Hovering beside her, Zahra made a soft noise of pity.
“Oh, Navi,” Eliana breathed, unable to hide her shock.
Navi’s head had been shaved, and her skin was a mosaic of pain—ugly dark bruises, angry red wounds, thin black markings with numbered figures beside them, as if Navi had been labeled with instructions for some malevolent seamstress. At Eliana’s touch, Navi moaned, her swollen face crumpling with pain.
Eliana whispered, “What have they done to her?”
“Their work is abominable,” Zahra said, her voice low and furious. “I have tried to stop them when I can, but without giving away my presence to Semyaza, there is only so much I can do.”
Questions gathered angrily on Eliana’s tongue, but she would ask them later. She heaved Navi’s body off the ground and slung the girl’s limp arm around her shoulders. “Show me the way out of here.”
“I cannot hide you again,” Zahra whispered, wringing her smoky hands together. “I used the last strength I had on that soldier in the corridor.”
Navi mumbled something pained against Eliana’s shoulder.
“How long until your strength returns?” Eliana asked.
Zahra looked away, as if ashamed. “I cannot say. My queen, I swear to you, I wasn’t always so weak.”
“We’ll just have to escape like normal people. Let’s go.”
They left Navi’s cell and hurried down a maze of corridors, the strange galvanized lights humming overhead. Zahra drifted ahead, then hurried back in time to warn Eliana of approaching Fidelia soldiers.
Eliana crouched with Navi in the shadows of a small alcove, her hand gently over Navi’s mouth. The soldiers passed, carrying a dead-eyed woman on a canvas stretcher. Bulbous dark growths marred her body.
Eliana’s stomach turned.
“It’s clear,” Zahra whispered and led the way once more.
Gritting her teeth against the persistent nausea of Zahra’s nearness, Eliana followed. When they exited the compound into a flat dirt yard bordered by tall stone walls, they took cover behind crates piled high with stinking wrapped heaps that she suspected were bodies. Night stretched vast above the compound, with faint blue at the horizon.
“Are we on a mountain?” Eliana whispered.
“Yes,” answered Zahra, “and not far from the northern border of Ventera.”
That explained the cold and the wind. “How far from Rinthos?”
“Four days’ ride.”
Eliana whipped her head around to stare at the wraith. “Four days? How long have we been here?”
“A week.”
Eliana closed her eyes, fighting back a swell of panic. Eleven days since their capture. Eleven days away from Remy, and no idea of where he might now be.
Navi moaned quietly, her head lolling against Eliana’s shoulder. “Eliana?”
“We’re going to have to run soon,” Eliana said quietly. “Can you wake up for me, Navi?”
Zahra uttered a hissed curse.
Eliana tensed. “What is it?”
“Semyaza is here.” Zahra jerked her head at the perimeter wall. “He was supposed to be out on tonight’s hunt. He must have realized you were gone or sensed my own presence.”
Eliana squinted across the yard, seeing nothing—but then, a disturbance rippled in the air. There was a shift, a flicker of a dark shape. A man, but taller and longer-limbed than a human.
Fear dried out her mouth. “What do we do?”
“I’ll take care of Semyaza,” Zahra said, her voice hard—and, Eliana thought, rather delighted. “You’ll hear a loud crash when I hit him and see a slant in the air. Run for the gate on the eastern wall. Run until you can’t anymore, then hide in the forest. I’ll find you, if Semyaza doesn’t trap me first.”
“Trap you?”
“I’ll explain later.”
“But the guards.” Eliana gestured at the Fidelia guards patrolling the yard. “I can’t fight off all of them, especially not with Navi.”
“What we need,” Zahra mused, “is a diversion.”
The western wall exploded.
Eliana ducked low over Navi as stone and wood went flying across the yard, then peered through the clouds of dust to see that a thirty-foot section of the wall was now gone.
Zahra stretched to her full height. “Well,” she said cheerfully, “that will work.”
Then she zipped out into the chaos and disappeared.
Eliana waited, wiping sweat from her forehead.
A low boom rattled the yard, as of two winds colliding. Fifty yards away and ten feet above the ground, a patch of light shifted and warped, swirling like a whirlpool’s mouth.