Though every bone and muscle in my body shrieked in protest, I managed to turn my head.
Mal was there, lying on another litter, carried along just a few feet beside me. He was watching me, as if he’d been waiting for me to wake. He reached out.
I found some reservoir of strength and stretched my hand over the litter’s edge. When our fingers met, I heard a sob and realized I was crying. I wept with relief that I would not have to live with the burden of his death. But lodged in my gratitude, I felt a bright thorn of resentment. I wept with rage that I would have to live at all.
* * *
WE TRAVELED FOR MILES, through passages so tight that they had to lower my litter to the ground and slide me along the rock, through tunnels high and wide enough for ten haycarts. I don’t know how long we went on that way. There were no nights and days belowground.
Mal recovered before I did and limped along beside the litter. He’d been injured when the tunnel collapsed, but the Grisha had restored him. What I had endured, what I had embraced, they had no power to heal.
At some point, we stopped at a cave dripping with rows of stalactites. I’d heard one of my carriers call it the Worm’s Mouth. When they set me down, Mal was there, and with his help, I managed to get into a sitting position, propped against the cave wall. Even that effort left me dizzy, and when he dabbed his sleeve to my nose, I saw that I was bleeding.
“How bad is it?” I asked.
“You’ve looked better,” he admitted. “The pilgrims mentioned something called the White Cathedral. I think that’s where we’re headed.”
“They’re taking me to the Apparat.”
He glanced around the cavern. “This is how he escaped the Grand Palace after the coup. How he managed to evade capture for so long.”
“It’s also how he appeared and disappeared at the fortune-telling party. The mansion was next to the Convent of Sankta Lizabeta, remember? Tamar led me straight to him, and then she let him get away.” I heard the bitterness in my weak voice.
Slowly, my addled mind had pieced it all together. Only Tolya and Tamar had known about the party, and they’d arranged for the Apparat to meet me. They’d already been among the pilgrims that morning when I’d nearly started the riot, there to watch the sunrise with the faithful. That was how they’d gotten to me so quickly. And Tamar had vanished from the Eagle’s Nest as soon as she’d begun to suspect danger. I knew that the twins and their sun soldiers were the only reason any of the Grisha had survived, but their lies still stung.
“How are the others?”
Mal looked over to where the ragged group of Grisha huddled in the shadows.
“They know about the fetter,” he said. “They’re frightened.”
“And the firebird?”
He shook his head. “I don’t think so.”
“I’ll tell them soon enough.”
“Sergei isn’t doing well,” Mal continued. “I think he’s still in shock. The rest seem to be holding up.”
“Genya?”
“She and David stay behind the group. She can’t move very quickly.” He paused. “The pilgrims call her Razrusha’ya.”
The Ruined.
“I need to see Tolya and Tamar.”
“You need to rest.”
“Now,” I said. “Please.”
He stood, but hesitated. When he spoke again, his voice was raw. “You should have told me what you intended to do.”
I looked away. The distance between us felt even deeper than it had before. I tried to free you, Mal. From the Darkling. From me.
“You should have let me finish him,” I said. “You should have let me die.”
When I heard his footsteps fade, I let my chin droop. I could hear my breath coming in shallow pants. When I worked up the strength to lift my eyes, Tolya and Tamar were kneeling before me, their heads bowed.
“Look at me,” I said.
They obeyed. Tolya’s sleeves were rolled up, and I saw that his massive forearms were emblazoned with suns.
“Why not just tell me?”
“You never would have let us stay so close,” replied Tamar.
That was true. Even now I wasn’t sure what to make of them.
“If you believe I’m a Saint, why not let me die in the chapel? What if that was meant to be my martyrdom?”
“Then you would have died,” said Tolya without hesitation. “We wouldn’t have found you in the rubble in time or been able to revive you.”
“You let Mal come back for me. After you gave me your vow.”
“He broke away,” said Tamar.
I lifted a brow. The day Mal could break Tolya’s hold was indeed a day of miracles.
Tolya hung his head and heaved his huge shoulders. “Forgive me,” he said. “I couldn’t be the one to keep him from you.”
I sighed. Some holy warrior.
“Do you serve me?”
“Yes,” they said in unison.
“Not the priest?”
“We serve you,” said Tolya, his voice a fierce rumble.