has done what he set out to do. Ethan, they call him now. The one with the blue eyes. He has found the young woman who can take you back. Her name is Anne. Not that different from your own.
âI have seen her. Spoken to her. Tried to bring her to us now. Save her as Iâve saved you. But they ran from me. They do not understand the truth of what is happening. They do not see the danger.â
We stand in silence for a moment. In the hearth, the fire crackles. I wait for Auntie to reach into her pocket. To remove the skull and bring forth the visions. But she does not.
âLook into my eyes, child,â Auntie tells me. I bristle at being called a child. But to Auntie, seventeen is just that: a handful of years, inconsequential as dust.
I do as she tells me. Stare into those glowing black coals. In each pupil, a tiny skull appears. It is as though I am falling into her eyes, falling and falling until there is nothing but darkness. Her gaze consumes me.
âWatch,â Baba Yaga tells me. âLearn.â
In Auntieâs eyes, a man sits at a table in what must be a restaurant, for there are many tables, each with a snowy white table cloth. He reaches into his jacket and removes a small, black device. He opens it, jabs at it with his fingers, and waits, tapping his other hand against the table. An impatient soundâthe sound of a man who is used to getting his way. Then he speaks.
âYou will stop him,â he says. âRemember, he is holding something back. He has not told me everything. His betrayal is a surprise, Brother, but it is not something weâyouâcannot handle. You are at an advantage. Ethan does not know I am here. He thinks I am still in St. Petersburg. Let us keep it that way.â
He closes the device and slips it back in his jacket.
A waiter approaches and sets a plate in front of him. On it rests a cut of meat so thick, so large, it fills half the plate. The waiter steps back. I have seen this behavior beforeâthe deference of servants to my father. Waiting to see if his meal is well cooked, his wine of the correct vintage, his every need met. My father was like the man I am watchingâa man who looks at the world as if it owes him its bidding; who likes his fine surroundings, his comforts.
In that instant, I know what Auntie meant when she said they do not understand. For who could understand that this manâthis man who I think is determined to stop the one Auntie says is now called Ethanâis not who he appears to be. That while he may enjoy the world of luxuries, they are not what he was born to. Not exactly. But they are what he has wanted for as long as I have known him.
Another waiter appears with wine, pours a taste in a goblet. Viktor sniffs, approves, then drinks with pleasure.
Viktor: the man I called my secret brother. The man who told me my family would be safe. The man I trusted.
âEnough,â I say to Auntie. My voice breaks as I speak. It has been a very long time since I have cried.
But now I weep.
Wednesday, 12:15 pm
Anne
Drink.â Ethan places the steaming mug of tea on the small wooden table in front of me. âIt will help.â
âI doubt it,â I say, but I pick up the mug anyway and sniff. Itâs fragrantâlike orange and some kind of spiceâand when I take a sip, the tea is hot on my tongue.
âIâve got honey,â he says. âMaybe some sugar too. Let me lookâ¦â
âItâs fine,â I say. âItâs fine.â
Weâre in the kitchen of his loft in an older area on the far side of town. Itâs one of those places that used to be all factories and warehouses and is now slowly turning residential, slowly being the operative word here. Iâm very clear on the fact that Iâm alone in a loft with him in a basically isolated area, and that the only reason Iâve let him bring me here is because we were chased by a giant pair of hands, after which
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