Penthesi slowed to a canter, then a trot; his sides heaved. When he came to a creek, he didn't jump it, but stopped abruptly and lowered his head to drink. A glow ran along the horizon to the east, and the whole sky was fading to white. It was almost morning.
Tansy slid off Penthesi's back and helped Elvie to drop down. The blind girl sank to her knees in the long grass. Automatically, Tansy yanked up a handful of grass and began to rub down the horse. âHush now, hush now, it's all right, it's over, it's over.' A sob caught in her throat.
Sedge limped up, her sides flecked with sweat and foam. Skir slithered to the ground, doubled over and vomited into the grass. Perrin jumped down and gripped his shoulder.
In the strengthening light, Perrin could see Skir's face, mud-coloured under his blackened hair. The front of his shirt was soaked with blood.
Skir croaked, âI pushed the dagger at him. I didn't mean â' He gagged again, and pressed his hand to his mouth. âIt stuck . . . in him . . . and â'
âI was sick too,' said Perrin. âAfter my first kill.'
Skir closed his eyes. He said thickly, âSorry.' He put out one hand, then stumbled to the edge of the creek. He lowered his hands into the swift water and watched as the thin threads of scarlet lifted and swirled away; then he tore off his stained shirt, soaked it and wrung it out, over and over, until the stream ran clear, and even after that he kept on dipping it and squeezing it out, until his hands were raw.
Elvie sat in the grass where she'd sunk down. She didn't turn her head as Perrin squatted beside her. âIs he all right?'
âHe will be,' said Perrin.
âYour house â it burned,' Tansy whispered. âLike the luck-piece.'
âYes,' said Elvie. âWe shouldn't have done that.'
âSomeone must have followed me from town.' Perrin shook his head. âI was so sure . . .' He remembered the scene he'd caused in the marketplace, when he approached the Captain; that was a mistake.
Elvie said, âSomeone in the town might have spied on you. There are many in Rarr who would sell their own family for money for rust, let alone a stranger. Or Madam Wanion knew, when we burned the luckpiece.'
Or you sent word to Lady Wanion yourself
, thought Tansy.
Elvie stood and brushed down her skirt; she'd slept in her faded dress, as she always did, but her feet were bare. âI can hear birds. Is it dawn?'
âYes. It's quite light now.'
âThen you mustn't stay. You must go on. Someone will see you.'
Tansy stared around at the blank horizon. âThere ain't no one here but goats.'
âWhere there are goats, there'll be a goat-herder. You must go.'
âBut you're coming with us,' said Perrin. âWe can't leave you.'
Elvie shook her head. âNo. I'll stay here.'
Tansy pulled Perrin aside. âMaybe it's for the best,' she muttered. âWe don't know who told Wanion.'
âThat wasn't Wanion tonight. It was the Balts, the Army.'
âYou don't think the soldiers do her bidding too?' said Tansy. âWe can't take her. We got to get Skir home safe.'
âYes,' said Perrin. âOur precious Priest-King.'
Elvie raised her voice. âI can't come with you. I would be a burden. Please, leave me. It's what I want.'
Skir came up; Tansy expected him to argue, but he didn't. He pulled out his coin-purse and pressed it into Elvie's hand. âTake this.'
Elvie shook her head and let the purse drop into the grass. âNo. Someone will cut my throat for that. I have other ways to earn my keep. I'd rather leave my hands free.'
There was a moment's awkward silence. Then Tansy said roughly, âGood luck.' She climbed onto Penthesi's back, and sat watching without a word as Perrin hugged Elvie, and Skir took both her hands in his.
âI won't forget you, Elvie.'
âAnd I won't forget you, Ren.'
When Skir swung back for one last look, Elvie was standing in the long grass, her faded pink dress warmed by the rising sun. She smiled bravely, and lifted her hand in farewell; but she was facing the wrong direction, waving her goodbye to no one.
THEY travelled steadily northward all that day, across plains starred with tiny orange flowers of goose-blossom. As the day grew hotter, more and more flowers opened, until it seemed they rode through a lake of fire.
The horses were weary, so they all walked, with Penthesi and Sedge carrying only the heaviest packs and bundles. Tansy and Perrin walked side-by-side. After a long silence, Perrin said, âYou fought well.'
She shot him a sideways glance. She wore the blue scarf, and her eyes were the same colour as the summer sky.
âI mean it,' he said. He wanted her to believe him; it was important that she did, and for the first time he doubted that she would. âYou fought like a soldier. Truly.'
She smiled uncertainly, and quickly looked away. âI never had to do it for real before. It were always, you know, just playing.' Her voice was soft. âIt weren't like I expected.'
âI know.' Perrin thrust his hands deep into his pockets. âI remember my first battle. Only two years ago, but it feels like a century. I was a kid of sixteen, a drafty. It was a shambles, that battle, at least it was to me. Noise, and steel clashing, and terror, and stink. I wet myself. I saw â well, never mind.' He looked at her. âLast night was a good fight. You can be proud. It was a good victory, not too easy, not too hard. We earned it.'
As he spoke the words, he almost believed them; and it was true, the soldiers who'd attacked him had fought hard. But the men who'd fought Skir and Tansy had held back, tried not to hurt them. They would have been surprised that the kids had defended themselves so fiercely. Tansy had fought as hard as she could, she had fought well. Perrin said what she needed to hear.
Tansy nodded, and her chin went up. It was a secret dream of hers that if she'd been a boy, she might have been a soldier, a horseman on a proud charger like Penthesi. Until today, she'd thought she'd make a better soldier than Perrin, with his songs and his dandy ways. Look at what he'd bought in the market: a comb and a finger-harp! When he could have bought saddles and proper bridles! But now she realised there was more to being a soldier than she'd thought, and she wasn't so sure she'd make a good one.
All her brothers back home on the farm knew how to fight; every man did, up near the border, in case the war in Cragonlands spilled southward. As a child, Tansy had pleaded with Cuff to teach her, too.
Nay
, Cuff had said.
Da and us boys'll
look after you and Ma, if it comes to that. Don't you fret on it.
But Tansy had begged, and at last Cuff had taught her to wrestle, how to use a boy's weight against him to tip him off his feet. She'd used that trick last night.
Then Nellip had helped her shoot straight, and Dory had shown her how to use a sword and throw a spear. She was only little then; she'd needed two hands to lift the wooden training sword. But she'd practised every chance she'd, even though Ma scolded her. Da didn't mind.
It's no shame for a lass to be handy
with a bow, and a good thing if she can fight for herself
, he'd said in his soft voice, and smiled down at her. His girl. A lump rose in Tansy's throat.
âYou all right?' said Perrin.
âGrit in my eye,' said Tansy.
All day Skir walked behind them. He didn't speak. He clutched Sedge's bridle tightly in his hand, as if he were drowning, and only that short length of rope kept him afloat. Every so often the mare would shove him gently with her nose, as if he were a foal; but Skir hardly noticed.
When they stopped at nightfall, Skir sat down abruptly in the grass and stared off to the horizon. He plucked up one blade of grass, then another, and let the evening breeze blow them away. He looked pathetically young, his hair plastered to his head, his eyes bruised and hollow.
Perrin sat down beside him. âGive it time. You'll feel better soon.'
âNo.' Skir's voice was low. âI killed a man. I've defiled my priesthood. I can't be Priest-King any more. I can't do anything.'
âDon't be stupid. No one's going to care. It was self-defence. You fought well. It was a good clean fight.'
But the words that had worked so well for Tansy had the opposite effect on Skir. He looked at Perrin almost with loathing.
â
Clean?
What was clean about it? It was â awful. You're talking like a soldier. I'm not a soldier. I'm a Priest of the Faith.'
âYes.' Perrin plucked some grass too. âBut I'm not a very good soldier.'
âAnd I'm not a very good priest.'
There was a short silence. Tansy built a fire and was busy with the cooking pot. Smoke drifted white above the ground, a cloud of unspun silk. The horses cropped at the grass nearby. Sedge gave a huge sigh, as if she were glad the day was over.
Skir said in a low voice, âMaybe it was Tansy's witch. I killed her little dolls, so then I killed a real person. Do you think she could do that, make that happen?'
Perrin looked away. He said, âYou don't have to tell anybody, you know, if that's what's worrying you.'
âBut it
happened
. I did â what I did. I can't undo it.'
Perrin glanced at him curiously. âYou want to tell them, don't you? You sound relieved. Don't you want to be Priest-King?'
Skir flushed. âIt's not that. I â'
âHere, eat this.' Tansy squatted beside them with the cooking pot. âCareful, it's hot. It's porridge, with wine in it.'
âYou used the oats? The horses' oats?' Perrin raised his eyebrows.
âPenthesi and Sedge won't grudge us. Not today.'
Perrin told her, âSkir doesn't want to be a priest any more.'
âIt's not a question of wanting. There are rules.' Skir stood up. âI took a life. I've broken the Faith.'
âHave some porridge, Skir. You'll feel better if you eat something.'
âI'm not hungry. I wish I was dead!' He stalked away across the plain toward the red and purple streaks of sunset, kicking his way through the tiny closed-up flames of goose-blossom.
âYou'd better go after him,' said Perrin. âHe won't want me to see him cry.'
âHe ain't crying!' said Tansy. âSorcerers don't cry.'
âOh yes they do,' said Perrin. âYou poured that good wine into porridge? That's enough to make me cry. Give me the spoon.'
For several days, they veered back and forth across the plain, dodging a farmhouse here and a herder there, careful to keep out of sight. Finally, they reached the ocean. At the top of the cliff Tansy halted Penthesi and simply stared. She tasted salt in the air, and the wind blew her hair into stiff spikes. Far below, the waves crashed and roared against the rocks, but she was dazzled by the wide belt of turquoise, a breathing jewel that spread from land to sky.
âWhat's the matter? Never seen the sea before?' Perrin's hand was still bandaged, but it was healing cleanly, and he could hold the reins in his fingertips. He wheeled Sedge so he could see Tansy's face. âBig, isn't it?'
âDon't tease me,' said Tansy, unable to drag her eyes from the great wide sparkling sea. âIt's grand.'
âI sailed right across there.' Perrin flung his arm out to the western horizon. âIt took a whole year. We went to all the little islands, and the people came racing to the harbour like we were gods.'
âYou would have liked that,' said Tansy with a sniff, and they grinned at each other.
âWhat do you think, Skir?' said Perrin.
Skir sat behind Tansy; he could balance now without holding onto her waist, and he sat stiffly upright, withdrawn from her, still wrapped tight in his misery. He said, âI've seen the sea before.'
âAin't it grand?' said Tansy. âIt's beautiful.'
Skir gazed dully at the ocean. âI suppose.'
The north coast of Baltimar wound east to west along the long shore of Codlin's Gulf. It was a mostly deserted region, a bare wilderness of salt-scrub and windswept grasses. As Skir had predicted, there were only two or three small towns scattered along the whole length of the shore: isolated fishing villages, cut off from the rest of Baltimar. The so-called coast road was no more than a rutted track, stony and overgrown with weeds.
Day after day the three rode along the cliffs and across the hard-packed sand without seeing any sign of life but gulls and crabs, until one morning Perrin abruptly halted Sedge, and Tansy had to wheel Penthesi aside so as not to run into them.
âCareful, you lackwit!'
âWhat's that? Over there.'
At the top of the next rise, high on the cliffs, stood a huge grey haystack. But it was far bigger than any haystack: it was an immense, weathered pile of driftwood that towered over their heads. Whole trees had been thrust onto the pile; branches poked out randomly, stripped bare, grey and eerie as ancient bones. Tansy urged Penthesi nearer, then cried out so suddenly the stallion half-reared and Skir almost fell off.
âDon't go near it! It's witches' work.' Tansy's hand groped automatically, uselessly, round her throat for a luckpiece.
âOut here? Are you sure?' said Perrin. âWhat is it, little dollies tied to the branches?'
But when Sedge came nearer and he saw what Tansy had seen, he gave a low whistle and turned away.
Skir looked sick. âWhat is it?'
âShore fire,' said Perrin. âTugger told us about them. Meant to ward off the western chanters. Keep the Singer of the Westlands at bay, stop her from bringing her Rising here.'
âRising? What's that?' said Tansy.
âThe revolution of the chanters. Chanters will take over all of Tremaris, if the Singer has her way. That's why my parents ran away from the Westlands. They â'