Lissa touched my face. I felt magic burn through our bond, and then the warm and cold tingling coursed through my own skin. Bruises and cuts disappeared.
“You shouldn’t do that,” I said.
A faint smile crossed her lips. “I’ve been doing it all day. I’ve been helping Dr. Olendzki.”
“I heard that, but wow. It just feels so strange. We’ve always kept it hidden, you know?”
“It doesn’t matter if everyone knows now,” she said with a shrug. “After everything that’s happened, I had to help. So many people are hurt, and if it means my secret getting out…well, it had to happen sooner or later. Adrian’s been helping too, though he can’t do as much.”
And then, it hit me. I straightened up.
“Oh my God, Liss. You can save him. You can help Dimitri.”
Deep sorrow filled her face and the bond. “Rose,” she said quietly. “They say Dimitri’s dead.”
“No,” I said. “He can’t be. You don’t understand. … I think he was just injured. Probably badly. But if you’re there when they bring him back, you can heal him.” Then, the craziest thought of all came to me. “And if… if he did die …” The words hurt coming out. “You could bring him back! Just like with me. He’d be shadow-kissed too.”
Her face grew even sadder. Sorrow – for me now – radiated out from her. “I can’t do that. Bringing people back from the dead is a huge power drain…and besides, I don’t think I could do it on someone who has been dead, um, that long. I think it has to be recent.”
I could hear the crazy desperation in my own voice. “But you have to try.”
“I can’t…” She swallowed. “You heard what I said to the queen. I meant it. I can’t go around bringing every dead person back to life. That gets into the kind of abuse Victor wanted. It’s why we kept this secret.”
“You’d let him die? You wouldn’t do this? You wouldn’t do this for me?” I wasn’t shouting, but my voice was definitely too loud for a church. Most everyone was gone now, and with the level of grief around here, I doubted anyone thought too much of an outburst. “I would do anything for you. You know that. And you won’t do this for me?” I was on the verge of sobbing.
Lissa studied me, a million thoughts swirling in her mind. She assessed my words, my face, my voice. And like that, she finally got it. She finally realized what I felt for Dimitri, that it was more than a teacher-student bond. I felt the knowledge light up in her mind. Countless connections suddenly came together for her: comments I’d made, ways that Dimitri and I acted around each other … it all made sense to her now, things she’d been too blind to notice. Questions immediately sprang up too, but she didn’t ask any of them or even mention what she’d realized. Instead, she just took my hand in hers and pulled me close.
“I’m so sorry, Rose. I’m so, so sorry. I can’t.”
I let her drag me away after that, presumably to get food. But when I sat at the cafeteria table and stared at the tray in front of me, the thought of eating anything made me sicker than being around the Strigoi had. She gave up after that, realizing nothing was going to happen until I knew what had happened to Dimitri. We went up to her room, and I lay down on the bed. She sat near me, but I didn’t want to talk, and I soon fell asleep again.
The next time I woke up, it was my mother beside me.
“Rose, we’re going to check the caves. You can’t go into them, but you can come to the school’s borders with us if you want.”
It was the best I could get. If it meant I could find out what had happened to Dimitri a moment sooner than if I stayed here, I’d do it. Lissa came with me, and we trailed behind the assembled guardian party. I was still hurt by her refusal to heal Dimitri, but a part of me secretly thought she wouldn’t be able to hold back once she saw him.
The guardians had assembled a large group to check the caves, just in case. We were pretty sure the Strigoi were gone, however. They’d lost their advantage and had to know that if we came back for the dead, it would be with renewed numbers. Any of them that had survived would be gone.
The guardians crossed over the wards, and the rest of us who had followed along waited by the border. Hardly anyone spoke. It would probably be three hours before they came back, counting travel time. Trying to ignore the dark, leaden feeling inside of me, I sat on the ground and rested my head against Lissa’s shoulder, wishing the minutes would fly by. A Moroi fire user created a bonfire, and we all warmed ourselves by it.
The minutes didn’t fly, but they did eventually pass. Someone shouted that the guardians were coming back. I leapt up and ran to look. What I saw drove me to a halt.
Stretchers. Stretchers carrying the bodies of those who had been killed. Dead guardians, their faces pale and eyes unseeing. One of the watching Moroi went and threw up in a bush. Lissa started crying. One by one, the dead filed past us. I stared, feeling cold and empty, wondering if I’d see their ghosts the next time I went outside the wards.
Finally, the whole group had gone by. Five bodies, but it had felt like five hundred. And there was one body I hadn’t seen. One I’d been dreading. I ran up to my mother. She was helping carry a stretcher. She wouldn’t look at me and undoubtedly knew what I’d come to ask.
“Where’s Dimitri?” I demanded. “Is he…” It was too much to hope for, too much to ask. “Is he alive?” Oh God. What if my prayers had been answered? What if he was back there injured, waiting for them to send a doctor?
My mother didn’t answer right away. I barely recognized her voice when she did.
“He wasn’t there, Rose.”
I stumbled over the uneven ground and had to hurry up to catch her again. “Wait, what’s that mean? Maybe he’s injured and left to get help….”
She still wouldn’t look at me. “Molly wasn’t there either.”
Molly was the Moroi who had been snacked on. She was my age, tall and beautiful. I’d seen her body in the cave, drained of blood. She had definitely been dead. There was no way she’d been injured and staggered out. Molly and Dimitri. Both their bodies gone.
“No,” I gasped out. “You don’t think…”
A tear leaked out of my mother’s eye. I’d never seen anything like that from her. “I don’t know what to think, Rose. If he survived, it’s possible…it’s possible they took him for later.”
The thought of Dimitri as a “snack” was too horrible for words – but it wasn’t as horrible as the alternative. We both knew it.
“But they wouldn’t have taken Molly for later. She’d been dead a while.”
My mother nodded. “I’m sorry, Rose. We can’t know for sure. It’s likely they’re both just dead, and the Strigoi dragged their bodies off.”
She was lying. It was the first time in my entire life that my mother had ever told me a lie to protect me. She wasn’t the comforting kind, wasn’t the kind who would make up pretty stories in order to make someone feel better. She always told the harsh truth.
Not this time.
I stopped walking, and the group continued filing past me. Lissa caught up, worried and confused.
“What’s happening?” she asked.
I didn’t answer. Instead, I turned and ran backwards, back toward the wards. She ran after me, calling my name. No one else noticed us because honestly, who in the world was stupid enough to cross the wards after everything that had happened?
I was, although in daylight, I had nothing to fear. I ran past the place Jesse’s group had attacked her, stepping across the invisible lines that marked the boundaries of the Academy’s grounds. Lissa hesitated a moment and then joined me. She was breathless from running after me.
“Rose, what are you – “
“Mason!” I cried. “Mason, I need you.”
It took him a little while to materialize. This time, he not only seemed ultra-pale, he also appeared to be flickering, like a light about to go out. He stood there, watching me, and although his expression was the same as always, I had the weirdest feeling that he knew what I was going to ask. Lissa, beside me, kept glancing back and forth between me and the spot I was speaking to.
“Mason, is Dimitri dead?”
Mason shook his head.
“Is he alive?”
Mason shook his head.
Neither alive nor dead. The world swam around me, sparkles of color dancing before my eyes. The lack of food had made me dizzy, and I was on the verge of fainting. I had to stay in control here. I had to ask the next question. Out of all the victims…out of all the victims they could have chosen, surely they wouldn’t have picked him.
The next words stuck in my throat, and I sank to my knees as I spoke them.
“Is he … is Dimitri a Strigoi?”
Mason hesitated only a moment, like he was afraid to answer me, and then – he nodded.
My heart shattered. My world shattered.
You will lose what you value most….
It hadn’t been me that Rhonda was talking about. It hadn’t even been Dimitri’s life.
What you value most.
It had been his soul.
Twenty-nine
NEARLY A WEEK LATER, I showed up at Adrian’s door.
We hadn’t had classes since the attack, but our normal curfew hours were still in effect, and it was almost bedtime. Adrian’s face registered complete and total shock when he saw me. It was the first time I’d ever sought him out, rather than vice versa.
“Little dhampir,” he said, stepping aside. “Come in.”
I did, and was nearly overwhelmed by the smell of alcohol as I passed him. The Academy’s guest housing was nice, but he clearly hadn’t done much to keep his suite clean. I had a feeling he’d probably been drinking nonstop since the attack. The TV was on, and a small table by the couch held a half-empty bottle of vodka. I picked it up and read the label. It was in Russian.
“Bad time?” I asked, setting it back down.
“Never a bad time for you,” he told me gallantly. His face looked haggard. He was still as good-looking as ever, but there were dark circles under his eyes like he hadn’t been sleeping well. He waved me toward an armchair and sat down on the couch. “Haven’t seen much of you.”
I leaned back. “I haven’t wanted to be seen,” I admitted.
I’d hardly spoken to anyone since the attack. I’d spent a lot of time by myself or with Lissa. I took comfort from being around her, but we hadn’t said much. She understood that I needed to process things and had simply been there for me, not pushing me on things I didn’t want to talk about – even though there were a dozen things she wanted to ask.
The Academy’s dead had been honored in one group memorial service, although their families had made arrangements for each person’s respective funeral. I’d gone to the larger service. The chapel had been packed, with standing room only. Father Andrew had read the names of the dead, listing Dimitri and Molly among them. No one was talking about what had really happened to them. There was too much other grief anyway. We were drowning in it. No one even knew how the Academy would pick up the pieces and start running again.
“You look worse than I do,” I told Adrian. “I didn’t think that was possible.”
He brought the bottle to his lips and took a long drink. “Nah, you always look good. As for me … well, it’s hard to explain. The auras are getting to me. There’s so much sorrow around here. You can’t even begin to understand. It radiates from everyone on a spiritual level. It’s overwhelming. It makes your dark aura downright cheerful.”
“Is that why you’re drinking?”
“Yup. It’s shut my aura-vision right off, thankfully, so I can’t give you a report today.” He offered me the bottle, and I shook my head. He shrugged and took another drink. “So what can I do for you, Rose? I have a feeling you aren’t here to check on me.”
He was right, and I only felt a little bad about what I was here for. I’d done a lot of thinking this last week. Processing my grief for Mason had been hard. In fact, I hadn’t even really quite resolved it when the ghost business had started. Now I had to mourn all over again. After all, more than Dimitri had been lost. Teachers had died, guardians and Moroi alike. None of my close friends had died, but people I knew from classes had. They’d been students at the Academy as long as I had, and it was weird to think I’d never see them again. That was a lot of loss to deal with, a lot of people to say goodbye to.
But… Dimitri. He was a different case. After all, how did you say goodbye to someone who wasn’t exactly gone? That was the problem.
“I need money,” I told Adrian, not bothering with pretense.