Cassandra's aunt and uncle ate something called Health Foods, which they brought with them in big cardboard boxes from a special Health Food store in Moscow. They had boxes called Better Buds, or Cereal Zeal and all kinds of crazy seeds and several brands of honey and strange juices that tasted like celery syrup and smelled even worse.
Cassandra would put their supper on the table and then spread out all those seeds and juice for them. You can imagine how exhausting it is for her to vacuum three times a week because the couple kept scattering so many seeds after each meal.
When their old vacuum broke, Aunt Klementina scolded her for her poor handling, which wasn't the case at all, so Cassandra suggested that maybe they should get a bird or a hamster instead of a new vacuum, and she was given a death glare.
This morning, Cassandra hurried through her chores and then returned to her room as soon as she could. The aunt and uncle had gone to the Ice Festival with the twins. Ruslan pretended to be sick and had insisted to stay behind with Cassandra.
When the coast was clear, they brought the chest outside and put it on the table. The golden sunbeam pierced through the window and shone directly on it. The two of them sat opposite each other, staring at the box for a long moment. Ruslan once in a while poking around it as if it was something alive.
"So where exactly did you get this box?" Ruslan said after a while. His small hands reached out to the said object, turning and feeling it around while his eyes still glued to it. Cassandra could imagine his mind working in the speed of light trying to figure out the puzzle.
"In the wood," she said.
"Who gave it to you?" he asked, looking up at her at last.
Cassandra was about to say 'an owl' when she caught herself. She looked at her cousin as if he was a doctor trying to diagnose a disease. Ruslan was brilliant in school, and he was always kind to Cassandra, but he was the sort of boy who is practical with a 'scientist's brain'. Ruslan Osinov, thought Cassandra, would not believe in magic or a talking owl, would he?
But he liked reading science fiction. Science fiction, Cassandra thought hopefully, was a little bit like magic, right?
"Cassandra?"
"Oh, sorry..." she said, and then she decided to take a chance. "Something happened to me yesterday."
"Huh?" said Ruslan, tilting his head at her. Cassandra decided to try another tack.
"What do you think," she started carefully, "is the most wonderfulest, specialest, excitingest thing in the world?"
"A Tesla's Coil," said Ruslan with a bright smile. She always knew that he wanted to be a great inventor. She smiled.
"So do you think his creations were nothing short of...magical?"
"Magical?" he said. "I only thought of that as scientifically genius, but now that you said, yes...they were kind of magical."
"And do you believe in magic?" Cassandra said.
"Well, unless it can be proven by science," Ruslan said.
"What if I told you I've found it?"
"You have found what?"
"Something or rather someone truly magical."
Ruslan raised his thick brows at her.
"Really?"
A great rushing warmth filled Cassandra's heart. She had been just about dead certain that no one would believe what she saw.
"It's a talking owl," she said slowly, leaning forward. "I was getting the groceries home and a great white owl took one of the bags from me. Then she talked to me and gave me this chest. And she wanted me to see her again tonight."
Ruslan's face changed. Then he burst out laughing uncontrollably.
"That was so funny, Cassandra."
For a moment, the girl felt silly in front of the eleven-year-old.
"Well, it wasn't a joke, Ruslan," she said. "The owl seemed like she was in terrible trouble of some kind. She needed us to open this box before sunset. Can you help me with that?"
Seeing the serious look on her face, Ruslan stopped laughing and stared at the wooden chest again. It did look like it had something magical inside. Something like a Tesla's Coil would make him feel.
"You meant...there was a talking owl?" he said slowly. "An owl who talks?"
Cassandra gave him a solemn nod back. She wasn't one who lies or thinks up fantasies, and Ruslan knew it. His mouth slacked as his eyes widened in wonderment.
"Don't tell your parents, okay?" she said. "Or they will put me in a nuthouse, you don't want them to lock me away in a nuthouse, do you?"
Ruslan shook his head and crossed his heart as if to show his loyalty. Indeed, there was a 99.999% chance that Aunt Klementina would definitely think Cassandra had been taking some hallucinogenic drugs if she heard a word about a talking owl.
For the whole morning, the two of them studied the ancient chest, trying to figure out the secret of the otherworldly puzzle together.
Cassandra herself wasn't talented, or a great learner of things, but she never gave up hope. Her mother used to sit her down on her lap and say to her that Cassandra's heart was solid. Her five-year-old self wasn't exactly sure what her mother meant by this, but she liked the sound of it.
And little did she know that soon she would need her solid heart.
"What do you think is inside the box, Cassandra?" Ruslan asked while Cassandra was washing the dishes after they both had a lunch break."The Hope Diamond, I suppose," she said. The long hours of trails and errors had dulled her sense of wonder and made Cassandra a bit disheartened by the fruitless result so far.
"Okay," Ruslan said. "What does the poem mean?""I have no idea," Cassandra said. "But the owl told me to come back to her after I open the box. Maybe I'll find out what it means.""Are you sure you're going to see this talking owl tonight?"
The owl raised her wings and made a high pitch squeak, which echoed off into the sky. The sound was sharp and strong and as soon as it faded the ground beneath Cassandra's feet began to tremble, but before she could scream earthquake, something else far more astonishing caught her eyes.She saw the glowing light emitting from the ancient mirror. The light seemed to form a ring of symbols much like the runes she saw on the chest and letter. Cassandra gasped as she stared at the strange phenomenon for the first time.
Cassandra didn't know what to make of the frog princess, but Owlyn kept looking at her as if waiting for her to do something. After a long awkward silence, she cleared her throat nervously."Well, um...nice to meet you...er...your highness," she said. "But now that Owlyn has found you, I guess there's nothing more I can do here, so I better go back."Then she turned to leave, but the owl immediately flew over to block her way.
No one ever moved faster than Vasilisa did getting back up the stairs. Cassandra was huffing and gasping as she followed the sorceress. Entered another chamber, she glanced around as if fearing that the Groundsler would crawl back, but everywhere she looked was silent and empty as ever."Are we safe here?" Cassandra whispered.
Cassandra sighed in despair. Of course, it has to be some deep dark wood, she thought. Every time you need to find a dumb magical thing, there's always a creepy wood for you to go to. It has always been like that in every fairy tale she'd ever read, but she never once thought she would actually be in one.The serpent appeared to have fallen asleep. Vasilisa stood up with a determined look on her face.
Owlyn safely led Cassandra back to Chamber of Mirror. They went through the mirror again, and the last thing the owl said before leaving was, "I'd appreciate it if you washed your face. You look like something a Groundsler dragged in. And remember we are all in a very great deal of trouble if you don't come back."The bird then turned and flew down the length of the ruined hall and plunged straight into the liquid-like mirror. Cassandra looked around to make sure that she was indeed back in the human realm. To her relief, it w
Ruslan turned the sheet of paper that contained the copied spells around and tried to decipher the fascinating writing system by himself. It looked beautiful but stranger, more alien and unreadable. Yet they also had an air of mocking familiarity, and he felt he would be able to read them if he only looked at them the right way."Latin?" he asked, looking up at the sorceress with unconcealed admiration. Vasilisa was packing her grimoire, wrapping it up with a large piece of gold cloth she had found.
"Oh, how I miss coming to the sun-drench island of Spain." Florence took a lungful of fresh air. She stepped out of the private jet that had landed at the Canary Island's international airport. The second person to follow was Clare. It was her first time on a private jet. She was still getting used to the special treatments that came with her status, but she was trying to be mindful and kept close to Florence.The whole flight was a smooth and easy journey, and Violet spent the entirety of it quietly working away on her laptop. If she wasn't typing, she was speaking on the phone. The Duchess dove straight to her wo
Tiredness forced Cassandra to lie down. It was a big boat. Besides her, Vasilisa had fallen into slumber again. Cassandra looked up at the moon, which was as thin as a fingernail. Then, painfully, feeling the boat rock beneath her, she propped herself on one elbow and sat up. The mist was still there, hanging low and ragged over the surface of the water. But the marsh itself had changed."We are almost there, my lady," said Nayris.
Owlyn brought back the herbs. Cassandra grounded them into a paste and applied it to the sorceress's wound. The Czarevna was less restless now and her breathing had evened out before she fell asleep again."Now what are we going to do?" Cassandra whispered softly in despair, her worried eyes kept staring at Vasilisa's pale face. The owllooked at her with a gentle surprise.
"Leave the boy with me," said the sorcerer-king. The demons retreated from the hall and closed the bronze doors behind them. The other sorcerers kept watching by the walls. When the Czar walked towards him, Ruslan looked back nervously. For a long moment, the Czar stood looking down at him without saying a word. His eyes seemed to penetrate his soul. Ruslan tried not to stare back."You must be wondering why you're brought here, young lad." His words were courteous, his manner charming, but it was clear that he had no good int
When the falling momentum stopped, they landed on hard ground. Through the opalescent light of the moon and the absence of mist above, Cassandra could see it now. The thing that had dragged her down. It was shaped vaguely like a very tall man, and its long grey arms and legs were covered with matted hair and mud. A terrible stench arose from it. Its feet were clawed like a bird's, but the knobbly fingers which had locked with such strength on her ankle ended in long twisted nails. Then the moonlight shone on its face, and she screamed again, for ithadno face, only an open, gaping wound of a mouth, with pendulous wattles of skin hanging below.
Ruslan had the impression of an open trapdoor with stone steps leading down, but his mind was no longer working. He felt as if it had been pushed into a tight, dark corner of his skull and locked there like a small, furry animal in a cage. He could still see through his eyes, still hear through his ears, but everything was at a long distance as if he was looking through the wrong end of a telescope.Nothing was important anymore, not where he was going. His thoughts crawled through treacle and were blurred around the edges, slipping and sliding away from him every time he tried to use them. If he concentrated reall
There was something about the grey creatures that sent Ruslan into a frenzy of revulsion. He fought like a demon himself. He punched and kicked furiously. The demons were nearly naked so he could see their repulsive, dark grey, hairless scrawny bodies, and their spindly limbs. When they touched him, his skin crawled.Individually, they were smaller than he was, but there were dozens of others who were human-size swarming across the rubble to help. He knew immediately that they were theDrekavac, the screamers, the mythical demons Owlyn had warned them about
Ruslan frowned. He had tumbled out onto a rocky hillside and knew at once something was wrong. He wasn't near the hill with the willow tree where they rested anymore. In fact, he didn't even seem to be in the marshes at all for that matter. How did he get here? Where were the others?Ruslan turned around and around, calling out to Cassandra. The air tasted foul, and it made him cough. It still had a hint of the metallic sulfur that had nearly choked him. And the sky, now he noticed, looked the wrong color. It had the purplish tint you sometimes got before a storm, except no storm was approaching — there was n
Never once did Cassandra think of her mother as anything but a perfectly ordinary woman. Of course, she only had vague memories of her. How her melodious voice sounded, how nice she smelled, and how warm she was to Cassandra when she was a child. Aunt Klementina told her that once when they were going to attend a wedding party, Cassandra's mother told her not to dance. Aunt Klementina hadn't been so fond of her mother for some reason and no doubt she went and danced her legs off. And she broke her hip that night.But that was