With a savage snarl, she grasped the butt of the rifle and yanked it toward her. Following its natural momentum, she brought it up, and then back down straight into his groin.
With a labored gasp, the assassin dropped to his knees. Apparently he was unable to choose which was the most painfuclass="underline" his nose or his genitals. Whatever pain he felt, however, was not enough as far as the Grand Duchess was concerned.
Burying her hands in his hair like a lover, she tugged his head forward viciously, directly onto her upraised knee. Now his scream was reduced to a gurgle. Yes, it was gratuitous. Yes, it was unnecessary. Yes, it felt delicious.
The Grand Duchess felt her own blood boil, a heady mix of terrible rage and savage joy. Her right hand wrapped around the hilt of Hatipai’s dagger. Now her hand pulled his head back by his hair. Looking into his confused, pained eyes, Zofiya smiled.
“This isn’t political,” she hissed. “This is very, very personal.”
She needed him to know that, even as she jerked the blade across his throat. The scarlet blood of the assassin was quite impressive on the pure linen of her white training uniform. Looking down at the silver dagger, Zofiya was abruptly entranced by the coating of blood it had now acquired.
Hatipai’s dagger was meant only to show her willingness to s
More than that—it felt warm in her grip. Through the broken, glorious remains of the rose window, Zofiya saw something moving that was not just the clouds. Not putting away her knife, not even cleaning it as was proper, she walked over to the view, broken glass crunching under her nearly bare feet, and peered out.
The Grand Duchess did not look over to the Great Hall to see if her brother was safe; instead she looked up. The clouds were still skidding across the blue of the sky, but something else was moving even faster among them: clusters of shadow, balls of gray smoke were darting south, like a flock of supernatural birds heading for home before winter.
Yet it was not winter, and she should not be able to discern geists. Zofiya glanced down again at her hands, still coated in blood, and then up again, suddenly making the connection between blood, knife and what she was seeing.
They were spirits, and if she concentrated hard enough, she could hear their song. It was a hymn of adulation for Hatipai, and she knew who they were—the dead worshippers of her goddess. It was a revelation—a true goddess-given revelation.
But what could it mean? Where were the true followers of the goddess going so very quickly?
To me. They come to me.
The voice of Hatipai rang bell-clear in her head, and the vision of the angel appeared among the broken remains of the rose window. Suddenly Zofiya was glad of the assassin’s attempt on her brother’s life. Without today’s blood, she would never have been granted this wonderful vision.
Tears began to roll out of her eyes and down her cheeks, as if she were a child again. Her fingers grew numb, and the knife fell from her fingers to rattle among the ruined glass. It was unimportant. Nothing mattered now as much as the clear voice of Hatipai in her mind.
You must come to me. It was the voice of her mother—or rather the voice that she wished her mother had used. Bring me this.
An image flashed in her mind. A grand Temple, with towering red walls, each one carved with scenes from the Holy Book of Beauty—the sacred text of Hatipai. The light that streamed in through the arched windows was yellow, bright and strong in a way that no sun in the north could possibly be. Zofiya saw the font where water was sacrificed to the goddess, and in rare and important moments other liquids. Her mind’s eye watched the font drain clear and a set of stairs grind into place—a marvel of ancient engineering. A cold dread formed in the pit of the Grand Duchess’ stomach—though she had no idea why.
Go down into the earth and bring me what only you can—my royal blood in Chioma has failed me. You shall not. The goddess’ tone grew harsh and angry, enough to make Zofiya quail.
As she trembled, the voice became soft again, bringing warmth to her suddenly cold limbs. I believe in your strength—you will not fail me, blessed child.
“Indeed, Bright One,” Zofiya whispered, her eyes halfshut, “I will not fail you. Whatever you need done, will be done.”
You must bring me what you find in the Temple. You will know it when you see it.
It was strange that the goddess would tell her no more—but it was not the place of even a Grand Duchess to questions. It was ai.
Tell no one what you are doing—there are many in this forsaken kingdom that would try to prevent you going.
It disturbed her to hear her brother’s Empire described thus, but she wouldn’t question what any of it meant. A sword did not question the motives of its wielder. She would immediately take the swiftest Imperial Dirigible south. How many weirstones they broke getting her there was of no account.
When the Imperial Guard found Zofiya, she was kneeling in the broken glass, looking out the window and weeping. She heard them whispering that she was a true and brave sister to cry for the salvation of the Emperor—but Zofiya knew better than they. She was weeping for the gift of sight. Something wonderful was happening to the south, and she would soon be part of it.
TWELVE
The Bond Reborn
“Still no sign?” Sorcha hissed out of the corner of her mouth.
The rest of the petitioners in the room took no notice—or at least pretended not to. The heat in the domed red room was stifling, and the Deacon could feel sweat coating her neck. Her robes had never felt a more foolish fashion choice. She would have been content to wait for Raed in the city, but the Prince apparently had different ideas. He had requested the Deacons from Vermillion be formally introduced to him.
Merrick, who sat opposite her in the room, wiped his own beaded forehead. “Raed is in the city, Sorcha, but I am no more able than you to say exactly where”—he gestured vaguely—“only that he is close.”
By the Bones, she needed a cigarillo, and it had to be now—etiquette be damned. Several of the other people in the room were already smoking; two beautifully carved pipes in the elegant fingertips of two merchants.
Obviously they were used to all this waiting, because they had the studied expressions of Sensitives at meditation. Actives were taught the very same lessons but were far less adept at it—Sorcha least of all.
Still, she had developed her own ways of coping. She lit her cigarillo, slumped back in her chair and contemplated seeing Raed again. He would not be able to sense they were in Orinthal, so she’d get a chance to observe his reactions. Maybe from them she could decide on what her own would be.
Leaning her forearms on her thighs, Sorcha glared down at the space between her feet, studying the mosaic floor. The question of her feelings for Raed was something she had avoided until now. Sorcha couldn’t decide which was worse: if she had been wrong about the giddy rush of desire, mistaking it for something deeper, or if she had been right.
In children’s stories when the Princess found her Prince, things were simple; they got married and lived that way forever. Life had taught her such things were oversimplifications—wishes that seldom came true in the complicated realities of existence. Most people never got to ride into the sunset with their one true love.