“This all?” he asked.
“Sorry, it wasn’t a big piece of rock.”
Gareth checked all three arrows and handed one back. “The head’s too loose on this one-won’t fly far. I’ll hang on to these two.”
“And if that doesn’t work?” asked Gwaine. “What about the girl?”
“If that doesn’t work, we fight to the last man,” said Arthur. Unconsciously, he ran his thumb over the engraved pommel of his sword as he scanned the battleground, tracing the emblem of the two knights on a single horse. He pointed to the school building. “What do you reckon, Gareth?”
“I’d prefer a grassy knoll, but that’ll do.” He sprinted off, bow in one hand and his quiver in the other. Billi held Vasilisa’s hand and drew her saber. “Stick close to me.”
Vasilisa responded with a squeeze.
Arthur turned to Ivan. “And you are?”
Ivan straightened. “I am Tsarevich Ivan Alexeivich Rom-”
“But you can call him Ivan,” Billi interrupted. She wiped the sweat off her forehead. Arthur took her arm, seeing the bandages.
“You’ve been injured? How bad?”
“Werewolves. Pretty bad.” She pulled up a corner of the bandages. The bite marks were black circles now, but thin, dark veins ran just under the skin. “She took a big bite.”
“Where are Elaine’s poultices?” Arthur asked Mordred. The young squire sprang to attention.
“In the car, sir.”
“Then take Billi over there right now. Just get her-”
“Eyes front,” said Gwaine.
They came. Engines died as one by one the followers of Baba Yaga stepped out of their vehicles. Packs of wolves crept out of the woods and through the sprawling amusement park. Then the Polenitsy stopped, and Billi watched their skin ripple as the wolves became women. They approached, chests heaving and blowing big clouds of steaming breath in the frosty air, eyes on Billi and the others. Closest was Svetlana. Her body shone with sweat as she stood on top of a car, staring down at them. Her face turned to horror as she saw her grandmother. Then the horror gave way to fury as she realized she was there of her own free will.
But the younger wolf didn’t even have to voice her rage before the land around them came alive, silencing them all. The trees shook. Their burden of snow tumbled down over the gathered crowd. Their boughs creaked and their branches rustled, as though whispering to one another.
“What’s happening?” said Arthur as he backed away. He gestured to the other Templars, and they formed a line alongside him, Billi and Vasilisa behind them.
“Baba Yaga,” said Vasilisa.
Old Gray crouched. Her hands had fully changed into claws, and she flexed them, prepared for the attack. Gwaine took a wide stance as the ground trembled under him. Mordred’s hands wrung the spear shaft while Arthur kept his sword low but ready.
Ivan had his revolver in his right hand and used his scabbarded sword as a stick to help steady himself. He quickly looked back at Billi.
“Now we will find out how right you are,” he said as he swayed on the pitching ground.
Billi, still holding Vasilisa, drew out her saber.
A powerful wind roared down between the buildings, and in its howl there was the scream of a thousand voices. What Billi thought was a circling flock of crows was actually a single mass, a figure wrapped in long streaming robes and a tangle of cloaks.
The ground shook and a crevasse tore along the pavement, hurling off sharp chips of concrete. The buildings groaned, and Billi spun around as she heard the school’s windowpanes creak, lines of fracture growing like spiderwebs across the glass, twisting, but holding.
The Polenitsy knelt as one, all but Old Gray. She raised her head defiantly, her face now more wolf than human, long-muzzled and black-lipped. The trees bowed, the thick trunks groaning as their branches touched the ground. Billi covered her eyes as the wind stung her. She pulled Vasilisa against her, covering her as best she could.
Then the air stilled.
Baba Yaga stood among the Polenitsy. She drew her taloned fingers through her brittle white hair, and her wrinkled iron-fanged face darkened with rage as she slammed her bone staff on the hardpacked snow. The ancient witch unbent, rising high over them, her shadow covering the Templars as she lifted herself to her full height, nearly twenty feet tall.
“Mother of God,” whispered Mordred. “Steady, lad,” said Arthur, even though his voice was anything but calm. Baba Yaga peered down at them, her black-diamond eyes glinting.
“The giRL. Give herr to MeEE,” she hissed.
“Come and get her,” said Billi.
Sixty yards, Billi reckoned, between her and Gareth. Just come a few steps closer, you old hag.
“Trust me, okay?” Billi whispered, then put her saber against Vasilisa’s throat. Vasilisa stiffened.
Afew of the werewolves edged closer.
“No, not you lot.” Billi stared at Baba Yaga. “Just her.”
“BacK, ZTay back.” Baba Yaga waved her hand. She turned her head slowly, searching the surroundings, not moving closer.
Did she suspect a trap? Of course she did. But Baba Yaga wanted the Spring Child, and what were they? Insignificant humans.
“Come on, take her,” Billi taunted. “Or are you afraid of a few mortals?”
“YoU WiLL dIESLoweSt, LittLe Templahh.”
Baba Yaga stepped forward. She moved slowly, each step churning the icy tarmac. Her fingers twitched on the bone staff, the bracelets and necklaces rattling. A deep hellish hiss rolled from her cracked throat.
Just a few more feet.
She was thinking it. They were all thinking it. Billi’s mind was focused on the arrowhead, the small sharp triangle of stone that would kill Baba Yaga. It all came down to the next few steps. She thought of Gareth in the armory, sending arrow after arrow into the bull’s-eye. The guy could put an arrow through the eye of a dormouse in the dark.
Just one more step and it’s game over.
Billi couldn’t keep the urge, the desire, out of her mind. None of them could. They were practically screaming for Baba Yaga to take another step.
“Noo, NoOO-” Baba Yaga stopped. She glared at Billi, her black eyes seeming to grow in darkness. Her teeth ground against each other.
Just one more foot.
Baba Yaga’s gaze shot up to the library window. “NOO!”
Oh no.
Baba Yaga was an avatar, but one who’d accumulated all the powers of the thousands of Spring Children she’d devoured. She could command the elements. She’d taught the first Polenitsy to shape-shift. She could read minds. She’d heard them-how could she not? They were all screaming at her to step closer into the Templars’ trap.
The twang of the bowstring seemed as loud as a thunderbolt, and like a thunderbolt, it covered the distance between Gareth and Baba Yaga in an instant. Baba Yaga screamed and fell backward as the arrow entered her shoulder. The Polenitsy wailed, and three scurried to aid their goddess, then backed away as she rose up again, her face twisted into a mask of horror. The iron-filled black mouth opened, and she screamed, snapping the arrow off with a flick of her taloned finger. Bilious black blood spurted from the wound.
The wolf pack leaped toward them. Dozens of Polenitsy moved from human to wolf in the blink of an eye.
“C’mon!” Billi wrapped her fingers tight around Vasilisa’s wrist as she backed away.
The second arrow flew, but Baba Yaga swatted it out of the air; it tumbled away and was lost in the snow.
Arthur grabbed Vasilisa around the waist as he ran, lifting her off the ground.
An engine revved and a Jeep raced out from an alleyway, Lance at the wheel.
“Let’s get the hell out of here,” he said.
The wolves charged them.
“Ivan!” Billi pulled him toward the Jeep. She kicked one startled werewolf in the jaw, catching its tongue in its teeth. Old Gray leaped among the Polenitsy in a frenzy of fangs and claws.