final Mark, Clary signs her name to her fatherâs defeat and puts an end to his reign of terror.
She Came, She Drew, She Conquered
Itâs fitting that during the final confrontation with Valentine in
City of Glass
, Clary is unable to speak. Valentine has silenced her with a rune, so her last words to himâwhen heâs finally seen her for who she is, instead of the weak little girl he perceives her to beâare not spoken but drawn.
Clary stretched out her hand, and with her finger she wrote in the sand at his feet. She didnât draw runes. She drew words: the words he had said to her the first time heâd seen what she could do, when sheâd drawn the rune that had destroyed his ship.
MENE MENE TEKEL UPHARSIN .
Valentine has known about Claryâs rune-creating ability, but until defeat is staring him in the face, he still thinks of her as weak. He underestimates her time and time againâbecause she was raised as a mundane, not a Shadowhunter. Because sheâs an artist, not a warrior. He refuses to give her the respect she deserves, despite the fact that she has thwarted him multiple times, because he canât acknowledge that the way she fights back is fighting.
But a fighter is not just someone who dispatches enemies with a blade or a bow. A fighter is someone who fightsâwith everything and anything she has at her disposal.
Clary is an artist, and before she draws her first rune, she has never used her art as a weapon. But once she is faced with a war that must be wonâa war that endangers the people she lovesâshe becomes an artist who fights. She wonât leave this war to be won by others. She canât do it aloneâbut the war canât be won without her either.
The seemingly mundane, pre-Shadowhunters Clary who took art classes at Tisch, and drew fantasy warriors in her sketchbook, and sighed over cartoon princes probably didnât think of herself as a hero. But Iâd bet that in her daydreams, when she was busy drawing heroes or disappearing into a fantasy world, she felt like she could be one. Like there was heroic potential in her, just waiting to be tapped.
How many of us read fantasy because we have that same feeling? We live vicariously through stories, because our own lives provide so few opportunities for high-stakes adventure and noble sacrifice. And most of the time, even as we wish we could be like our favorite heroes, we know that weâre just too different. Jace has killed more demons than any other Shadowhunter his age. Isabelle handles her electrum whip with such finesse, itâs as if the weapon is a part of her. Alecâs skill with a bow and arrow allows him to make shot after shot, even in a high-stress battle situation.Maiaâs werewolf nature means that sheâs faster and more ferocious than any human could hope to be.
Clary, thoughâ¦Clary is like you, or me, or that kid in class whoâs always drawing instead of taking notes. We
know
this girl. And thatâs part of what makes Clary such an amazing heroine. Because she manages to do extraordinary things using talents she honed during a mostly ordinary life.
Clary is what I think a lot of us hope we could be, if we found ourselves in her situation: someone who becomes a hero out of necessity, who is not on an even playing field with the rest of the playersâbut who, out of sheer determination, finds a way to turn her natural talents into the tools of her survival.
Clary saves livesâher own, and those of her friends. She draws a better world into existence, and she never lets the word
impossible
stop her.
In Claryâs hands, the stele is truly mightier than the sword.
Sarah Cross
is the author of the modern fairy-tale novel
Kill Me Softly
, the superhero novel
Dull Boy
, and the Wolverine comic âThe Adamantium Diaries.â Sheâs inspired by all kinds of art and illustration and curates a fairy taleâart blog called Fairy