In any case, he scooted to the edge of his chair and sat a bit taller. “Our plan, then, is twofold. We attempt to locate Nikolai, make amends, and stop this madness before any more damage is done. And in the meantime, we work on calming the people and convincing them that magic will be used for good.”
“So you want me to enchant a Christmas tree on the city tour?” Vika asked.
“Yes,” Pasha said. “Please.”
“I still think you should include fire,” Yuliana said. “If an enchanter is going to burn at the stake, it might as well be Nikolai.”
“Yuliana, no,” Pasha said, his hand tugging on a lock ofhair. “I’ve made my decision. This is our plan. Now, I need to change clothes. Or, um, write down what I’m going to say. Or tell the Guard to ready a carriage.” He practically vaulted out of his chair and hurried from the study.
When he was well down the hall and out of earshot, Yuliana rose from behind the desk, as if none of what had transpired bothered her. It probably hadn’t.
She looked down her nose at Vika. “My brother’s life is in your hands,” she said. “As is the future of all Russia. Think carefully as you choose your loyalties and make your decisions.” She held Vika’s gaze for a long moment before she turned on her heel and whisked out of the room.
Vika stared at the door after them, sinking deeper into her chair. The weight of life and death and an entire empire was no small thing to bear.
CHAPTER TWENTY
One of Nikolai’s stone sparrows had seen Vika through the windows of the Winter Palace, and Nikolai’s curiosity had sabotaged him, tempting him here. He hovered on the edge of Palace Square, eyes narrowed at the green, gold, and white splendor in which the imperial family lived.
Nikolai had thought there was an unbreakable connection between him and Vika. He’d thought that being two of a kind tied their fates together. He’d thought, at the end of the Game, that she loved him.
But last night, she’d stopped his statue of Peter the Great, and now she’d gone to Pasha again.
To him, not me.
Nikolai sighed and turned his back on the palace.
Two enormous boxes sat before him in the center of the square. In the red one was a life-size jack-in-the-box; in the purple, a music-box ballerina. Nikolai and Vika, in enchanted puppet form. He’d created them during the Game to perform a pas de deux in the sky every evening when theclock chimed six o’clock. And just like his Dream Benches that continued his legacy, the Jack and ballerina still danced with each other every night.
But now, Vika had chosen Pasha. After all Pasha had done to them! Why would she do such a thing?
The cold ambition that had fueled Nikolai last night had weakened after he enchanted the statue of Peter the Great. It seemed to ebb and flow, lessening after he performed some feat of magic, and strengthening when he grew upset. At least this was what he’d observed so far. And true to theory, it flared up again now as Nikolai remembered how Vika had turned her back on him so easily, the chill flying through his veins like cold blue flames.
He narrowed his eyes. “I never want to watch these puppets again.”
No one could see him, for Nikolai had cast a shroud around himself. Of course, he could have frightened them with his shadow form if he’d wanted to, but there was something twisted and lovely about causing mayhem and having the people blame Vika and Pasha.
Nikolai steepled his fingers together, and the crank on the Jack’s box began to turn slowly. Its tinny tune rang through the square, and those who’d merely been passing through stopped to watch and listen.Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti, do. C-major. Nikolai’s fists tightened.Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti, do. G-major.Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti, do. D-major. His nails dug through the tips of his gloves.Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti, do,again and again, all twelve major scales, faster and faster and faster, until Nikolai’s hands flew violently open andpop!the Jack jumped out of his box.
The Jack was not dressed in the red and black diamondsof a harlequin, as he used to be. Now the Jack was entirely gray. Dark, dark gray, from wooden head to wooden toe.
Nikolai’s breath sped up.
Music from the balletZéphire et Florebegan to tinkle out of the purple box. The lid cracked open, and the ballerina slipped out, no longer just a pretty thing in periwinkle tulle but something with a glimmer of cunning in her painted eyes. She curtsied to the Jack.
Instead of bowing and inviting her to dance, though, as he’d always done before, the Jack leaped into the sky. Nikolai’s anger seemed to concentrate his power, to amplify it. The Jack spun for a moment in the air in a slow-motion pirouette.
Then it exploded in a burst of wooden splinters and metal gears, which in turn transformed into thousands of tiny mechanical birds that flapped away. The collective beat of their wings thrummed through the air.
The people in Palace Square issued a collective gasp. One woman screamed. A man shouted for everyone to find cover in the nearest church.
Nikolai’s pulse matched the frenetic rhythm of the flock of birds. But the ballerina stood still, watching.
What was her reaction supposed to be? How had Vika felt, watching Nikolai die at the end of the Game and vanish before her eyes?
Nikolai clenched his fists tightly again, wanting desperately for the ballerina to collapse into a heap and cry. Or to fly into the air after the Jack, to chase every last bird and convince them to come back, because she loved him.
But instead, the ballerina’s mouth only turned down atits painted corners. She watched the last of the mechanical birds as it disappeared into the clouds. Then she twirled on her toe and descended into her purple box. Just like Vika had done now—disregarded Nikolai and moved on. How could she be so callous?