Nevsky Prospect. And yet, there was also something deeper there, something more untamed. All these years, Nikolai had been alone, with only Galina’s minor magic keeping company with his own. But now there was suddenly another enchanter in his life, and he felt a paradoxical kinship with her. It dissolved the edges of his loneliness, like finding the path home after years of wandering the wilderness on his own.
And although it was arrogant how she’d changed the colors in the canals just to taunt him, Nikolai also admired that she wasn’t afraid to do so.
Which made the girl all the more dangerous. She was the enemy. Nikolai could not afford to be drawn in.
He was also afraid that Pasha would fall for her, seeing as he had already gone far out of his way to track down her details on Ovchinin Island. How could Nikolai kill the girl if his best friend became infatuated with her?
Aloud, Nikolai said, “A rational person would be wary. A rational person would not go seeking to invite someone like that to a ball. Why invite her? To entertain your guests with feats of fire? You can hire the flame-eaters from the circus for that.”
Pasha picked at the label on the vodka bottle. “Or perhaps I will ask her to dance.”
“Pavel Alexandrovich.”
“Don’t call me that.”
“Fine, then. Pasha.”
“What?”
“You can’t.”
“Can’t what?”
“Invite her. Dance with her. You’re . . .” Nikolai lowered his voice to a whisper. “You’re the tsesarevich of the Russian Empire.”
“So?” Pasha threw up his arms. “Doesn’t that mean I can do whatever I please?”
“You know it doesn’t. Your mother has rules about whom you can even flirt with, let alone dance with.”
“Guidelines.”
“What?”
“Whom I can flirt with. They’re guidelines, not rules.”
“Pasha.”
The tsesarevich slumped in the booth. He jammed his hands in his hair, and it rumpled to such an extent, it finally looked as if he were a patron of low enough birth and means to frequent this tavern. Someone like me, Nikolai thought. He, too, sank lower in the booth.
After a bit more wrenching, Pasha finally released his abused locks and said, “You know, I’ve been reading a great deal about mystics and enchanters. They’re not evil, contrary to popular belief. They’re misunderstood. And the Church and the people’s irrational fear of their powers have driven them underground, to hide their magic. How dreadful is that? Imagine how taxing it must be to hide your true self every minute of your entire life.”
Nikolai bit his lip.
“I want her to know it’s all right,” Pasha said.
“To what?”
“To live in the open.”
“Married to the heir to the throne?”
Pasha scowled. “That is not what I meant.” He picked up the now-warm shot of vodka Nikolai had poured for him earlier, muttered a toast to the tsar’s health, and gulped it down. His mouth puckered, but he didn’t bother to chase the vodka with beer.
“She’s not the type of girl you can send a glass slipper to and make into a princess,” Nikolai said.
“You never know.”
“She could turn out to be the wicked fairy godmother instead.”
“Now you’re conflating your fairy tales. The wicked fairy godmother is from The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood, not Cinderella. And why are you convinced the lightning girl is dangerous?”
So many reasons.
Nikolai rubbed the back of his neck. “We know nothing about her.”
“Her name is Vika.”
Nikolai’s scar burned at the same time that the knot in his chest—that foreboding sense of kismet that had begun when he saw the Canal of Colors—tightened.
“‘Though she be but little, she is fierce.’”
“Quoting Shakespeare won’t sway me, Nikolai.”
“Then what can I do to dissuade you from searching for the girl again or inviting her to the ball?”
Pasha topped off their glasses. “You can’t.” Then he lifted his glass and toasted, “To the lightning girl. And all else that may come.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
“Why hasn’t he killed her yet?” Galina’s teeth chattered, even though she was inside the cabin while the Siberian blizzard raged outside.
“Because I taught Vika well,” Sergei said. He cast a look at the fireplace, and the flames expanded, filling the small cabin with more heat.
“Well, I also trained Nikolai well.”
“It’s been only five days since the oath.”
Galina turned up her nose. “He ought to have dispatched her by now.”
Sergei recoiled. But he quickly composed himself, for to show Galina that her comment had ruffled him would only encourage her to mention Vika’s death more than she already did. He had learned this lesson from their youth, when Galina would torture him mercilessly with whatever made him