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Ruin and Rising

Page 14

by Leigh Bardugo


  “If you’re going to jump, at least give me time to compose a ballad in your honor,” said Nikolai. I turned to see him striding onto the terrace, blond hair shining. He’d thrown on an elegant greatcoat of army drab, marked with the golden double eagle. “Something with lots of sad fiddle and a verse devoted to your love of herring.”

  “If I wait, I may have to hear you sing it.”

  “I happen to have a more than passable baritone. And what’s the rush? Is it my cologne?”

  “You don’t wear cologne.”

  “I have such a naturally delightful scent that it seems like overkill. But if you have a penchant for it, I’ll start.”

  I wrinkled my nose. “No, thank you.”

  “I shall obey you in all things. Especially after that demonstration,” he said with a nod to the lopped-off mountain. “Anytime you want me to take off my hat, please just ask.”

  “Looks impressive, doesn’t it?” I said with a sigh. “But the Darkling learned at Baghra’s knee. He’s had hundreds of years to master his power. I’ve had less than one.”

  “I have a gift for you.”

  “Is it the firebird?”

  “Was that what you wanted? Should have told me sooner.” He reached into his pocket and placed something atop the wall.

  Light glinted off an emerald ring. The lush green stone at its center was bigger than my thumbnail and surrounded by stars of tiny diamonds.

  “Understatement is overrated,” I said on a shaky breath.

  “I love it when you quote me.” Nikolai tapped the ring. “Console yourself knowing that, should you ever punch me while wearing it, you’ll probably take my eye out. And I’d very much like you to. Wear it, that is. Not punch me.”

  “Where did you get this thing?”

  “My mother gave it to me before she left. It’s the Lantsov emerald. She was wearing it at my birthday dinner the night we were attacked. Curiously enough, that was not the worst birthday I’ve had.”

  “No?”

  “When I was ten, my parents hired a clown.”

  Tentatively, I reached out and picked up the ring. “Heavy,” I said.

  “A mere boulder, really.”

  “Did you tell your mother you planned to give it to a common orphan?”

  “She did most of the talking,” he said. “She wanted to tell me about Magnus Opjer.”

  “Who?”

  “A Fjerdan ambassador, quite a sailor, made his money in shipping.” Nikolai looked out at the cloud bank. “Also my father, apparently.”

  I wasn’t sure whether to offer congratulations or condolences. Nikolai talked about the conditions of his birth easily enough, but I knew he felt the sting of it more deeply than he admitted.

  “It’s strange to actually know,” he continued. “I think some part of me always hoped the rumors were just that.”

  “You’ll still make a great king.”

  “Of course I will,” he scoffed. “I’m melancholy, not daft.” He brushed an invisible piece of lint from his sleeve. “I don’t know if she’ll ever forgive me for sending her into exile, especially to the Colonies.”

  Was it harder to lose a mother or to simply never know one? Either way, I felt for him. He’d lost his family piece by piece—first his brother, now his parents. “I’m sorry, Nikolai.”

  “What is there to be sorry about? I’ve finally gotten what I wanted. The King has stepped down, the path to the throne is clear. If there weren’t an all-powerful dictator and his monstrous horde to attend to, I’d be opening a bottle of champagne.”

  Nikolai could be as glib as he wanted. I knew this wasn’t how he’d imagined assuming leadership of Ravka—his brother murdered, his father brought low by the sordid accusations of a servant.

  “When will you take the crown?” I asked.

  “Not until we’ve won. I’ll be crowned in Os Alta or not at all. And the first step is consolidating our alliance with West Ravka.”

  “Hence the ring?”

  “Hence the ring.” He smoothed the edge of his lapel and said, “You know, you could have told me about Genya.”

  I felt a wash of guilt. “I was trying to protect her. Not enough people have done that.”

  “I don’t want lies between us, Alina.” Was he thinking of his father’s crimes? His mother’s dalliance? Still, he wasn’t quite being fair.

  “How many lies have you told me, Sturmhond?” I gestured to the Spinning Wheel. “How many secrets have you kept until you were ready to share them?”

  He tucked his hands behind his back, looking distinctly uncomfortable. “Prince’s prerogative?”

  “If a mere prince gets a pass, so does a living Saint.”

  “Are you going to make a habit of winning arguments? It’s very unbecoming.”

  “Was this an argument?”

  “Obviously not. I don’t lose arguments.” Then he peered over the side. “Saints, is he running the ice stairs?”

  I squinted through the mist. Sure enough, someone was making his way up the narrow, zigzagging steps along the cliff side, his breath pluming in the icy air. It took me only a moment to realize it was Mal, head bent, pack on his shoulders.

  “Looks … bracing. If he keeps this up, I may actually have to start exerting myself.” Nikolai’s tone was light, but I could feel his clever hazel eyes on me. “Assuming we best the Darkling, as I’m sure we will, does Mal plan to stay on as the captain of your guard?”

  I caught myself before I could rub my thumb over the scar on my palm.

  “I don’t know.” Despite everything that had happened, I wanted to keep Mal near. That wouldn’t be fair to either of us. I made myself say, “I think it might be better if he was reassigned. He’s good in combat, but he’s a better tracker.”

  “You know he won’t take a commission away from the fighting.”

  “Do what you think is best.” The pain was like a slender knife gliding right between my ribs. I was cutting Mal out of my life, but my voice was steady. Nikolai had taught me well. I tried to hand the ring back. “I can’t accept this. Not now.” Maybe not ever.

  “Keep it,” he said, curling my fingers over the emerald. “A privateer learns to press any advantage.”

  “And a prince?”

  “Princes get used to the word yes.”

  * * *

  WHEN I GOT BACK to my room that evening, Nikolai had more surprises waiting. I hesitated, then turned on my heel and marched down the corridor to where the other girls were lodged. For a long second, I just stood there, feeling shy and foolish, then I forced myself to knock.

  Nadia answered. Behind her, I saw Tamar had come to visit and was sharpening her axes by the window. Genya sat at the table, sewing gold thread around another eye patch, and Zoya was lounging on one of the beds, keeping a feather aloft with a gust from her fingertips.

  “I need to show you something,” I said.

  “What is it?” asked Zoya, keeping her eyes on the feather.

  “Just come and see.”

  She rolled herself off the bed with an exasperated sigh. I led them down the hallway to my room, and threw open the door.

  Genya dove into the pile of gowns laid out on my bed. “Silk!” she moaned. “Velvet!”

  Zoya picked up a kefta hanging over the back of my chair. It was gold brocade, the sleeves and hem embroidered lavishly in blue, the cuffs marked with jeweled sunbursts. “Sable,” she said to me, stroking the lining. “I have never loathed you more.”

  “That one’s mine,” I said. “But the rest are up for grabs. I can’t wear all of them in West Ravka.”

  “Did Nikolai have these made for you?” Nadia asked.

  “He’s not a big believer in half measures.”

  “Are you sure he wants you giving them away?”

  “Lending,” I corrected. “And if he doesn’t like it, he can learn to leave more careful instructions.”

  “It’s smart,” Tamar said, tossing a teal cape over her shoulders and looking at herse
lf in the mirror. “He needs to look like a King, and you need to look like a Queen.”

  “There’s something else,” I said. Again, I felt that shyness creep over me. I still didn’t quite know how to behave around the other Grisha. Were they friends? Subjects? This was new territory. But I didn’t want to be alone in my room with nothing but my thoughts and a pile of dresses for company.

  I took out Nikolai’s ring and set it on the table.

  “Saints,” breathed Genya. “That’s the Lantsov emerald.”

  It seemed to glow in the lamplight, the tiny diamonds twinkling around it.

  “Did he just give it to you? To keep?” asked Nadia.

  Genya seized my arm. “Did he propose?”

  “Not exactly.”

  “He might as well have,” Genya said. “That ring is an heirloom. The Queen wore it everywhere, even to sleep.”

  “Toss him over,” Zoya said. “Break his heart cruelly. I will gladly give our poor prince comfort, and I would make a magnificent queen.”

  I laughed. “You actually might, Zoya. If you could stop being horrible for a minute.”

  “With that kind of incentive, I can manage a minute. Possibly two.”

  I rolled my eyes. “It’s just a ring.”

  Zoya sighed and held the emerald up so it flashed. “I am horrible,” she said abruptly. “All these people dead, and I miss pretty things.”

  Genya bit her lip, then blurted, “I miss almond kulich. And butter, and the cherry jam the cooks used to bring back from the market in Balakirev.”

  “I miss the sea,” said Tamar, “and my hammock aboard the Volkvolny.”

  “I miss sitting by the lake at the Little Palace,” Nadia put in. “Drinking my tea, everything feeling peaceful.”

  Zoya looked at her boots and said, “I miss knowing what happens next.”

  “Me too,” I confessed.

  Zoya set the ring down. “Will you say yes?”

  “He didn’t actually propose.”

  “But he will.”

  “Maybe. I don’t know.”

  She gave a disgusted snort. “I lied. Now I have never loathed you more.”

  “It would be something special,” said Tamar, “to have a Grisha on the throne.”

  “She’s right,” added Genya. “To be the ones to rule, instead of just to serve.”

  They wanted a Grisha queen. Mal wanted a commoner queen. And what did I want? Peace for Ravka. A chance to sleep easy in my bed without fear. An end to the guilt and dread that I woke to every morning. There were old wants too, to be loved for who I was, not what I could do, to lie in a meadow with a boy’s arms around me and watch the wind move the clouds. But those dreams belonged to a girl, not to the Sun Summoner, not to a Saint.

  Zoya sniffed, settling a seed pearl kokochnik atop her hair. “I still say it should be me.”

  Genya tossed a velvet slipper at her. “The day I curtsy to you is the day David performs an opera naked in the middle of the Shadow Fold.”

  “Like I’d have you in my court.”

  “You should be so lucky. Come here. That headpiece is completely crooked.”

  I picked up the ring again, turning it over in my hand. I couldn’t quite bring myself to put it on.

  Nadia bumped my shoulder with her own. “There are worse things than a prince.”

  “True.”

  “Better things too,” Tamar said. She shoved a cobalt lace gown at Nadia. “Try this one on.”

  Nadia held it up. “Are you out of your head? The bodice might as well be cut to the navel.”

  Tamar grinned. “Exactly.”

  “Well, Alina can’t wear it,” said Zoya. “Even she’ll fall right out of it onto her dessert plate.”

  “Diplomacy!” shouted Tamar.

  Nadia collapsed into giggles. “West Ravka declares for the Sun Summoner’s bosom!”

  I tried to scowl, but I was laughing too hard. “I hope you’re all enjoying yourselves.”

  Tamar hooked a scarf over Nadia’s neck and drew her in for a kiss.

  “Oh, for Saints’ sake,” complained Zoya. “Is everyone pairing up now?”

  Genya snickered. “Take heart. I’ve seen Stigg casting mournful glances your way.”

  “He’s Fjerdan,” Zoya said. “That’s the only kind of glance he has. And I can arrange my own assignations, thank you very much.”

  We sorted through the trunks of clothes, choosing the gowns, coats, and jewels best suited to the trip. Nikolai had been strategic, as always. Each dress was wrought in shades of blue and gold. I wouldn’t have minded some variety, but this trip was about performance, not pleasure.

  The girls stayed until the lamps burned low, and I was grateful for their company. But when they’d claimed the dresses they liked, and the rest of the finery had been wrapped and returned to the trunks, they said their goodnights.

  I picked up the ring from the table, feeling the absurd weight of it in my palm.

  Soon the Kingfisher would return and Nikolai and I would leave for West Ravka. By then, Mal and his team would be on their way to the Sikurzoi. That was the way it should be. I’d hated life at court, but Mal had despised it. He’d be just as miserable standing guard at banquets in Os Kervo.

  If I was honest with myself, I could see that he’d flourished since we’d left the Little Palace, even underground. He had become a leader in his own right, found a new sense of purpose. I couldn’t say he seemed happy, but maybe that would come in time, with peace, with a chance for a future.

  We would find the firebird. We would face the Darkling. Maybe we’d even win. I would put on Nikolai’s ring, and Mal would be reassigned. He would have the life he should have had, that he might have had without me. So why did that knife between my ribs keep twisting?

  I lay down on my bed, starlight pouring through the window, the emerald clutched in my hand.

  Later, I could never be sure if I’d done it deliberately, or if it was an accident, my bruised heart plucking at that invisible tether. Maybe I was just too tired to resist his pull. I found myself in a blurry room, staring at the Darkling.

  CHAPTER

  9

  HE WAS SITTING on the edge of a table, his shirt crumpled into a ball at his knee, his arms raised above his head as the vague shape of a Corporalnik Healer came in and out of focus, tending to a bloody gash in the Darkling’s side. I thought at first we might be in the infirmary at the Little Palace, but the space was too dark and blurry for me to tell.

  I tried not to notice the way he looked—his mussed hair, the shadowed ridges of his bare chest. He seemed so human, just a boy wounded in battle, or maybe sparring. Not a boy, I reminded myself, a monster who has lived hundreds of years and taken hundreds of lives.

  His jaw tensed as the Corporalnik finished her work. When the skin had knitted together, the Darkling dismissed her with a wave. She hovered briefly, then slipped away, fading into nothing.

  “There’s something I’ve been wondering,” he said. No greeting, no preamble.

  I waited.

  “The night that Baghra told you what I intended, the night you fled the Little Palace, did you hesitate?”

  “Yes.”

  “In the days after you left, did you ever think of coming back?”

  “I did,” I admitted.

  “But you chose not to.”

  I knew I should go. I should at least have stayed silent, but I was so weary, and it felt so easy to be here with him. “It wasn’t just what Baghra said that night. You lied to me. You deceived me. You … drew me in.” Seduced me, made me want you, made me question my own heart.

  “I needed your loyalty, Alina. I needed you bound to me by more than duty or fear.” His fingers tested the flesh where his wound had been. Only a mild redness remained. “There are rumors that your Lantsov prince has been sighted.”

  I drifted nearer, trying to keep my voice casual. “Where?”

  He glanced up, his lips curling in a slight smile. “Do you like him?”<
br />
  “Does it matter?”

  “It’s harder when you like them. You mourn them more.” How many had he mourned? Had there been friends? A wife? Had he ever let anyone get that close?

  “Tell me, Alina,” said the Darkling. “Has he claimed you yet?”

  “Claimed me? Like a peninsula?”

  “No blushes. No averted eyes. How you’ve changed. What about your faithful tracker? Will he sleep curled at the foot of your throne?”

  He was pressing, trying to provoke me. Instead of shying away, I moved closer. “You came to me wearing Mal’s face that night in your chambers. Was it because you knew I would turn you away?”

  His fingers tightened on the table’s edge, but then he shrugged. “He was the one you longed for. Do you still?”

  “No.”

  “An apt pupil, but a terrible liar.”

  “Why do you have such disdain for otkazat’sya?”

  “Not disdain. Understanding.”

  “They’re not all fools and weaklings.”

  “What they are is predictable,” he said. “The people would love you for a time. But what would they think when their good king aged and died, while his witch of a wife remained young? When all those who remember your sacrifices are dust in the ground, how long do you think it will take for their children or their grandchildren to turn on you?”

  His words sent a chill through me. I still couldn’t get my head around the idea of the long life that lay ahead of me, that yawning abyss of eternity.

  “You never considered it, did you?” said the Darkling. “You live in a single moment. I live in a thousand.” Are we not all things?

  In a flash, his hand snaked out and seized my wrist. The room came into sudden focus. He yanked me close, wedging me between his knees. His other hand pressed to the small of my back, his strong fingers splayed over the curve of my spine.

  “You were meant to be my balance, Alina. You are the only person in the world who might rule with me, who might keep my power in check.”

  “And who will balance me?” The words emerged before I thought better of them, giving raw voice to a thought that haunted me even more than the possibility that the firebird didn’t exist. “What if I’m no better than you? What if instead of stopping you, I’m just another avalanche?”

 

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