โWย hen Nina and Matthias came charging into the tomb, Jesper wanted to leap up from the table and waltz with them both. Heโd spent the last hour trying to explain to Kuwei how they would reach the embassy, and he was starting to get the distinct impression the kid was playing dumbโ possibly because he was enjoying the ridiculous gestures Jesper was making.โ
โCould you repeat the last part?โ Kuwei said now, leaning in a little too close.
โNina,โ Jesper said. โCan you help facilitate this exchange?โ
โThank the Saints,โ said Inej, leaving off her work at the table with Wylan and Kaz. They were assembling the mass of wires and gear Kaz had stolen from the Cirkus Zirkoa. Wylan had spent the last two hours making modifications to ensure Inejโs safety at the silos, attaching magnetized clamps that would grip their metal sides.
โWhy do you keep staring at him?โ Kuwei said. โI look just like him.
You could look at me.โ
โIโm not staring at him,โ protested Jesper. โIโm โฆ overseeing their work.โ The sooner Kuwei got on that boat, the better. The tomb was starting to feel crowded.
โDid you manage to contact the refugees?โ Inej asked, waving Nina over to the table and clearing a place for her to sit.
โEverything went smoothly,โ said Nina. โAside from breaking a few windows and nearly getting shot.โ
Kaz looked up from the table, his interest secured.
โBig trouble in Little Ravka?โ asked Jesper.
โNothing we couldnโt handle,โ Nina said. โPlease tell me thereโs something to eat.โ
โYouโre hungry?โ said Inej.
They all goggled at Nina. She curtsied. โYes, yes, Nina Zenik is hungry. Now will someone feed me before Iโm forced to cook one of you?โ
โDonโt be ridiculous,โ said Jesper. โYou donโt know how to cook.โ
Inej was already digging through what remained of their stockpile of food, placing the meager offerings of salt cod, dried meat, and stale crackers before Nina.
โWhat happened at the tavern?โ asked Kaz.
โThe refugees are in hiding at the embassy,โ said Matthias. โWe met
โโ
โTheir leader,โ said Nina. โTheyโll be waiting for word from us.โ She shoved two crackers into her mouth. โThese are awful.โ
โSlow down,โ said Matthias. โYouโre going to choke.โ โWorth it,โ Nina said, struggling to swallow.
โFor crackers?โ
โIโm pretending theyโre pie. When does the boat leave?โ
โWe found a shipment of molasses headed for Os Kervo leaving at eleven bells,โ said Inej. โSpecht is working on the documents now.โ
โGood,โ said Nina, uncrumpling a piece of paper from her pocket and smoothing it onto the table. A sketch of Matthias looked back at them. โWe need to get out of town as soon as possible.โ
โDamn it,โ Jesper said. โKaz and Wylan are still in the lead.โ He gestured to where theyโd pasted up the rest of the wanted posters: Jesper, Kaz, and Inej were all there. Van Eck hadnโt yet dared to plaster Kuwei Yul-Boโs face over every surface in Ketterdam, but heโd had to maintain the pretense of searching for his son, so there was also a poster offering a reward for Wylan Van Eckโs safe return. It showed his old features, but Jesper didnโt think it was much of a likeness. Only Nina was missing. Sheโd never met Van Eck, and though she had connections to the Dregs, it was possible he didnโt know of her involvement.
Matthias examined the posters. โOne hundred thousandย krugeย !โ He shot a disbelieving glower at Kaz. โYouโre hardly worth that.โ
The hint of a smile tugged at Kazโs lips. โAs the market wills it.โ
โTell me about it,โ said Jesper. โTheyโre only offering thirty thousand
for me.โ
โYour lives are at stake,โ said Wylan. โHow can you act like this is a competition?โ
โWeโre stuck in a tomb, merchling. You take the action where you find it.โ
โMaybe we shouldย allย go to Ravka,โ said Nina, tapping Inejโs wanted poster. โIt isnโt safe for you to remain here.โ
โItโs not a bad idea,โ said Kaz.
Inej cast him a swift glance. โYouโd go to Ravka?โ
โNot a chance. Iโll lie low here. I want to see Van Eckโs life come apart when the hammer falls.โ
โBut you could come,โ Nina said to Inej. โJesper? We could bring Colm too.โ
Jesper thought of his father, stuck in some lavish suite at the Geldrenner, probably wearing the carpet down to the floorboards with his pacing. Just two days had passed since heโd watched his fatherโs broad back disappear between the graves as Rotty shepherded him off Black Veil, but it felt like far longer. Since then, Jesper had nearly been killed by Grisha hunters and had a price placed on his head. But if they could just get this job done tonight, his father wouldnโt have to know any of that.
โNo way,โ said Jesper. โI want Da to get his money as fast as possible and then get back to Novyi Zem. Iโm not going to sleep easy until heโs safe on the farm. Weโll hide out at his hotel until Van Eck has been discredited and the sugar market goes crazy.โ
โInej?โ said Nina.
They all looked to the Wraithโexcept Jesper. He watched Kaz, curious to see how he would react to the prospect of Inej leaving town. But Kazโs expression was impassive, as if waiting to hear what time dinner might be served.
Inej shook her head. โWhen I go to Ravka, it will be on my own ship, piloted by my own crew.โ
Jesperโs brows shot up. โSince when are you a seafarer? And what sane person would want to spend more time on a boat?โ
Inej smiled. โIโve heard this city drives people mad.โ
Kaz drew his watch from his waistcoat. โWeโre coming up on eight bells. Van Eck is gathering the Merchant Council at his house for a meeting tonight.โ
โDo you think theyโll devote more resources to the search for Wylan?โ asked Nina.
โProbably. Itโs not our concern anymore. The noise and people coming and going will provide good cover for Wylan and me to get the seal out of the safe. Nina and Inej will hit Sweet Reef at the same time. The guards patrol the silosโ perimeter constantly, and it takes about twelve minutes for them to make it around the fence. They always leave someone to watch the gate, so be smart about the approach.โ He placed a tiny stoppered bottle on the table. โThis is coffee extract. Kuwei, Nina, Jesper, I want you all wearing plenty of it. If those Shu soldiers really can scent Grisha, this might throw them off.โ
โCoffee?โ asked Kuwei, popping the cork and taking a tentative sniff. โClever,โ said Jesper. โWe used to pack illegal shipments ofย jurdaย and
spices in coffee grounds to throw off theย stadwatchย dogs. Confuses their noses.โ
Nina took the bottle and dabbed a generous amount of the extract behind her ears and at her wrists. โLetโs hope the Kherguud work the same way.โ
โYour refugees had better be ready,โ said Kaz. โHow many are there?โ โFewer than we thought. Fifteen and um โฆ some of the people from
the embassy too. A total of seventeen.โ
โPlus you, Matthias, Wylan, and Kuwei. Twenty-one. Specht will forge the letter accordingly.โ
โIโm not going,โ said Wylan.
Jesper clasped his fingers together to make them stay still. โNo?โ โIโm not letting my father run me out of this city again.โ
โWhy is everyone so determined to stay in this miserable town?โ Nina grumbled.
Jesper tipped his chair back, studying Kaz. Heโd shown no surprise that Wylan wanted to remain in Ketterdam. โYou knew,โ he said, putting the pieces together. โYou knew Wylanโs mother was alive.โ
โWylanโs mother is alive?โ said Nina.
โWhy do you think I let you two go to Olendaal?โ Kaz said. Wylan blinked. โAnd you knew I was lying about the quarry.โ
Jesper felt a spike of rage. It was one thing for Kaz to mess with him, but Wylan wasnโt like the rest of them. Despite the bad hand heโd drawn with his father, Wylan hadnโt let his circumstances or this city knock the goodness out of him. He still believed people could do right. Jesper
pointed a finger at Kaz. โYou shouldnโt have sent him to Saint Hilde blind like that. It was cruel.โ
โIt was necessary.โ
Wylanโs fists were clenched. โWhy?โ
โBecause you still didnโt understand what your father really is.โ โYou could have told me.โ
โYou were angry. Angry wears off. I needed you righteous.โ Wylan crossed his arms. โWell, youโve got me.โ
Kaz folded his hands over his cane. โItโs getting late, so everybody put away yourย Poor Wylanย hankies and set your minds to the task at hand. Matthias, Jesper, and Kuwei will leave for the embassy at half past nine bells. You approach from the canal. Jesper, youโre tall, brown, and conspicuousโโ
โAll synonyms for delightful.โ
โAnd that means youโll have to be twice as careful.โ โThereโs always a price to be paid for greatness.โ
โTry to take this seriously,โ said Kaz, voice like a rusty blade. Was that actual concern? Jesper tried not to wonder if it was for him or the job. โMove quickly and get everyone to the docks no sooner than ten. I donโt want all of you hanging around attracting attention. We meet at Third Harbor, berth fifteen. The ship is called theย Verrhaderย . It sails the route from Kerch to Ravka several times a year.โ He rose. โStay smart and stay quiet. None of this works if Van Eck gets wise.โ
โAnd stay safe,โ added Inej. โI want to celebrate with all of you when that boat leaves the harbor.โ
Jesper wanted that too. He wanted to see them all safe on the other side of this night. He raised his hand. โWill there be champagne?โ
Nina finished the last of the crackers, licking her fingers. โIโllย be there, and Iโm effervescent.โ
After that, there was nothing to do but finish packing up their gear.
There would be no grand goodbye.
Jesper shuffled over to the table where Wylan was packing his satchel and pretended to search for something he needed in the pile of maps and documents.
He hesitated, then said, โYou could stay with me and Da. If you want.
At the hotel. If you need a place to wait everything out.โ โReally?โ
โSure,โ Jesper said with a shrug that didnโt feel right on his shoulders.
โInej and Kaz too. We canโt all scatter before the comeuppance is delivered.โ
โAnd after that? When your fatherโs loan is paid, will you go back to Novyi Zem?โ
โI should.โ
Wylan waited. Jesper didnโt have an answer for him. If he went back to the farm, heโd be away from the temptations of Ketterdam and the Barrel. But he might just find some new kind of trouble to get into. And there would be so much money. Even after the loan was paid, there would still be more than three millionย krugeย . He shrugged again. โKaz is the planner.โ
โSure,โ said Wylan, but Jesper could see the disappointment in his face.
โI suppose youโve got your future all figured out?โ
โNo. I just know Iโm going to get my mother out of that place and try to build some kind of life for us.โ Wylan nodded to the posters on the wall. โIs this really what you want? To be a criminal? To keep bouncing from the next score to the next fight to the next near miss?โ
โHonestly?โ Jesper knew Wylan probably wasnโt going to like what he said next.
โItโs time,โ Kaz said from the doorway.
โYes, this is what I want,โ said Jesper. Wylan looped his satchel over his shoulder, and without thinking, Jesper reached out and untwisted the strap. He didnโt let go. โBut itโs not all that I want.โ
โNowย ,โ said Kaz.
Iโm going to beat him over the head with that cane.ย Jesper released the strap. โNo mourners.โ
โNo funerals,โ Wylan said quietly. He and Kaz vanished through the door.
Nina and Inej were next. Nina had disappeared into one of the passages to change out of the ridiculous Fjerdan costume and don practical trousers, coat, and tunicโall of Ravkan make and cut. Sheโd taken Matthias with her and had emerged rumpled and rosy several long minutes later.
โStaying on task?โ Jesper couldnโt resist asking.
โIโm teaching Matthias all about fun. Heโs an excellent student.
Diligent in his lessons.โ โNinaโโ Matthias warned.
โHas problems with attitude. Shows room for improvement.โ
Inej nudged the bottle of coffee extract toward Jesper. โTry to be cautious tonight, Jes.โ
โIโm about as good at cautious as Matthias is at fun.โ โIโm perfectly good at fun,โ Matthias growled. โPerfectly,โ Jesper agreed.
There was more he wanted to say to all of them, mostly Inej, but not in front of the others.ย Maybe not everย , he conceded. He owed Inej an apology. His carelessness had gotten them ambushed at Fifth Harbor before they left for the Ice Court job, and the mistake had nearly cost the Wraith her life. But how the hell did you apologize for that?ย Sorry I almost got you stabbed to death. Who wants waffles?
Before he could ponder it further, Inej had planted a kiss on his cheek, Nina had aimed a single-fingered gesture at the wall of wanted posters, and Jesper was stuck waiting for half past nine bells, alone in the tomb with a glum-looking Kuwei and a pacing Matthias.
Kuwei began reorganizing the notebooks in his pack. Jesper sat down at the table. โDo you need all of those?โ โI do,โ said Kuwei. โHave you been to Ravka?โ
Poor kid is scaredย , thought Jesper. โNo, but youโll have Nina and Matthias with you.โ
Kuwei glanced at Matthias and whispered, โHe is very stern.โ
Jesper had to laugh. โHeโs not what Iโd call a party, but he has a few good qualities.โ
โI can hear you, Fahey,โ Matthias grumbled. โGood. Iโd hate to have to shout.โ
โArenโt you even concerned about the others?โ Matthias said.
โOf course. But all of us are out of nursery clothes. The time for worrying is over. Now we get to the fun part,โ he said, tapping his guns. โThe doing.โ
โOr the dying,โ Matthias muttered. โYou know as well as I do that Nina isnโt at her best.โ
โShe doesnโt have to be tonight. The whole idea isย notย to get into a fight, alas.โ
Matthias left off his prowling and took a seat at the table across from Jesper. โWhat happened at the lake house?โ
Jesper smoothed out the corner of one of the maps. โIโm not sure, but I think she choked a guy to death with a cloud of dust.โ
โI donโt understand it,โ said Matthias. โA cloud of dust? She controlled shards of bone todayโshe could never have done that beforeย paremย . She seems to think the change is temporary, a residual effect of the drug, but โฆโ He turned to Kuwei. โCould theย paremย alter a Grishaโs power? Change it? Destroy it?โ
Kuwei fiddled with the latch on his travel pack. โI suppose itโs possible. She survived the withdrawal. That is rare, and we know so little aboutย paremย , about Grisha power.โ
โDidnโt carve enough open to solve that riddle?โ The words were out of Jesperโs mouth before he thought better of them. He knew they werenโt fair. Kuwei and his father were Grisha themselves, and neither had been in any position to keep the Shu from experimenting on others.
โYou are angry with me?โ said Kuwei.
Jesper smiled. โIโm not an angry type of guy.โ
โYes, you are,โ said Matthias. โAngry and frightened.โ Jesper sized up the big Fjerdan. โBeg your pardon?โ โJesper is very brave,โ protested Kuwei.
โThank you for noticing.โ Jesper stretched out his legs and crossed one ankle over the other. โYou have something to say, Matthias?โ
โWhy arenโt you going to Ravka?โ โMy fatherโโ
โYour father could go with us tonight. And if youโre so concerned about him, why werenโt you at his hotel today?โ
โI donโt see how thatโs any of your business.โ
โI know what it is to be ashamed of what you are, of what youโve done.โ
โYou really want to start this, witchhunter? Iโm not ashamed. Iโm careful. Thanks to people like you and yourย drรผskelleย buddies, the world is a dangerous place for people like me. It always has been, and it doesnโt look to be getting any better.โ
Kuwei reached out and touched Jesperโs hand, his face imploring. โUnderstand. Please. What we did, what my father did โฆ We were trying to make things better, to make a way for Grisha to โฆโ He made a gesture as if he was pressing something down.
โTo suppress their powers?โ suggested Matthias.
โYes. Exactly. To hide more easily. If Grisha donโt use their powers, they grow ill. They age, tire easily, lose appetite. Itโs one way the Shu identify Grisha trying to live in secret.โ
โI donโt use my power,โ said Jesper. โAnd yet โฆโ He held up his fingers, enumerating his points as he made them. โOne: On a dare, I ate a literal trough full of waffles doused in apple syrup and almost went back for seconds. Two: A lack of energy has never been my problem. Three: Iโve never been sick a day in my life.โ
โNo?โ said Matthias. โThere are many kinds of sickness.โ
Jesper touched his hands to his revolvers. Apparently the Fjerdan had a lot on his mind tonight.
Kuwei opened his pack and took out a tin of ordinaryย jurdaย , the kind sold in every corner shop in Ketterdam. โJurdaย is a stimulant, good for fighting fatigue. My father thinks โฆ thought it was the answer to helping our kind. If he can find the right formula, it will allow Grisha to remain healthy while hiding their powers.โ
โDidnโt quite work out that way, did it?โ Jesper said. Maybe he was a
littleย angry.
โThe tests do not go as planned. Someone in the laboratory is loose in his talk. Our leaders find out and see a different destiny forย paremย .โ He shook his head and gestured to his pack. โNow I try to remember my fatherโs experiments.โ
โThatโs what youโre scribbling away at in the notebooks?โ โI also keep a journal.โ
โMust be fascinating. Day one: sat in tomb. Day two: sat in tomb some more.โ
Matthias ignored Jesper and said, โHave you had any success?โ Kuwei frowned. โSome. I think. In a laboratory with real scientists,
maybe more. Iโm not my father. He was a Fabrikator. I am an Inferni. This is not what Iโm good at.โ
โWhat are you good at?โ asked Jesper.
Kuwei cast him a speculative glance, then frowned. โI never had a chance to find out. We live a frightened life in Shu Han. It was never home.โ
That was certainly something Jesper could understand. He picked up the tin ofย jurdaย and popped the lid open. It was quality stuff, sweetly scented, the dried blossoms nearly whole and a vibrant orange color.
โYou think if you have a lab and a few Grisha Fabrikators around, you might be able to re-create your fatherโs experiments and somehow work your way to an antidote?โ
โI hope,โ said Kuwei.
โHow would it work?โ
โWould it purge the body ofย paremย ?โ asked Matthias.
โYes. Draw theย paremย out,โ said Kuwei. โBut even if we succeed, how to administer it?โ
โYouโd have to get close enough to inject it or make someone swallow it,โ said Matthias.
โAnd by the time you were within range, youโd be done for,โ finished Jesper.
Jesper pinched one of theย jurdaย blossoms between his fingers. Eventually, someone would figure out how to create their own version ofย jurda paremย , and when they did, one of these blossoms might be worth a very pretty fortune. If he focused on its petals, even a little, he could feel them breaking apart into their smaller components. It wasnโt exactly seeing, more like sensing all the different, tiny bits of matter that formed a single whole.
He put the flower back in the tin. When he was a little boy, lying in his fatherโs fields, heโd discovered he could leach the color out of aย jurdaย blossom petal by petal. One boring afternoon, heโd bleached a swear word into the western pasture in capital letters. His father had been furious, but heโd been scared too. Heโd yelled himself hoarse chastising Jesper, and then Colm had just sat there, staring at him, big hands clasped around a mug of tea to keep them from shaking. At first, Jesper thought it was the swear his father was mad about, but that wasnโt it at all.
โJes,โ heโd said at last. โYou must never do that again. Promise me.
Your ma had the same gift. It can bring you only misery.โ
โPromise,โ Jesper had said quickly, wanting to make things right, still reeling from seeing his patient, mild-mannered father in such a rage. But all heโd thought was,ย Ma didnโt seem miserableย .
In fact, his mother had seemed to take joy in everything. She was Zemeni born, her skin a deep, plummy brown, and so tall his father had to tilt his head back to look her in the eye. Before Jesper was old enough to work the fields with his father, heโd been allowed to stay home with her. There was always laundry to be done, food to be made, wood to be chopped, and Jesper loved to help her.
โHowโs my land?โ sheโd ask every day when his father returned from the fields, and later Jesper would learn that the farm had been in her name, a wedding gift from his father, who had courted Aditi Hilli for
nearly a year before sheโd deigned to give him the time of day. โBlooming,โ heโd say, kissing her cheek. โJust like you, love.โ
Jesperโs da always promised to play with him and teach him to whittle at night, but invariably Colm would eat his dinner and fall asleep by the fire, boots still on, their soles stained orange withย jurdaย . Jesper and his mother would pull them off Daโs feet, stifling their giggles, then cover him with a blanket and see to the rest of the eveningโs chores. Theyโd clear the table and bring the laundry in off the line, and sheโd tuck Jesper into bed. No matter how busy she got, no matter how many animals needed skinning, or baskets needed mending, she seemed to have the same infinite energy as Jesper, and she always had time to tell him a story before bed or hum him a song.
Jesperโs mother was the one to teach him to ride a horse, bait a line, clean a fish, pluck a quail, to start a fire with nothing but two sticks, and to brew a proper cup of tea. And she taught him to shoot. First with a childโs pellet gun that was little more than a toy, then with pistols and rifle. โAnyone can shoot,โ sheโd told him. โBut not everybody can aim.โ She taught him distance sighting, how to track an animal through the brush, the tricks that light can play on your eyes, how to factor wind shear, and how to shoot running, then seated on a horse. There was nothing she couldnโt do.
There were secret lessons too. Sometimes, when they got home late, and she needed to get supper on, sheโd boil the water without ever heating the stove, make bread rise just by looking at it. Heโd seen her pull stains from clothes with a brush of her fingers, and she made her own gunpowder, extracting the saltpeter from a long-dry lake bed near where they lived. โWhy pay for something I can make better myself?โ she asked. โBut we donโt mention this to Da, hmm?โ When Jesper asked why, sheโd just say, โBecause he has enough to worry about, and I donโt like it when he worries about me.โ But Da did worry, especially when one of his motherโs Zemeni friends came to the door looking for help or healing.
โYou think the slavers canโt reach you here?โ heโd asked one night, pacing back and forth in their cabin as Jesper huddled in his blankets, pretending to sleep so that he could listen. โIf word gets out thereโs a Grisha living hereโโ
โThat word,โ Aditi said with a wave of one of her graceful hands, โis not our word. I cannot be anything other than what I am, and if my gifts
can help people, then itโs my duty to use them.โ
โAnd what about our son? Do you owe him nothing? Your first duty is to stay safe so we donโt lose you.โ
But Jesperโs mother had taken Colmโs face in her hands, so gently, so kindly, with all the love shining from her eyes. โWhat kind of mother would I be to my son if I hid away my talents? If I let fear be my guide in this life? You knew what I was when you asked that I choose you, Colm. Do not now suggest that I be anything less.โ
And like that his fatherโs frustration was gone. โI know. I just canโt bear the thought of losing you.โ
She laughed and kissed him. โThen you must keep me close,โ she said with a wink. And the argument would be over. Until the next one.
As it turned out, Jesperโs father was wrong. They didnโt lose Aditi to slavers.
Jesper woke one night to hear voices, and when heโd wriggled out from under his blankets, heโd seen his mother putting her coat over her long nightgown, fetching a hat and her boots. Heโd been seven then, small for his age, but old enough to know the most interesting conversations happened after his bedtime. A Zemeni man stood at the door in dusty riding clothes, and his father was saying, โItโs the middle of the night. Surely this can wait until morning.โ
โIf it were Jes who lay suffering, would you say that?โ asked his mother.
โAditiโโ
Sheโd kissed Colmโs cheek, then swept Jesper up in her arms. โIs my little rabbit awake?โ
โNo,โ he said.
โWell then, you must be dreaming.โ She tucked him back in, kissed his cheeks and his forehead. โGo to sleep, little rabbit, and Iโll be back tomorrow.โ
But she didnโt return the next day, and when a knock came the following morning, it was not his mother, just the same dusty Zemeni man.
Colm grabbed his son and was out the door in moments. He pushed a hat onto his head, plunked Jesper down in the saddle in front of him, then kicked his horse into a gallop. The dusty man rode an even dustier horse, and they followed him across miles of cultivated land to a white farmhouse at the edge of aย jurdaย field. It was far nicer than their little
cabin, two stories high with glass in the windows.
The woman waiting at the door was stouter than his mother, but nearly as tall, her hair piled in thick coils of braids. She waved them inside, saying, โSheโs upstairs.โ
In the years after, when Jesper had pieced together what had happened over those terrible days, he remembered very few things: the polished wood floors of the farmhouse and how they felt nearly silky beneath his fingers, the stout womanโs eyes, red from crying, and the girlโa child several years older than Jesper with braids like her motherโs. The girl had drunk from a well that had been dug too near one of the mines. It was supposed to be boarded up, but someone had simply taken away the bucket. The winch was still there, and the old rope. So the girl and her friends had used one of their lunch pails to bring the water up, cold as morning and twice as clear. All three of them had taken ill that night. Two of them had died. But Jesperโs mother had saved the girl, the stout womanโs daughter.
Aditi had come to the girlโs bedside, sniffed the metal lunch pail, then set her hands to the girlโs fevered skin. By noon the next day, the fever had broken and the yellowish tinge was gone from the girlโs eyes. By early evening, she sat up and told her mother she was hungry. Aditi smiled once at her and collapsed.
โShe didnโt take enough care when extracting the poison,โ the dusty man said. โShe absorbed too much of it herself. Iโve seen it happen before with zowa.โย Zowa.ย It simply meant โblessed.โ That was the word Jesperโs mother used instead of Grisha.ย Weโre zowaย , she would say to Jesper as she made a flower bloom with a flick of her fingers.ย You and me.
Now there was no one to call upon to save her. Jesper did not know how. If sheโd been conscious, if sheโd been stronger, she might have been able to heal herself. Instead she slipped away into some deep dream, her breath becoming more and more labored.
Jesper slept, his cheek pressed to his motherโs palm, sure that any minute she would wake and stroke his cheek and he would hear her voice say, โWhat are you doing here, little rabbit?โ Instead, he woke to the sound of his father weeping.
Theyโd taken her back to the farm and buried her beneath a cherry tree that was already beginning to flower. To Jesper, it had seemed too pretty for such a sad day, and even now, seeing those pale pink flowers in a
shop window or embroidered on a ladyโs silks always put him in a melancholy mind. They took him back to the smell of fresh-turned earth, the wind whispering through the fields, his fatherโs trembling baritone singing a lonely kind of song, a Kaelish air in words Jesper didnโt understand.
When Colm had finished, the last notes drifting up into the cherry treeโs branches, Jesper said, โWas Ma a witch?โ
Colm laid a freckled hand on his sonโs shoulder and drew him close. โShe was a queen, Jes,โ he said. โShe was our queen.โ
Jesper had made dinner for them that night, burnt biscuits and watery soup, but his father ate every bite and read to him from his Kaelish book of Saints until the lights burned low and the pain in Jesperโs heart eased enough for him to sleep. And that was the way it had been from then on, the two of them, looking after each other, working the fields, bundling and drying jurda in the summers, trying to make the farm pay. Why hadnโt it been enough?
But even as Jesper had the thought, he knew it could never be enough. He could never go back to that life. He hadnโt been built for it. Maybe if his mother had lived, she would have taught him to channel his restlessness. Maybe she would have shown him how to use his power instead of hiding it. Maybe heโd have gone to Ravka to be a soldier for the crown. Or maybe he would have ended up right here anyway.
He wiped the stain of theย jurdaย from his fingertips and placed the lid back on the tin.
โThe Zemeni donโt just use the blossoms,โ he said. โI remember my mother soakingย jurdaย stalks in goatโs milk. She gave it to me when Iโd been out in the fields.โ
โWhy?โ asked Matthias.
โTo counteract the effects of inhalingย jurdaย pollen all day. Itโs too much for a childโs system, and no one wanted me more excitable than I already was.โ
โThe stalks?โ repeated Kuwei. โMost people just dispose of them.โ โThe stalks have a balm in them. The Zemeni drain it for ointments.
They rub it on babiesโ gums and nostrils when theyโre burningย jurdaย .โ Jesperโs fingers drummed on the tin, a thought forming in his mind. Could the secret to the antidote forย jurda paremย be theย jurdaย plant itself? He wasnโt a chemist; he didnโt think like Wylan, and he hadnโt been trained as a Fabrikator. But he was his motherโs son. โWhat if thereโs a
version of the balm that would counteract the effects ofย jurda paremย ? There still wouldnโt be a way to adminโโ
That was when the window shattered. Jesper had his guns drawn in less than a breath, as Matthias shoved Kuwei down and shouldered his rifle. They edged to the wall and Jesper peeked outside through the smashed stained glass. In the shadows of the cemetery he saw lanterns raised, shifting shapes that had to be peopleโa lot of people.
โUnless the ghosts just got a lot more lively,โ Jesper said, โit looks like we have company.โ