“I don’t want to wake up.” The laughter died on Shahrzad’s lips, its echo calling back to her from beyond the double doors. From a gateway between worlds.
“And I don’t want you to wake up,” Shiva said. “Yet, when the time comes, you will wake up, all the same.”
“Perhaps we should just stay here.”
“I think not.” Shiva’s mouth crooked into a melancholy smile. “After all, you were not looking for me when you first arrived. You were looking for him.” It was not an accusation. Merely an observation. Shiva had always been like that—incapable of withholding the truth but incapable of cruelty. A rare kind of person. The best kind of friend.
Shahrzad averted her gaze. “I—don’t know that I can ever look for him again. Not with the curse—”
“Then you must break it,” Shiva interrupted. “That is beyond question. What remains is how you intend to go about doing so. Have you made a plan?”
Though Shahrzad had intended to seek Musa Zaragoza soon for this exact purpose, she could not answer Shiva. She wasn’t yet sure how to proceed. Even as a child, she’d gone through much of life on instinct. That and sheer nerve.
It was Shiva who had been the planner. Shiva who had always thought ahead of what was to come.
“See?” Shiva said, her forehead smoothing. “This is why I came to you tonight, my dearest love. You’re lost. And it simply will not do.”
Shahrzad watched as the fog spread toward the ceiling, wrapping its wraithlike arms around the platform and curling about the single taper above. “I don’t know where to begin,” she admitted, her voice fading into the fog.
“Why don’t you start by saying aloud what it is you wish for?”
Could she even dare to say such a thing? After all the death and bloodshed and senseless destruction, it seemed like the worst kind of selfishness.
To build her world upon a bower of bones.
“So tiresome.” Shiva nudged her in jest. “This is your dream, you goose! If you cannot say what it is you desire in your own dream, then where can you dare to say it?”
Shahrzad saw herself reflected in Shiva’s gaze.
It was a shell of the girl she knew. A girl hunched forward, reticent. A girl absent—from life, and of life.
She squared her shoulders. “I want to be with Khalid. I want my father to be well. And . . . I want the curse to be broken.”
“There she is,” Shiva said, amusement leavening her tones.
“But are such things possible?” Shahrzad countered. “For they do not seem so.”
“Then how does one go about making the impossible, possible?”
Shahrzad shrugged, her expression morose. “You’d have better luck asking me how to make a goat fly.”
“Very well, then.” Shiva nodded, an air of solemnity about her. “How does one make a goat fly?”
“Tie it to a very large kite.”
“It wouldn’t get far, as it’s tied to a string.”
“Be serious.”
“I’m very serious!” Shiva laughed, letting the sound carry beyond the encroaching fog and past the silent sentinel above. “What if you were to put the goat on your floating carpet? Perhaps it would fly then?” Her eyes shone with a suspicious light.
“Don’t be ridiculous.”
“It was just a thought.” Shiva waved a hand through a whorl of white smoke. “But, if you ask me, the best way to go about flying is to cut the strings tying you down . . .” Her words began to sound muffled, as though she were underwater, yet her smile continued to burn bright.
“Cut the strings, Shazi. Fly.”
Shahrzad woke with a start.
Their tent was awash in black. Her sister’s breaths had long ago lapsed into the rhythm of a deep sleep, and the sound of a lulling desert wind buffeted the stitched walls.
Her throat was dry, but her heart was full.
She waited for the crushing emptiness to follow when she realized her dream had ended with so many things left unsaid.
It never came.
For the first time since she’d fled the city of Rey nearly a week ago, she didn’t feel lost and quite so alone. She had found a means to achieve her purpose. And her purpose had a weight she could bear.
Something she could truly fight for.
“Cut the strings, Shazi. Fly.”
Thank you, Shiva.
Careful not to disturb Irsa, Shahrzad stepped into her sandals to take in some air. She stole her sister’s shahmina and draped the long triangle of cloth over her head to shield herself from a chilly desert night. Then she made her way to the entrance of the tent, securing its flap shut behind her—
Before sprawling across the body lying in wait outside.
“Uff!” Shahrzad rolled into the sand.
Strong hands grabbed her, pinning her down. A vision of a hooded soldier flashed through her mind. An angry soldier with a scarab brand and a weapon meant for war.
She struck out against a wall of muscle. Slapped at a face hewn from stone. Stared back into eyes the silver of sharp knives.
Tariq’s heart pounded over hers.
“Get off me!” she said, dismayed to feel her cheeks flush.
He pushed to his feet, taking her with him in one lithe movement.
“What are you—”
“What the hell—”
She shoved away from him, crossing her arms.
He knocked the sand from his hair with a vicious swipe of a hand.
“You first,” Tariq said in a sullen voice that brought to mind a much younger version of himself. One with a lazy smile and a penchant for pranks.
One Shahrzad much preferred at that moment.
“That’s quite gallant of you. After you’ve ignored me for the better part of a week, like a boy half your age with twice your charm.”
His lips stayed poised between silence and speech for the span of several breaths.
“You—are awful, Shazi. Just awful.” He rubbed a palm across his face, but not before Shahrzad saw the look of aggrievement he failed to mask.
She squeezed her elbows, refusing to reach out and comfort him. No matter how much she wanted to. No matter how natural it felt to comfort the boy she’d loved for so long.
“I know I’m awful. So it begs the question: Why are you here?”
“I’ve asked myself that same question, several times . . . especially as I lay in the cold sand, keeping watch over an awful girl. One with little sense of gratitude and no sense of loyalty.”
It was as though he’d doused her with icy water.
Fending off a fresh wave of guilt, she whirled away, her cheeks aflame.
Tariq chased after her, taking hold of her arm.
Shahrzad threw him off. “Don’t touch me, Tariq Imran al-Ziyad! Don’t you dare!” She was horrified to feel the sting of tears behind her eyes. Not once had she cried in the past few days. Not when they’d found her father’s huddled figure on a cloud-darkened slope. Not when she’d turned to take in a final glimpse of her burning city behind her.
Not even when she’d learned Tariq had promised Jalal never to bring her back.
Tariq drew her close without a second thought.
“Stop it.” She splayed both hands against his chest as angry tears began to well. “I don’t need you!”
You deserve someone who will feel you at her side without needing to see you.
And I’ve only felt that way about one boy.
“Stop trying to hurt me, you awful girl,” he said grimly. “It won’t work. At least not in the way you hope it will.”
Hot tears slipped down her face. Yet she refused to lean on him. Refused to succumb to such weakness.
With a weary sigh, Tariq wrapped his arms around her.
They felt solid, certain, safe.
They felt like everything she’d ever loved about being young and free. The scent of sand and salt on his skin; the wild feeling of falling and knowing someone would always be there to catch her or, at the very least, tend to her wounds; the newness of all things . . . and of love, especially.
“Rahim told me what happened.” Tariq’s fingers shifted to the nape of her neck as they had so many times before, so many years past. He lowered his voice; it rumbled, rich and resonant against her, almost decadent. A luxury she no longer needed nor deserved. “I’ll beat that boy bloody for even thinking such things.”