Onlar bizim kanunlarımızı bilmiyor Claps, Bunu unutma genellikle çok çaresizler ve hep ama hep korkuyorlar
Sayfa 95·Kitabı okudu
To save him...
“Fine. Now, will you tell me how to save Raphael?” He stretches out a long arm and plucks an apple from a tree. “Of course. To save him, we must learn exactly where they’re keeping him.” “So, you don’t know where he is?” “In my dreams, I see mere glimpses. He is in Auberon’s fortress, but it’s a vast place, with countless dungeons, cells, and torture chambers. I need to think.” He takes a bite of the apple, closes his eyes, and leans his head back against the column. I grit my teeth in frustration as I turn back to look at the banquet table. He’s actually still got ancient wine in the decanters. Dust and snow cover the plates and the faded gold tablecloth. There are food trays with silver domes on them. I hate to think of what’s underneath them. I have no idea what Mordred is doing right now. Eyes closed, he seems deep in thought. He begins to hum, an eerie, haunting tune that raises the hair on my nape and pulls my attention from the banquet table. The song is uncanny, strangely familiar, and his body glows with silver. And for some reason, I feel as if the tune is beckoning me closer. After a while, movement catches my eye from above, and I glance up to see a cloud of silver moths fluttering down from the ruined ceiling. As Mordred hums, they twirl and dance in the air, their wings ignited by the slate-silver moonlight. Mordred holds out his hand, and a moth lands on his palm. He opens his eyes and clamps his hand into a fist, crushing it. The rest of the moths scatter, flitting away from him. He opens his hand again, and my breath hitches. On his palm is a jeweled silver moth, its wings decorated with tiny, sparkling stones. “Take it,” he says. I take it from his palm, a lifeless moth made of metal. “This moth will be my ears and my eyes. Carry it into Auberon’s
Sayfa 48 - Nia·Kitabı okudu
Etimoloji Defteri
Mücellit Nedir ?
They are making Progres
“It’s okay, Luther,” Mr. Carver says. “You can let them see.” The boy tries again, his brow furrowing in concentration. This time, he takes the fern by the stem, holding it in his small fist. And slowly, the fern curls beneath his touch, turning black, folding into itself—dying. As we watch, transfixed, Mr. Carver grabs something else from the back shelf and sets it in his son’s lap. Leather gloves. “You take good care of him,” he says. His teeth clench, shutting tight against the storm inside his heart. “You promise me that.” Like all true men, he doesn’t flinch when I shake his hand. “I give you my word, Mr. Carver.” Only when we’re back at the safe house, which we’re starting to call the Notch, do I allow myself a moment alone. To think, to tell myself the lie was well made. I cannot truly promise this boy, or the others like him, will survive what is to come. But I certainly hope he does, and I will do everything I can to make it so. Even if this boy’s terrifying ability is death itself. The newbloods’ families aren’t the only ones to flee. The Measures have made life worse than ever before, driving many Reds into the forests and frontiers, seeking a place where they won’t be worked to death or hanged for stepping out of line. Some come within a few miles of our camp, winding north toward a border already painted with autumn snow. Kilorn and Farley want to help them, to give them food or medicine, but Cal and I overrule their pleas. No one can know about us, and the Reds marching on are no different, despite their fate. They will keep heading north, until they meet the Lakelander border. Some will be pressed into the legions holding the line. Others might be lucky enough to slip through, to succumb to cold and starvation in the tundra rather than a bullet in
Sayfa 240
The first totally silvers
“This is the first completely Silver legion going into the trenches,” he says evenly. “They’re going to fight with the Reds, dressed as Reds, serving with Reds. The Lakelanders won’t know who they are when they get to the Choke. And when the bombs fall, when the enemy tries to break the line, they’re going to get more than they bargained for. The Shadow Legion will take them all.” Suddenly I feel hot and cold at the same time. “Original.” But Cal doesn’t gloat. Instead, he looks sad. “You gave me the idea.” “What?” “When you fell into Queenstrial, no one knew what to do. I’m sure the Lakelanders will feel the same.” Though I try to speak, no sound comes out. I’ve never been a point of inspiration for anything, let alone combat maneuvers. Cal stares at me like he wants to say more, but he doesn’t speak. Neither of us knows what to say. A boy from our training, the windweaver Oliver, claps a hand on Cal’s shoulder while the other clutches a sloshing drink. He wears a uniform too. He’s going to fight. “What’s with the hiding, Cal?” He chuckles, gesturing to the crowd around us. “Next to the Lakelanders, this bunch will be easy!” Cal meets my eyes, a silver blush tingeing his cheeks. “I’ll take the Lakelanders any day,” he replies, his eyes never leaving mine. “You’re going with them?” Oliver answers for Cal, smiling much too wide for a boy going off to war. “Going?” he says. “Cal’s leading us! His own legion, all the way to the front.” Slowly, Cal shifts out of Oliver’s grip. The drunk windweaver doesn’t seem to notice and keeps babbling. “He’ll be the youngest general in history and the first prince to fight on the lines.” And the first to die, a morose voice in my head whispers. Against my better instincts, I reach out to Cal. He doesn’t pull away from me,
Sayfa 197
A Magnetron
The smallest girl I’ve ever seen rises out of darkness. Cheers rise as a house in brown silk and red gemstones applauds their daughter. “Rohr, of House Rhambos,” the family shouts, announcing her to the world. The girl, no more than fourteen, smiles up at her family. She’s tiny in comparison to the statues, but her hands are strangely large. The rest of her looks liable to blow away in a strong breeze. She takes a turn about the ring of statues, always smiling upward. Her gaze lands on Cal—I mean the prince—trying to entice him with her doe eyes or the occasional flip of honey-blond hair. In short, she looks foolish. Until she approaches a solid stone statue and sloughs its head off with a single, simple slap. House Rhambos speaks again. “Strongarm.” Below us, little Rohr destroys the floor in a whirlwind, turning statues into pulverized piles of dust while she cracks the ground beneath her feet. She’s like an earthquake in tiny human form, breaking apart anything and everything in her way. So this is a pageant. A violent one, meant to showcase a girl’s beauty, splendor—and strength. The most talented daughter. This is a display of power, to pair the prince with the most powerful girl, so that their children might be the strongest of all. And this has been going on for hundreds of years. I shudder to think of the strength in Cal’s pinkie finger. He claps politely as the Rhambos girl finishes her display of organized destruction and steps back onto the descending platform. House Rhambos cheers for her as she disappears. Next comes Heron of House Welle, the daughter of my own governor. She’s tall, with a face like her bird namesake. The destroyed earth shifts around her as she puts the floor back together. “Greenwarden,” her family chants. A greeny. At her command, trees
Sayfa 70
“Onu arayacağım.” Claps ceketinin iç cebindeki fotoğrafa dokundu. “Onu…birinin hatıralarında… arayacağım…”