The keep’s gates are shattered and ruined. Through them file a dozen streltsi led by Grigory. Several train their weapons on the Maharraht, but their weapons do not fire. A moment later they drop them as if they’ve been burned.
The Maharraht smile-Nasim, they believe, has joined them-but moments later the same happens to them, leaving everyone weaponless with an elder spirit standing in their midst.
Atiana is loosely connected to the Matri, but her mother begins to slip from her consciousness. She realizes too late that she is attempting to assume Nasim.
Nyet! Atiana pleads.
She knows what she is about, the other Matri tell her.
She does not! Atiana shouts. Do not allow her to do this.
We cannot abide this boy-
Atiana does not listen. Something else has drawn her attention. She has realized how present the walls of the aether are-they are close, as they were along the rift on Uyadensk, but they are not close enough. What Nikandr has done will not complete the cycle. The walls are still too far apart for him to bridge the gap.
She calms herself.
As she did with the babe, as she did with Nasim before, she touches the walls, but unlike those other times she does not push them away. Instead she draws them inward.
And they obey.
Moments later a surge of energy courses through her.
Nasim collapses as a storm is unleashed upon the aether. She can feel the emotions of the other Matri, but also of the Maharraht, of the streltsi, of Grigory, of Rehada somewhere outside the walls. And Nikandr.
But she cannot feel Nasim’s.
Or Mother’s.
The pain grows within her until it reaches beyond the heights of the clouds, beyond even the stars.
And she woke.
Woke to the sound of the cold, bitter wind, her heart barely beating, her skin numb to the world.
This cannot be, she thought sadly as she lay there, listening once again to the sad sound of the shore, to the soft breeze playing among the boughs of the pine.
She turned her head and looked upon the trees-tall and green and proud. She stared at them a good long while, wondering where the world might take her.
This was a good place to die, she decided-whether she was taken into the house of her ancestors or returned to Adhiya in preparation for the next life, she could be proud of what she had done.
CHAPTER 66
The musket shots around Rehada had stopped. The streltsi-only the sotnik and two others remained-were out of ammunition. They limped forward and placed themselves between her and the lumbering vanahezhan, protecting her, but they made no move to do the same for Ashan, who lay unconscious a dozen yards away.
“Please,” Rehada said, “save him.”
The sotnik, blood streaming along the side of his eye and down his cheek from a vicious cut to his forehead, looked down at her with dispassionate eyes. “I’ll not waste more lives.”
The vanahezhan was now only a handful of strides away from Ashan.
“He’s done his best to save you.”
“There’s nothing we can do.”
The vanahezhan had reached Ashan. Rehada ran forward, crying out and waving her arms, hoping to distract it, even if only for a moment. The hezhan, however, was of a singular mind. It stared down-perhaps curious over an arqesh like Ashan-but then reared up and raised its arms over its head.
But then the ground it stood upon broke, crumbling beneath its feet. It stumbled, trying to regain its footing as more and more earth gave way. A sinkhole had opened up like some great, gaping mouth. And then, as quick and deadly as a landslide, the edges of it snapped closed with a resounding boom.
Rehada scanned the horizon, knowing Ashan could not have done such a thing. The clouds were beginning to break apart, revealing here and there the dark blue sky. Skiffs were slipping down between them-not just a few, but dozens, then hundreds.
The Landed caravel was still under attack. All three topsails were fluttering loose. Another broke free of the ship completely and floated on the unseen currents. She could not see the jalahezhan, but the ship suddenly began to tilt. Then the nose dipped landward. It was already low in the sky, nearing the ground, and the tilting of the forward portions of the ship caused the bowsprit to gouge a long trench into the earth.
Rehada watched in horror as the twelve-masted ship crumbled while rolling onto its side-masts snapping and cracking in the cold wind. It slid against the snow and muddy earth for a hundred paces before finally coming to a halt.
The jalahezhan emerged from the bowels of the ship. Perhaps sensing the newest threat, it sprayed itself against the incoming skiffs. A dozen were weighted down, and they dropped like kingfishers. Several twisted in the air like maple seeds, throwing the Aramahn within them to the fate of the winds. They plummeted and struck the earth not far from the ruined windship.
The qiram reacted quickly. Wind was pulled from the sky to mingle with the elder. It was difficult to follow with the naked eye, but there were telltale signs of motion-sprays of blue water flowing between skiffs. A sound like the sigh of the surf drifted down from the unassuming battle, but it grew in volume until it resounded like the mighty crash of water against the cliffs below Radiskoye.
And then, in the span of a heartbeat, the sound was gone.
She felt someone at her shoulder. It was the younger of the two remaining streltsi, holding a cherkesska for her to wear over her naked form. She took it gladly. Even had she a bonded spirit, she was in no state to summon even a meager amount of warmth.
She waved to the sotnik. “We must go to the keep. Quickly.”
The sotnik paused only to retrieve a musket and to load it with ammunition retrieved from the dead. His two streltsi did likewise, and then they were off, moving as quickly as they could toward the keep.
Off to the northwest, four large ships of the Grand Duchy had moved in and were holding position. Nearly a dozen skiffs were launched, each bearing a score of soldiers, but before they could move more than a dozen yards, they were blown back by a fierce wind.
Rehada shaded her eyes and stared southward. This was the Aramahn’s doing. They would not allow the Landed to approach the keep-not while things were still tenuous.
Dozens upon dozens of Aramahn skiffs were now heading toward their position. Without speaking, Rehada and Ashan and the soldiers picked up their pace-they were all eager to reach the keep’s interior before the Aramahn could do anything to prevent it.
Inside, the fallen lay everywhere. Grigory’s men stood just inside the gates. The Maharraht were atop the wall and at the base of it. Some were clearly dead, but many were alive-lying down, eyes closed, breathing shallowly.
“Check them,” Ashan said to the sotnik.
The sotnik pointed for his men to check the Maharraht upon the wall. As they moved to obey, Rehada saw the sotnik pause and level a severe expression on Nasim. He seemed angry, this man, but in the end Rehada wrote it off as curiosity over the boy who had been at the center of this raging storm.
She gave it little thought as she moved toward the spire, where Nasim lay. Nasim watched her approach, but he said nothing. She might have thought he was still in the state he’d always seemed to be in, but she knew better. His expression of pain-a nearly constant companion-had been replaced with a look of serenity. It looked strange upon him, though she was glad that he had somehow-even if it lasted only for a short time-found peace.
Ashan looked down upon Nasim, and then to Soroush and Bersuq, who lay next to one another. Ashan seemed confused as he studied them, perhaps wondering what had come to pass within these walls.
“Rehada?”