The Bronzed Beasts Page 3
“My father had a keen sense of understanding about the world,” said Ruslan.
The longer Séverin stared at the kneeling boy, the more he began to suspect the uncanny resemblance to Tristan was no mistake. His fingers twitched to reach out to the boy, to untie his hands and throw him into the stinking water so he might escape whatever Ruslan planned.
“Most importantly,” said Ruslan. “My father knew that nothing was without sacrifice.”
Ruslan’s hand blurred forward so quickly that Séverin didn’t have time to react. Séverin bit down on his tongue, tasting blood. It was the only thing that kept him from lurching forward to catch the boy and break his fall. The boy’s eyes widened for an instant before he slumped forward. Blood pooled from his slashed throat, spreading slowly over the marble threshold. Ruslan stared down at him, the knife in his hand now glossed with crimson. Wordlessly, he handed the blade to one of his followers.
“Sacrifice was built into the very design of our ancestral home,” continued Ruslan casually. “Father always knew it was our destiny to become gods … and all gods require sacrifice. That is why he named it Casa D’Oro Rosso.”
House of Red Gold.
Before, the house had seemed pale and nondescript. But the touch of blood had changed it. What had once been a colorless mosaic floor leading to the pale door, had begun to transform. As the blood seeped into the ground, the translucent stones shifted—a faint hue of crimson deepening to ruby. Cherry-dark garnet flecked the stones, haloed by patterns of pink quartz that formed a decorative geometric design. The color lazily bloomed outward until it hit the door. The white door blushed pink, swirls of dark gold crawling up from the marble and across the Forged wood that smoldered away, revealing the gold and iron scrollwork of a grand entryway. In one smooth motion, the door swung open.
“I believe the inlay stonework is in a style called cosmatesque,” said Ruslan, gesturing at the threshold. “It’s beautiful, is it not?”
Séverin couldn’t stop staring at the body sprawled out on the dock, the blood steaming in the cold air. His palms turned damp, remembering the hot slip of Tristan’s blood on his skin when he’d held his brother’s body to his chest. The matriarch’s voice echoed in his head: He will test you before he trusts you.
Séverin swallowed hard, forcing his thoughts to Hypnos and Laila, Enrique and Zofia. They were counting on him to find the map to the temple beneath Poveglia. His instructions on the Mnemo bug he had left by an unconscious Laila had been clear: in three days’ time, they would meet at the appointed location in Venice. By then, they should have cracked the matriarch’s riddles and discovered where the map lay. If not, then it was up to him to find the answer. Once he had the answer, then he needed to figure out a way to be rid of Ruslan.
“It’s beautiful, yes,” said Séverin, arching an eyebrow. He wrinkled his nose. “But the reek of blood hardly agrees with this stinking Venetian air. Come, let us go, before it puts us off our appetite. One day soon, we shall demand more elegant offerings than blood.”
Ruslan smiled, gesturing him inside.
Séverin’s hand twitched. He pressed his thumb against the hard, crystalline strings of the divine lyre. He still remembered what it felt like to touch those strings with a bloodied hand … as if the pulse of the universe had run through him. In his hand alone lay the gates of godhood.
And in a matter of days, Séverin Montagnet-Alarie would be a god.
2
LAILA
Laila had never felt more alone.
Around her, the grotto burned with cold. Icicles lay shattered on the floor, and in the eerie blue light of the snow-packed walls, the smashed wings of the Mnemo bug bled watery rainbows. A knot rose in her throat, and she squeezed the diamond pendant in her hand, wincing at the sharp pain of its angles.
In the hour since Séverin had left with Ruslan, she hadn’t moved. Not once.
She kept staring instead at the bodies of Enrique and Zofia sprawled out on the ice, not three meters from her. She didn’t want to leave them, and she didn’t want to get closer either. If she touched them … if she closed their eyes to make their death appear like sleep … it would be like breaking the fragile skin of a dream. One touch, and she would have made this horror real. And she couldn’t allow that.
She couldn’t allow herself to hold the truth wholly in her heart: Séverin had killed them all.
He’d plunged a knife into Enrique and Zofia. Maybe he’d done so to Hypnos too. Poor Hypnos, thought Laila. She hoped he’d at least been stabbed in the back so he’d died without knowing that the person whose love he wanted most had betrayed him.
Séverin had known there was no need to subject Laila to the same fate. There was nothing he could do to her that time wasn’t already planning. Laila blinked and saw Séverin’s cold, violet eyes staring down at her as he wiped his knife against the front of his jacket and said: “She’ll die soon anyway.”
Light caught on her garnet ring, the number displayed within the jewel impossible to miss: Ten. That was all she had left. Ten days before the Forging mechanisms that held her body together fell apart, and her soul came loose.
Maybe she deserved this.
She’d been too weak, too forgiving. Even after everything, she had let him—no, wanted him—to draw her down to him and intersperse their heartbeats with kisses. Maybe it was a blessing that he had not played the divine lyre, for how could she live with herself knowing she had encouraged a monster?
Monster, not Majnun, she told herself.
Yet some selfish part of her broke from knowing how close she had been to life. She’d touched the very strings that could have saved her, but they would not move for her.
Séverin had been cruel enough to want to show her. Why else would he have left the Mnemo bug beside her, and the diamond pendant he had once used to summon her? Laila smashed the Mnemo bug’s wings once more, watching whatever memories it held expire with a sigh. Again and again, she knocked it against the ice, gripped by a fierce desire to destroy any sign of Séverin. An odd, choked laugh ripped out of her throat as plumes of colored smoke rose in a thick fog, distorting the grotto around her.
As she stared through the veil of fog … a shape on the ice stirred.
Laila reared back, horror filling her. She had to be seeing things. She had to.
Séverin must have driven her mad.
Because right before her eyes, Enrique and Zofia stirred to life.
3
ZOFIA
Zofia woke to a shrill ringing in her head. Her mouth felt dry. Her eyes kept watering. Add to that the sticky raspberry-cherry jam on her shirt—and she did not like raspberry-cherry jam. Slowly, her eyes adjusted to the sights around her. She was still in the ice grotto. Several smashed icicles lay around her. The oval-shaped pool where the leviathan named David had once rested was now empty of the mechanical creature, and the water was very still. A colorful fog rose up in the place where Laila had once stood …
Laila.
Panic grabbed hold of Zofia.
What had happened to Laila?
The past hour flew back to her. Ruslan—who had lied to them, pretending to be their friend—shaking Laila, demanding she play the divine lyre, only to find out that Séverin was the one who could. And then Séverin walking toward her holding the knife imbued with Goliath’s paralyzing venom. He had grabbed her, whispering: