“With you in tow, the Kamarisi will welcome Siha s with open arms. And then he will take you to the Spar.”
“I don’t like it,” Siha s said.
“Nor do I!” echoed Irkadiy. “My Lady Princess, we should go to our countrymen. Let us join the push to take Baressa and the Spar and let Siha s and his men work from behind the Kamarisi’s lines.”
Siha s, his dark brows pinched, glanced aside at Irkadiy. “He may be right. The time may have come to admit that the Kamarisi can no longer be saved, and if that is so, you would be safer with your people.”
“If you do this”-the feathers along the back of the crow’s neck crested-“any chance to come near to the Al-Aqim will be lost, and mark my words: the battle will never reach them in time.”
Atiana stood and moved to the window. The cold morning air drifted in through the gaps. She could not see Baressa-it lay hidden behind the ridge-but she could see two columns of smoke rising to the east. No doubt the battle lay there. She wanted nothing more than to go to her people, to return to a place of safety.
The wind kicked up, rattling the pane momentarily, drawing her attention to the straits. She could see the tall cliffs on the far side and far below the white, churning water. The southern end of the Spar lay hidden by the turn of land, but she could see the northern landing and its elegant, towering arches that defied belief. They looked small from this distance. They seemed less threatening, as if her worries had been born of a dream. It felt-now that the sun was rising-as though her worries would fade, as nightmares do.
But this was no dream. This was no figment of her imagination to be cast aside like childish fears.
This was deadly serious, and she could no more abandon her cause than she could abandon her people.
“I will go to Sariya,” she said at last.
Irkadiy rose to his feet. “My Lady-”
“There is no choice,” Atiana said. “If I return, our last, best chance will have been lost. I will go, and I hope you will join me.” This she said to Siha s. Irkadiy would go with her, she knew, to the ends of the earth.
Siha s stood as well. He glanced to the window, and he too seemed to take note of the smoke rising in Baressa.
But then he met Atiana’s eyes and nodded. “I will go,” he said, “and we will see what can be done.”
As the men left to prepare, the crow flapped up to the windowsill. Atiana swung the window wide, and the smell of the sea came to her, strong and vibrant. The crow did not leave, however. It shivered for a moment and performed a strange dance, hopping on one foot, and then the other. Atiana could only assume Ishkyna’s control was slipping away now that she was alone with Atiana.
“There’s one more thing,” the crow said, and cawed several times, low and sad.
“What?”
“Your man is come.”
“What? Who?”
“Nik-” It cawed again. “Nischka.” Leaning out beyond the sill, the crow dipped its head, pointing westward. “He flies even now.”
And then the crow leaned out and winged above the tall snowy grass and out over the straits, cawing all the while.
CHAPTER SEVENTY-SEVEN
I t felt strange to return to the streets of Baressa so soon after leaving them, but it was a different day, and it felt like a different time. The battle to the south of the city grew and by the time midday had struck, it had grown until it sounded like it had encompassed a good half of the city. She saw no battles, but she could hear it, cannons and the cries of men. She could smell the gunpowder on the wind.
As transfixed as they were by the battle to the southeast, Atiana often found herself looking westward, toward Nikandr. Part of her wished she had her soulstone, if only to grasp it and to ask the ancients to spare him.
Siha s set a course toward the Spar. The streets were nearly empty. Only once in a great while did they see old men or women, or sometimes children, peek at them from behind corners or from the insides of their darkened homes. They came eventually to a line of men who were setting up hastily constructed barricades of rough stone, but Siha s, showing his ring of office, was allowed to pass with little more than a cross look from the Galaheshi soldier who’d stopped them.
Shortly after passing, a whistle alerted them. Another four men on ponies waved to Siha s. They were dressed in the same uniform as Siha s, red janissary coats with unadorned black turbans, boar tusk cartridges on their bandoliers and gleaming swords at their sides. They rode with an ease that made it clear these were seasoned men, and from the way they greeted Siha s and the rest of his men, she knew they were part of the Kamarisi’s personal guard. They met and moved further away from the Galaheshi soldiers to speak in peace.
“Where is the Kamarisi?” Siha s asked.
“He left the kasir early this morning with handpicked janissaries. They rode across the bridge and haven’t been seen since.”
“Then that is where we go.”
The soldier, a man ten years Siha s ’s senior, smiled and bowed his head. “As you say, My Lord.”
When they reached the Spar, foot soldiers hailed them. “We were told to find you,” one of them said. He was a heavyset man with a limp, and he stared at them all as if assessing them, as one might an enemy.
“They know,” Atiana whispered to Siha s.
He heard, for she felt him stiffen, but he did not turn his head away from the soldier standing in their way. “Where are they?” Siha s called to him.
He pointed to the far side of the straits. The city of Vihrosh, her stone buildings and red-tile roofs, were brightly lit by the noontime sun. “The Kamarisi and the Kaymakam of Galahesh wait for you at the gate to the old city.”
Siha s nodded, spurring his pony on.
The nine of them rode over the bridge, the hooves of their ponies clopping loudly in the relative silence. The smell of the sea grew stronger. The winds blew upward, swirling over the bridge, chilling them as they distanced themselves from the soldiers who eyed their passing with altogether too much interest.
“I don’t like this,” Atiana said.
“This is the way to Sariya.”
“They know we’re coming.”
“Did you think we could hide from the Al-Aqim forever?”
They reached the center of the bridge, where two squat stone towers sat, one on either side of the road. There, upon the central keystones, was the marking of blood that Atiana had seen only in the dark of the aether. It was dark brown, almost black. She could feel her nostrils flare, feel her gut churn at the memory of watching her father’s cold-blooded execution.
Again, as it had so often before, the image of the sword swinging down against his neck came to her. I will avenge you, she said to him, hoping he was near, hoping he could hear her. She could feel the touch of the aether, but could not sense her father. It made her feel as cold as a grave in a long-forgotten cemetery.
She looked to Irkadiy, who rode behind one of the other men. He nodded, granting her some small amount of strength. She wanted to turn back, to find another way that wouldn’t allow their enemies to take them as they wanted, but she could think of no other path. She had to get to Sariya. She would simply have to trust Ishkyna once they did. She nodded back to Irkadiy, telling him they would go on. He tried to smile, but he managed only a nervous twitching of his lips that reminded her of a much younger man-a callow youth holding a musket for the first time, a soldier new to the cough of the cannon-but then he swallowed, and the look was gone.
They continued on across the great bridge. Far below, the straits seethed, frothing white. The Spar was wide, but not so wide that Atiana felt safe on a pony with the wind as strong as it was, and so she was glad when at last they reached the other side. As they passed, the janissaries that held this side of the Spar merely touched their fingers to their foreheads and bowed, as if news of their arrival had already been passed to every soldier in Galahesh.