think you must challenge Father’s opinion on this matter, please do us the courtesy of waiting until he returns from Constanţa, then speak to him personally.” I made myself smile at him, ignoring the anger in his eyes. He gave a stiff nod. Then he took my hand and raised it to his lips, startling me so much I sat frozen and let him do it. Iulia exploded into a fit of nervous giggles.
Gogu made a wild leap, aiming for my shoulder and overshooting by at least an arm’s length. He landed heavily on an oak side table, skidded, and thumped into the wall. In an instant I was on my feet and had him cradled between my hands. I could feel his heart pounding like a miniature drum. His body was possessed by a quivering sense of outrage. There didn’t seem to be anything damaged, save his pride.
“There’s something extremely odd about that creature,” said Cezar, eyeing Gogu suspiciously. “It just serves to underline my argument. A place in which a child can find an oddity like that frog is not a safe place to wander about. It is not the benign realm of your theory, Paula. Ideally, the forest around both Vǎrful cu Negurǎ and Piscul Dracului should be felled entirely.”
Perhaps he did not hear our indrawn breath of pure horror, for he went boldly on.
“That would keep those presences I mentioned away from our doorsteps, as well as opening up additional land for grazing. The shepherds don’t like coming up here, not even onto the pasture areas, and with good reason. The whole of the eastern hillside is wasted as a result. A complete clearance, that’s what I’d like to see. As for the frog, you should get rid of it, Jena. You’re a young woman now. If you must have a little companion, and I know ladies are fond of such things, a cat or a terrier would be far more suitable. I would be happy to make inquiries for you. That creature is … peculiar.”
I could think of nothing to say. I was used to his attitude to Gogu, which had grown stronger as I had become older. As for the forest and its dwellers, there was a reason why Cezar feared them, a reason that made perfect sense to anyone who had not had the privilege of entering the Other Kingdom.
“Aunt Bogdana likes pastries, doesn’t she?” I said brightly. “Florica, could you pack up some of these for Cezar to take home? I’ll see him out.”
On the way to find Uncle Nicolae, Cezar paused in the hallway, arms folded, his face half in shadow. “Jena?”
“Mmm?”
“You’re angry, aren’t you?”
“No, Cezar. I may disagree with your ideas, but that doesn’t mean I’m angry. It’s hard to be angry with someone who once saved your life. When you talk about Costi, I can still see it.”
His features tightened, his dark eyes turning bleak. “Metoo, Jena. I wish it would fade, but it doesn’t. Ten whole years. Every night I dream of it. It won’t go away.”
“It was an accident,” I said, the pale waters of the Deadwash filling my mind, with the remembered terror of floating away from the shore—farther and farther away—as a thrilling game turned into a dark reality. “Nobody’s fault. It was terrible, yes. But you need to look forward now.”
“When I’ve destroyed every one of those creatures out there, when I’ve broken their world and stamped on the pieces, then I’ll look forward,” Cezar said. His words set cold fingers around my heart.
“Even if you did all that, it wouldn’t bring Costi back.” We were going over old ground here. And the more we did so, the less ready he was to change his mind. Ten years was a long time. Wasn’t time supposed to ease grief? It seemed to me that Cezar had grown sadder and angrier with every year that passed. “Hating people doesn’t mend anything.”
“I must go,” he said abruptly. “Goodbye, Jena.”
“Farewell, Cezar. I’ll see you at church, perhaps.”
Tǎul Ielelor had always been forbidden. Children love forbidden places, especially when they lie deep in a mysterious
Shauna Rice-Schober[thriller]