“I’d rather just kill something,” Ava whispered.
“You try to forget him, but you can’t. You never will. He is the other half of your soul.”
“Astrid,” Damien said softly, but the Irina ignored him.
“Half of you died with him, Ava.”
“Shut up.”
“Half of you died, but you must understand, half of him still lives.”
She could feel the tears welling. Tears she’d shunned. Tears she forced herself to battle back. If she let them loose, they would fall forever.
“He lives in you.”
“Shut. Up.” She choked on the lump in her throat. “You have no idea—”
“I have every idea.” Astrid took a hand and put it to her throat. Then a whisper came from her lips in the Old Language, and the marks on her skin began to glow. Her mating marks were intricate, like gold lace covering her skin. When she pulled her hand away from her throat, Ava saw a band appear. Duller than the other marks, it crossed her collarbone and disappeared over her shoulders.
“What is that?” Ava asked.
Damien put his hand on Astrid’s shoulder, leaning down. “Too soon, sister.”
Astrid blinked and her mating marks disappeared. “Of course. Forgive me, Damien. I forget myself.”
“A rare occurrence, if I remember correctly.”
“Not so rare as before,” she said with a smile. She turned back to Ava, all friendly business again. “Shall we meet in an hour? That will give you time to dress and eat some breakfast. Did Karen bring a basket?”
“Yes, it’s in the kitchen.”
“Good.” Astrid nodded brusquely. “Eat something, dress warmly. Good shoes. I’ll be back in an hour to show you around.”
“I’ll be ready.”
“And if you need anything, if you’re not sleeping well… Just know that’s very normal when we lose a mate. I can help if you wish it. I’m the resident healer here.”
Damien stepped to the door as Astrid walked toward it. “Thank you.”
Ava saw him grasp Astrid’s hand in both of his. Saw the gentle hold she knew must be easing some of the other woman’s tension. Then Astrid smiled sweetly at him and left.
“She’s a widow,” Ava said a few moments after the door closed. “Astrid. She’s a widow.”
Damien nodded. “Yes.”
“What was that band around her throat? Does that happen when…”
“No,” he said softly. “Nothing has changed with your mating marks, Ava. Astrid wears a mourning collar to show respect for her lost mate, but it’s not permanent like a mating mark.”
“How long?”
“He was killed during the Rending. He was a good man. A friend.”
Ava looked out the window. She could still see Astrid walking along the pathway to the large colorful house where most of the Irina lived. Her soft brown curls bounced cheerfully and she saw her stop another woman and exchange some words that made both throw their heads back in laughter. Would she ever laugh like that again? Would she mourn for two hundred years, as Astrid had?
Half of you died with him.
Only half? It felt like more.
As if he could read her mind, Damien said, “You will take your own path to healing, Ava. Don’t ever look to another to rule your grief.”
She didn’t want to think about Malachi. Didn’t want to think about her dark dreams and the dull pain that lived in her chest.
Ava slid on a facade and turned from the window. “I heard someone brought breakfast?”
Hours later, she was walking through the valley with Astrid, drinking in the beauty of the water and the sky. The hills rolled softly up from the fjord, and the houses dotted the green meadows that rested in the shadow of the mountains. The retreat was far from just a collection of houses. There were greenhouses, workshops, even animals the community kept for milk and eggs.
“We’re mostly self-sustained. We try to keep to ourselves. The people in the nearest town think we’re hippies.” Astrid smiled. “They leave us alone, for the most part.”
“How many women?”
“It varies. Some of the older Irina, those Sari trusts the most, come and go. Living here full time, there are probably fifty or so.”
“The ones who come and go, what do they do?”
“Various things. Some maintain ties to the human world. A few have mates in active service in a scribe house somewhere relatively close. Most do other things that protect this haven and a few others like it around the world. So much of the world is run on the Internet now. We’re hardly isolated at all.”
“So there are other places like this? Where?”
Astrid glanced at her. “Sari doesn’t know you that well.”
“And everyone just follows Sari?” Ava found that hard to believe.
“At the end of the day,” Astrid said with a smile, “this is really her house. Her land. She doesn’t force any of us to stay, but where else would we go?”
“What about the scribe houses? Or that council they told me about in Vienna?”
“The council?” She sneered. “Old men who think Irina shouldn’t leave the house. The council of the elders thinks the only thing Irina are good for is breeding little scribes and inventing things to make them rich. They’re the ones who isolated us in retreats to begin with. They’re the ones who allowed the Rending to happen.”
Ava was shocked by the ire in the woman’s voice.
“Okay, then what about the scribes? The ones in Istanbul—”
Astrid stopped walking. “The Irin are far from one mind about this. You’ve seen Damien and Sari. You know they’re equal partners. I’m sure your mate was the same. They keep to the old ways. Many of the scribes are just like that, because that’s the way it’s supposed to be.”
“So—”
“But that’s not the reality. Before the Rending—even now—many Irin wanted the Irina powerless. If we were their equals, then that made the scribes less, in their eyes. Twisted, I know, but some of the sickness of the human world has crept into the Irin race, as well.”
“So why withdraw?” Ava asked. “You can’t change things if you just disappear.”
“We didn’t have much of a choice at first. And now?” Astrid shrugged and continued walking. “We change things. In our own way.”
“In secret. So that no one knows what you’re doing or where you are?”
“If that’s the way it needs to be? Yes. Do you think we want to paint another target on our back?”
“Why can’t you work with the scribes? Work together? Malachi said that Irin were most powerful when they were mated.”
“Yes, because we can loan them Irina power when they go into battle,” Astrid’s voice was acid. “Why do you think the Grigori decimated us as they did? Most of the Irina were weak from loaning our mates magic. So when we were attacked ourselves, we were vulnerable. You think we will chance that again? Think we will put our sisters and the few children we still have at risk so that the Irin gain glory?”
“Malachi loaned me his power,” Ava said. “And I gave him nothing. He went into battle weak so that I could be strong. And he died because of it. He sacrificed his own safety for mine.”
Astrid said nothing for a moment.
“Your mate will be rewarded in the heavens.” Astrid spoke quietly as she continued walking. “The Creator values nothing more than love. And what is love that does not sacrifice?”
“But you’re acting like he’s the only one.” Ava shook her head. “Malachi and his brothers treated me like some sort of royalty when I was at the scribe house in Istanbul. Don’t you realize? There are men—good scribes—out there. Fighting against the Grigori who harm people. Fighting against the Fallen. And they’re doing it alone. They’re mourning mates and children, alone.” Ava thought of the devastated faces of the scribes in Cappadocia. The longing she’d seen in Rhys’s face. In all of Malachi’s brothers. “They would give anything to have the Irina back.”