asked, releasing her hand.
โI was to have a new name, a quiet life in the countryside,โ she said softly. โI have never cared for politics or life at court. I would be free to pursue my music, fall in love where I wished.โ
โWhat a lovely picture you paint,โ said Nikolai. โWere it not a danger to my countryโs future, your lack of guile would be charming. Did you really believe your sister was going to leave you to rusticate in some mountain village? Did you actually think you would survive this plot?โ
โI have never wanted the crown! I am no threat to my sister.โ
โThink,โ Zoya snapped, losing patience. โYou are popular, adored, the daughter everyone wants on the throne. Your death is the thing meant to rally an entire nation to war. How could your sister let you live and risk discovery? You would be nothing but a liability.โ
The princess lifted her pointed chin. โI do not believe it.โ
โYour guards have been secured,โ Zoya said. โI suspect one of them had orders to make you disappear before you ever made it to your pastoral retreat. You can question them yourself.โ
Ehri somehow lifted her chin higher. โWill I face trial or simply be executed?โ
โYou should be so lucky,โ said Nikolai. โNo, I have a far worse fate for you in mind.โ
โAm I to be your hostage?โ
โIโm not much for pet names, but as you like.โ โYou truly mean to keep me here?โ
โOh, indeed. Not as my prisoner but as my queen.โ
Zoya was surprised at the way those words pricked atโwhat? Her heart? Her pride? She had known this end was inevitable. It was the course she had fought and harangued for. So why did she feel like sheโd left her flank open yet again?
โOur engagement will earn me a glorious dowry,โ said Nikolai, โand your popularity among your people will keep your sister from harassing our borders.โ
โI will not do it,โ said Ehri, her face ferociousโthe countenance of a queen.
โItโs that or execution, my dove. Think of it this way: You wonโt be hanged, but the price is a life of luxury and my sparkling company.โ
โYou might consider the gallows,โ said Zoya. โQuicker and less
painful.โ It felt good to say the words, to tease him while she still could.
Nikolai nodded to Tolya and Tamar. โGet her back to her chambers and keep a close eye on her. Until we announce the royal engagement, thereโs a good chance sheโll try to bolt or kill herself.โ
โWhat do we do with the injured girl?โ said Genya once the princess had been escorted out of the conservatory and the twins had returned.
โKeep her underย heavyย guard at the Little Palace. Even wounded, sheโs a member of the Tavgharad. Letโs not forget that.โ
โDid the real Mayu ever really mean to defect?โ
โI think so,โ said Tamar. โShe has a brother, a twin. I think he was taken to be trained for theย khergud. She may have hoped to get both of them out of Shu Han.โ
โKebben,โ said Tolya, resting a hand on his sisterโs shoulder. It was a word Zoya didnโt know. โIf she was found out, maybe she used her own life to barter for her brotherโs freedom.โ
โShould make for an interesting chat once sheโs conscious,โ said Nikolai. He knelt once again by Isaak. โIโll write a letter to his mother tomorrow. We can at least give him a heroโs pension and make sure his family wants for nothing.โ
โAnd the body?โ asked Tolya quietly.
โTake him out through the tunnels to Lazlayon.โ
Genya brushed her fingers over Isaakโs lapel. โIโll begin work on him right away. He โฆ he didnโt hesitate. When we told him what was at stake he โฆโ
Tolya lifted Isaakโs body carefully in his huge arms. โHe had the heart of a king.โ
โWhat did you tell Hiram Schenck?โ asked Genya, wiping fresh tears from her scarred cheek. โHis grin was as big as a melon rind.โ
โI gave him the plans for our submersibles.โ โTheย izmarsโya?โ said Tamar.
โArmed?โ asked Tolya, his face distressed.
โAfraid so. As I understand it,โ said Nikolai, โthe Apparat has gone missing and Fjerda is marching in support of a Lantsov pretender. Is he good looking?โ
Tamar frowned. โThe Apparat?โ
โThe Lantsov pretender. I suppose itโs of no matter. But yes, I gave Schenck the real plans. Weโre going to war. Weโll be in sore need of Kerch funds as well as our new Shu friends.โ
โThe Zemeniโโ protested Tolya.
โDonโt worry,โ said Nikolai. โI gave Schenck what he wanted, but heโs going to discover itโs not what he needs. Sometimes you have to feed the demon.โ
โWhat does that mean?โ asked Genya. โAnd are you going to tell us where you went?โ
โOr if you found a cure?โ said Tamar.
โWe did,โ said Nikolai. โBut it didnโt quite take.โ โSo the monk was no help at all?โ asked Tolya.
Nikolaiโs gaze met Zoyaโs. She drew in a long breath, then nodded. It was time the others knew. โWe have some bad news.โ
โThereโs more?โ asked Genya.
โItโs Ravka,โ Nikolai and Zoya said together.
โThereโs always more,โ she heard him finish as she vanished into the antechamber to retrieve their prisoner, hands tightly bound. Sheโd woken him with Genyaโs red bottle, enjoying the way he startled, the brief confusion in his eyes.
โYuri?โ said Genya. โWhat did he do? Bore someone to death?โ
Zoya tugged at the rope, and the monk stepped fully into the light. His hood fell back.
Genya gasped, edging away, her hand flying to the patch that covered her lost eye. โNo. It canโt be.ย No.โ Nikolai placed a steadying hand on her shoulder.
The monk was still too tall and too lean, but he moved with a new grace. His face was clean-shaven and his glasses were gone. His hair looked darker, smoothed back from his brow, and the very shape of his features seemed to have altered, the bones winnowing to sharper, more elegant lines. His eyes flashed gray, the color of quartz.
Tamar stepped in front of Genya as if to shield her. โImpossible.โ โImprobable,โ said Nikolai gently.
When Zoya had destroyed the vessel that Elizaveta had so lovingly preserved, she had seen a shadow leave the fire, but she hadnโt understood what it meant at the time. The Darklingโs power had fracturedโpart of it had remained in the wounded shadow soldier that the ritual had almost destroyed and that still lived on in Nikolai. But the rest, the spirit that had begun to bleed from that soldier into the body Elizaveta had prepared โฆ Zoya should have known the Darkling would not miss his chance at freedom.
Yuri had gotten his wish. Heโd helped his Saint return. Had the young monk given himself up willingly? Joyously? Or in those final moments of fire and terror, had he begged to keep his life? Zoya knew there would be no mercy from the Starless Saint. The Darkling was not in the business of answering prayers.
Nikolai had made the discovery in the shed where theyโd taken shelter, in the hours when Zoya had been trekking to Kribirsk.
โLet me kill him,โ sheโd told Nikolai when heโd shown her. โWe can bury his body here. No one ever has to know he โฆโ She had stumbled over the words.ย He has returned.ย She could not say it. She refused to.
โIf we kill him, I may never be free of the demon inside me,โ Nikolai had said. โAnd we are about to be at war. I intend to use every resource we have.โ
Theyโd kept him gagged throughout their journey back to Os Alta, but just the amusement in those familiar gray eyes had made her want to snap his neck.
Nikolai insisted there was a way to use his power. Zoya wanted to watch him burn all over again.
So she would wait. She could be patient. The beast inside her knew eternity.
Now Zoya looked at Genya with her scarred hands pressed to her mouth, at Tolyaโs fury, at Tamar with her axes drawn. She looked at her king and the woman who would soon be his wife.
We are the dragon and we will bide our time.
โSo many of my old friends, gathered in one place,โ said the Darkling from the mouth of a loyal, gullible boy, another fool who had loved him. โItโs good to be home.โ