She curls her lip in a snarl and offers me her hand reluctantly. To my surprise, it trembles.
"It wo
n't hurt too much." My voice is kinder than I expected. Bleeding skies, why am I reassuring her? She's a murderess and a blackmailer. Brusquely, I hold her steady and close my eyes.
Fear curls up in my belly. I want this to work--and I don't want it to work. It's the same feeling I had when I healed Laia. Now that I've seen the wound and Cook's asked for help, it feels necessary to fix it, like a tic I can't stop. The lack of control, the way my whole body yearns toward this, frightens me. It is not me. It is nothing I've ever trained for or wanted.
If you wish to find Elias, do it.
A sound fills my ears: humming--my own. I don't know when it began.
I look into Cook's eyes and dive into that blue darkness. I have to understand her all the way through to her core if I wish to remake bones and skin and flesh.
Elias felt like silver, a bolt of adrenaline beneath a cold, clear dawn. Laia was different. She made me think of sorrow and a green-gold sweetness.
But the Cook . . . her insides slither like eels. I flinch away from them. Somewhere behind the roiling blackness, I catch a glimpse of what she once was, and I reach for it. But in doing so, my hum becomes suddenly discordant. That goodness within her--it's a memory. Now the eels take the place of her heart, writhing with mad vengeance.
I change the melody to catch hold of this truth at her core. A door springs open inside her. I go through, walk down a long corridor that is strangely familiar. The floor sucks at my feet, and when I look down, I half expect to see the tentacles of a squid wrapped around me.
But there is only darkness.
I cannot bear to sing Cook's truth out loud, so instead I scream the words in my head, looking into her eyes all the while. To her credit, she doesn't look away. When the healing begins, when I've captured her essence and her body begins to knit itself back to health, she doesn't even twitch.
Pain grows in my side. Blood drips down into the waist of my fatigues. I ignore it until I'm gasping, when I finally force myself to release Cook. I feel the injury I've taken on from her. It's much smaller than the old woman's, but it still hurts like hell.
Cook's wound is a bit bloodied and raw, but the only sign of infection is the lingering smell of death.
"Take care of that," I gasp. "If you can get into my room, you can thieve yourself herbs to make a poultice."
She peers down at the wound and then at me. "The girl has a brother linked to the--the--the Resistance," she stutters for a moment, then goes on. "The Martials sent him to Kauf months ago. She's trying to get him out. Your boy is helping her."
He's not my boy is my first thought.
He's bleeding insane is my second.
A Martial or Mariner or Tribesman sent to Kauf might emerge eventually, chastened, purged, and unlikely to defy the Empire again. But Scholars have no way out that doesn't involve a hole in the ground.
"If you're lying to me--"
She climbs up into the window, this time with the spryness I last saw in Serra. "Remember: Hurt the girl and you'll regret it."
"Who is she to you?" I ask. I saw something inside Cook during the healing--an aura, or shadow, some ancient music that made me think of Laia. I frown, trying to remember. It's like dredging up a decade-old dream.
"She's nothing to me." The Cook bites out the words as if even the thought of Laia is repugnant. "Just a foolish child on a hopeless mission."
When I stare at her uncertainly, she shakes her head.
"Don't just stand there gawping at me like a stunned cow," she says. "Go save your family, you stupid girl."
XXXV: Laia
"Slow down." Keenan, panting as he runs beside me, reaches for my hand. The brush of his skin is a welcome shot of warmth in the freezing night.
"In the cold, you don't realize how much you're pushing yourself. You'll collapse if you're not careful. And it's too bright out, Laia--someone could see us."
We're nearly to our destination--a safe house in a stretch of farmland far north of where we parted from Afya a week ago. There are even more patrols up here than farther south, all hunting the Scholars fleeing the Commandant's merciless attacks in cities north and west of here. Most of the patrols, however, hunt Scholars during the day.
Keenan's knowledge of the land has allowed us to travel at night and make good time, especially since we've been able to steal horses more than once. Kauf is now only three hundred miles away. But three hundred miles might as well be three thousand if the damned weather doesn't cooperate. I kick at the thin layer of snow on the ground.
I grab Keenan's hand and urge him forward. "We need to reach that safe house tonight if we want to make for the mountain passes tomorrow."
"We won't get anywhere if we're dead," Keenan says. Frost beads on his dark lashes, and patches of his face are purplish blue. All of our cold-weather gear was burned with Afya's wagon. I have the cloak Elias gave me weeks ago, but it was meant for a Serran winter, not this biting cold, which gets under the skin and clings like a lamprey.
"If you exhaust yourself into illness," Keenan says, "one night of rest isn't going to fix it. Besides, we're not being careful. That last patrol was yards away--we nearly walked right into it."
"Bad luck." I'm already moving on. "We've been fine since then. I hope this safe house has a lamp. We need to look at the map Elias gave us and work out how we're going to get to that cave if the storms get bad."
The snow swirls down in thick patches, and nearby, a rooster caws. The landowner's mansion is just visible a quarter mile away, but we veer away from it and head for an outbuilding near the slaves' quarters. In the distance, two hunched figures trudge to a barn, buckets in hand. The place will be swarming with slaves and their overseers soon. We need to take cover.
We finally make it to the cellar door behind a squat granary. The door's latch is stiff from cold, and Keenan groans as he tries to pry it up.
"Hurry." I crouch beside him. In the slaves' hovels a few dozen yards away, smoke rises and a door creaks. A Scholar woman, her head wrapped in cloth, emerges.
Again, Keenan digs his dagger into the latch. "Bleeding thing won't--ah." He sits back, the latch having finally come loose.
The sound echoes, and the Scholar woman spins around. Keenan and I both freeze--there's no chance that she hasn't seen us. But she simply waves us into the cellar.
"Quick," she hisses. "Before the overseers wake!"
We drop into the cellar's dimly lit interior, our breath clouding above us. Keenan bars the door as I inspect the space. It is a dozen feet wide, a half dozen feet long, and cramped with barrels and wine racks.
But a lamp hangs from the roof on a chain, and below it, a table boasts fruit, a paper-wrapped loaf of bread, and a tin tureen.
"The man who runs this farm is a Mercator," Keenan says. "Scholar mother, Martial father. He was the only heir, so they passed him off as a full-blooded Martial. But he must have been closer to his mother, because last year, when his father died, he started helping runaway slaves." Keenan nods at the food. "Looks like he's still at it."
I pull Elias's map from my pack, unroll it carefully, and clear a space on the ground. My stomach rumbles with hunger, but I ignore it. Safe houses usually have little room to move, let alone light enough to see. Keenan and I spend every hour of the day sleeping or running. This is a rare chance to discuss what's to come.
"Tell me more about Kauf." My hands shake with cold--I can hardly feel the parchment between my fingers. "Elias drew a rough layout, but if he fails and we have to go inside, it won't be--"
"You haven't said her name since she died." Keenan cuts through the torrent of words spilling from my mouth. "Do you know that?"
My hands shake more violently. I fight to still them as he sits in front of me.
"You only talk about the next safe house. About how we'll make our way out of the Empire. About Kauf. But you won't talk about her or what happened. You won't talk about this strange power of yours--"
"Power." I want to scoff. "A power that I can't even tap into.
" Though skies know I've tried. Every free moment, I've attempted to will myself into invisibility until I feel like I'll go mad thinking the word disappear. Every time, I fail.
"Perhaps if you talked about it, it would help," Keenan suggests. "Or if you ate more than a bite or two. Or slept more than a few hours."
"I don't feel hungry. And I can't sleep."
His gaze falls upon my shaking fingers. "Skies, look at you." He shoves the parchment away and envelops my hands in his own. His warmth fills up an emptiness inside. I sigh, wanting to fall into that warmth--to let it wrap around me so that I forget all that's to come--even for a few minutes.
But that's selfish. And stupid, considering that at any moment, we might be caught by Martial soldiers. I try to take my hands away, but as if Keenan knows what I'm thinking, he pulls me near, pressing my fingers against the heat of his stomach and throwing his cloak around us both. Beneath the rough weave of his shirt, I can feel the ridges of muscle, hard and smooth. His head is bent as he looks at our hands, red hair hiding his eyes. I swallow and look away from him. We've traveled together for weeks, but we've never been this close before.
"Tell me something about her," he whispers. "Something good."
"I didn't know anything." My voice cracks, and I clear my throat. "I knew her for weeks? Months? And I never even asked her anything worthwhile about her family or what it was like when she was young or--or what she wanted or what she hoped for. Because I thought we had time."
A tear snakes down my face, and I pull a hand from him and dash it away. "I don't want to talk about this," I say. "We should--"
"She deserves better than you pretending she didn't exist," Keenan says. I look up, shocked, expecting anger, but his dark eyes are sympathetic. It makes it worse somehow. "I know it hurts. Of all people, I know. But pain is how you know you loved her."
"She loved stories," I whisper. "Her eye would fix on me, and I could see when I told them that she'd lose herself in whatever I was saying. That she could see it all in her head. And later, sometimes days later, she'd ask me questions about them, like that whole time she was living in those worlds."
"After we left Serra," Keenan says, "we'd been walking--running, really, for hours. When we finally stopped and settled into our rolls for the night, she looked up and said, 'The stars are so different when you're free.'" Keenan shakes his head. "After running all day, eating hardly anything, and being so tired she couldn't take another step, she fell asleep smiling at the sky."