Upon catching sight of Sergei, the woman tilted her head, keeping her tiny hat perfectly perched on her chestnut curls. She lifted the hem of her voluminous dress and curtsied, albeit somewhat mockingly. “Bonjour, mon frère,” she said. “I would say you haven’t aged a day in the two and a half decades since I’ve seen you, but that would be a blatant lie, so I won’t. You may say that of me, though, if you’d like.”
Sergei stood with his arms folded across his chest, both feet firmly planted in the dirt. “Hello, Galina. You are, indeed, the same as ever, if not in looks, then at least in manner.”
Behind Galina, a boy stepped out of the carriage. He had no real color, and, come to think of it, no real substance either. He was a shadow, but without a solid person to follow around. The boy did touch his shoes to the paper stairs as he descended, but since he was a mere silhouette, his weight hardly mattered. Remarkable. Vika could not tear her gaze from him.
He turned to Sergei first, removed his top hat, and bowed. Sergei grunted but bowed back, unable to justify rudeness to a boy he’d never before met. The shadow then pivoted to Vika and bowed to her as well.
She curtsied, but since he had no facial features, she couldn’t tell whether he saw her curtsy through the shroud.
“Enchanter One,” Sergei said to Vika, “meet Enchanter Two.”
Galina clucked. “On the contrary. Mine is Enchanter One. Yours is Enchanter Two.”
“Absolutely not. My daughter is One.”
“Ah, but I am older than you, little brother, and I believe seniority merits my side being Enchanter One.”
“Well, I—”
“This is ridiculous,” Vika said. “I’ll be Two, and he can be One.” She pointed at the shadow boy. “What does it matter anyway?”
Galina grinned, baring her teeth. “Enchanter One gets the first move.”
Vika scowled. “I know that. I simply meant it doesn’t matter to me if I go first or not.”
Galina frowned at Vika as if the girl were a pebble in her shoe. An inconsequential pebble, given that Galina’s feet didn’t even touch the ground. “A bit of ego on your student, eh, brother?”
No wonder Father doesn’t like her. If I think highly of myself, it’s because it’s well deserved. Vika took a step toward Galina to say as much but stubbed the toe of her boot on a rock and tumbled forward.
The shadow boy caught her by the arm, his grip on her sleeve gentle but firm.
The instant he touched her, his shadow flickered, and his real self flashed through. Vika sucked in a breath.
Oh, mercy, he was handsome, all ebony hair and ink-black eyes and a face so precisely chiseled, Vika could almost picture the blade that had created him. And the sparks that danced through his magic! Goose bumps rose where his hand held her, even though there was a glove and a sleeve between them. Everything inside Vika quivered.
Half a second later, he released her arm, and he was shadow once again.
Vika blinked. Did I imagine him? she wondered, even as she still buzzed from his touch.
But no, he’d been too beautiful. Even Vika’s vivid imagination wouldn’t have been able to come up with that.
“Are you all right?” the boy asked her.
She couldn’t find the correct words—which was, in itself, a miracle, for Vika was rarely without something to say—so she merely nodded.
The boy bowed and stepped back to his original place near Galina. It was as if he didn’t realize what had happened when he and Vika touched. In fact, his retreat was so proper, it appeared to be more about decorum—not keeping his hand on Vika any longer than appropriate, ensuring she was uninjured—than about fear or competition.
Galina sniffed in Sergei’s direction. “I don’t see how you expect her to win if she can’t even keep herself upright.”
Sergei glared. “It’s a marvel your student has such impeccable manners, given his teacher’s complete lack thereof.”
Galina shrugged.
They hadn’t noticed the momentary falter in the shadow boy’s facade. Or in Vika’s composure.
In the distance, the rumble of hooves and carriage wheels announced the tsar’s arrival. The ground shook as he approached. He was preceded, flanked, and trailed by dozens of his Guard.
No more time to dwell on the boy, Vika thought. At least not on how he looks. She did not acknowledge how he’d made her feel, all tremble and ache inside, for she couldn’t. It’s about the Game now.
The golden carriage came to a stop in front of them in a cloud of dust. Vika had thought Galina’s coach was pretty, but this one was utterly magnificent. A painting of the Summer Palace adorned the door, with the handle the graceful stretch of a swan’s neck. The tsar’s coat of arms—a double-headed black eagle wearing imperial crowns and clutching a scepter and an orb and cross, the globus cruciger—ornamented the panels beside the door. Even the roof was trimmed in gold spirals and smaller versions of the double eagle. The coach’s beauty was so extraordinary, Vika wondered if the last Imperial Enchanter had conjured it.