โSheโs beautiful,โ Brum said, โin an exaggerated way. You were strong not to be lured by her.โ
Iย wasย lured, though, thought Matthias.ย And it wasnโt just her beauty.
โThe alarmโโ Matthias said. โHer compatriots, no doubt.โ โButโโ
โMatthias, my men will take care of it. The Ice Court is secure.โ He glanced back at Ninaโs cell. โWe could press the button right now.โ
โWonโt she be a threat?โ
โWeโve combined theย jurda paremย with a sedative that makes them more biddable. Weโre still working out the correct ratios, but weโll get there. Besidesยธ by the second dose, the addiction does the work of controlling them.โ
โNot the first dose?โ โDepends on the Grisha.โ
โHow many times have you done this?โ
Brum laughed. โI havenโt counted. But trust me, sheโll be so desperate for moreย jurda parem, she wonโt dare act against us. Itโs a remarkable transformation. I think youโll enjoy it.โ
Matthiasโ stomach clenched. โYouโve kept the scientist alive then?โ
โHeโs done his best to replicate the process of creating the drug, but itโs a complicated thing. Some batches work; others are no better than dust. As long as he can be of service, he lives.โ Brum placed his hand on Matthiasโ shoulder, his harsh gaze softening. โI can scarcely believe youโre really here, alive, standing before me. I thought you were dead.โ
โI believed the same of you.โ
โWhen I saw you in that ballroom, I barely recognised you, even in that uniform. You are so changedโโ
โI had to let the witch tailor me.โ
Brumโs revulsion was obvious. โYou allowed her toโโ
Somehow, seeing that response in someone else made Matthias ashamed of the way heโd reacted to Nina.
โIt had to be done,โ he said. โI needed her to believe I was committed to her cause.โ
โThatโs all over now, Matthias. You are finally safe and among your own kind.โ Brum frowned. โSomething is troubling you.โ
Matthias looked into the cell next to Ninaโs, then another, and another, moving down the hall as Brum followed. Some of the captive Grisha were agitated, pacing. Others had their faces pressed up against the glass. Others simply lay on the floor. โYou canโt have known aboutย paremย for more than a month. How long has this facility been here?โ
โI had it built almost fifteen years ago with the blessing of the king and his council.โ
Matthias drew up short. โFifteen years? Why?โ
โWe needed somewhere to put the Grisha after the trials.โ
โAfter? When Grisha are found guilty, theyโre sentenced to death.โ
Brum shrugged. โIt is still a death sentence, just one a little longer in the making. We discovered long ago that the Grisha could prove a useful resource.โ
A resource.ย โYou told me they were to be eradicated. That they were a blight on the natural world.โ
โAnd they are โ when they attempt to masquerade as men. They arenโt capable of right thinking, of human morality. They are meant to be controlled.โ
โThatโs why you wantedย parem?โ Matthias asked incredulously. โWe have tried our own methods for years with limited success.โ
โBut youโve seen whatย jurda paremย can do, what Grisha can do when in its gripโโ
โA gun is not evil. Nor is a blade.ย Jurda paremย ensures obedience. It makes Grisha what they were always meant to be.โ
โA Second Army?โ Matthias asked, his voice thick with scorn.
โAn army is made of soldiers. These creatures were born to be weapons. They were born to serve the soldiers of Djel.โ Brum squeezed his shoulder. โAh, Matthias, how Iโve missed you. Your faith was always so pure. Iโm glad youโre reluctant to embrace this measure, but this is our chance to strike a deathblow. Do you know why Grisha are so hard to kill? Because theyโre not of this world. But they are very good at killing each other. They call it โlike calls to likeโ. Wait until you see all weโve achieved, the weapons their Fabrikators have helped us develop.โ
Matthias looked back down the hall. โNina Zenik spent a year in Kerch trying to bargain for my freedom. Iโm not sure those are the actions of a monster.โ
โCan a viper lie still before it strikes? Can a wild dog lick your hand before it snaps at your neck? A Grisha may be capable of kindness, but that does not change her fundamental nature.โ
Matthias considered this. He thought of Nina standing terrified in that cell as the door slammed shut. He had longed to see her made captive, punished as he had been punished. And yet, after everything theyโd been through, he was not surprised by the pain he felt at seeing it come to pass.
โWhat is the Shu scientist like?โ he asked Brum. โStubborn. Still grieving his father.โ
Matthias knew nothing of Yul-Bayurโs father, but there was a more important question to ask. โIs he secure?โ
โThe treasury is the safest place on the island.โ โYou keep him here with the Grisha?โ
Brum nodded. โThe main vault was converted to a laboratory for him.โ
โAnd youโre sure itโs safe?โ
โI have the master key,โ said Brum, patting the disk hanging from his neck, โand heโs guarded night and day. Only a select few even know heโs here. Itโs late, and I need to make sure Black Protocol has been addressed, but if you like, Iโll take you to see him tomorrow.โ Brum placed his arm around Matthias. โAnd tomorrow weโll deal with your return and reinstatement.โ
โI still stand accused of slave trading.โ
โWeโll get the girl to sign a statement recanting the slaving charges easily enough. Believe me, once sheโs had her first taste ofย jurda parem, sheโll do anything you ask and more. There will be a hearing, but I swear you will wearย drรผskelleย colours again, Matthias.โ
Drรผskelleย colours. Matthias had worn them with such pride. And the things heโd felt for Nina had caused him so much shame. It was still with him, maybe it always would be. Heโd spent too many years full of hate for it to vanish overnight. But now the shame was an echo, and all he felt was regret โ for the time heโd wasted, for the pain heโd caused, and yes, even now, for what he was about to do.
He turned to Brum, this man who had become father and mentor to him. When heโd lost his family, it had been Brum who had recruited him for theย drรผskelle. Matthias had been young, angry, completely unskilled. But heโd given what was left of his broken heart to the cause. A false cause. A lie. When had he seen it? When heโd helped Nina bury her friend? When heโd fought beside her? Or had it been long before โ when sheโd slept in his arms that first night on the ice? When sheโd saved him from the shipwreck?
Nina had wronged him, but sheโd done it to protect her people. Sheโd hurt him, but sheโd attempted everything in her power to make things right. Sheโd shown him in a thousand ways that she was honourable and strong and generous and very human, maybe more vividly human than anyone heโd ever known. And if she was, then Grisha werenโt inherently evil. They were like anyone else โ full of the potential to do great good, and also great harm. To ignore that would make Matthias the monster.
โYou taught me so much,โ Matthias said. โYou taught me to value honour and strength. You gave me the tools for vengeance when I needed them most.โ
โAnd with those tools we will build a great future, Matthias. Fjerdaโs time has finally come.โ
Matthias returned his mentorโs embrace.
โI donโt know if youโre wrong about the Grisha,โ he said gently. โI just know youโre wrong about her.โ
He held Brum tight, in a hold Matthias had learned in the echoing training rooms of theย drรผskelleย stronghold, rooms he would never see again. He held Brum as he struggled briefly and as his body went slack.
When Matthias pulled away, Brum had slipped into unconsciousness, but Matthias did not think he imagined the rage that lingered on his
mentorโs features. He made himself memorise it. It was right that he should remember that look. He was a true traitor at last, and he should carry the burden of it.
When theyโd entered the great ballroom, Matthias and Kaz had staked out a shadowy nook near the stairs. Theyโd watched Nina enter in that outrageous gown of shimmering scales โ and then Matthias had spotted Brum. The shock of seeing his mentor alive had been followed by the terrible realisation that Brum was following Nina.
โBrum knows,โ heโd said to Kaz. โWe have to help her.โ
โBe smart, Helvar. You can save her and get us Yul-Bayur, too.โ
Matthias had nodded and plunged into the crowd. โDecency,โ heโd heard Kaz mutter behind him. โLike cheap cologne.โ
Heโd waylaid Brum by the stairs. โSirโโ โNot now.โ
Matthias had been forced to step right in front of him.ย โSir.โ
Brum had halted then. His face had shown anger at being stopped, then confusion, and then wondering disbelief. โMatthias?โ heโd whispered.
โPlease, sir,โ Matthias had said hurriedly. โJust give me a moment to explain. There is a Grisha here tonight intent on assassinating one of your prisoners. If youโll bear with me, I can explain the plot and how it can be stopped.โ
Brum had signalled to anotherย drรผskelleย to watch Nina, and shepherded Matthias into an alcove beneath the stairs. โSpeak,โ heโd said, and Matthias had told him the truth โ a bare sliver of it: his escape from the shipwreck, his near drowning, Ninaโs false charge of slavery, his captivity in Hellgate, and then the promise of the pardon. Heโd blamed it all on Nina, and said nothing of Kaz or the others. When Brum had asked if Nina was alone in her mission, heโd simply said he didnโt know.
โShe believes Iโm waiting to escort her over the secret bridge. I broke away as soon as I could and came to find you.โ
A part of him was disgusted by how easily the lies came to his lips, but he would not leave Nina at Brumโs mercy.
He looked at Brum now, mouth slightly open in sleep. One of the things heโd respected most in his mentor was his mercilessness, his willingness to do hard things for the sake of the cause. But Brum had taken pleasure in what heโd done to these Grisha, what he would have
gladly done to Nina and Jesper. Maybe the hard things had never been difficult for Brum the way theyโd been for Matthias. They had not been a sacred duty, performed reluctantly for the sake of Fjerda. They had been a joy.
Matthias slipped the master key from around Brumโs neck and dragged him into an empty cell, propping him up against the wall in a seated position. Matthias hated to leave him there, chin flopped on his chest, legs sprawled in front of him, without dignity. He hated the thought of the shame that would come to him, a warrior betrayed by someone to whom heโd given his trust and affection. He knew that pain well.
Matthias pressed his forehead once, briefly, against Brumโs. He knew his mentor could not hear him, but he spoke the words anyway. โThe life you live, the hate you feel โ itโs poison. I can drink it no longer.โ
Matthias locked the cell door and hurried down the passage towards Nina, towards something more.