“Again,” Pasha said, grinning even harder than before. “I like this trick.”
“Your Imperial Highness, I can’t. If I strike you, the tsar will have my head.”
At that moment, Yuliana appeared on the gravel path leading to the archery range. “What nonsense are you up to that would cause Maxim to lose his head?” The way she moved always appeared elegant but sounded like an angry stampede of wildebeests, even when she wasn’t angry or irritated—which, to be honest, was rare. But she wasn’t upset now; although her footsteps were vehement, the tone of her question was woven through with genuine curiosity. Pasha’s archery practice was one of the few settings where he and his sister were both consistently pleasant.
Well, Pasha was always pleasant. But yes, watching him shoot arrows somehow soothed Yuliana’s ruffled edges.
Maxim bowed to Yuliana.
Pasha wiped the sweat off his brow. “Oh, nothing. Maxim’s being overly cautious. He refuses to shoot any more arrows at me.”
“I’d say that Maxim is the wiser of the two of you, although that’s nothing we don’t already know.”
Pasha laughed.
“Maxim, I believe you’re finished here. Pasha and I will shoot at something safer. A stationary, nonhuman target.” She gestured at the bull’s-eyes that were set up a hundred fifty feet away, at the end of what was the normal archery range, not Pasha’s extended one.
“Yes, Your Imperial Highness.” Maxim bowed to both Pasha and Yuliana, hung his bow and quiver on the weaponry rack, and left the field.
“You’re no fun,” Pasha said through a smile.
“But I’m rather good at keeping my brother alive,” Yuliana said.
Pasha set down his bow for a second to roll his sleeves to his elbows. After an hour of shooting—much of it involving running while hitting moving targets that Maxim threw in the air—Pasha was hot, and the muscles in his forearms were taut from the exertion. But if Yuliana wanted to shoot with him, he’d press on. There was no holding back anyway when it came to target practice, for it was one thing for certain in which Pasha was better than Nikolai, and he wouldn’t cede that ground. Even if archery was a completely useless hobby.
“What are you musing on?” Yuliana asked.
“What do you mean?”
“You come out here when you need to think. Something’s on your mind.”
Pasha laughed. He actually hadn’t realized that he came to the archery range to think, but now that his sister mentioned it, he found that it was true. The library and the range were solace to him.
“Nothing slips your notice,” he said.
“As a general rule, no,” Yuliana said. “So what is it that’s preoccupying you?”
Pasha picked up his bow again and drew an arrow from his quiver. “Do you think she likes me?” he asked Yuliana.
“Who?”
“The girl from the ball.” Pasha’s stomach somersaulted just thinking about her.
“Which girl? You danced with half the room.”
Pasha lowered his bow and cast a wry smile at his sister. “You know the one. Lady Snow. She was, as far as I’m concerned, the only girl in the room.”
Yuliana walked—or rather, stomped—her way to the weapons rack and lifted a small bow. She strapped on a quiver, too, then returned to Pasha’s side. “Well, if she’s the one you’re pining after, I’d say you ought to move on.”
“And why’s that?” Pasha aimed at the target again.
“She’s not at all your equal.”
Pasha let three arrows fly in rapid succession. Two of them hit their marks, but the third landed far awry with a thwack in the outer ring. He sighed. “I know. She’d probably like Nikolai better than me.”
Yuliana rolled her eyes at him. “I didn’t mean that she’s above you! You’re the tsesarevich. You have few equals, if any at all.” She sighted her arrow and shot. It hit two rings off center. “And Nikolai is no competition. He’s a commoner. At best, he can aspire to work for you someday.”
Pasha laughed. Nikolai, working for him! He could only imagine what that would be like, having Nikolai in his Guard. He could probably slay an entire enemy army with a single scowl. “I cannot picture Nikolai taking orders from me.”
“It’s your future,” Yuliana said. “Not necessarily Nikolai, but people in general. You have to get used to the idea that you’re better than everyone else.”
“That sounds horrible and lonely.”
She shrugged. “It’s not so bad, being horrible.”
“Yuliana . . .”
She glide-stomped over and stood up on her toes. She pecked him on the cheek. “Oh, don’t worry about me, brother. It’s I