He opened his eyes. They flickered silver, the pupils slitting.
“That Elizaveta,” he said on a wheezing gasp. “Such an actress.”
“What happened? What did she do to you?”
He released a sound that might have been a laugh or a moan. “She offered me wine. After hundreds of years. Honey mead made from fruit born of her vines. She said she had been saving it. It was sweet, but it was not wine.”
She looked at his charred lips, his blackened tongue, and understood. “It was fuel.”
“Only our own power can destroy us. My flames burned me from the inside.”
“No,” Zoya said. “No.” Her heart was too full of loss. “I’ll get Grigori. He can heal you.”
“It’s too late.” Juris seized her wrist with surprising force. “Listen to me. We thought we had convinced Elizaveta to give up her power, but that was never her intent. If she breaks free of the bounds of the Fold, nothing will be able to control her. You must stop her.”
“How?” Zoya pleaded.
“You know what you must do, Zoya. Wear my bones.” She recoiled, but he did not release his grip. “Kill me. Take my scales.”
Zoya shook her head. All she could think of was her aunt’s resolute face. Zoya had been responsible for her death. She could have stopped the Darkling, if she’d looked closer, if she’d understood, if she hadn’t been consumed by her own ambition. “He doesn’t get to take you from me too.”
“I am not your aunt,” Juris growled. “I am your teacher. You were an able student. Prove to me that you are a great one.”
She could not do it. “You said it was a corruption.”
“Only if you give nothing of yourself in return.”
The truth of that hit her, and Zoya knew she was afraid.
“A little faith, Zoya. That is all this requires.”
A bitter laugh escaped her. “I don’t have it.”
“There is no end to the power you may obtain. The making at the heart of the world has no limit. It does not weaken. It does not tire. But you must go to meet it.”
“What if I get it wrong all over again?” What if she failed Juris as she had failed the others? Her life was crowded with too many ghosts.
“Stop punishing yourself for being someone with a heart. You cannot protect yourself from suffering. To live is to grieve. You are not protecting yourself by shutting yourself off from the world. You are limiting yourself, just as you did with your training.”
“Please,” Zoya said. She was the thing she’d always feared becoming: a lost girl, helpless, being led up the aisle of the chapel in Pachina. “Don’t leave me. Not you too.”
He nudged his broadsword with one hand. “Zoya of the lost city. Zoya of the garden. Zoya bleeding in the snow. You are strong enough to survive the fall.”
Juris released a cry that began as a scream and became a roar as his body shifted from man to dragon, bones cracking, scales widening, until each was nearly the size of her palm.
He enfolded her in his wings, so gently. “Now, Zoya. I can hold on no longer.”
Zoya released a sob. To live is to grieve. She was a lost girl—and a general too. She hefted the broadsword in her hands and, with the power of the storm in her palms, drove the blade into his heart.
At the same instant, Zoya felt the dragon’s claws pierce her chest. She cried out, the pain like the fork of a lightning bolt, splitting her open. She felt her blood soaking the silk against her body, a sacrifice. Juris released a heavy sigh and shut his glowing eyes. Zoya pressed her face to his scales, listening to the heavy thud of his heart, of her own. Was this death, then? She wept for them both as the rhythm began to slow.
A moment passed. An age. Juris’ claws retracted. She could hear only one heartbeat now, and it was her own.
Zoya felt no pain. When she looked down, she saw her kefta was torn, but the blood flowed no longer. She touched her fingers to her skin. The wounds Juris had made had already healed.
There was no time for mourning, not if Juris’ sacrifice was to mean something, not if she had any hope of saving Nikolai and stopping Elizaveta. Zoya would have her revenge. She would save her king.
She grabbed a dagger from the wall. Before her tears could begin anew, she scraped the scales from the ridge that ran over Juris’ back.
But what was she to do now? She wasn’t a Fabrikator. That was Elizaveta’s gift.
Are we not all things?
Zoya had broken the boundaries within her order, but did she dare challenge the limits of the orders themselves?
Anything worth doing always starts as a bad idea. Nikolai’s words. Terrible advice. But perhaps it was time to heed it. She focused on the scales in her hand, sensed their edges, the particles that comprised them. It felt alien and wrong, and she knew instantly that this work would never be natural to her, but in this moment her meager skill would have to be enough. Zoya let the scales guide her. She could feel the shape they wanted to take, could see it burning clearly in her mind like a black wheel—no, a crown. Juris. Pushy to the last. She shoved the image aside and forced the scales to form two cuffs around her wrists instead.
As soon as the scales touched, sealing the bond, she felt Juris’ strength flow through her. But this was different than it had been with the tiger. Open the door. She could feel his past, the eons both he and the dragon had lived flooding through her, threatening to over-whelm the short speck of her life.
Take it, then, she told him. I am strong enough to survive the fall.
She felt Juris’ restraint, felt him draw back, protecting her and guiding her as he had done over the past weeks. As he always would.
The dragon was with her. And they would fight.
OVER THE GUARD’S SHOULDER, Nina saw the fishermen turn their heads toward the sound of a crying baby.
Hurriedly, the guard tried to slam shut the doors.
“Help!” cried Nina. “Help us!”
“What’s going on over there?” said one of the men.
Bless Fjerda and its belief in helpless girls. They were taught from a young age to protect the weak, particularly women. That kindness didn’t usually extend to Grisha, but the dead had spoken, and Nina intended to let them keep speaking.
Another baby began to cry. “That’s it, kid,” Nina whispered. “Do your thing.”
Now the fishermen were moving up the side of the hill toward the checkpoint.
“This is none of your concern,” said the guard, finally succeeding in closing the wagon doors.
“What do you have in there?” a voice asked.
Nina peered through the slats. Hanne and Adrik had been yanked from the wagon and were flanked by armed men. The crowd of locals around the cart was growing.
“Just a shipment for the factory,” said the guard.
“So why is the wagon headed down the mountain?”
“Get this wagon turned around and get going,” the guard growled to the soldiers now perched in the driver’s seat. The reins snapped and the horses took a few tentative steps forward, but the fishermen had moved into the road, blocking the wagon’s path.
“Show us what’s in the wagon,” said a large man in a red cap.
Another stepped forward, hands spread in an open, reasonable gesture. “We can hear babies crying. Why are you trying to take them to a munitions factory?”
“I made it clear that it’s none of your concern. We do not answer to you, and if you insist on interfering with the business of the Fjerdan military, we are authorized to use force.”
A new voice spoke from somewhere Nina couldn’t see. “Are you really going to open fire on these men?”
Nina moved to the other side of the wagon and saw more of the townspeople had gathered, drawn by the commotion at the checkpoint.
“Why wouldn’t they?” said a woman. “They already poisoned our river.”
“Be silent,” hissed a soldier.
“She’s right,” said the tavern owner Nina recognized from their first day in town. “Killed that girl up at the convent. Killed Gerit’s cattle.”
“You want to shoot us, go ahead,” said someone. “I don’t think you have enough bullets for us all.”
“Stay back!” cried the guard, but Nina heard no gunfire.
A moment later, the wagon doors were pried open once again.
“What is this?” said the man in the red cap. “Who are these women? What’s wrong with them?”
“They’re … they’re sick,” said the guard. “They’ve been quarantined for their own good.”
“There’s no disease,” said Nina from the shadows of the cart. “The soldiers have been experimenting on these girls.”
“But they’re all … Are they all pregnant?”
Nina let the silence hang, felt the mood of the crowd shift from suspicion to outright anger.
“You’re from the convent?” the man asked, and Nina nodded. Let this miserable pinafore and these awful blond braids lend her a bit of credibility.
“These prisoners are not women,” sputtered the guard. “They’re Grisha. They are potential threats to Fjerda, and you have no right to interfere.”
“Prisoners?” the man in the red cap repeated, his face troubled. “Grisha?”
The crowd moved forward to stare at the women and girls. Nina knew the power of the prejudice they carried with them. She’d seen it in Matthias, felt the weight of it. But she’d also seen that burden shift, that seemingly immovable rock eroded by understanding. If that could happen for a drüskelle soldier who had been raised to hate her kind, she had to believe it could happen for these people too. The girls in this wagon were not powerful witches raining down destruction. These were not faceless enemy soldiers. They were Fjerdan girls plucked from their lives and tortured. If ordinary people could not see the difference, there was no hope for anyone.
“Cille?” said a young fisherman pushing forward through the crowd. “Cille, is that you?”