As I shut the front door, the little bells tinkled.
The blonde bomb barreled out. “Tania? Tania? Do not keep custom waiting!” she said shrilly then peered at me. Her nose lifted. “Tania, I will take over here myself. You help the lady.”
“I can wait,” I said.
The woman shooed Tania with fussy movements of her small, plump hands and cooed at the mother in a sugary voice. The daughter eyed her for a moment, looking mutinous as only thirteen-year-olds can when adults are trying to coax them into something. Then she whispered to Tania.
I wandered along the shop walls, peering at the astonishing array of glass and crystal prisms as Madam Lens-Maker urged the mother toward the most expensive frames. The mother sturdily asked the price of each, and the girl peppered Tania with anxious questions about which of two pair looked most flattering.
I worked my way to the shop window. In it were large shapes of welded glass with water inside, some of it colored. Below, positioned to catch passing rays of sunlight, were prisms in pyramid, cube, and other shapes. And hanging from tiny beaded strings were many styles of chandelier prisms. When I got close to some of these, the glitter of refracted light made my head pang.
Behind me, the drama steadily escalated as the two women were now carrying on a kind of battle conducted in rigidly polite voices. The girl peered into the hand mirror, her nose about an inch from the glass.
Tania said in a low voice, “The octagonal ones frame your eyes so nicely.”
“The square ones are much more practical,” the mother stated.
Madam Lens-Maker cooed, “The
hill
girls
all
wear
these
with the decorative silver chasing.”
“I will have these.” The girl touched the ones Tania had suggested.
“They will be ready tomorrow.” Madam Lens-Maker said, giving up. “Taaan-ya! Take them to the back.”
Tania was already doing that. Madame turned away from the mother and daughter, elbowed in front of the manâpresumably her husbandâleaving him to collect the money, and cooed up at the elderly gent: “And now, dear sir, which frames would you like?”
I went up to Tania. “I was told to say that Salfmatta Sarolta requested you to test me.”
Her eyes widened, then her expression changed to one of focused intent. “Come into the back.”
I followed her to a tiny room crammed floor to ceiling with various tools and simple machines for glass grinding and making, and cabinets filled with tiny drawers. She indicated another, narrow door. “We share this room with the photographer.”
She picked up a prism from a small work table, and then opened the narrow door to the photography room, which smelled like an old-fashioned darkroom.
“I have learned to make charms, which we sell in the shop,” she said. “I say the Novena over each, on days when there is sun, with the protective light held in mind.” She touched her forehead. “We are taught that Vrajhus makes the simplest covalent bond with light. Sound is more difficult, though it can be very powerful. As is scent, like that from our protective trees, such as hawthorn, rowan, and rose.”
“You're talking about quantum mechanics,” I said, trying not to goggle. Physics and magic in tandem did not compute in my brain.
Tania said, “The teachers try many words, some from the mathematics. We lost so very much during the war, and slowly we try to recover. Sister Franciska tells us the language is changing.”
“So . . .” I was thinking fast. Vampiresâ
inimasang
in Dobreniâalso called the Shadow Ones, as well as Wild Folk. “Do vampires use darkness in some sinister way?”
“The bending or absence of light. Some can see them, even though they try to hide in shadow. Have you?”
“I don't think so. How would I know?”
“You would know.” She sounded definite. “I can feel them, I think. I know my cats feel them.”
“Your cats?”
“Not really mine.” Tania flushed. “The neighborhood cats.” She almost smiled. “You know how one does not actually own cats? My family lets me live in the attic, where I have a little door so the cats can come and go freely. I bring the leftover food up there for the street cats, in winter. Anyway, we know they see the Shadow Ones, even if
we
don't. But I am straying from what I am to tell you.”
I picked up the thread. “So these crystals and diamonds, are not only worn, but hung in windows, where they catch the light, and that wards off vampires.”
“Yes,” she said. “We understand that it makes our spaces harder for them to perceive.”
“Is it always crystal or diamond?”
“Anything that reflects light, though the Salfmattas say that the more light refraction, the stronger the Vrajhus. But highly polished pure metals are also used.”
“Do they use prisms for the same thing?”
She hesitated, then said slowly, “Those with the Sight can use prisms to . . . to see across the border. At times. I don't know how,” she added. “I do not have the Sight.”
“So seeing ghosts isn't the same as the Sight?”
“No. Though there are those who see both. Now for the test.”
She set the prism on the darkroom table between the trays, put a lit lamp on the table, then lifted a heavy hooded cloth and set it over the lamp.
Total darkness closed us in; I heard her light breathing, and the shift of cloth as she moved. “Look,” she whispered. “Into the prism.”
I looked down, seeing nothing. Of course there would be nothingâthere was no light for the prism to reflect. But as my eyes adjusted, glints and glittersâshards of light no bigger than fingernail clippingsâdappled the prism. The effect was like light on water, except in colors across the spectrum.
There was no possible way that thing could be reflecting light. The lamp was completely hidden. I could not make out anything of Tania's form, though she stood within arm's reach.
I shut my eyes, then opened them. This time I caught after-images, no more than a second in duration. Rectangles that seemed to stack, a little like mirrors facing mirrors.
I described it all to Tania, then finished, “What am I seeing?”
“Light from the Nasdrafus. That much I know,” she whispered back.
“If I take this prism to, say, France, will I see the lights?”
“If there is a place where the border is thin.”
“How about other places in the world. Same thing? Where the border is thin?”
“That is what we are taught.”
The glinting shapes were curiously compelling, like windows, and within each, colors flashed, sparkling and shifting like light on water, opening gradually into bits of images: a diamond ring on a woman's finger, a portion of the back of someone's head; a shoe; the smiling stone face of a faun from the shepherdess statue. I stared harder, trying to see the entire image, but there was this giddy sense of falling down, and down, and down . . .
Tania drew in a short breath and yanked the cover off the lamp. I lurched back, violently dizzy. I'd thought I was falling, but I hadn't actually moved.
I steadied myself against the table. The lamplight seemed quite bright. In its light the prism lay on the table, cold glass.
Tania's expression was thoughtful. “I am told one should not stare into the lights for long.”
“You said
into
, not
at
. Because?”
“If you've the Sight, your mind can fall Between, is what they say.”
“That sounds creepy enough. How would someone with the Sight go about learning? I guess I should ask Salfmatta Sarolta herself for that sort of thing.”
“Salfmatta Sarolta oversees the charms of health and protection,” Tania said as she replaced the lamp and the prism. “She and Sister Franciska.”
You have the Sight . . .
“Grandmother Ziglieri,” I said, remembering the day of Anna's wedding. “She said something about the Sight.”
Tania pursed her lips. “She is very well known.”
“Can I find her?”
“Taaania!” The shrill voice penetrated the thick door. “Taaaania!”
“I will send a message.” As Madam came barging in, Tania's face smoothed into professional politeness. “Here I am, Madam Petrov.” And to me, “Do you still wish to buy a prism?”
“I do. Let me think about which one I want.” And in whispered French, “Thanks for the lesson, Tania.”
Her employer shooed Tania over to wait on the old fellow, who was still poring over the cheap frames. Then Madam Petrov retreated to the back room, shoulders twitching with indignation, as I let myself out the front door.
The temperature had dropped, and the sky pressed low with strands of heavy gray cloud. At the bottom of the street, a group of little kids zoomed about, skidding on the ice and laughing, as I made my way toward the inn.
There, I found Anna and her mother serving supper.
Frustrated, tired, achy, I let myself into my room. It was chilly, though I smelled a faint trace of cleaning stuff. Maybe the room had been aired.
I opened the wardrobe door . . . nothing. Remembering what Tania had told me, I widened the door in increments, so that the reflection, and refraction, altered by degree as I muttered, “Ruli, you called for my help. Come out. Come on. Talk to me. Tell me how to help you.”
A flickerâbut it was Grandfather Armandros. Another couple of degrees, and he was gone again.
Moving the mirror a millimeter at a time, I caught Armandros again, and froze. He was clear, yet obviously a reflection, more like a reflection of a reflection. The highlights and shadows had flattened toward uniformity, as if seen through several layers of glass. His body was still, his gaze direct, and yet I wasn't certain he saw
me
. The slow drift of smoke from his eternally burning cigarette belied the impression of a still life.
I moved the mirror minutely, and he winked out.
I shifted in a slow circle, fighting the urge to kick the mirror into shards.
Questions everywhere, and instead of answers, just more hints, mysteries, and . . . questions.
I really needed to talk to Alec. How I wished cell phones worked! Where would he be, at the palace or Ysvorod House? Or was it possible he'd go out? How could I check without causing gossip? Maybe by looking for someone who might know where he was.
I could begin my search somewhere publicâlike Zorfal. No one would have to know I was looking for him.
The weather had gotten so nasty that most of the inkri drivers had raised canopies. It was cold and stuffy inside the passenger compartment, reminding me of tents at summer camp. I wondered if this was what old-fashioned coaches had been like.
Zorfal was all lit up, music drifting out each time the door opened. I walked into brightness, good smells, and a kind of folk-rock beat that reminded me of some German and Swedish bands. Again there were a lot of Vigilzhi uniforms around. This had to be one of their hangouts.
A waiter appeared. “Are you meeting anyone?”
When I shook my head, he led me up the stairs to the first gallery. A tiny table had been tucked between a rail and a wooden support that looked like the entire trunk of a fir. The table was perfect for one.
I had a good view of about 300 degrees of the lower gallery, as well as the rail tables opposite me on the upper. There, a large group had gathered, at least half of them in blue uniforms. A sudden gust of laughter rose. In in their midst stood a tall, elegant blonde, a sleek chignon flattering her well-shaped head.
Phaedra Danilov must have felt my gaze, or else she, too, was checking out the scene. Our eyes met briefly across the intervening space as the band below played a resounding finish. She looked away, I looked away.
No sign of Alec. All right, then, I'd have dinner and listen to music, then nerve myself to try Ysvorod House. Maybe if I pulled my scarf entirely over my head, the entire world wouldn't be gossiping about my visit within seconds of my arrival. They don't
need
cell phones, I thought sourly, then I was distracted by a flicker at the edge of my vision. Instead of the expected waiter, I found Phaedra leaning against the wooden support.
I said, “I'm in really bad mood, so if you're about to accuse me of trying to murder Honoré and set fire to his house, don't.”
“Eliska and Boris.”
“Huh?”
“You went inside to save Eliska and Boris. The cats. They were in the secret room.”
“Yeah, well, wouldn't you?”
She made an impatient gesture. “No one trying to murder someone would save their cats. Or drag him and his papers out on a rug to safety.” She looked across the space at her party, as the band began the intro to another song. “You're here for a reason?”
She wasn't friendly, but the outright hostility was gone.
So I didn't lie. “I was hoping to see Alec.”
The band launched into the chorus with a rattling of tambours, strumming guitars, and someone playing wild cadenzas in counterpoint on a violin. Phaedra leaned toward me. “Beka took him to the Hanging Gardens first.”
“First?”
She lifted a shoulder. “At eight, a small party, given by Hans for him, and Cerisette, and the others.”
She turned away before I could ask who Hans was. Not that it mattered.
A minute later, I said to the first inkri driver I saw, “Hanging Gardens.”
She gave me a look that became an eye-widened double take, then she hastily faced front. Easy enough to interpret:
Ghost of Madam Stat-thalterâno, it's the imposterânone of my business
. The longer I stayed, the more I was going to see that, I thought as she whistled to her reindeer. It did not improve my mood any.