A fire had been built in the parlour that night, burning brightly in a hearth that was as high as Ira was tall and as wide as she was if laid alongside. The light it flickered across the otherwise dark room was warm and welcoming - catching only glimpses of Persian carpets and richly textured damask furniture. Gleaming cherrywood surfaces. The odd decanter of port of whiskey.
Five young and washed faces basked in the heat, each one of the Almasy children aware that beyond the safety of their house was the great cold wilderness of nocturnal Sobinka. Ira, Kazimir and Roman were huddled on the floor with a single great goose feather eiderdown draped across them: boney shoulders pressed together and still faintly reeking of saltwater, even though they had all changed into their nightdresses by now.
On the large settee behind them, the two older Almasy brothers -
Feliks and Fyodor in their early teens yet - were consulting over a scroll of parchment, tousled dark heads bent intently over its unfurled script. The
Durmstrang insignia blemished a corner.
"
English word, meaning graceful or deft-" Feliks suddenly said, causing Ira to look over her shoulder.
"Six letters." An expectant silence ensued until Roman whispered something into her ear and she repeated his answer like a neutral and elegant mouthpiece: nimble. Fyodor scribbled away.
Elsewhere in the great house, a gong sounded and each fledgling began to collect themselves, aside from Roman. He looked to Kazimir curiously as they obediently tidied up the eiderdown.
"Bedtime. But don't worry, I'll come get you," Kaz smiled secretively - he was off, running again, before an explanation could be demanded. Feliks yelled at him to slow down.
***
Unlike the other children, Ira Almasy slept on the other side of the house - and in the attic, of course, where the rest of the family could safely assume that she might entertain herself without inadvertently waking the entire household. This naturally made it the perfect place to meet after curfew.
The nine year old, natural red hair pinned into a mess of curls atop her head, was lighting a lantern when the first of them arrived. It was easy enough to see by moonlight coming through the windows but she was still many years away from appreciating the subtlety of hallowed blue illumination over the comfort of fire.
Kazimir and Roman climbed in, one sleepily dragging the other. Before the trapdoor could be shut, the older brothers appeared in their navy nightclothes - each carrying red enamel mugs of coffee. Their younger counterparts wrinkled their noses at the smell.
"Mama and papa already asleep?" Ira trotted daintily to her bed with the lantern, where she folded herself on to the floor at its foot. Feliks was dragging a chair over while the others settled in a circle and stole sips from Fyodor's mug. Kazimir yawned. "
Da, snoring to high heaven." A titter of giggles through the group. Ira turned around and slid out a thick, old looking tome from beneath her bed. They fell quiet and watched as she methodically opened it to a blank middle page before whispering the watchword. At first, only her. "Privyet. Once there was-" and then altogether her brothers read, "- where there wasn't, there was
[1] a misfortune of children." The tome stiffened.
With a muffled thud the pages shivered and shuddered and
flattened, and instead of a book, there lay in the middle of their circle a pale cream block of marble. It scintillated and looked almost golden by lantern fire. Roman stared. He was truly awake, flooded with fascination. Oxford seemed a distant memory.
Ira ran her palm across the marble; from the nightdress pocket procured a small knife. The blade was blunt and its handle plain as a kitchen tool. She looked at her cousin, pensive. The others smirked condescendingly at his flinch of fear.
"Give me your hand," she ordered.
Feliks and Fyodor watched like hawks, ready to pounce on their half-blood relation at any show of hesitation or weakness. They did not seem any less dangerous for all their deference to the young sister. He sensed their gazes. Roman offered his left hand and closed his eyes to its nervous tremor. He felt her take it--
-- and then a strange, dull pain at the base of his pinky. Grating. His dark eyes were open in a flash. Every other child in the circle did not seem bothered that Ira was slowly digging the blade into the finger, severing it. Yet no blood was spilt and even at his tender age, Roman knew that this was not a palpable pain. Still. His face was a ghastly white.
She cut through completely and the pinky disappeared into thin air. Ira smiled down at the hand, now short a digit, and seemed to know rather than see the horror of his expression.
"We play a game of dice. For every match you lose, cousin, I will take a finger." Just as serenely, the young witch dragged the blade in the opposite direction of before - just like that, with a cramping sensation, Roman saw that he had recovered the missing digit. "See?" He pulled back his hand immediately and the others laughed, merry voices falling dead on dark floorboards.
Fyodor had been working on the marble slab with a fountain pen as they talked. Fluid black lines marked a series of complex pentagons and paths, that it began to almost resemble the backdrop of some archaic board game. Kazimir pulled out a pair of ebony dice.
Outside, the winds picked up and the house creaked in response. Roman rubbed his hands nervously. Ira looked around the circle with a feeling of great fondness for her family. She raised her knife, saying: "I won last time..." and then proceeded to carve off her thumb and index finger as the handicap for tonight's round.
End
***