Katerina Saburova

Katerina Saburova (Катерина Сабурова) is the wife of Alexander Saburov and the Mistress of Earth.

Description
Katerina is much weaker than the forces of the deceased Nina Kaina and Victoria Olgimskaya. Unlike them, she is neither dark nor light, torn between two principles. Her words are vague; they cannot be expressed more clearly, since, according to her, details distort the essential meaning and devalue what is said. Many citizens doubt the truth of her prophecies.

However, despite Katerina's dubious ability, some citizens trust her visions. According to Capella, the visions of Katerina are true in general, but the little things are often distorted. Katerina herself knows this and thus refuses to clearly and unequivocally formulate her prophecies.

She is addicted to morphine.

Background
Her position as a Mistress was held alongside Nina Kaina and Victoria Olgimskaya, the Mistresses of Dark and Light respectively. While both were alive, she occupied an intermediate position. After the death of Nina she began to play the role of Mistress of the Dark, but after Victoria's death could not revert to the light.

At night, she is visited by the strange Rat Prophet, who whispers to her and influences her prophecies.

Aspity's take on her:
«A queen turned witch. That's what you get for dabbling with the spirits of the night. After Nina died, Katerina shamelessly rushed to take the place of the Dark Mistress; the burden of caring for the town was Victoria's, so petty games were still allowed. She got carried away though... Rumour has it, she needs daily morphine injections and welcomes cold-skinned visitors in her alcove at night...»

Lara's take:
«Katerina took a hard hit and managed to pull through. Who could survive between Nina's rock and Victoria's hard place? That's how the town worked back then—upon this rock Nina was forging it, while Victoria maintained a firm stance to keep it in check; Katerina was the one to ensure the balance was in place. I also admire how much Alexander and she love each other. They could have been the grand kings of old—noble, resolute, and honest. Now is simply the wrong time for them.»