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.
"For now," Vasilisa replied and walked up to an extinguished hearth in the middle of the hall. Cassandra watched the young maiden holding her hand out in a gesture that was fluid and delicate, it was like she was tracing strokes in the air. Suddenly, the fire burst to life, brightening the whole room with its vivid dancing flames. Cassandra's eyes widened in admiration.
Then the fair-haired princess turned to her owl.
"Owlyn, where do they keep my cloak?"
"I know where it is, my lady, give me a moment," the bird said and then flew out of the room through an open window. That left only Cassandra and Vasilisa alone together for the first time.
Cassandra averted her eyes, looking anywhere but the naked sorceress beside her.
"So your name is Cassandra? What a twist of fate," Vasilisa said, staring at the girl like she did when she was a frog.
"A twist of fate?"
"I heard from Owlyn that you're a seer from the human world. If you're the One, I need your help to find my wand."
"I'm not a seer or anything, I'm just me," Cassandra said. "And I certainly don't want to die here. I want to go home now."
Then she looked around with some uneasiness. She seemed to remember the way they had come. If she wasn't wrong, the Chamber of Mirror was somewhere upstairs. She could find her way back and go home through the magical mirror.
Cassandra was making for the door, but Vasilisa moved over to stop her. Her nude form still made Cassandra feel embarrassed as if she was the one with no clothes. Obviously, the sorceress had no concern about any human decency at all.
"Where are you going?" Vasilisa said.
"To my normal, human-friendly world, what do you expect?" Cassandra said.
"No, you can't leave. You have to help me find my wand before Koschei found it first."
"What?" Cassandra said. "Isn't that your own responsibility to find your own wand?"
Then they heard a cry from Olwyn, who flew back into the room. She carried with her a long multi-layered garment. The outer fabric was a flowing material made of red feathers sewn together into a cloak.
The owl glided through the chamber with the robe in her claws. The longer feathers that made up the hem flirted with the wind like the tail of a phoenix.
Vasilisa turned to her pet and held her arms out. Owlyn dropped the robe for her and it fell elegantly, covering the sorceress's nakedness.
"What a delight to have it back," the sorceress breathed in contentment.
It was the most beautiful robe Cassandra'd ever seen. The sleeves were wide like the wings of a swan. Cassandra looked at the robe and its wearer in awe. She was sure that the sorceress's cloak was also magical.
Without realizing it, she found herself reaching her hand to touch the feathers, admiring the handiwork. It had unusually rich, ornamented mantles but surprisingly light. The dominant color was a mix of lustrous red and glittery gold.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" Vasilisa said smugly.
"This is not an ordinary cloak, Cassandra," Owlyn added. "Fashioned after Goddess Freyja's Falcon Cloak, my lady named it the Cloak of the Fire-Bird."
"You made it?"
"No, it's a gift from Vasilisa's mother before she was born," Owlyn said in a whisper.
Vasilisa turned around to them.
"Now," Vasilisa said. "Don't you want to know more about your mother?"
"My mother?" Cassandra said.
"Yes."
"What do you know about her that I don't?"
"Something that she never told you," Vasilisa said.
~*~
Later they made their way through the corridors. Then they found themselves in front of the enormous double doors. The doors were so heavy that it took the combined weight of the two girls to move them.
"Oh..." breathed Cassandra as they stepped inside. It was a circular hall with a vast dome and gilded gold ceiling.
They slowly walked the length of the hall in silence. Cassandra gazed up at the marble statues, which stood supporting the roof. Did she just notice that a statue over there, of the man with a steer's horns —hadn't it been on the other side before? And surely the winged woman above them hadn't been smiling so cruelly?
It might have been a beautiful place, if one didn't mind the strange statues, of course, or that faint faraway music which disappeared when you tried to listen to it.
"You think your magic wand is here?" said Cassandra in a small voice.
"No," answered Vasilisa. "But I'm looking for clues."
The sorceress floated over to the dais which stood at the east end near the imperial staircase. She seemed to be searching for something among the glittering tapestries on the walls. Then she waved her hand and the tapestries flipped aside, revealing the largest mirror Cassandra had ever seen, a mirror large enough for four people to walk into abreast.
Yet, Cassandra felt a familiar pulse in her veins once again, she blinked and realized something was hanging in front of the fireplace, which was burning with hot green flames. It was a birdcage made of twisted golden wires.
"Look!" she whispered, going tiptoe to check it but keeping well back in case it was something dangerous. Then: "Oh! What is that?"
The owl and her mistress were right beside her at once.
"It looks like...it's a snake," Owlyn said in a restrained voice. Her eyes stared at it with intensity. "Anyway, it's dead. Let me eat it!"
"No!" both Cassandra and Vasilisa cried at the same time. Then they heard another sound, barely audible above the crackle of the fire, a sound like a paper bag brushing across a wooden floor.
"...if you please, gentleladies,..."
Cassandra froze. She looked at Vasilisa, who was frowning. Somehow the thought of a snake being kept like a canary was the most horrible of all. This is a different world, Cassandra thought, and all desire to explore and understand tempted her again.
"...gentle ladies...if you please..."
"It's the snake," confirmed Cassandra. There was a sort of horrified amazement in her voice. Vasilisa put her head close to the cage. The snake was lying as still and quiet as before, but its black eyes glittered at her. It was alive.
"...of your mercy, ladies...I beg you..." The voice was as dry and thin as a dead butterfly's wing.
"It's hurt," said Vasilisa, somehow sure of this.
"What's wrong with you?" Cassandra said to the snake. "What can we do?"
"...if it would not be too much to ask...the heat...fire is death to my kind..."
Now that Cassandra thought of it, she saw it would be madness to keep any other living creature so close to that great fire. She looked up and realized with dismay that the cage could not be detached from its chain. They would have to reach in and take the snake out.
"Don't trust a snake, my lady," warned Owlyn. "It could be one of Koschei's tricks."
Vasilisa seemed to hesitate. Cassandra didn't want to either, but she couldn't just walk away and leave the creature to die. For some reason, she felt a pang of sympathy towards the snake. The way its weakened voice begging them, and how it seemed to waste away slowly motivated her to speak again.
"You won't—er, bite us, will you?" she said.
"Ah, lady..." The tiny voice was so pained now that even the princess looked ashamed. With a sideways glance at Cassandra, she unfastened the cage door and took out the snake, which was neither slimy nor scaly, but dry and very warm. It drooped limply from the princess's hand, head and tail hanging like pieces of old string.
"It's cooler at the other end of the hall," advised Cassandra. She might have trouble managing her fear at times, but she never got overly hysterical, Vasilisa noticed. The princess felt grateful for this as she carried the snake back and laid it on the floor near the double doors.
"Is that any better?"
The snake gave a weak, appreciative wiggle. "My life...is yours...gentle ladies..."
"What was it doing there, anyway?" Owlyn said.
"Hush, Owlyn, it's tired out. It can't talk," Vasilisa said.
Cassandra kept staring at the creature. She was tempted to stroke the snake down its blue and coral length, which was strange as she wouldn't want to do the same with frogs. She resisted though.
Although the creature was nearly two feet long, its back was marred by little bumps or stubs, giving it the look of a very slim caterpillar.
"What were you doing in that cage?" Vasilisa asked again. "If Koschei did it, we'd better know about it."
"Yes, my lady, it was that devil, the deathless lord," answered the snake weakly. They strained to hear the papery voice.
"Him again!" said Vasilisa in rage.
"That cage was meant for a Firebird, a Phoenix...but he caught me and put me there lest I fly away."
"Fly?" said Cassandra. "Like a butterfly? So you're a caterpillar, aren't you?"
When the creature spoke again its voice was a little stronger. "Gentle lady, you mock me..." then, with a laugh like a whispered sigh, it said, "Although only an infant of my kind, I am known as a Feathered Serpent."
"You mean you're a serpent with wings?" Cassandra bent over the serpent, reaching a tentative finger towards one of the bumps. Now that she looked at them more closely, they didn't look decorative at all. They looked...like wounds. "You're like a dragon then?"
"No, just a Feathered Serpent, gentle lady."
"Oh, alright," she said. "And what happened to your wings?"
"Koschei the Deathless tore them off," whispered the serpent.
"That bastard!" cried Vasilisa, "Once my wand is restored, I will turn him into a toad!"
"Are you Sorceress Princess Vasilisa?" asked the wingless serpent.
"Yes, that is correct."
"Oh, we have been waiting for your return, my lady. We need your help to stop that devil's cruelty. Everyone has been severely oppressed since you disappeared."
"Well, now I am back and I will indeed help you," said the princess vehemently. "But I must search for my wand. Do you happen to know where it is?"
"I am weak, but I could still smell the power of the Golden Wand," the serpent replied. "It's not in this castle, my lady, but you should go seek it yonder in the Wood of a Thousand Deaths."
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.
By the time Cassandra and Ruslan reached Mischka Park, it was closed. They had to find a way to sneak in, which was not an easy thing to do. There was a security post by the entrance gate. They weren't sure if there were any guards around, but the post was empty.Ruslan found a gap in the park's fence and motioned for her to make use of it. They could see the greenhouse in the middle of the farmland. At the edge of the park stood the old mansion of the former landlady. No one lived there anymore. It would cost a fortune to renovate it, so it was practically abandoned. Some said the Soviet doctors had turned it into
They were now sinking down to the waist, and when Cassandra looked up, she saw the great jaw open wide above them, ready to swallow them whole. Just as she thought she was going to die, her eyes caught a glimpse of glowing light from her belt, and then she remembered the Gracelin dagger the Feathered Serpent had given her.In fact, the elven blade had been glowing ever since they had entered the mansion, but Cassandra did not notice and thought that it was just her own flashlight. She wanted to smack herself in the face
It was nearly midnight at the World Beyond, and they were waiting for the moon. They waited by the window because it had a clear view of the sky."What I'm worried about," said Vasilisa, "is the open mirror. For every moment we wait that means any magical beasts or evil mags can cross to the mortal world. We are running out of time."
"Owlyn, do you think you can lead us the way into the Wood?" Vasilisa asked the bird."I'm afraid the path is lost to me, too, my lady," Owlyn said sadly. "In the World Beyond, only Feathered Serpents and the fiery falcon,Raróg,have the power to travel fast and wide. And the warlocks, with their portals..." The white owl stopped and sighed."If we're fortunate, we migh
In the long silence that followed Cassandra felt herself sinking like a stone with her captor. They went deeper and deeper as if the oasis was bottomless. Cassandra tried to wiggle her body against the tight grip, but as she struggled, she caught a glimpse of a long dark green eel-like tail flipping beside her. Cassandra's frantic heart thumped against her ribcage.She bucked and kicked her feet, but the monster's arms held her down like an octopus's. Then it twirled her body around. Cassandra finally came face to face with her captor. She saw through the clear water, a beautiful red-haired maiden wearing light, sh
"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