“They called the Mongols the wolves from the east,” she said. “They ruled Russia for over two hundred years. The blood of the Mongols is strong in the Polenitsy.”
Billi lifted the quiver. The arrows were neatly arranged in two rows. Wide-barbed man-killers at the front, narrow-headed armor-piercing bodkins at the back; all with eagle fletching. Billi spotted a silver ring on a tassel off the side of the quiver. She put it on her right thumb. Olga handed her the bow, strung and ready.
The bow was a masterpiece.
“This will do,” said Billi.
They worked together to arm her. As Ivan laced up the mail shirt, Billi tucked in the sword and a long knife. Finally she threw the quiver over her shoulder and notched her first arrow, hooking the bowstring around her thumb, then pulling back, slowly letting her back muscles do the heavy work alongside her arms. The draw was powerful. They’d use the figurine to make arrowheads. She’d have no problem puttinga meteor-tipped arrow through Baba Yaga’s thick skull.
Olga stepped back and straightened Billi’s armor. “Maybe some Mongol blood runs in you, child. You are more wolf than you know.”
Ivan gave a low admiring whistle. “Now you are beautiful,” he said. He’d taken a mail shirt of his own and a plain, straight sword. But he seemed happiest with Olga’s big revolver and a fistful of bullets. “They will have the advantage out here,” he said, surveying the wild landscape. “They’ll come at us from all around. We need a better battlefield.”
“We’ll find one,” replied Billi. She took one of the mobiles they’d confiscated, and checked it. Barely any reception.
“Dad? Where are you?”
“Billi? Billi?”
“Dad, we’ve got Vasilisa.”
“Billi? Where are you?”
“We’ve got Vasilisa!” Billi shouted. Her dad sounded like he was shouting from the other side of the world. “Where are you?” Damn it! Billi stared around the road. To one side was a fenced-off stretch of woodland, picketed with spindly trees. Signs hung every thirty feet along the fence. They were all a trisected black circle on a yellow background: the international warning symbol for radiation.
“Where are you?”
Somewhere made of concrete and choked with pollution, a place where Baba Yaga would be weakest. Billi read the dented road sign up ahead.
“Chernobyl, Dad.”
39
THEY DROVE THE REST OF THE DAY, STOPPING ONLY to snack on dried meat, hard bread, and water. Olga said nothing, but each time she stopped, she spent the meal searching the horizon. But nobody came.
Using the toolbox, Billi disassembled the arrows. She cut the heads out and then, holding the Venus figurine between her boots, smashed it with a hammer. Vasilisa sat silently beside her as she chipped the shards of polished black stone into something that resembled arrowheads.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
Billi handed her a rough triangle of meteoric stone.
“This is the meteoric rock from Tunguska I told you about. Your great-grandmother knew that it had injured Baba Yaga before.”
Vasilisa inspected the stone. “You think this will kill Baba Yaga?” Her voice betrayed her doubts.
“Bloody hope so.”
By the time they’d finished their meal, Billi had three decent stone-tipped arrows. She used up a tube of superglue to hold them into the shafts; they weren’t particularly well made and she would have liked to try shooting with them, to get an idea of how they flew, but time was too short; they needed to move.
The late afternoon sun hung low on the horizon, bathing the landscape with pinks and oranges. Sparse woodland gave way to overgrown and abandoned fields, dotted with crumbling old farmhouses and empty villages. The signs of humanity increased as the day wore on. They’d reached the outskirts of Chernobyl.
Chernobyl had been the site of the worst nuclear disaster in history. Back in the 1980s, a nuclear reactor had exploded and launched a huge radioactive cloud over most of south Russia and Ukraine. Tens of thousands of people had been evacuated overnight, taking only what they could carry. They’d never returned. It seemed like ancient history, but the town itself looked as though it could have been emptied yesterday. The cars, the buildings, parks, and gardens all remained. Not demolished, as they would have been in a war-just empty. Only the humans had left.
So this was the world Baba Yaga wanted.
Silent, gray tower blocks stood like titans guarding a city of the dead. A flock of crows launched themselves into a cloud of black feathers, cawing angrily at their arrival, their cries sharp and keen. Otherwise the streets were eerily empty. The snow-laden boughs of the trees lining the road sagged over them, their branches scratching the van’s roof. Roots had broken through the tarmac, and pond-sized potholes pockmarked the road, each glistening with dark ice. Cars sat abandoned, rusting. Their hoods had been thrown open, and engines, tires, and seats were all stripped out.
The van stopped. A large shadow loomed over the front windshield, and the air rumbled with a curious, threatening growl.
A huge black bear with beady brown eyes stood in the center of the road. Olga left the engine running and stepped out of the van. The bear dropped down onto all fours, and even then was still taller than the woman. It lumbered closer and raised its head to sniff her.
Olga just stood, watching it.
The bear rose onto its hind legs, towering over her. It threw back its head and bellowed.
Billi glanced at Ivan. He’d been in the back inspecting the weapons, while Vasilisa had moved up front. He raised his eyebrows.
“Well?” he whispered. He moved forward and rested the pistol barrel on the back of the seat, pointing it at the windshield. Vasilisa was squeezed next to Billi. The girl reached out and touched the glass, mouth open as she gazed in awe at the giant creature.
“Olga knows what she’s doing. I think.”
Then the bear dropped back down onto all fours and wandered off into the woods. Billi stepped out and joined Olga.
“What was that all about?” said Billi after her heartbeat had returned to normal. “He’s the king here. He just wanted to make sure we knew,” Vasilisa said from out of the car window.
Ivan hopped out of the back and waved his pistol. “We could have scared him off with this. It would have been safer.”
Olga scowled. “Just what a human would think.”
They drove on for another fifteen minutes, slowly rolling along the silent roads.
“Where are we?” asked Billi.
“One of the outlying towns.” Olga pointed ahead. “The reactor’s a few miles that way.”
Billi checked the surroundings. The town wasn’t hugely built up, and each residential block had plenty of space around it. No matter which direction the attack came from, she’d see it coming.
“Stop here,” Billi said. Olga drew up at the side of the road. Ahead stood a set of tall iron gates, beyond which was a simple amusement park.
Billi wandered around the park. The yellow carts of the Ferris wheel were filled with snow. Crystalline ivy covered the rusty steel legs of the main support, and the steel creaked in the wind. A bit farther were the bumper cars. The roof had collapsed, and long strips of plastic cloth and wood were scattered over the cars.
Opposite the park was a school building. It was about eight stories tall, and would give them a good vantage point over the surrounding land. Vasilisa joined Billi as they went in to explore. The windows and doors were gone, so they stepped over the low threshold straight into a classroom. The paint on the walls and the desks had faded and blistered. There were posters of old Soviet leaders, a large framed map of the USSR in faded red, and drawings that had been made by children, mainly of rockets and cosmonauts. Small rubber gas masks hung on the coat hooks.
They walked past the nurse’s office, still filled with first-aid posters and old cots, and found the steps that led upstairs. Billi stopped dead as a shadow marked the wall. She tugged Vasilisa behind her.