Fairy stared at the underside of the floorboards. She was as frustrated with the Council’s lack of progress as the empress was.
“I know they have a way of doing things,” she said, “but why haven’t they found anything yet? It’s like they’re afraid to stray from their tracks, for fear of stumbling into an unknown they can’t handle.” Resigned, she laid her head down, her cheek pressed flat into the dirt.
But then she thought of Spirit and Wolf, out there, brave but alone, in the midst of the unknown.
Fairy lifted her head.
Broomstick looked at her expectantly.
“If Spirit were here, she’d come up with a plan,” Fairy said. “But since she’s not, we’ll have to do it ourselves.”
“What do you have in mind?”
“Right now, nothing. But like Empress Aki said, she wants the taigas to start thinking differently. Maybe we can combine your knowledge of the inner workings of the Society with my talent for being in places I’m not supposed to be, and come up with something.”
Broomstick nodded slowly as he considered it. “Work hard, mischief harder, right?”
Fairy was able to muster a small smile now. “Yeah. Let’s mischief harder.”
Chapter Thirty-One
Sora was experimenting in the cargo hold again, now with a different sense. On the rooftop of the Kaede City command post, Prince Gin had described ryuu magic as emerald dust. What if, like real dust, it was something that could be touched?
Sora lifted her hand in front of her face and blew gently into the air.
Nothing happened.
She kept blowing.
Nothing.
More air.
Nothing.
More, more, more . . .
Sora was light-headed. She paused so the room would stop spinning.
Daemon hurried in. He was a little paler than usual, and his hair was mussed up. But there was also an electric sort of energy in the way he bounced around the hold, unable to stand still, kinetic and fully charged.
He stopped moving for half a moment to say, “I did it. I broke into Prince Gin’s quarters.” Daemon promptly resumed pacing again and told her what he’d discovered in the maps and notes upstairs.
When he was done, Sora sank down to the floor. “Prince Gin is building an unstoppable army. War is coming.”
“No,” Daemon said. “War’s already here. It’s just that the rest of Kichona doesn’t realize it yet.”
The nauseating image of the tenderfoot nursery on fire flashed through Sora’s memory. She could still smell the smoke and see the charred remains in her head. And then afterward, once the embers had died, she’d wrenched herself away from the arms of the teachers who tried to comfort her, to restrain her, and bolted into the middle of all the ash. It had flown up around like a snow flurry from the hells.
Beneath it, there had been bones. Tiny, blackened bones, the skeletons inseparable from one to the next. The tenderfoots had died huddled together.
Sora bent over, dry heaving.
Daemon rushed to her side.
She shoved the fiery memories aside and tried to breathe.
In. Out. In. Out.
Breathe.
“We can’t let this ship make it to Tiger’s Belly,” Sora said. “We can’t let him choose more Hearts or take more taigas. We have to poison everyone here, and soon.”
“We really have to kill everyone?” Daemon asked.
Sora felt his unease keenly, not only because it coursed through their gemina bond like milk gone sour, but also because she wasn’t convinced that killing everyone was necessary either. Or at least she didn’t want to do it.
She kept focusing on her breaths as she rethought her plan. She opened Fairy’s pouch and looked through the vials. Then she saw a tiny transparent packet fastened to the inside of the leather flap. Sora gasped. It was kagi powder.
“What if we use this?” she asked, showing the fine white powder to Daemon. “It’s ground kagi leaves, which cause the equivalent of very vicious food poisoning. They’ll retch to the point of passing out.”
Daemon nodded as he processed what she was suggesting. “It’ll debilitate the ryuu long enough for us to isolate and kill Prince Gin. Maybe, without a leader, the rest of the ryuu will stop their advance through Kichona.”
“Exactly.”
However, poisoning the meal wouldn’t be easy. There were people in the galley, cooking. Sora and Daemon would have to distract them, or hope that there was a moment before dinnertime when the food was left unguarded.
They climbed up a level to where the galley was located and slinked in between crates of vegetables and drums of oranges until they were close to the kitchen. From what she could see through the galley door, there were three ryuu recruits in there, likely relegated to dinner duty because they were the lowest rungs of the ladder.
“Keep watch,” Sora said to Daemon. “Remember, if one of us is captured, save yourself.”
He hesitated.
“It’s the only way,” she said.
He shook his head. “No. We won’t get caught.”
Sora sighed. “And you say I’m the stubborn one.”
He shrugged and positioned himself at the ladder in case any other ryuu decided to make an appearance.
Sora crept a little farther through the food stocks, as close as possible to the galley door without being exposed. She reached into the pouch in her sleeve and confirmed that the small square of paper, folded like an envelope, was there. The kagi powder would blend into whatever it was that was bubbling on the stove.
She also checked that her pink disk of rira was easily accessible. It was the poison that Fairy had given her in case she was captured. Daemon had one on him too.
Sora stalled. Both she and Daemon were 100 percent nerves, and their gemina bond was as taut as a tightrope.
We were blessed by Luna to do this, she reminded herself. And we have trained our entire lives to protect Kichona. It didn’t make her any less nervous, but it was enough to push her forward with her plan.
One of the ryuu was tasting what was in the pot. Another was pulling trays of roasted mackerel out of the oven. The third put a vat of pickled radish on the small counter.
“I think this is done,” the one at the pot said. “Let’s ring the meal bell.”
Oh no, Sora thought. If they rang the bell, the deck would be swarming with ryuu before she could get to the pot.
She had to disable the bell. But it hung right outside the galley door, which meant she risked exposure even running to it, let alone trying to tinker with it while the ryuu were a foot away.
It was a risk she had to take.
Sora glanced at Daemon on the other side of the deck to signal what she was going to do. He shook his head and raised his arms up in confusion. Her pantomiming hadn’t made any sense.
Never mind that. She had only seconds to get this done. Sora darted to the bell.
She pressed herself flat against the wall of the galley and wrapped her fingers around the cold brass clapper dangling inside the bell. But how would she dampen it? She couldn’t yank the thing out; it was connected by a metal ring.
I might’ve acted a little hastily.
She let go of the bell for a moment and retrieved a knife from her sleeve. Then she sliced off the cuff of that sleeve and began to wrap the fabric around the brass clapper.
A spike of panic, like the prick of a cold stiletto blade, pierced her gemina bond.
At the same time, someone cleared her throat behind Sora. “What, exactly, do you think you’re doing?”
Sora jumped.
She recognized that acid-tinged voice. It was Virtuoso, the girl who’d been training the recruits.
“I’m, um, fixing the bell,” Sora said, her back still to Virtuoso.
“How interesting. I didn’t realize bells could be fixed with cotton. Or kagi powder.”
Sora whirled around and saw with horror that the little paper packet of poison had fallen out of her sleeve, probably when she grabbed her knife to cut the fabric. And now the envelope was in the hands of Virtuoso, the top flap open where white powder spilled out.
She looked up from Virtuoso’s hands. The ryuu’s face was shrouded by the heavy hood of her cloak.
She didn’t dare spare a glance past Virtuoso, to where Daemon was, for fear of revealing him.
Run! she wished she could say. She tried her best to convey the feeling of it through their gemina bond.
Resistance pushed through the connection.
Sora pushed back. Go, go, go! She sent the urgency to him. He couldn’t stay. He couldn’t get caught too.
His sadness harpooned through their bond. But he’d made her a promise, and his intention reverberated through their connection. He would get off the ship. He would make it to shore, somehow, because he knew that otherwise, Sora’s sacrifice wouldn’t be worth it.
She saw out of the corner of her eye when he fled.
Please get away safely.
She focused on Virtuoso again. Sora dared to reach for her sword.
Virtuoso took a step back, as if momentarily caught off guard. But then she laughed. Green mist coalesced out of thin air. It was shaped like a snake’s head, a smaller version of the one that had menaced over Kaede City.
“I’m ordering you to stop.” Sora pointed her sword to strike at the snake.