Scarlett wondered if the Assassin always kept his face shadowed by his woolen cloak and hood. It was unnerving not to see the person whoâd whisked her back in time. But it was too late for Scarlett to worry about that, or any of the decisions that had led her into this ice-covered alley from years long since passed, with a Fate who possessed a reputation for madness.
âPut this on.â He shoved a dress into her hands, then gave her a heavy raspberry-red coat lined in thick gold fur. It went down to her knees, giving a bold glimpse of the dressâs striking black-and-white diamond pattern.
âShouldnât I be trying to blend in?â Scarlett asked.
âYou will.â The Assassin inclined his hood toward one end of the alley, which appeared to lead to the Satine District. It was just as fancy as in the present day and full of people to match. Everyone who passed the alley wore vibrant coats lined in dyed furs. Some even carried fur parasols that looked as if theyâd been made from leopard pelts.
âItâs going to start snowing,â the Assassin grunted. âAs soon as it does, your mother will walk by on that sidewalk. Follow her and steal her clothes, but whatever you do, do not change the past. Today sheâs learned that sheâs pregnant with you. You cannot mistakenly prevent yourself from being conceived, but if you alter the past, other parts of your world might be undone.â
âLike my sisterâs birth?â
âYes. Be careful, princess. Follow your mother and observe her until youâre able to steal the dress you need to deceive Gavriel. Then leave as quickly as you can. Iâll be waiting for you beneath the broken lamppost.â
There was a tiny scratching sound and then the Assassin was gone.
Scarlett hurried to put on the clothes heâd given her. Her scorched shoulders burned whenever fabric touched them, but the cold air and the rush of time travel had dulled much of the pain.
The first snowflake fell a moment later and Scarlett started toward the mouth of the alley, where icy bricks turned into neat lanes covered in crisp flakes of white that glinted like the start of something new, something that she hoped would be quick and simple.
When sheâd first proposed the idea, sheâd imagined going back in time to spy on her mother and steal a dress from her would be like when she was very young and she would sneak into her motherâs closet to try on her fancy lace slipsâa little risky, but not in a way that could cause real damage. Scarlett wasnât going to change the past. She was just going to observe her mother, take one of her gowns, and maybe a bit of her perfume along with it. But that was it.
The hard part was supposed to be convincing her father she was the Paradise of the past once Scarlett returned. Seeing her mother walk down the snow-covered street was not supposed shake Scarlettâs world, or make her forget how to breathe. If anything, seeing her mother as Paradise the criminal was supposed to ease some of the guilt that Scarlett had been carrying around.
But as Scarlett followed her mother down the street, for the first time Scarlett saw her not as sheâd been in Scarlettâs memories or imaginings. Scarlett saw Paradise as the woman who Tella had always believed her to be.
Paradise glided over the street in a skirt that was such a pure shade of white it made the freshly fallen snow look gray. She smiled at everyone she passed, tipping her head and making her red feathered hat bob. These people must not have known she was a criminal, or they all liked her so much that the ones who did know kept her secret. She looked the way Love might have looked if Love looked in a mirror, infectiously happy and radiantly beautiful.
She skipped inside a fanciful dress shop with a pretty purple awning, and Scarlett didnât even think before following her. There was a display of imported hats in the corner and Scarlett darted right to them, hoping to hide from anyoneâs notice. Not that she needed to worry. The eyes of the women in the shop went directly to Paradise.
There were only three of them, but Paradise commanded their attention like a queen ruling over her subjects.
The lady setting up a display of ribbons dropped a spool. A plump woman whoâd been about to step into the back snapped around. And the young girl whoâd been spinning in front of a mirror froze.
âHello, Minerva,â Paradise called to the plump one whoâd been about to leave. âIs my order ready?â
âI have no idea what youâre talking about, darling.â
âYes, you do. Gavriel ordered a dress for me. Itâs supposed to be a surprise, but I found out about it, so I plan to surprise him instead.â Paradise clutched her chest dramatically, reminding Scarlett a bit of Tella. âIâm going to wear it tonight and ask Gavriel to marry me.â
âYouâre asking a man to marry you?â cried the girl whoâd been spinning. âThatâs forward.â
âIâd rather be forward than backward.â Paradise spoke far faster than Scarlett, as if she wanted to cram as much as possible into every moment of life, an observation that Scarlett tucked away for her performance. âIn my line of work, life is often very short, so I donât want to waste any of it waiting for a question that I could easily ask myself. Iâm also rather certain heâs going to say yes.â She winked.
Even from Scarlettâs position behind the hats she could see the head of the young twirling girl exploding with thoughts. Her brief conversation with Paradise had just splintered the way she viewed the world, opening up a door that the girl hadnât even known existed.
âBut,â Paradise added, âif heâs afraid of marriage, or of me, Iâll know itâs time to move on.â
âTo Marcello Dragna?â said the lady with the ribbons. âHeâs very handsome and rich.â
âThen you should marry him.â Paradise laughed. âHeâd probably be much happier with you than heâd be with me. Marcello only he could handle me. I believe he wants to tame me, like a caged tiger at a circus, so he can show off to his friends.â
âThat sounds sort of like what youâre trying to do with Gavriel,â mused Minerva.
âNo, I like Gavriel outside of his cage, and I donât have any friends to show off to, except for you, Minerva.â
Minerva muttered something too low for Scarlett to hear before slipping back into the door sheâd been about to go through as Paradise had entered. A moment later she reappeared with a creation in her hands that was far too extravagant to be called a gown. It was a riot of cream and black and rose and pink with splashes of flowers and lace and stray gold leaf. Long sleeves attached to a decorative bodice that was fitted through the hips, until the skirt flared out in ruffled tiers that ended in a train of gold and rose flowers with lacy black leaves.
It didnât look like Scarlettâs idea of love, but she could see how it could have been her motherâs, and Gavrielâs.
Paradise gasped. âItâs sublime.â
âEach of these layers can be easily removed with a quick tug, if you need to run.â
âOr if I want to have some fun with Gavriel,â chimed Paradise.
The twirling girl turned red as berries, the lady with the ribbons broke out in a laugh, but Minerva didnât crack a smile. She looked as wary as Scarlett was feeling.
Scarlett knew her mother went on to marry Marcello Dragna, not Gavriel. But the entire exchange still left Scarlett with a deep, heavy feeling of dread as the conversation between the women ended. The ill feeling remained with Scarlett as she followed Paradise from the dress shop back into another icy alley.
Scarlett had no love for Marcello, but as much as Scarlett hated him, if Paradise never married him, then Tella would never be born. Scarlett quickened her steps as her mother disappeared around the corner.
Scarlett knew she wasnât supposed to interfere. The Assassin had warned her not to changeâ
Her back slammed against a brick wall of a dead-end street, as Paradise placed a knife to Scarlettâs throat.
She fought to take a ragged breath. Seeing Paradise like this was like peering in a threatening mirror. This was the mother Scarlett had originally expected to meet. But she couldnât feel triumphant about it; if this encounter went the wrong way it could destroy the entire future Scarlett knew, or end Scarlettâs life.
âWhatâs a pretty little girl like you doing followingââ Paradise cut off abruptly. She must have seen the resemblance as well, though her response was to hold the blade closer to Scarlettâs throat.
âWho are you? Why are you trying to look like me?â She spoke even faster than she had in the shop. âTell me in the next ten seconds or Iâll slit your throat and walk away before your body hits the snow. One. Two. Three.â
âIâm not here to hurt you,â Scarlett said.
âNot the right answer.â Paradise flashed a vicious grin. âFour. Five.â
âIâm here because your family is in danger.â
âDonât have a family,â she sang. âSeven. Eight.â
âYes, you do, in the future.â
Paradise didnât even bother to respond to this claim. âNine.â
âYou have a daughter,â Scarlett said. âYouâre pregnant with her right now!â
Paradise stopped counting.
âHow did you know that? Iâve only told one person that, and he wouldnât say a word.â Her eyes narrowed on Scarlett and then went wide. âWhere did you get those earrings?â She dropped the box sheâd been holding and touched her own ears, where a matching pair of jeweled baubles rested.
âThey were from you,â Scarlett said. âYou told me my father gave them to you because scarlet was your favorite color. Itâs also what you named me.â
Paradise stumbled back, but continued to hold out the knife. Gray mist swirled around her; she was confused but no longer feeling hostile, though on the outside she kept her expression severe.
âYou also change your name to Paloma,â Scarlett said. âYou leave this identity and turn into something close to a legend.â
This made a hint of her grin return, but it didnât meet her eyes the way Scarlettâs grins always did. âAll right, say I do believe you, why are you here?â
âIâm only here to steal a dress.â
Paradise laughed, softening a little more. âThen youâre a terrible thief. I must not have raised you very well.â
Scarlett was tempted to tell her the truth, to tell Paradise that sheâd been a dreadful mother, that sheâd left when her daughters had needed her most and she hadnât come back. But Paradise wasnât that woman yet, and Scarlett wondered if maybe sheâd never actually been that woman.
Somewhere along the way Scarlett had come to believe her mother didnât love her, or really love anyone. If sheâd loved her daughters she wouldnât have left them or hurt themâpeople didnât hurt the ones they loved. But until Scarlett had appeared, her mother had been bursting with love. Sheâd been full of so much love she was going to ask a man to marry her. But she didnât. In Scarlettâs world she went on to betray him instead, and Scarlett wondered if Paradise did all of this because Paradise loved her.
Even now Scarlett could see the love taking over Paradiseâs emotions as her eyes continued to dart from her earrings to Scarlettâs face. In this timeline theyâd only just met, but Paradise was already choosing to love Scarlett.
Scarlett could scarcely comprehend it. Whenever she loved, she loved fiercely, but it never came this easily, and she wouldnât have expected it to come so effortlessly to Paradise.
Clearly, Scarlett had never really known her mother. But there were a few things she did know about her.
âYou were the best mother you could be,â Scarlett said. âYou sacrificed everything for my sister and me.â
âYou have a sister?â Paradiseâs entire face lit up, making her look even more magnetic, and Scarlett wished Tella could have seen how happy their mother was to hear she was having a second daughter. âI canât wait to tell your father about this.â
âNo! You canât tell him. Whatever you do, donât tell him.â Again, Scarlett almost left it at that. The Assassin had warned her not to interfere with the past, but maybe Scarlett had been part of the past all along. Maybe she wasnât just here to steal a dress, or to see a mother sheâd never understood. Maybe Scarlett was here to help make sure her mother made some of those choices Scarlett had never understood. Because she understood them now.
If Paradise married Gavriel and raised Scarlett with him, the future would changeâTella would never be born, and there was a good chance that all the Fates would be freed from the cards very soon.
âGavriel is not what you think he is,â Scarlett said.
Paradise took a harsh step back, some of the sharp edges returning to her expression.
But Scarlett didnât stop; either she was wrong and sheâd already changed the future irreparably, or she was right and she needed to press forward, to stop her mother from making an irreversible mistake.
âI donât know how much Iâm supposed to tell you, or if Iâm supposed to be saying any of this. But you donât marry Gavriel. Heâs not the father of your second child. Gavriel is a Fate. Heâs the Fallen Star and he was trapped inside the Deck of Destiny that you stole from Empress Elantine. He wants to find the deck again so he can free all the Fates and take over the empire. You stop him from doing thisâyou trap him in a card again. But then you still have to hide, because his churchâthe Church of the Fallen Starâcomes after you for running with the cards. So you marry Marcello Dragna and go away with him.â
Paradise laughed, but it held none of the amusement of her earlier laugh. âNo, I would never marry Marcello.â
âBut you do,â Scarlett said. And it struck her that out of all the impossible things sheâd just shared, this was the one Paradise remarked on. It made Scarlett wonder if deep down her mother was already aware of Gavrielâs true goals and identity.
Scarlett tried to read her motherâs colors. There were competing emotions warring each other, but Scarlett could see that Paradise was in love and uncertain, and despite her calm exterior, she was terrified of what Scarlett had just said.
âIâm sorry,â Scarlett said.
âWhy are you apologizing?â
âBecause I know you love him.â
âCriminals donât love.â
âIf that were true, I donât think I would be here. But I am. Iâm here because you did whatever it took to take care of meâthe daughter youâre pregnant with right now. Thatâs part of what makes you so remarkable. You leave Valenda, but people still tell stories about you. Even Empress Elantine talked about you before she died. She told my sister that when you loved, you did it as fiercely as you lived. You were willing to do whatever it took to protect the ones you love, even if it hurt you or them in the process.â
And Scarlett realized thenâshe was the exact same. Everything sheâd just said would cause Paradise and Tella and herself a world of pain. But if Paradise took a different course, then the future would change; everything Scarlett cared about might be lost and the Fallen Star might never be defeated.
Paradise was shaking her head, as if she could clear her muddled emotions. âAnd I thought you were just here to steal a dress.â
âLike you said, Iâm not a very good thief.â
âI might have been wrong.â Paradise reached down, picked up her box from the dress shop, and held it out to Scarlett. âTake it, you earned it with your story.â
âDoes this mean you believe me?â
âI donât know, but I donât think Iâll be getting engaged tonight,â Paradise said, careless and flippant. She sounded a lot like Tella when Tella was pretending not to feel.
âIâm sorry,â Scarlett said.
âYou donât need to keep apologizing. But there is one thing you could do for me.â Paradise gave Scarlett a trembling smile. âPut the dress on. I didnât get to try it on today, and I want to know if it would have looked as fabulous as Iâm imagining. Iâll watch the other alley to make sure no one unwanted pops in.â
Paradise darted around the corner.
Scarlett wanted to protest; she didnât feel like stripping in a frozen alley once again. But after all sheâd told Paradise, this was the least Scarlett could do for her. It was the last thing her mother would ever ask of her. And it turned out to be the last thing her mother would ever say to her, as well.
When Scarlett finished dressing and turned the corner, Paradise was gone.
Scarlett picked up the bottom of her new dress and ran to the end of the alley, hoping to catch her mother. She looked up and down the street at all the people in their bright coats walking through the falling snow. If Paradise was among them, Scarlett didnât see her. All she found was a broken lamppost and a dropped knife.
Her mother had left again. Scarlett couldnât be surprised, and she didnât let herself feel hurt, not this time. Paradise might have been her mother, but she was also just a pregnant girl whoâd been told sheâd have to make a terrible choice. Scarlett couldnât blame her for running, and maybe Scarlett shouldnât have blamed her so much before. Scarlett loved Tella and Julian despite their imperfections; it was time to start loving her mother the same way.
And when the Assassin appeared an instant later, Scarlett imagined that this was how it was meant to be all along, and that her mother really had done the best she could. She might have run away from Scarlett just now, but Scarlett believed that when she went back to the future, sheâd find things unchanged.
âDid you do what you needed to do?â he asked.
âAlmost.â Scarlett picked up the knife her mother had dropped. It was a white dagger with a star-shaped stone in the hilt. Scarlett wondered if it had been a gift from Gavriel as she used the knife to cut off her silver streak of hair. Months ago, that little streak had felt like such a great cost to Scarlett, but it was nothing compared to what her mother had sacrificed. âIâm ready now.â
As soon as she said it, the Assassin took her hand and then they both were standing in the candlelit court of the Fallen Star.