Текст книги "The Burning Sky"
Автор книги: Sherry Thomas
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Текущая страница: 21 (всего у книги 21 страниц)
She raised her hand toward the overcast sky. The clouds crackled with electric charge. Blue flashes leaped from cloud to cloud. From the farthest horizon, lines of energy rushed toward Purple Mountain, meeting at the zenith of the sky, seething, roiling.
Waiting for her.
She pointed her finger at the phantom behemoth.
Down the lightning came, beyond beautiful, beyond powerful.
All the boulders in the air fell. The phantom behemoth fell, striking ground with a force that jolted her entire person.
After another minute, the hardy little wyvern regained consciousness and, finding itself still airborne, began to flap its wings again.
Titus landed on Helgira’s terrace, kissed the wyvern on its scaly neck, and dismounted. Helgira, panting, regarded him with both tenderness and fury. All at once he knew she was not Helgira, but Fairfax. She had come, his most stalwart friend, and she had saved him.
He closed the distance between them and wrapped his arms around her. “Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I thought this was the night the prophecy came true.”
“No, not tonight.” One of her hands was in his hair, the other tracing his jaw. “Not ever, if I can help it. But not tonight, at least.”
He could not begin to describe the sensation of being alive, being safe, and being here, with her.
His lips hovered barely an inch above hers. Their breaths mingled.
“Love will make you weak and indecisive, remember?” she murmured.
What a fool he had been. For a journey like theirs, love was the only thing that would make him strong enough.
“Don’t ever listen to an idiot like me,” he answered.
“Well,” she said, “I guess it doesn’t count if it happens in the Crucible.”
With that, she pulled him to her and kissed him. Tears stung the back of his eyes. He had survived. Theyhad survived. He held tightly on to her, on to life itself.
Titus would have liked to remain forever—or at least another minute—in this state of euphoric closeness. But with a sigh, Fairfax let go of him. “I’ve got boys running all over Eton to cover our tracks. I need to get them back to bed.”
Titus made sure he left behind Helgira’s cuff. And just to be careful, after they returned to the Black Bastion in his copy of the Crucible, he sealed the portal: he still preferred to err on the side of caution, even in the midst of risking his life.
In this fort, where he had caused such a ruckus, there was consternation at his reappearance, followed by flabbergasted looks as Fairfax climbed onto a wyvern behind him. But that was the advantage of being mistaken for the lightning-wielding mistress of Black Bastion: she didn’t need to explain herself to anyone.
Even better, as the wyvern took to the air, she wrapped her arms about him and laid her head on his shoulder.
Was this what happiness felt like?
She recounted how she had managed to pass before the Inquisitor unscathed, and that Kashkari had been “the scorpion.” He told her what he had seen and heard in the Citadel, including Horatio Haywood’s mysterious disappearance.
“Thank you,” she said, banding her arms tighter around him.
“What for?”
“For being willing to rescue my guardian.”
“Now we no longer know where he is.”
“We’ll find out,” she said, her voice scratchy with fatigue. She ruffled his hair. “And you—you are all right with having killed the Inquisitor?”
“I would rather someone else had taken her life. But I will not miss her.”
They dismounted on the meadow before Sleeping Beauty’s castle. She shed the wig and the gown she had borrowed and turned once again into a lithe, cocky boy.
He drew her to him and rested his cheek against her hair. “Is it true that if it happens in the Crucible, it doesn’t count?”
She held him tight. “My rescue, my rules.”
He kissed the shell of her ear. “Then let me tell you this: I live for you, and you alone.”
CHAPTER 25
Kashkari had followed Fairfax’s directions beautifully. He had tied, blindfolded, and gagged Trumper and Hogg with strips of their own clothes. Then, once they had regained consciousness, he had thrown a barrage of German at them, as Fairfax had asked, in order to make them think that he was Titus, generally known to be a native speaker of German.
When Fairfax and Titus arrived on the scene, he shook their hands and then left with Fairfax to join the other boys. Titus did the same after rendering Trumper and Hogg unconscious again and dropping them on the front steps of their house, stripped to their drawers.
All the boys stood together and admired his handiwork. Now that their night’s task—and fun—was done, they started back for their own beds, yawning. At Mrs. Dawlish’s, the front door was open, the downstairs lights on, and Mrs. Dawlish and Mrs. Hancock both waiting. Mrs. Dawlish wearily waved them up. “Go to bed now. We’ll deal with the lot of you tomorrow.”
“Except you, Your Highness,” said Mrs. Hancock. “Would you mind coming with me to my office?”
Fairfax stepped in front of him. “We all went. The prince shouldn’t be singled out.”
Titus briefly rested his hand on her shoulder. “Go. I will be fine.”
In Mrs. Hancock’s office, it was Baslan’s spectral projection again, pacing into shelves and walls.
“You may leave us,” Baslan said to Mrs. Hancock.
“I would like to remind you, sir, that I am a special envoy of the Department of Overseas Administration, not your subordinate,” Mrs. Hancock said, smiling.
Baslan gave Mrs. Hancock a cold stare.
Titus plunked himself down on Mrs. Hancock’s best chair. He enjoyed squabbles between agents of Atlantis. “What do you want this time, Baslan?”
“You will address me as Inquisitor, Your Highness.”
Inquisitor. So Titus’s nemesis was truly dead. He gave his stomach a moment to settle. “Inquisitor, Baslan? Is everybody at the Inquisitory called the Inquisitor these days?”
Baslan flinched at Titus’s suggestion. “Madam Inquisitor can no longer carry out her duties. She has departed this earth.”
Titus found that he did not need to pretend to be shocked. He was shocked, still. “It cannot be true. I last saw her only hours ago. Right here at Eton. She showed no signs of imminent death.”
“To our lasting regret, it is quite true.”
“How did it happen?”
“That is strictly private. I need Your Highness to give an account of your whereabouts tonight.”
“And that is not strictly private?”
“No,” said Baslan without any sense of irony.
Titus crossed his arms before his chest. “After your lot finally let me go in the evening, I retreated to my room to enjoy a little peace and quiet. I was there until lights-out. Not long after lights-out, two boys threw a rock into my window. I chased them down, gave them what-for, and dragged them to the front door of their house.”
“Are there corroborating eyewitnesses?”
The question was for Mrs. Hancock. “The prince was in his room at lights-out—I knocked myself. Both the prince and his neighbor’s windows were broken. As for the rest, I will go check right now.”
“And you will confiscate all the prince’s books,” ordered Baslan.
Mrs. Hancock rolled her eyes but did not remind him again about their separate jurisdictions.
Titus exhaled. A very good thing that Fairfax had his mother’s diary. And that he had stowed his copy of the Crucible, disguised as a volume of devotional poetry in medieval French, at the school library, until he could move it to the laboratory.
Baslan held up the Citadel’s copy of the Crucible. “What do you know about this book?”
“Oh, that. I play Big Bad Wolf to Little Red Riding Hood. She likes it rough, did you know? I did not.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“What else are you going to do with such a contraption? Of course Sleeping Beauty is probably prettier, but I am not going to fight dragons for any girl. And the chit who lives in the woods is agreeable enough, but those dwarfs in her cottage are perverts. They always want to watch.”
Baslan’s face turned splotchy. “Did you use such a book as a portal to get into the Citadel tonight and make away with Horatio Haywood?”
Titus laughed. “Listen to yourself, Baslan. Are you mad?”
Baslan’s throat worked. “As you are no doubt aware, Atlantis is seeking a young woman who can summon lightning. We encountered her tonight.”
“Why did you not take her into custody?”
“She was in this book. We want to know where she is now.”
“Still in there, obviously. Have you never heard of Helgira?”
“Who?”
Titus rolled his eyes. “Helgira the Merciless, one of the most famous mythological, folkloric characters known to magekind. Oh, I forgot, Atlanteans don’t know anything.”
Baslan clenched his teeth. “Atlanteans are not ignorant, but we do not pay attention to stories of lesser lands.”
“Well, then, how did you enjoy your encounter with Helgira?”
Baslan fumed, but had nothing else to ask Titus. Mrs. Hancock returned shortly with Trumper and Hogg, still mostly naked.
There followed a scene of great comedy, at least to Titus. Trumper and Hogg, half-frightened, half-opportunistic, neither quite noticing they were speaking to a phantom projection, accused Titus of not only abduction, but of innumerable acts of violence and perverse cruelty on their persons, and therefore providing incontrovertible evidence that if anyone had killed the Inquisitor, it could not have been Titus.
Mrs. Hancock returned once more, carrying an armload of books. “I have His Highness’s collection here, Inquisitor. Will you send a courier for them or shall I?”
Titus rose. “I will leave you two to discuss details. Good night, Inquisitor. Good night, Mrs. Hancock. And good night, Messrs. Trumper and Hogg—it was my pleasure.”
The no-vaulting zone was gone in the morning. And when the prince’s spymaster returned, reports flew out of the writing ball.
The Inquisitor was indeed dead. As was, apparently, the Bane—though no intelligence on whether he had been killed outright by Iolanthe’s lightning or by the subsequent fall. The double deaths caused both panic and rejoicing in the Citadel—which turned into ashen fear a short while later, as the Bane walked back into the Citadel looking younger and more vibrant for having been resurrected a third time.
Inquisitory personnel initially accused Lady Callista of tampering with evidence—the blood that came out of the Crucible had all been cleared away by the time they’d arrived. But she’d wept over how awful the blood looked on the floor, and all of a sudden everyone agreed that of course she had every right to keep her own home free of such upsetting sights.
The news that mattered most to Iolanthe, however, concerned the punishments that were to be meted out to the boys who’d left Mrs. Dawlish’s home that night: twenty lashes to Titus, five each to everyone else. What if she’d be required, as she’d heard rumored sometimes, to lower her trousers in the course of the punishment? She’d lasted this long; she did not want to be found out as a girl for such a silly reason.
But Titus came out of his punishment smiling. Birmingham not only didn’t require the removal of trousers, he didn’t even hit Titus—the lashes were given to a rug instead. In addition, Birmingham congratulated him warmly on making Trumper and Hogg into laughingstocks before the whole school.
Still Iolanthe practiced her memory and confusion charms. But her time with Birmingham turned out to be very pleasant. They had a cup of tea together and a lively chat on Homerian epics—something near and dear to Birmingham’s heart.
The rest of the term passed just as agreeably. The house cricket team did not win the school cup, but it contended for the first time in years. Wintervale made the roster for the school match against Harrow, which thrilled the entire house. Iolanthe, to the prince’s head-shaking amazement, won ten quid for writing the best Latin essay in the entire school. She promptly spent the money on ices and fancy cakes for everyone—and a very nice monogrammed shaving set for Kashkari, toward which the prince chipped in half of the cost.
The last Sunday before the end of Summer Half, Kashkari finally organized the tennis tournament he had been talking about for a while, in honor of Birmingham and a few other senior boys who were leaving to attend university.
There was one trophy for the junior boys and another for the senior boys. A group of Iolanthe’s friends watched the junior boys from her room. When it was time for the senior boys to compete, they left en masse, eager to defeat one another.
The prince was the last person remaining.
She tilted her head at the door. “Shall we?”
He closed the door and took out a plate from her cabinet. “Flamma nigra,”he said. A black flame crackled into being.
“What’s this?”
“Give me your hand.”
He plunged their combined hands into the black flame. The flame was the temperature of a sun-heated stone, licking at her skin with the playfulness of a puppy. After a few seconds it turned purple, then deep blue, then sky blue, then the pale blue of a vein seen through the skin. At last it turned transparent and dissipated.
She stared at her hand, then at him. “That was—that was the blood oath?”
He lowered his head, almost as if he were feeling shy. “Yes. You are free.”
“Do you understand what you have done?” she asked, her voice unsteady.
“How can I not? I have been thinking of nothing else for weeks. The enormity of it is still beyond my understanding.”
“Then why? Is it because we had made one attempt on the Bane’s life?”
That had been the terms of their agreement, one and only one attempt. But surely that didn’t count, since the Bane did not remain dead.
“That was part of it.”
“What’s the rest of it?”
He hesitated briefly. “The choice was made for me. I was never asked whether I was willing to walk this path. I do not want to take that choice from you—friends do not enslave friends. You should decide for yourself.”
Her eyes prickled with the beginning of tears. “What if I decide to take off on my own?”
He looked down for a moment. When he looked back again at her, this boy who had told her that he lived for her and her alone, his gaze was not without fear, but also not without hope. “That is your right.”
Below, boys were calling their names. Like a sleepwalker, she drifted to her open window. “We’ll be down this minute.”
Outside, everything looked the same, summer sky, summer grass, summer boys. Yet everything was different. Her life was her own once again, to do as she willed.
She turned around to the boy who had just become her truest friend in the world. “Do I need to decide now?”
“No,” he said. “Take your time.”
“Come on, Fairfax. You too, prince,” shouted Wintervale. “We are waiting for you to draw lots.”
“Coming!” she shouted back. Then, more softly, “We’d better go play some tennis.”
At the door, he laid a hand on her shoulder. “No matter what you decide, knowing you has been the greatest privilege of my life.”
She closed her own hand over his and blinked back tears. “Likewise, prince.”
“And just so you know, I am going to annihilate you at tennis.”
She laughed even as she wiped at her eyes. “You can try, Your Highness. You can always try.”
EPILOGUE
TITUS WAITED.
Cape Wrath was beautiful this time of the year. The sun shone bright enough to turn the sea from its usual moody gray into a deep, dark blue. A few sheep, their biscuit-colored wool still short after the spring shearing, grazed on the green headland. The lighthouse glistened, white and serene.
But he was no longer capable of appreciating the loveliness of his surroundings.
She was late.
She had left school two days before he did. She knew the exact hour she must meet him here, at the only remaining entrance to his laboratory. It was now past that time.
If he did not leave now, he would miss his train.
He continued to wait, a black pain strangling his heart. He could no longer imagine life without her.
They had perhaps thirty seconds left.
Twenty.
Fifteen.
Ten.
“Sorry! Sorry! Don’t go without me!”
It was her, valise in hand, hurtling toward him. His heart almost bursting with joy, he grabbed her hand. They sprinted together toward the lighthouse.
Explanations spilled from her. The train from Edinburgh to Inverness had been delayed en route because a section of the tracks had been covered by a small-scale landslide. She, the great elemental mage of their era, who could now move tons of soil at a snap of her fingers, had to remain in her seat while railroad workers cleared the tracks with shovels. Shovels!
But all he heard was poetry, verses of hope and friendship and courage and everything else that made life worth living. She was here. She was here. She was here.
She panted with exertion. “And I couldn’t leave the train, since I had to get within a hundred miles of Cape Wrath before I could vault. More than that on my own in a day might kill me.”
“You cannot vault a hundred miles at a go.”
“I split the distance into four segments, and did some blind vaulting in the middle.”
He pushed open the door to the laboratory and thrust the potions at her. He was turning her into a tiny turtle this time—just in case anyone still wanted to confiscate his canary. “Blind vaulting, are you mad?”
She threw aside her valise and gulped down the potions. “Of course I am. I am here, am I not?”
He was choked. “I am—I am glad you are here.”
She smiled at him. “Ready?”
Perhaps she was only asking him whether he was ready for her to transform. But when he answered, he answered for all the possible futures that awaited them.
“Yes,” he said. “I am ready.”
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Kristin Nelson, for the six drafts we went through together.
Donna Bray, for knowing the way to perfection. It’s a destination that one never reaches, but I had no doubt she set me on the right path.
Everyone at Balzer + Bray, for their incredible dedication and expertise.
Colin Anderson, for the smashing cover art.
Erin Fitzsimmons, for the genius art direction.
Janine Ballard, for the invaluable read.
Flannery Keenan, for her honest opinion.
Dr. Margaret Toscano, for the fantastic Latin spells.
Maili Ryan, for her peerless fact-checking skills.
Ivy Adams, for all the laughter.
My family, for giving me both the support and the space I need. A special thank-you to my firstborn, the most unwavering champion anyone could ask for—and a pretty darn good fanboy besides.
And if you are reading this, thank you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.