Yvgenie (12 page)

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Authors: CJ Cherryh

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He thought she said, while he was spinning and falling:

I have to do this, Pyetr. I have to. Or we'll all of us die.

 


I don't know what the hell she meant.

His hands were still shaking at breakfast, but the heart next to his was quiet, thank the god. Thank the god Ilyana was still sleeping—or thank Sasha, he thought, who was responsible for the breakfast and maybe for his sanity.

I'm not even sure she said it. It's what I remember.

Sasha sank slowly onto the other bench and stared at him.


Have some tea.

Pyetr picked up the pot. It was the cracked teacup Sasha had this morning; and the magical patch from Uulamets' time still held. So not everything had fallen apart, though his pouring splashed tea on the tabletop and the pot rattled as he set it down.


She
's
on the river somewhere south of here,'' Sasha said,

she's taken the boat. I think the vodyanoi's gone after her.''


Oh, god, fine! What more?


Worry about the vodyanoi. It's even possible she's called it. I can't tell.


Good god, Sasha—


She's very well this morning. She's watching the sun rise, listening to the water—she's improved a great deal since last night.

A memory came back, with a brief shortness of breath.

I was scared to death she had gone at you. I couldn't hear you.


She told me held Ilyana asleep and not to interfere.

Sasha was a little pale himself this morning, and unshaven as yet—razors did not seem a good idea, considering the amount of tea on the table.

I couldn't, was the plain fact: I had to trust her. If we'd gone at it—

Sasha did not need to finish. He had
felt
it. He did not want to remember that this morning. Sasha must have hauled him off to bed last night. And had breakfast on the table when he waked.


Are you
all right?

he asked Sasha.


Considering. How are you feeling?


Better for the tea and the breakfast. What in hell are we I going to do?

That
question unsettled Eveshka's quiescent presence. He wondered if she had meant last night that she was not going to get better and she was not coming back, and that scared him.

Sasha said,

I don't know, to both questions.


Don't listen to me like that. She doesn't like it.


She can be patient under the circumstances.'' Sasha did something: he felt calmer of a sudden, numb in a certain spot.

She's right, I think, about how long she can keep this up.


Keep
what
up, for the god's sake?


Easy, easy. —Using magic. Using magic is what she
can't keep doing, considering her state of mind. I'm terribly afraid something's loose.


What do you mean, 'loose?'


The vodyanoi, maybe, but he's not an instigator. He
likes to
think he is.

'Veshka's heart struggled to express itself, then
calmed again
, angry, now.


She doesn't like that idea,

he said.


I think she knows it,
though. The business with Cher
nevog—there are no coincidences in magic. No great ones, at least. Chernevog's condition certainly isn't coincidence. Anything that's ever been associated is always associated.


What are you saying, he's linked to her? Is—

The heart in him disturbed his
o
wn. —Is she fading? he wondered.
Is
that
what's going on —that she's going back to—


—rusalka-form?

Sasha caught up his thought.

I don't I think that's it. I certainly hope not. Calm. Easy. We'll solve this.


I'd like to know how!'' He was not sure now whose panic
it was. He fought a
s
hiver, bit an already bitten spot on his lip.

Sasha, she's not doing well.


She's doing very well indeed.

Sasha's voice laid calm down like a blanket.

She knows exactly what she's doing and she's asking us to keep the mouse from foolishness. It's what we knew could happen. I just never thought—never thought of Chernevog himself as an unsettled matter. But of course he was. It's the things you don't think about—and there may be a reason you're not thinking about them—that make a way to you. Silences can be the most dangerous spots.

'' Something made us forget him?
He
made us forget him?''


He was very strong; he was very—cheated of his life. His appearance in that place certainly isn't all that unreasonable.


You think
he's
the cause? Or is something behind him?''


I'm not sure,

Sasha said, and Eveshka's heart shuddered in him, wanting—


Certainly it's not Eveshka at fault,

Sasha added in that same deathly hush.

If anything, this business came at her first—not a hundred years ago: I mean now, maybe with the mouse's birth, maybe in something that happened when she was with her mother.

Another shiver. Yes, he thought. And the shiver came through him, a twitch of his arms.

It might have been.''


She believes in magic as a thing with intent. She believes there's some—power behind the Yard-things and the Forest-things that doesn't like us, or at least, isn't like us. I don't think so, not—truly. I think it's something else, something far less alive, certainly less aware. Maybe she recognized some danger I didn't, maybe she sensed some gap in our defenses I didn't—I don't know. But I do think she's been fighting this back for longer than we know, without consciously knowing she was fighting anything specific, if you want my guess.


This—what 'this?'


This slippage. This sliding into magic. I don't know whether she's fighting the danger or whether she
is
the dan
ger.

Cold silence lay next his heart. He could not tell whether it was agreement: he tried not to think about it. He leaned his chin on his hand and listened to Sasha saying:


—If she did any one thing wrong, it was sealing herself off alone with the problem and not explaining—if it was actually awareness. If it was going on, I didn't feel it going on. Or I didn't feel
what
was going on. But maybe Ilyana did: she used to have a bad habit of eavesdropping; I suppose all children must, before they understand it's wrong—but if the mouse got too close to her mother, I understand now why 'Veshka would have shut her out. Ilyana wouldn't. Ilyana wouldn't have any way to understand it: Ilyana started fighting her, and Ilyana still doesn't understand. That's our greatest danger. Our mouseling's been hurt, very badly hurt, and she's so young—

Fear and hurt. Pyetr studiously found the teacup of overwhelming interest, picked it up and took a sip. The tea was cold.

What you're saying is
th
at
'Veshka's the chink in our armor.


In many senses, yes.
'Veshka's standoffishness from her daughter—she sees it as protective, holding questions off till the mouse is old enough. I feel she's not chosen the best way—but 'Veshka—Honestly, 'Veshka can't feel at ease with the child; can't let go. Perhaps it's a limit she's decided for herself; but if it is—it's still real; and
I
can't answer the mouse's questions, not the deep ones that 'Veshka's rebuffs have created. I can say it—but the hurt's still there. Which may mean it's all on you. You're the one point—the one person in this world who can possibly hold all our hearts.

He shuddered, so badly his hand overset the cup and banged into the plate. He got a breath, rescued the cup before it reached the edge.

I'm sorry. I'm not doing so well this morning.


You're doing very well. Steady. In one sense you already hold them. There's not one of us would see you come to harm. In that sense you're the most protected man in all the Russias. In another you know very well that you're another vulnerable point.


A fool with a sword—


At close range, before any of us could protect you, yes

some fool with a sword could put it in our hearts. Literally.''


He'd truly be a fool. I don't think I'd want to see what would happen to him.''

Sasha moved back from the table, sudden scrape of wood on wood. He said:

Abandon that thought. Please.

Sasha was not one to panic. Equally frightening, the rise of panic he felt inside.


Nice weather,

he said, with a break in his voice. It was often good to discuss the weather, when wizards were upset.

Looks like the sun's shining.''


The sun's in danger,

Sasha said.

God, craziness. It was enough to make his skin crawl.

Sasha said,

That's better.

A deep breath.

I think we'd better wake Ilyana.''


I'm not so sure. I'm not so sure you're doing that well, friend. And what in hell's going on with my wife?


She's wished—

Sasha stopped for another breath, and there was such fear in Sasha's expression his heart went cold.

She's left me to make the decision with Ilyana. She says I'm the only one—and
she's
the unstable point—I don't know how she knows that. —Eveshka, dammit—

She was gone. She wanted him to know in parting—he heard her speaking clear as clear—

I love you, Pyetr. I can't come home till things are changed.

Come to me if there's no other hope. But Sasha will be gone then, and your life and your soul will be in danger.

Most of all, don't rely on Ilyana. Don't. You don't imagine what she can do to you.

Warn Sasha—

What? he wanted to ask her. Warn Sasha of
what?
''

But her heart had left him by then.

***

 

Waking up was like any morning at first, with the birds under the eaves, and all, but that was only for a breath or two.

 

 

 

Grizli777

Then Ilyana realized that something was weighing down her bed on one side and she remembered—

Her father was sitting on the edge of her bed. Her father looked tired and sad, and he brushed her hair away from her face and asked:


How are you, Ilyana?

He almost never called her name unless she was in trouble; no one did, except her mother; but she was in trouble with her mother so often she could never tell what her mother meant.

She was certainly in trouble with her mother now. Mother and father had had a terrible fight, so bad uncle had had to hold her—

She did not even remember going to sleep. But her father was all right this morning. That was the important thing. She was glad he was all right.

She could not tell about her mother. Her mother was being very quiet this morning. That probably meant she was mad.

And her friend was gone. Her mother had banished him. Maybe forever.

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