โWhat if I say no, Brekker?โ It was mere posturing, Matthias knew that. The time for protest had long passed. They were already jogging down the gentle slope of the embassy roof towards theย drรผskelleย sector, Wylan panting from exertion, Jesper loping along with ease, and Brekker keeping pace despite his crooked gait and lack of cane. But Matthias disliked how well this low thief could read him. โWhat if I donโt give you this last bit of myself and my honour?โ
โYou will, Helvar. Nina is on her way to the White Island right now.
Are you really going to leave her stranded?โ โYou presume a great deal.โ
โSeems like the perfect amount to me.โ
โThese are the law courts, right?โ Jesper said as they raced over the roof, catching glimpses of the elegant courtyards below, each built around a burbling fountain and dotted with rustling ice willows. โI guess if youโre going to be sentenced to death, this isnโt a bad place for it.โ
โWater everywhere,โ said Wylan. โDo the fountains symbolise Djel?โ โThe wellspring,โ mused Kaz, โwhere all sins are washed clean.โ
โOr where they drown you and make you confess,โ Wylan said.
Jesper snorted. โWylan, your thoughts have taken a very dark turn. I fear the Dregs may be a bad influence.โ
They used a doubled segment of rope and the grappling hook to cross to the roof of theย drรผskelleย sector. Wylan had to be looped into a sling, but Jesper and Kaz moved easily across the rope, hand over hand, with unnerving speed. Matthias approached with more caution, and though he didnโt show it, he did not like the way the rope creaked and bowed with his own weight.
The others pulled him onto the stone of theย drรผskelleย roof, and as Matthias stood, he was struck by a wave of vertigo. More than any place in the Ice Court, more than any place in the world, this felt like home to him. But it was home turned on its head, his life viewed at the wrong angle. Peering into the dark, he saw the massive pyramid skylights that marked the roof. He had the disconcerting sense that if he looked through the glass he would see himself running drills in the training rooms, seated at the long table in the dining hall.
In the distance, he heard the wolves barking and yapping in their kennel by the gatehouse, wondering where their masters had gone for the night. Would they recognise him if he approached with an outstretched hand? He wasnโt sure he recognised himself. On the northern ice, his choices had seemed clear. But now his thoughts were muddied with these thugs and thieves, with Inejโs courage and Jesperโs daring, and with Nina, always Nina. He couldnโt deny the relief heโd felt when sheโd emerged from the incinerator shaft, dishevelled and gasping, frightened but alive. When he and Wylan had pulled her out of the flue, heโd had to force himself to let her go.
No, he would not look through those skylights. He could afford no more weakness, especially on this night. It was time to move forwards.
They reached the lip of the roof overlooking the ice moat. From here it looked solid, its surface polished bright as a mirror and illuminated by the guard towers on the White Island. But the moatโs waters were ever shifting, concealed only by a wafer-thin skin of frost.
Kaz secured another coil of rope to the roofโs edge and prepared to rappel down to the shore.
โYou know what to do,โ he said to Jesper and Wylan. โEleven bells and not before.โ
โWhen have I ever been early?โ asked Jesper.
Kaz braced himself for the descent and vanished over the side. Matthias followed, hands gripping the rope, bare feet pressed against the
wall. When he glanced up, he saw Wylan and Jesper gazing down at him. But the next time he looked, they were gone.
The shore surrounding the ice moat was little more than a slender, slippery rind of white stone. Kaz perched there, pressed against the wall and frowning out at the moat.
โHow do we cross? I donโt see anything.โ โBecause you are not worthy.โ
โIโm also not near-sighted. Thereโs nothing there.โ
Matthias began edging along the wall, running his hand over the stone at hip level. โOn Hringkรคlla theย drรผskelleย finish our initiation,โ he said. โWe go from aspirant to noviceย drรผskelleย in the ceremony at the sacred ash.โ
โWhere the tree talks to you.โ
Matthias resisted the urge to shove him into the water. โWhere we hope to hear the voice of Djel. But thatโs the final step. First, we have to cross the ice moat undetected. If we are judged worthy, Djel shows us the path.โ
In truth, elderย drรผskelleย simply passed the secret of the crossing along to aspirants they wished to see enter the order; it was a way of culling the weak or those who had simply not meshed successfully with the group. If youโd made friends, if youโd proven yourself, then one of the brothers would take you aside and tell you that on the night of the initiation, you should go to the shore of the ice moat and run your hand along the wall of theย drรผskelleย sector. At its centre, you would find an etching of a wolf that marked the location of another glass bridge โ not grand and arching like the one that spanned the moat from the embassy wing, but flat, level, and only a few feet wide. It lay just under the frozen skin of the surface, invisible if you didnโt know to look for it. Commander Brum himself had been the one to tell Matthias how to find the secret bridge, as well as the trick for crossing it undetected.
It took Matthias two passes along the wall before his fingers found the carved lines of the wolf. He rested his hand there briefly, feeling the traditions that connected him to the order ofย drรผskelle, as old as the Ice Court itself.
โHere,โ he said.
Kaz shuffled over and squinted across the moat. He leaned out and Matthias yanked him back.
He pointed to the guard towers on the top of the wall surrounding the White Island. โYouโll be visible,โ he said. โUse this.โ
He scraped his hand along the wall and his palm came away white. The night of his initiation, Matthias had rubbed his clothes and hair with the same chalky powder. Camouflaged from the view of the guards in their towers, heโd crossed the slender path to the island to meet his brothers.
Now he and Kaz did the same, though Matthias noticed Kaz tucked his gloves neatly away first. Inej must have returned them.
Matthias stepped onto the secret bridge, then heard Kaz hiss when the icy waters of the moat closed over his feet.
โChilly, Brekker?โ
โIf only we had time for a swim. Get moving.โ
Despite his taunts to Kaz, by the time they were halfway to the island, Matthiasโ feet had gone almost completely numb, and he was keenly aware of the guard towers high above the moat.ย Drรผskelleย would have come this way earlier tonight. Heโd never heard of any aspirant being spotted or shot at on the bridge, but anything was possible.
โAll this to be a witchhunter?โ Kaz said behind him. โThe Dregs need a better initiation.โ
โThis is only one part of Hringkรคlla.โ
โYes, I know, then a tree tells you the secret handshake.โ
โI feel sorry for you, Brekker. There is nothing sacred in your life.โ There was a long pause, and then Kaz said, โYouโre wrong.โ
The outer wall of the White Island loomed up before them, covered in a rippling pattern of scales. It took a moment to locate the ridge of scales that hid the gate. Only a short while ago,ย drรผskelleย would have been gathered in this niche of the wall to welcome their new brothers ashore, but now it was empty, the iron grating chained. Kaz made quick work of the lock, and soon they were in a slender passage that would lead them to the gardens that backed the barracks of the royal guard.
โWere you always good at locks?โ โNo.โ
โHow did you learn?โ
โThe way you learn about anything. Take it apart.โ โAnd the magic tricks?โ
Kaz snorted. โSo you donโt think Iโm a demon any more?โ โI know youโre a demon, but your tricks are human.โ
โSome people see a magic trick and say, โImpossible!โ They clap their hands, turn over their money, and forget about it ten minutes later. Other people ask how it worked. They go home, get into bed, toss and turn, wondering how it was done. It takes them a good nightโs sleep to forget all about it. And then there are the ones who stay awake, running through the trick again and again, looking for that skip in perception, the crack in the illusion that will explain how their eyes got duped; theyโre the kind who wonโt rest until theyโve mastered that little bit of mystery for themselves. Iโm that kind.โ
โYou love trickery.โ
โI love puzzles. Trickery is just my native tongue.โ
โThe gardens,โ Matthias said, pointing to the hedges up ahead. โWe can follow them all the way round to the ballroom.โ
Just as they were about to emerge from the passage, two guards rounded the corner โ both in black and silverย drรผskelleย uniforms, both carrying rifles.
โPerjenger!โ one of them shouted in surprise. Prisoners. โSten!โ
Without thinking, Matthias said, โDesjenet, Djel comenden!โ Stand down, Djel wills it so. They were the words of aย drรผskelleย commanding officer, and he delivered them with all the authority heโd ever learned to muster.
The soldiers exchanged a confused glance. That moment of hesitation was enough. Matthias grabbed the first soldierโs rifle and head-butted him hard. Theย drรผskelleย collapsed.
Kaz slammed into the other soldier, knocking him over. Theย drรผskelleย kept hold of his rifle, but Kaz slipped behind him and brought his forearm across the soldierโs throat, applying pressure until the soldierโs eyes shut, and his head fell forwards as he slipped into unconsciousness.
Kaz rolled the body off him and stood.
The reality of the situation struck Matthias suddenly. Kaz hadnโt picked up the rifle. Matthias had a gun in his hands, and Kaz Brekker was unarmed. They were standing over the bodies of two unconsciousย drรผskelle, men who were supposed to be Matthiasโ brothers.ย I can shoot him, Matthias thought.ย Doom Nina and the rest of them with a single act.ย Again, Matthias had the strange sense of his life viewed the wrong way up. He was dressed in prison clothes, an intruder in the place heโd once called home.ย Who am I now?
He looked at Kaz Brekker, a boy whose only cause was himself. Still, he was a survivor, and his own kind of soldier. He had honoured his bargain with Matthias. At any point, he might have decided that Matthias had served his purpose โ once heโd helped them draw up the plans, once theyโd got past the holding cells, once Matthias had revealed the secret bridge. And whoever heโd become, Matthias was not going to shoot someone unarmed. Heโd not yet sunk so far.
Matthias lowered his weapon.
A faint smile touched Kazโs lips. โI wasnโt sure what youโd do if it came down to this.โ
โNeither was I,โ Matthias admitted. Kaz lifted a brow, and the truth struck Matthias with the force of a blow. โIt was a test. Youย choseย not to pick up the rifle.โ
โI needed to be sure you were really with us. All of us.โ โHow did you know I wouldnโt shoot?โ
โBecause, Matthias, you stink of decency.โ โYouโre mad.โ
โDo you know the secret to gambling, Helvar?โ Kaz brought his good foot down on the butt of the fallen soldierโs rifle. The gun flipped up. Kaz had it in his hands and pointed at Matthias in the space of a breath. Heโd never been in any danger at all. โCheat. Now letโs clean up and get those uniforms on. We have a party to go to.โ
โOne day youโll run out of tricks,ย demjin.โ โYouโd better hope itโs not today.โ
Weโll see what this night brings, Matthias thought as he bent to the task.ย Trickery is not my native tongue, but I may learn to speak it yet.