Vampire Academy: The Complete Collection: 1/6

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Vampire Academy: The Complete Collection: 1/6 Page 65

by Richelle Mead


  “And it’s what you lose your lives for. You’re all but enslaved and don’t even realize it. And for what? Why do you protect us?”

  “Because . . . we need you,” I faltered. “For our race to survive.”

  “You don’t need to throw yourselves into battle for that. Making children isn’t really that difficult.”

  I ignored his quip. “And because the Moroi . . . the Moroi and their magic are important. They can do amazing things.”

  Victor threw his hands up in exasperation. “We used to do amazing things. Humans used to revere us as gods, but over time, we grew lazy. The advent of technology made our magic more and more obsolete. Now, all we do is parlor tricks.”

  “If you have so many ideas,” said Dimitri, with a dangerous glint in his dark eyes, “then do something useful in prison and write a manifesto.”

  “And what’s this have to do with Lissa anyway?” I asked.

  “Because Vasilisa is a vehicle for change.”

  I stared incredulously. “You think she’s going to lead your revolution?”

  “Well, I’d prefer that I lead it—someday. But, regardless, I think that she’s going to be part of it. I’ve heard about her too. She’s a rising star—still young, certainly, but people are taking notice. All royals aren’t created equal, you know. The Dragomir symbol is a dragon, the king of the beasts. Likewise, the Dragomir blood has always been powerful—that’s why the Strigoi have targeted them so consistently. A Dragomir returning to power is no small thing—particularly one such as her. My impression from the reports is that she must have mastered her magic. If that’s so—with her gifts—there’s no telling what she could do. People are drawn to her with almost no effort on her part. And when she actually tries to influence them . . . well, they’ll do anything she wants.” His eyes were wide as he spoke, wonder and happiness on his face as he imagined Lissa living out his dreams.

  “Unbelievable,” I said. “First you wanted to hide her away to keep you alive. Now you actually want her out in the world to use her compulsion for your own psycho plans.”

  “I told you, she’s a force for change. And like you being shadow-kissed, she’s the only one of her kind that we know about. That makes her dangerous—and very valuable.”

  Well, that was something. Victor wasn’t all-knowing after all. He didn’t know about Adrian’s spirit use.

  “Lissa will never do it,” I said. “She’s not going to abuse her powers.”

  “And Victor’s not going to say anything about us,” said Dimitri, tugging my arm. “He’s achieved his goal. He brought you here because he wanted to know about Lissa.”

  “He didn’t find out much,” I said.

  “You’d be surprised,” said Victor. He grinned at Dimitri. “And what makes you so certain I won’t enlighten the world about your romantic indiscretions?”

  “Because it won’t save you from prison. And if you ruin Rose, you’ll destroy whatever weak chance you had of Lissa helping you with your warped fantasy.” Victor flinched just a little; Dimitri was right. Dimitri stepped forward, pressing close to the bars as I had earlier. I’d thought I had a scary voice, but when he spoke his next words, I realized I wasn’t even close. “And it’ll all be pointless anyway, because you won’t stay alive long enough in prison to stage your grand plans. You aren’t the only one with connections.”

  My breath caught a little. Dimitri brought so many things to my life: love, comfort, and instruction. I got so used to him sometimes that I forgot just how dangerous he could be. As he stood there, tall and threatening while he glared down at Victor, I felt a chill run down my spine. I remembered how when I had first come to the Academy, people had said Dimitri was a god. In this moment, he looked it.

  If Victor was frightened by Dimitri’s threat, he didn’t show it. His jade green eyes glanced between the two of us. “You two are a match made in heaven. Or somewhere.”

  “See you in court,” I said.

  Dimitri and I left. On our way out, he said a few words in Russian to the guardian on duty. From their manners, my guess was Dimitri was offering thanks.

  We ventured outdoors, walking across a wide, beautiful parklike space to get back to our rooms. The sleet had stopped, and it had left everything—buildings and trees alike—coated in ice. It was like the world was made of glass. Glancing at Dimitri, I saw him staring straight ahead. It was hard to tell while walking, but I could have sworn he was shaking.

  “Are you okay?” I asked.

  “Yes.”

  “You sure?”

  “As okay as I can be.”

  “Do you think he’ll tell everyone about us?”

  “No.”

  We walked in silence for a bit. I finally asked the question I’d been dying to know.

  “Did you mean it . . . that if Victor did tell . . . that you’d . . .” I couldn’t finish. I couldn’t bring myself to say the words have him killed.

  “I don’t have much influence in the upper levels of Moroi royalty, but I have plenty among the guardians who handle the dirty work in our world.”

  “You didn’t answer the question. If you’d really do it.”

  “I’d do a lot of things to protect you, Roza.”

  My heart pounded. He only used “Roza” when he was feeling particularly affectionate toward me.

  “It wouldn’t exactly be protecting me. It’d be after the fact—cold-blooded. You don’t do that kind of thing,” I told him. “Revenge is more my thing. I’ll have to kill him.”

  I meant it as a joke, but he didn’t think it was funny. “Don’t talk like that. And anyway, it doesn’t matter. Victor’s not going to say anything.”

  He left me to go to his own room when we got inside. As I was opening the door to mine, Lissa rounded the hall corner.

  “There you are. What happened? You missed dinner.”

  I’d completely forgotten. “Sorry . . . got carried away with some guardian stuff. It’s a long story.”

  She’d changed for dinner. Her hair was still pulled up, and she now wore a form-fitting dress made out of silver raw silk. She looked beautiful. She looked royal. I thought about Victor’s words and wondered if she really could be the power for change he swore she was. Looking like she did now, so glamorous and self-composed, I could imagine people following her anywhere. I certainly would, but then, I was biased.

  “Why are you looking at me like that?” she asked with a small smile.

  I couldn’t tell her that I’d just seen the man who frightened her the most. I couldn’t tell her that while she’d been out living it up, I’d been off watching her back in the shadows, like I would always do.

  Instead, I returned her smile. “I like the dress.”

  FOURTEEN

  ABOUT A HALF HOUR before my alarm was scheduled to go off the next morning, I heard a knock at my door. I expected it to be Lissa, but a sleepy check of our bond showed that she was still fast asleep. Puzzled, I staggered out of the bed and opened the door. A Moroi girl I didn’t recognize handed me some folded clothes with a note attached. I wondered if I should tip her or something, but she left too quickly for me to react.

  I sat back on my bed and unfolded the clothing. Black slacks, white blouse, and a black jacket. It was the same ensemble that the other guardians wore around here, and it was in my size. Wow. I was about to become part of the team. A slow grin spread over my face, and I opened the note. It was in Dimitri’s writing: Wear your hair up.

  The grin stayed on my face. A lot of female guardians cut their hair to show off their molnija marks. I’d reluctantly considered it once, and Dimitri had told me not to. He loved my hair and had told me to wear it up. The way he’d said it back then had given me chills, just like now.

  An hour later, I was on my way to the trial with Lissa, Christian, and Eddie. Someone had rustled up a black-and-white outfit for Eddie too, and I think we both kind of felt like kids playing dress-up with their parents’ clothing. My cropped jacket and stretchy blouse w
ere actually pretty cute, and I wondered if I’d be able to bring these back with me.

  The courtroom was over in the large, ornate building we’d passed upon arrival. Walking through its halls, I saw a mix of the old and the new. Outside, it was all arched windows and stone spires. Inside, it was a hub of modern activity. People worked in offices with flat-screen monitors. Elevators led to upper floors. Yet, despite that, a few antique touches could still be found. Sculptures on pedestals. Chandeliers in the halls.

  The courtroom itself had beautiful murals that stretched from floor to ceiling, and in the front of the room, seals from all the royal families hung on the walls. Lissa stopped as we walked in, her eyes falling on the Dragomir dragon. King of the beasts. A sea of conflicting emotions swirled within her as she stared at the seal and felt the full weight of being the only one left to carry on her name. Pride to be part of that family. Fear that she wouldn’t be good enough to live up to the name. Giving her a gentle nudge, I urged her on toward our seats.

  The seating was split by an aisle down the middle of the room. We sat at the front of the right-hand section. There were still several minutes to go before proceedings began, but the room wasn’t very full yet. I suspected that wouldn’t change, due to the secrecy surrounding what had happened with Victor. A judge sat at the front, but there was no jury. An elevated seat on one side of the room marked where the queen would sit when she arrived. She would be the one who made the ultimate decision. That was how it worked with royal criminal cases.

  I pointed it out to Lissa. “Let’s hope that she’s against him. Looks like she’ll be the only one making the decision.”

  Lissa frowned. “Not having a jury feels kind of weird.”

  “That’s because we spent so much time around humans.”

  She smiled. “Maybe. I don’t know. Just seems like there’s a lot of room for corruption.”

  “Well, yeah. But this is Victor we’re talking about.”

  Moments later, Prince Victor Dashkov himself entered the courtroom. Or, rather, just Victor Dashkov did. He’d been stripped of his title when he’d been imprisoned. It had gone to the next oldest person in the Dashkov family.

  Fear shot through Lissa, and the little color that was in her cheeks completely disappeared. Mingled with that fear was an emotion I hadn’t expected: regret. Before he’d kidnapped her, Victor had been like an uncle to her—that was even how she’d referred to him. She’d loved him, and he’d betrayed her. I put my hand over hers. “Easy,” I murmured. “It’s going to be okay.”

  His eyes, narrowed and cunning, looked around the courtroom as though it were a party. He had that same unconcerned look he’d had while talking to Dimitri and me. I felt my lips curl into a sneer. A red haze tinged my vision, and I worked hard to be as serene as the other guardians in the room. He finally focused on Lissa, and she flinched at seeing the same eye color she and others of her family had. When he nodded a sort of greeting to her, I felt my control snap. Before I could actually do anything, I felt new words in my mind—Lissa’s. Breathe, Rose. Just breathe. It looked like we were going to have to rely on each other to get through this. A heartbeat later, Victor was walking again, off to take his seat on the left side of the room.

  “Thanks,” I said to her, once he was gone. “It’s like you can read my mind.”

  “No,” she said gently. “I could just feel your hand.”

  I looked down at where I’d put my hand over hers. I’d done it to comfort her and had ended up clenching her fingers in my own agitation. “Yikes,” I said, jerking away and hoping I hadn’t broken her bones. “Sorry.”

  Queen Tatiana’s entrance followed his, which distracted me and helped calm my dark feelings. We all stood when she appeared and then knelt. It was all kind of archaic, but it was a custom the Moroi had held onto over the years. We didn’t rise until she took her seat, and then the rest of us were able to sit too.

  The trial started. One by one, those who had witnessed the events with Victor gave their account of what they’d seen. Largely, this involved the guardians who had pursued Lissa when Victor had taken her away and who had subsequently been part of the raid on Victor’s hideout.

  Dimitri was the last of the guardians to go. On the surface, his testimony wasn’t much different than theirs. They’d all been part of the rescue squad, but his part in the story had begun a little earlier.

  “I was with my student, Rose Hathaway,” he said. “She shares a bond with the princess and was the first to sense what had happened.”

  Victor’s lawyer—I couldn’t even imagine how they’d gotten anyone to represent him—glanced at some papers and then looked back up at Dimitri. “Based on the events, it sounds like there was a delay between when she discovered that and when you alerted the others.”

  Dimitri nodded, his mask of composure never slipping. “She couldn’t act on it because Mr. Dashkov had inflicted a charm on her, one that caused her to attack me.” He spoke the words so levelly, it amazed me. Not even the lawyer seemed to notice anything. Only I could see—or maybe it was just because I knew him—how much it hurt for Dimitri to lie. Oh, he wanted to protect us—wanted to protect me in particular—which was why he was doing this. But it killed a piece of him to stand up there, under oath, and lie. Dimitri was not perfect, no matter how much I thought he was some days, but he always tried to be truthful. Today he couldn’t be.

  “Mr. Dashkov works with earth magic, and some who use that power and are strong in compulsion can influence our base instincts,” continued Dimitri. “In this case, he affected her anger and violence through an object.”

  Off to my left, I heard a sound—like someone choking on their own laughter. The judge, an elderly but fierce Moroi woman, glared.

  “Mr. Dashkov, please respect the decorum of this courtroom.”

  Victor, still smiling, waved his hands in apology. “I’m terribly sorry, Your Honor and Your Majesty. Something in Guardian Belikov’s testimony just tickled my fancy, that’s all. It won’t happen again.”

  I held my breath, waiting for the blow to fall. It didn’t. Dimitri finished his statement, and then Christian was called up. His part was short. He’d been with Lissa when she’d been taken and had been knocked out. His contribution was being able to ID some of Victor’s guardians as the kidnappers. Once Christian sat down, it was my turn.

  I walked up, hoping I looked calm in front of all those eyes—and in front of Victor. In fact, I went out of my way to not look at him at all. As I said my name and gave my oath to tell the truth, I suddenly felt the full force of what Dimitri must have experienced. I was standing before all these people, swearing I’d be honest, but I would lie in an instant if the lust charm came up.

  My version was pretty straightforward. I had details to offer from before the night of the kidnapping, like about when Victor had laid his sick traps to test Lissa’s power. Otherwise, my story lined up with Dimitri’s and the other guardians’.

  I’d said before that I could lie well, and I brushed over the “attack” charm part with such ease that no one paid any attention. Except Victor. Despite my refusal to look at him, I inadvertently glanced in his direction when I mentioned the charm. His eyes bored into me, and a small smirk sat on his lips. His smugness, I realized, was more than just because he knew I was lying. It was also because he actually knew the precise truth—and the look he gave me told me that he had that power over me and Dimitri, the power to ruin everything for us in front of all these people—no matter what Dimitri had threatened. All the while, I kept my face calm enough to make Dimitri proud, but inside my chest, my heart thudded loudly.

  It seemed to last forever, but I knew I was only on the stand for a few minutes. I finished, sagging with relief that Victor hadn’t called me out, and then it was Lissa’s turn. As the victim, she offered the first new perspective thus far, and everyone there grew caught up in her story. It was compelling; no one had ever heard anything like it. I also realized that, without even trying, Lissa wa
s using her spirit-induced charisma. I think it came from the same place compulsion did. People were enraptured and sympathetic. When Lissa described the torture Victor had put her through to force her to heal him, I saw faces go pale with shock. Even Tatiana’s stern mask faltered a little, though whether she felt pity or just simple surprise, I couldn’t say.

  The most amazing thing, though, was how calmly Lissa managed to deliver the story. On the outside, she was steady and beautiful. But as she spoke the words, describing exactly how Victor’s henchman had tortured her, she relived the pain and terror of that night. The guy had been an air user, and he’d toyed with that element, sometimes taking it away so she couldn’t breathe and at other times smothering her with it. It had been horrible, and I’d experienced it right along with her. In fact, I experienced it with her again now as she spoke about the events on the stand. Each painful detail was still etched in her mind, the pain echoing back to both of us. We were both relieved when her testimony finished.

  Finally, it was Victor’s turn. From the look on his face, you never would have guessed he was on trial. He wasn’t angry or outraged. He wasn’t contrite. He didn’t plead. He looked like we were all hanging out somewhere, like he had nothing in the world to worry about. Somehow, that made me that much angrier.

  Even when answering, he spoke as though he made perfect sense. When the prosecuting lawyer asked why he’d done what he had, he looked at her as though she were crazy.

  “Why, I had no choice,” he said pleasantly. “I was dying. No one was going to condone me openly experimenting with the princess’s powers. What would you have done in my place?”

  The lawyer ignored that. She was having a hard time keeping the disgust off of her face. “And you found coaxing your own daughter into turning Strigoi also necessary?”

  Everyone in the courtroom shifted uncomfortably. One of the most awful things about Strigoi was that they were made, not born. A Strigoi could force a human, a dhampir, or a Moroi into becoming Strigoi if the Strigoi drank the victim’s blood and then fed Strigoi blood back to the victim. It didn’t matter if the victim wanted it or not, and once she became Strigoi, she lost all sense of her old, moral self. She embraced becoming a monster and killing others to survive. Strigoi converted others if they found someone they thought would strengthen their ranks. Sometimes they did it just out of cruelty.

 

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