“A dagger wants flesh, her father would say. Find it.”
Marie Rutkoski“It was different to give something up than to see it taken away. The difference, Kestrel said, was choice.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Crime“Throughout my college years, I'd watch my sister squeal every Christmas as she unwrapped another 'Buffy' DVD set. I didn't know much about the series, but I was filled with that obnoxious self-importance that comes from having decided to be an Academic Who Reads Serious Things.”
Marie Rutkoski“She focused on that nothingness, imagined it as ink spilling over everything she could possibly think or feel.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Curse“Her innocence was maddening. She should know. She should know what her steward had done. She should know it to be her fault whether she’d given the order or not–and whether she knew or not. Innocent? Her? Never.He did not want her to know. He did not want her to see. But:Look at me, he found himself thinking furiously at her. Look at me. She lifted her eyes, and did.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Crime“Will you come with me?""Ah, Kestrel, that's something you never need to ask.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Kiss“But we don’t think too well when we want too much.”
Marie Rutkoski, Bridge of Snow“The guard hit Kestrel across the face. “I said, what did you give him?”You had a warrior’s heart, even then.Kestrel spat blood. “Nothing,” she told the guard. She thought of her father, she thought of Arin. She told her final lie. “I gave him nothing.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Crime“You can't see both sides of one coin at once, can you, child? The god of money always keeps a secret.The god of money was also the god of spies.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Crime“Kestrel's cruel calculation appalled her. This was part of what had made her resist the military: the fact that she could make decisions like this, that she did have a mind for strategy, that people could be so easily become pieces in a game she was determined to win...”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Curse“When I look at you as if you're crazy it's not that I judge you for your insanity.”
Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Kiss