AT DAWNย the next morning, while the others damped the fire and gnawed at pieces of hardtack, I drew on my coat and walked back a little ways to look at the falls. The mist was dense in the valley. From here, the bones at the base of the falls just looked like trees. No ghosts. No fire. It felt like a quiet place, somewhere to rest.
We were packing up the ash-covered tents when we heard itโa cry, high and piercing, echoing through the dawn. We halted, silent, waiting to see if it would sound again.
โCould just be a hawk,โ warned Tolya.
Mal said nothing. He slung his rifle over his shoulder and plunged into the woods. We had to scurry to keep pace with him.
The climb up the back of the falls took us the better part of the day. It was steep and brutal, and though my feet had toughened and my legs were used to hard travel, I still felt the strain of it. My muscles ached beneath my pack, and despite the chill in the air, sweat beaded on my forehead.
โWhen we catch this thing,โ panted Zoya, โIโm going to turn it into a stew.โ
I could feel the excitement rippling through all of us, the sense that we were close now, and we drove each other to push harder up the mountain. In some places, the rise was nearly vertical. We had to pull ourselves higher by grabbing tight to the roots of scraggly trees or wedging our fingers into the rock. At one point, Tolya brought out iron spikes and hammered them directly into the mountain so we could use them as a makeshift ladder.
Finally, late in the afternoon, we hauled our bodies over a ragged stone lip and found ourselves on the flat top of the cliff wall, a smooth expanse of rock
and moss, slick with mist and split by the frothing tide of the river.
Looking north, beyond the abrupt drop of the falls, we could see back the way weโd comeโthe far ridge of the valley, the gray field that led to the ashwood, the indentation of the old road, and beyond it, storms moving over the grass-covered foothills. And they were just foothills. That was clear now. Because if we turned south, we had our first real view of the mountains, the vast, white-capped Sikurzoi, the source of the snowmelt that fed the Cera Huo.
โThey just go on and on,โ said Harshaw wearily.
We made our way to the side of the rapids. It would be tricky fording them, and I wasnโt sure there was a point. We could see across to the other side, where the cliff simply ended. There was nothing there. The plateau was clearly and disappointingly empty.
The wind picked up, whipping through my hair and sending a fine mist stinging against my cheek. I glanced south at the white mountains. Autumn was here and winter was on its way. Weโd been gone over a week. What if something had happened to the others back in Dva Stolba?
โWell,โ said Zoya angrily, โwhere is it?โ
Mal walked to the edge of the falls and looked out at the valley.
โI thought you were supposed to be the best tracker in all of Ravka,โ she said. โJust where do we go now?โ
Mal rubbed a hand over the back of his neck. โDown one mountain, up the next. Thatโs the way it works, Zoya.โ
โFor how long?โ she said. โWe canโt just keep on this way.โ โZoya,โ Tolya cautioned.
โHow do we even know this thing exists?โ
โWhat were you expecting?โ asked Tolya. โA nest?โ
โWhy not? A nest, a feather, a steaming pile of dung. Something.
Anything.โ
Zoya was the one saying it, but I sensed the fatigue and disappointment in the others. Tolya would keep going until he collapsed. I wasnโt sure Harshaw and Zoya could take much more.
โItโs too wet to make camp here,โ I said. I pointed toward the woods behind the plateau where the trees were reassuringly ordinary, their leaves lit with red and gold. โHead that way until you find a dry spot. Make a fire.
Weโll figure out what to do after dinner. Maybe itโs time to split up.โ
โYou canโt go farther into the Shu Han without protection,โ Tolya objected.
Harshaw said nothing, just nuzzled Oncat and failed to meet my eyes. โWe donโt have to decide right now. Just go make camp.โ
Carefully, I crossed to the edge of the plateau to join Mal. The drop was dizzying, so I looked into the distance instead. If I squinted, I thought I could just make out the burned field where weโd chased off the thieves, but it might have been imagination.
โIโm sorry,โ he said at last.
โDonโt apologize. For all we know, there is no firebird.โ โYou donโt believe that.โ
โNo, but maybe we werenโt meant to find it.โ
โYou donโt believe that either.โ He sighed. โSo much for the good soldier.โ I winced. โI shouldnโt have said that.โ
โYou once put goose droppings in my shoes, Alina. A bad mood I can handle.โ He glanced at me and said, โWe all know the burden youโre carrying. You donโt have to bear it alone.โ
I shook my head. โYou donโt understand. You canโt.โ
โMaybe not. But I saw this with soldiers in my unit. You keep storing up all that anger and grief. Eventually it spills over. Or you drown in it.โ
Heโd been telling me the same thing when weโd first arrived at the mine, when heโd said the others needed to grieve with me. Iโd needed it too, even if I hadnโt wanted to admit it. Iโd needed to not be alone. And he was right. I did feel like I was drowning, fear closing in over me like an icy sea.
โItโs not that easy,โ I said. โIโm not like them. Iโm not like anyone.โ I hesitated then added, โExcept him.โ
โYouโre nothing like the Darkling.โ
โI am, even if you donโt want to see it.โ
Mal raised a brow. โBecause heโs powerful and dangerous and eternal?โ He gave a rueful laugh. โTell me something. Would the Darkling ever have forgiven Genya? Or Tolya and Tamar? Or Zoya? Or me?โ
โItโs different for us,โ I said. โHarder to trust.โ
โI have news for you, Alina. Thatโs tough for everyone.โ โYou donโtโโ
โI know, I know. I donโt get it. I just know thereโs no way to live without painโno matter how long or short your life is. People let you down. You get hurt and do damage in return. But what the Darkling did to Genya? To Baghra? What he tried to do to you with that collar? Thatโs weakness. Thatโs a man afraid.โ He peered out at the valley. โI may never be able to understand what it is to live with your power, but I know youโre better than that. And they all know it too,โ he said with a nod back to where the others had gone to make camp. โThatโs why weโre here, fighting beside you. Thatโs why Zoya and Harshaw will whine all night, but tomorrow theyโll stay.โ
โThink so?โ
He nodded. โWeโll eat, weโll sleep, and then we see what happens next.โ I sighed. โJust keep going.โ
He laid a hand on my shoulder. โYou move forward, and when you falter, you get up. And when you canโt, you let us carry you. You let me carry you.โ He dropped his hand. โDonโt stay out here too long,โ he said, then turned and strode back over the plateau.
I wonโt fail you again.
The night before Mal and I had first entered the Fold, heโd promised that we would survive.ย Weโre going to be fine,ย heโd told me.ย We always are.ย In the year since, weโd been tortured and terrorized, broken and rebuilt. We would probably never feel fine again, but Iโd needed that lie then, and I needed it now. It kept us standing, kept us fighting another day. It was what weโd been doing our whole lives.
The sun was just starting to set. I stood at the edge of the falls, listening to the rush of the water. As the sun dipped, the falls caught fire, and I watched the pools in the valley turn gold. I leaned over the drop, glimpsing the pile of bones below. Whatever Mal had been hunting, it was big. I peered into the mist rising off the rocks at the base of the falls. The way it billowed and shifted, it almost looked like it was alive, as ifโ
Something came rushing up at me. I stumbled backward and hit the ground with a jarring thud to my tailbone. A cry cut through the silence.
My eyes searched the sky. A huge winged shape soared above me in a widening arc.
โMal!โ I shouted. My pack was at the edge of the plateau, along with my rifle and bow. I made a dash for them, and the firebird came straight at me.
It was huge, white like the stag and the sea whip, its vast wings tinged with golden flame. They beat the air, the gust driving me backward. Its call echoed through the valley as it opened its massive beak. It was big enough to take my arm off in one bite, maybe my head. Its talons gleamed, long and sharp.
I raised my hands to use the Cut, but I couldnโt keep my footing. I slipped and felt myself tumbling toward the cliffโs edgeโhip, then head, striking damp rock.ย The bones,ย I thought.ย Oh, Saints, the bones at the bottom of the falls.ย This was how it killed.
I clawed at the slick stone, trying to find purchaseโand then I was falling.
My scream caught on my lips as my arm was nearly wrenched from its socket. Mal had hold of me just below my elbow. He was on his stomach, hanging over the cliff face, the firebird circling above him in the fading light.
โIโve got you!โ he shouted, but his grip was slipping up the damp skin of my forearm.
My feet dangled over nothing, my heart pounding in my chest. โMalโฆโ I said desperately.
He leaned out farther. We were both going over.
โIโve got you,โ he repeated, his blue eyes blazing. His fingertips closed around my wrist.
The jolt slammed through us at the same time, the same crackling shock weโd felt that night in the woods near theย banya. He flinched. This time we had no choice but to hold tight. Our eyes met, and power surged between us, bright and inevitable. I had the sense of a door swinging open, and all I wanted was to step throughโthis taste of perfect, gleaming elation was nothing compared to what lay on the other side. I forgot where I was, forgot everything but the need to cross that threshold, to claim that power.
And with that hunger came horrible understanding.ย No,ย I thought desperately.ย Not this.
But it was too late. I knew.
Mal gritted his teeth. I felt his grip go even tighter. My bones rubbed together. The burn of power was almost unendurable, a dull whine that filled my head. My heart beat so hard I thought I might not survive it. I needed to walk through that door.
Then, miraculously, he was pulling me higher, inch by inch. I pawed at the rock with my other hand, searching for the top of the cliff, and finally made
contact. Mal took hold of both my arms, and I wriggled onto the safety of the plateau.
As soon as his hand released my wrist, the shuddering rush of power relented. We dragged ourselves away from the edge, muscles trembling, panting for breath.
That echoing call sounded again. The firebird hurtled toward us. We shoved up to our knees. Mal had no time to draw his bow. He threw himself in front of me, arms spread wide as the firebird shrieked and dove, its talons extended directly toward him.
The impact never came. The firebird drew up short, its claws bare inches from Malโs chest. Its wings beat once, twice, driving us back. Time seemed to slow. I could see us both reflected in its great golden eyes. Its beak was razor sharp, and its feathers seemed to blaze with a light of their own. Even through my fear, I felt awe. The firebird was Ravka. It was right that we should kneel.
It gave another piercing cry, then whirled and flapped its wings, soaring into the gathering dusk.
We sank to the ground, breathing hard. โWhy did it stop?โ I gasped.
A long moment passed. Then Mal said, โWeโre not hunting it anymore.โ He knew. Just as I did.ย He knew.
โWe need to get out of here,โ he said. โIt still might come back.โ
Dimly, I was aware of the others running toward us over the slippery rock as we got to our feet. They must have heard my screams.
โThat was it!โ shouted Zoya, pointing at the disappearing shape of the firebird. She lifted her hands to try to bring it back in a downdraft.
โZoya, stop,โ said Mal. โLet it go.โ
โWhy? What happened? Why didnโt you kill it?โ โItโs not the amplifier.โ
โHow can you know that?โ Neither of us answered.
โWhat is going on?โ she shouted. โItโs Mal,โ I said finally.
โWhatโs Mal?โ asked Harshaw.
โMal is the third amplifier.โ The words came out in a rasp, but solid, so much more even and strong than I ever would have anticipated.
โWhat are you talking about?โ Zoyaโs fists were clenched, and there were hectic spots of color on her cheeks.
โWe should find cover,โ said Tolya.
We limped across the plateau and followed the others a short distance up the next hill to the camp theyโd made near a tall poplar.
Mal dropped his rifle and unslung his bow. โIโm going to go catch dinner,โ he said, and melted into the woods before I could think to form a protest.
I slumped down on the ground. Harshaw started the fire, and I sat before it, staring at the flames, barely feeling their warmth. Tolya handed me a flask, then dropped into a crouch, and after waiting for a nod from me, slammed my shoulder back into its socket. The pain wasnโt enough to stop the images pouring through my head, the connections my mind wouldnโt stop making.
A girl in a field, standing over her slain sister, the black wisps of the Cut rising from her body, a father kneeling beside her.
He was a great Healer.ย Baghra had gotten it wrong. It had taken more than the Small Science to save Morozovaโs other daughter. It had takenย merzost, resurrection. Iโd been wrong too. Baghraโs sister hadnโt been Grisha. Sheโd beenย otkazatโsyaย after all.
โYou must have known,โ said Zoya, sitting down on the other side of the fire. Her gaze was accusatory.
Had I? The jolt that night by theย banya, Iโd assumed it was something in me.
And yet, when I looked back, the pattern seemed clear. The first time Iโd used my power had been when Mal lay dying in my arms. Weโd searched for the stag for weeks, but weโd found it after our first kiss. When the sea whip had revealed itself, Iโd been standing in the circle of his arms, close to him for the first time since weโd been forced aboard the Darklingโs ship. The amplifiers wanted to be brought together.
And hadnโt our lives been bound from the first? By war. By abandonment. Maybe by something more. It couldnโt be chance that weโd been born into neighboring villages, that weโd survived the war that had taken both of our families, that weโd both ended up at Keramzin.
Was this the truth behind Malโs gift for tracking, that he was somehow tied to everything, to the making at the heart of the world? Not a Grisha, and no ordinary amplifier, but something else entirely?
I am become a blade.ย A weapon to be used. How right heโd been.
I covered my face with my hands. I wanted to blot out this knowledge, carve it from my skull. Because I hungered for the power that lay beyond that golden door, desired it with a kind of pure and aching fever that made me want to tear at my skin. The price for that power would be Malโs life.
What had Baghra said?ย You may not be able to survive the sacrifice that
merzostย requires.
Mal returned a little while later. Heโd brought back two fat rabbits. I heard the sounds of him and Tolya working as they cleaned and spitted the animals, and soon I smelled cooking meat. I had no appetite.
We sat there, listening to the branches pop and hiss in the heat of the flame, until finally Harshaw spoke. โIf someone doesnโt talk soon, Iโm going to set fire to the woods.โ
So I took a sip from Zoyaโs flask, and I talked. The words came more easily than I expected. I told them Baghraโs story, the horrible tale of a man obsessed, of the daughter he neglected, of the other daughter who had nearly died because of it.
โNo,โ I corrected myself. โShe did die that day. Baghra killed her. And Morozova brought her back.โ
โNo one canโโ
โHe could. It wasnโt healing. It was resurrection, the same process he used to create the other amplifiers. Itโs all in his journals.โ The means of keeping oxygen in the blood, the method for preventing decay. The power of the Healer and the Fabrikator pushed to their limits and well beyond, taken to a place they were never meant to go.
โMerzost,โ Tolya whispered. โPower over life and death.โ
I nodded. Magic. Abomination. The power of creation. That was why the journals were incomplete. In the end, there had been no reason for Morozova to hunt for a creature to make into the third amplifier. The cycle had already been completed. Heโd endowed his daughter with the power heโd meant for the firebird. The circle had closed.
Morozova had achieved his grand design, but not the way he had expected.ย To dabble inย merzost, well, the results are never quite what one would hope.ย When the Darkling had tampered with the making at the heart of the world, the punishment for his arrogance was the Fold, a place where his power was
meaningless. Morozova had created three amplifiers that could never be brought together without his daughter forfeiting her life, without his descendants paying in flesh and blood.
โBut the stag and the sea whip โฆ they were ancient,โ said Zoya. โMorozova chose them deliberately. They were sacred creaturesโrare,
fierce. His child was just an ordinaryย otkazatโsyaย girl.โ Was that why the Darkling and Baghra had discounted her so readily? Theyโd assumed sheโd died that day, but the resurrection must have made her strongerโher fragile, mortal life, a life bound by the rules of this world, had been replaced by something else. But in the moment when Morozova gave his daughter a second life, a life that didnโt rightly belong to her, would he have cared if it was abomination that made it possible?
โShe survived the plunge into the river,โ I said. โAnd Morozova brought her south to the settlements.โ To live and die in the shadow of the arch that would someday give Dva Stolba its name.
I looked at Mal. โShe must have passed her power on to her descendants, built into their bones.โ A bitter laugh escaped me. โI thought it was me,โ I said. โI was so desperate to believe there was some great purpose to all this, that I didnโt just โฆ happen. I thought I was the other branch of Morozovaโs line. But it was you, Mal. It was always you.โ
Mal watched me through the flames. He hadnโt said a word through the whole conversation, through all of a dinner that only Tolya and Oncat had managed to eat.
He said nothing now. Instead he rose and walked to me. He held out his hand. I hesitated the briefest moment, almost afraid to touch him, then placed my palm in his and let him pull me to my feet. Silently, he led me to one of the tents.
Behind me, I heard Zoya grumble, โOh, Saints, now I have to listen to Tolya snore all night?โ
โYou snore too,โ said Harshaw. โAnd it isnโt ladylike.โ โI do notโฆโ
Their voices faded as we bent to enter the dim confines of the tent. Firelight filtered through the canvas walls and sent shadows swaying. Without a word, we lay down in the furs. Mal curled around me, his chest pressed to my back, his arms a tight circle, his breath soft against the crook of my neck.
It was the way weโd slept with the insects buzzing around us by the shores of Trivkaโs Pond, in the belly of a ship bound for Novyi Zem, on a narrow cot in the run-down boardinghouse in Cofton.
His hand slid down my forearm. Gently, he clasped the bare skin of my wrist, letting his fingers touch, testing. When they met, that jolting force moved through both of us, even that brief taste of power nearly unbearable in its force.
My throat constrictedโwith misery, with confusion, and with shameful, undeniable longing. To want this from him was too much, too cruel.ย Itโs not fair.ย Stupid words, childish. Senseless.
โWeโll find another way,โ I whispered.
Malโs fingers separated, but he kept my wrist in a loose hold as he drew me closer. I felt as I always had in his armsโcomplete, like I was home. But now I had to question even that. Was what I felt real or some product of a destiny Morozova had set into motion hundreds of years ago?
Mal brushed the hair from my neck. He pressed a single brief kiss to the skin above the collar.
โNo, Alina,โ he said softly. โWe wonโt.โ
* * *
THE RETURN JOURNEY to Dva Stolba seemed shorter. We kept to the high country, to the narrow spines of the hills, as distance and days faded beneath our feet. We moved more quickly because the terrain was familiar and Mal wasnโt seeking signs of the firebird, but I also just felt as if time were contracting. I dreaded the reality that awaited us back in the valley, the decisions we would have to make, the explanations I would have to give.
We traveled in near silence, Harshaw humming occasionally or murmuring to Oncat, the rest of us locked in our own thoughts. After that first night, Mal kept his distance. I hadnโt approached him. I wasnโt even sure what I wanted to say. His mood had changedโthat calm was still there, but now I had the eerie sense that he was drinking in the world, memorizing it. He would turn his face up to the sun and let his eyes close, or break a stalk of bur marigold and press it to his nose. He hunted for us every night that we had enough cover for a fire. He pointed out larksโ nests and wild geranium, and caught a field mouse for Oncat, who seemed too spoiled to do any hunting of her own.
โFor a doomed man,โ said Zoya, โyouโre remarkably chipper.โ โHe isnโt doomed,โ I snapped.
Mal nocked an arrow, drew back, and released. It twanged into what looked like a cloudless and empty sky, but a second later, we heard a distant caw and a shape plummeted to the earth nearly a mile ahead of us. He shouldered his bow. โWe all die,โ he said as he jogged off to retrieve his kill. โNot everyone dies for a reason.โ
โAre we philosophizing?โ asked Harshaw. โOr were those song lyrics?โ As Harshaw started humming, I ran to catch up with Mal.
โDonโt say that,โ I said as I came level with him. โDonโt talk that way.โ โAll right.โ
โAnd donโt think that way either.โ He actually grinned.
โMal, please,โ I said desperately, not even sure what I was asking for. I grabbed his hand. He turned to me, and I didnโt stop to think. I went up on my toes and kissed him. It took him the barest second to react, then he dropped his bow and kissed me back, arms winding tight around me, the hard planes of his body pressed against mine.
โAlinaโโ he began.
I grabbed the lapels of his coat, tears filling my eyes. โDonโt tell me this is all happening for a reason,โ I said fiercely. โOr that itโs going to be okay. Donโt tell me youโre ready to die.โ
We stood in the tall grass, wind singing through the reeds. He met my gaze, his blue eyes steady. โItโs not going to be okay.โ He brushed the hair back from my cheeks and cupped my face in his rough hands. โNone of this is happening for a reason.โ He skimmed his lips over mine. โAnd Saints help me, Alina, I want to live forever.โ
He kissed me again, and this time, he didnโt stopโnot until my cheeks were flushed and my heart was racing, not until I could barely remember my own name, let alone anyone elseโs, not until we heard Harshaw singing, and Tolya grumbling, and Zoya cheerfully promising to murder us all.
* * *
THAT NIGHT, I slept in Malโs arms, wrapped in furs beneath the stars. We whispered in the dark, stealing kisses, conscious of the others lying only a few
feet away. Some part of me wished that a Shu raiding party would come and put a bullet through both of our hearts, leave us there forever, two bodies that would turn to dust and be forgotten. I thought about just leaving, abandoning the others, abandoning Ravka as weโd once intended, striking out through the mountains and making our way to the coast.
I thought of all these things. But I rose the next morning, and the morning after that. I ate dry biscuits, drank bitter tea. Too soon, the mountains faded, and we began our final descent into Dva Stolba. Weโd arrived back sooner than expected, in time to retrieve theย Bitternย and still meet any forces the Apparat might send to Caryeva. When I saw the two stone spindles of the ruins, I wanted to level them, let the Cut do what time and weather had failed to, and turn them to rubble.
It took a little while to locate the boardinghouse where Tamar and the others had found lodging. It was two stories high and painted a cheerful blue, its porch hung with prayer bells, its pointed roof covered in Shu inscriptions that glittered with gold pigment.
We found Tamar and Nadia seated at a low table in one of the public rooms, Adrik beside them, his empty coat sleeve neatly pinned, a book perched awkwardly on his knees. They sprang to their feet when they saw us.
Tolya enveloped his sister in an enormous hug, while Zoya gave Nadia and Adrik a grudging embrace. Tamar hugged me close as Oncat sprang from Harshawโs shoulders to forage through the leavings of their meal.
โWhat happened?โ she asked, taking in my troubled expression. โLater.โ
Misha came pelting down the stairs and hurled himself at Mal. โYou came back!โ he shouted.
โOf course we did,โ said Mal, sweeping him into a hug. โDid you keep to your duties?โ
Misha nodded solemnly.
โGood. I expect a full report later.โ
โCome on,โ Adrik said eagerly. โDid you find it? Davidโs upstairs with Genya. Should I go get him?โ
โAdrik,โ chastised Nadia, โtheyโre exhausted and probably starving.โ โIs there tea?โ asked Tolya.
Adrik nodded and went off to order.
โWe have news,โ said Tamar, โand it isnโt good.โ
I didnโt think it could possibly be worse than our news, so I waved her on. โTell me.โ
โThe Darkling attacked West Ravka.โ I sat down hard. โWhen?โ
โAlmost immediately after you left.โ
I nodded. It was some comfort in knowing there was nothing I could have done. โHow bad?โ
โHe used the Fold to take a big chunk out of the south, but from what weโve heard, most of the people had already evacuated.โ
โAny word of Nikolaiโs forces?โ
โThere are rumors of cells cropping up fighting under the Lantsov banner, but without Nikolai to lead them, Iโm not sure how long theyโll hold out.โ
โAll right.โ At least now I knew what we were dealing with. โThereโs more.โ
I glanced at Tamar questioningly, and the look on her face sent a chill slithering over my skin.
โThe Darkling marched on Keramzin.โ