from somewhere inside her. It coursed through her, not harming her but immobilizing her. It used her as a conduit. She controlled the flame no more than the wick of a candle might; it rallied to her and enveloped her.
In her mind’s eye she saw the Phoenix, undulating from its plinth in the Pantheon. Watching. Laughing.
She couldn’t see the general through the flame, only a silhouette, an outline of armor collapsing and folding in on itself, a kneeling pile of something that was less a man than it was a chunk of charred flesh, carbon, and metal.
“Stop,” she whispered. Please, make it stop.
But the fire kept burning. The lump that had been the general staggered back and crumpled, a ball of flame that grew smaller and smaller and then was extinguished.
Her lips were dry, cracked; when she moved them, they bled. “Please, stop.”
The fire roared louder and louder. She couldn’t hear; she couldn’t breathe through the heat. She sank to her knees, eyes squeezed shut, grabbing her face with her hands.
I’m begging you.
In her mind’s eye she saw the Phoenix recoil, as if irritated. It opened its wings in a huge, fiery expanse and then folded them.
The way to the Pantheon shut.
Rin swayed and fell.
Time ceased to hold meaning. There was a battle around her and then there wasn’t. Rin was enveloped in a silo of nothing, insulated from anything that happened around her. Nothing else existed, until it did.
“She’s burning,” she heard Niang say. “Feverish . . . I checked for poison in her wounds, but there’s nothing.”
It’s not a fever, Rin wanted to say, it’s a god. The water that Niang dripped on her forehead did nothing to quench the flames still coursing inside her.
She tried to ask for Jiang, but her mouth would not obey. She couldn’t speak. She couldn’t move.
She thought she could see, but she didn’t know if she was dreaming, because when she opened her eyes next she saw a face so lovely she almost cried.
Arched eyebrows, a porcelain smoothness. Lips like blood.
The Empress?
But the Empress was far away, with the Third Division, still marching in from the north. They could not have arrived so soon, before daybreak.
Was it daybreak already? She thought she could see the first rays of the rising sun, the break of dawn on this long, horrible night.
“What do they call her?” the Empress demanded.
“Her”? Is the Empress talking about me?
“Runin.” Irjah’s voice. “Fang Runin.”
“Runin,” the Empress repeated. Her voice was like a plucked string on a table harp, sharp and penetrating and beautiful all at once. “Runin, look at me.”
Rin felt the Empress’s fingers on her cheeks. They were cool, like snow, like a winter breeze. She opened her eyes to the Empress, looked into those lovely eyes. How could anyone possess such beautiful eyes? They were nothing like a viper’s eyes. They were not the eyes of a snake; they were wild and dark and strange, but beautiful, like a deer’s.
And the visions . . . she saw a cloud of butterflies, silk sheets of ribbon fluttering in the wind. She saw a world that consisted only of beauty and color and rhythm. She would have done anything to stay trapped within that gaze.
The Empress inhaled sharply, and the visions fell away.
Her grasp on Rin’s face tightened.
“I watched you burn,” she said. “I thought I watched you die.”
“I’m not dead,” Rin tried to say, but her tongue was too heavy in her mouth and all she made was a gagging noise.
“Shhh.” The Empress held an icy finger against her lips. “Don’t speak. It’s all right. I know what you are.”
Then there was a cool press of lips against her forehead, the same coolness that Jiang had forced into her during her Trials, and the fire inside her died.
Chapter 12
When Rin was released from Enro’s supervision, she was moved to the basement of the main hall, where the matches used to be held. She should have found this odd, but she was too dazed to think much about anything. She slept an inordinate amount. There was no clock in the basement, but often she dozed off to find that the sun had gone down. She had trouble staying awake for more than a few minutes. Food was brought to her, and each time she ate, she fell asleep again almost immediately.
Once, as she slept, she heard voices above her.
“This is inelegant,” said the Empress.
“This is inhumane,” said Irjah. “You’re treating her like a common criminal. This girl might have