jolt. She flipped back up and grabbed Red’s face as the werewolf dug her claws into Billi’s ribs.
Despite the roaring pain, Billi concentrated on sinking her razor-sharp nails into Red’s face. Her thumbs were tipped with daggers, and she pushed toward Red’s eyes. Grooves opened along the wolf’s snout as she slid closer.
Svetlana screamed and twisted away. Billi stumbled toward the sword and, chest heaving, tried to lift it. It seemed ten times heavier now, even with only half a blade. Blood sprinkled the snow. Her blood. Her body was covered in cuts, and her coat hung off her in tatters.
Every step was like dragging through lead. The werewolf’s eyes were filled with blood. She howled and swiped left and right blindly. Billi slashed at her legs, cracking the kneecap, and the red-pelted wolf buckled.
Billi stared down at Svetlana, who panted, her tongue dangling loosely out of her savage jaw. Blood smeared her face, and her fur was blood-splattered. She tried to raise her arm to defend herself, but the effort was weak, defeated. Billi raised her sword and stiffened her grip. Svetlana stared up, eyes filled with impotent fury. Billi smashed the pommel on her head, and the werewolf collapsed.
Vasilisa lay curled up in the nook of a boulder. She’d buried her face in her knees and had her hands over her head as if trying to blank out what had happened.
Billi looked at her own hands. The nails were thicker, but normal. She’d fought down the change again. The bloodthirsty rage subsided, and with it she shook the Beast back into its cage.
Shouts rose out of the wind. Flashlights appeared in the distance and dark figures ran through the snow. The wind carried fearful howls.
Billi tossed away the broken sword. She groaned as she bent down to pick up her dagger. Every muscle screamed, and her bones did too, each having been twisted and tortured out of shape and back. Her spine popped as each joint set back into its socket. It took a huge effort to grasp the dagger and lift it.
“Billi?”
She had to do it now.
Billi grabbed Vasilisa by her dangling necklaces and held her fast. She raised her knife.
Oh God. This is it.
Vasilisa stared up at her, not understanding. She shook her head as if this might be some nightmare. She held on to Billi’s fingers, wanting this to be okay, wanting to trust Billi, but she could only tremble.
Strike!
Billi willed her arm down, willed the blade to enter the girl’s heart, but her arm wouldn’t bend. Vasilisa gazed up at her, too terrified to move.
“Close your eyes, Vasilisa. You won’t feel anything.” Billi’s voice broke. She pressed her lips together despite the tremor running through her. She had to do this.
It was her duty as a Templar. The life of one against the lives of billions. Baba Yaga would bring Fimbulwinter, and humanity would suffera long, slow deathby starvation. A second of ruthless action and the world was saved. Billi wouldn’t have time to regret it; the werewolves were going to tear her to pieces at any moment.
“God forgive me,” said Billi. She pushed Vasilisa against the rock and twisted the necklaces around her fist, holding Vasilisa still. The moonlight caught the little girl’s petrified face, her bewilderment. It glistened off the brightly polished baubles and old flint arrowheads dangling from her neck. The small bones, lumps of precious metal, beads, and a crude statue all jangled from Billi’s grip.
The statue.
Billi’s breath stopped. She held it between her fingers. The small, roughly carved shape of a woman, the big hips and small stub of a head, all veined with dark iron.
It was the Venus figurine.
A werewolf slammed into Billi, pushing her away from Vasilisa, and the necklace broke a part as it came free. The pair tumbled in the snow, knocking all the air from Billi’slungs. She lay limp under the snarling werewolf, its gruesome fangs just a few inches from her throat. Half buried in the snow, Billi twisted enough to look at Vasilisa. Olga was already there, passing the girl to others. Two women helped Svetlana up.
Vasilisa was removed, quickly surrounded by the Polenitsy and carried away. Only when she’d gone did the werewolf move off of Billi.
They lifted Billi up. Olga approached.
“Why didn’t you kill her?” the old woman asked.
Billi smiled. She slipped her closed hand into her pocket, feeling the smooth cold curves of the statuette made in Tunguska. The one thing that could kill Baba Yaga.
Oh, but I will.
37
IVAN STARED OPENMOUTHER AS THEY DRAGGED BILLI back. He shook his head like he couldn’t believe his eyes. It lasted a second before his face dropped. He was tied to one of the thick wooden posts in the center of the
Ivan waited a few moments, then leaned over and whispered, “What happened?”
“I couldn’t do it.” Billi couldn’t quite believe it. “I think I’ve found another way.”
Ivan blinked. He leaned back against the column, shifting his shoulders to get more comfortable. A slow smile crept over his lips. “I am glad you are alive.”
“Me too.” Billi tried to turn her hands, but the leather seemed to cut into her skin. Already she felt her fingers tingle with numbness.
“I can kill Baba Yaga,” she whispered.
“That’s impossible. She’s immortal.”
Billi grinned, unable to resist the taunt. “Let a Templar show you how it’s done.”
Ivan raised an eyebrow. “And how is that, exactly?”
“Remember when I told you about the meteorite-the figurines?”
“Yes.”
“Well-I’ve got one now.” Billi smiled.
“So let’s do it,” said Ivan at last.
“We just need to get out of these straps.” She’d thought it through. The rock of the Venus figurine could be sharpened, chiseled away, until it became a crude stone knife. All she needed was to get close enough to deliver the blow.
“But even with this, why let Vasilisa live? You’re taking a huge risk.” Ivan struggled at his own bindings, but they were as tight as Billi’s.
“If I’d killed Vasilisa, I’d have achieved nothing. I would be dead and the figurine lost, maybe forever. So what if Vasilisa died? Sooner or later another powerful Spring Child would come along, and we’d be back where we started.” After all, they’d found Kay and Vasilisa within a few years of each other. Who knows who else might be out there, waiting to be found by the Polenitsy and brought to their goddess? She continued. “Think about it. We have the means to kill Baba Yaga, and she’s nearby. If Vasilisa had died right now, the Polenitsy would have ripped us to shreds, and the only chance to kill Baba Yaga, once and for all, would have been lost. We need to get close to her. It’s now or never.”
“So that’s why you let Vasilisa live.” Ivan grinned. “I thought you’d gone all sentimental and soft.”
“Then you’ve a lot to learn about me.”
“I hope I get the chance.”
The door flap flipped open, and Olga came in to begin the watch, carrying a steaming wooden bowl. She took a stool and sat down, then blew over the bowl and scooped a spoonful into her mouth. She ate in silence, watching Billi and Ivan.
Billi spoke. “Olga, I don’t understand why you’re going to help her do this. You know she’s lying to you.”