tiny lips that had spilled the woman's lifeblood. It was a death as
grotesque as any Eiah had heard in the tales of poets who had tried to
bind the andat and fallen short.
Tears filled her eyes. Something like love or pity or gratitude filled
her heart to bursting. She looked at the woman's face for the first
time. The woman hadn't been pretty. A thick jaw, a heavy brow, acne
pocks. Eiah held back from kissing her cheek. Parit was confused enough
as it stood. Instead, Eiah wiped her eyes on her sleeve and took the
dead woman's hand.
"What happened?" she asked.
"The watch saw a cart going west out of the soft quarter," Parit said.
"The captain said there were three people, and they were acting nervous.
When he hailed them, they tried to run."
"Did he catch them?"
Parit was staring at Eiah's hand clasping the dead woman's fingers.
"Parit," she said. "Did he catch them?"
"What? No. No, all three slipped away. But they had to abandon the cart.
She was in it," Parit said, nodding at the corpse. "I'd asked anything
unusual to be brought to me. I offered a length of silver."
"They earned it," Eiah said. "Thank you, Parit-kya. I can't tell you how
much this means."
"What should we do?" Parit asked, sitting on his stool like a fresh
apprentice before his master. He'd always done that when he felt himself
at sea. Eiah found there was warmth in her heart for him even now
"Burn her," Eiah said. "Burn her with honors and treat her ashes with
respect."
"Shouldn't we ... shouldn't we tell someone? The utkhaiem? The Emperor?"
"You already have," Eiah said. "You've told me."
There was a moment's pause. Parit took a pose that asked clarification.
It wasn't quite the appropriate one, but he was flustered.
"This is it, then," he said. "This is what you were looking for."
"Yes," Eiah said.
"You know what happened to her."
"Yes."
"Would you..." Parit coughed, looked down. His brow was knotted. Eiah
was half-tempted to go to him, to smooth his forehead with her palm.
"Could you explain this to me?"
"No," she said.
AFTER THAT, IT WAS SIMPLE. THEY WOULDN'T REMAIN IN SARAYKEHT, NOT WHEN
they'd so nearly been discovered. The Emperor's daughter asked favors of
the port master, of the customs men on the roads, of the armsmen paid by
the city to patrol and keep the violence in the low towns to an
acceptable level. Her quarry weren't smugglers or thieves. They weren't
expert in covering their tracks. In two days, she knew where they were.
Eiah quietly packed what things she needed from her apartments in the
palace, took a horse from the stables, and rode out of the city as if
she were only going to visit an herb woman in one of the low towns.
As if she were coming back.
She found them at a wayhouse on the road to Shosheyn-Tan. The winter sun
had set, but the gates to the wayhouse courtyard were still open. The
carriage Eiah had heard described was at the side of the house, its
horses unhitched. The two women, she knew, were presenting themselves as
travelers. The man-old, fat, unpleasant to speak withwas posing as their
slave. Eiah let the servant take her horse to be cared for, but instead
of going up the steps to the main house, she followed him back to the
stables. A small shack stood away at an angle. Quarters for servants and
slaves. Eiah felt her lips press thin at the thought. Rough straw
ticking, thin blankets, whatever was left to eat after the paying guests
were done.
"How many servants are here now?" Eiah asked of the young maneighteen
summers, so four years old when it had happened-brushing down her horse.
He looked at her as if she'd asked what color ducks laid the eggs they
served at table. She smiled.
"Three," the servant said.
"Tell me about them," she said.
He shrugged.
"There's an old woman came in two days ago. Her master's laid up sick.
Then a boy from the Westlands works for a merchant staying on the ground
floor. And an old bastard just came in with two women from Chaburi-Tan."
"Chaburi-Tan?"
"What they said," the servant replied.
Eiah took two lengths of silver from her sleeve and held them out in her
palm. The servant promptly forgot about her horse.
"When you're done," she said, "take the woman and the Westlander to the
back of the house. Buy them some wine. Don't mention me. Leave the old man."
The servant took a pose of acceptance so total it was just short of an
open pledge. Eiah smiled, dropped the silver in his palm, and pulled up
a shoeing stool to sit on while she waited. The night was cool, but
still not near as cold as her home in the north. An owl hooted deep and
low. Eiah pulled her arms up into her sleeves to keep her fingers warm.
The scent of roasting pork wafted from the wayhouse, and the sounds of a
flute and a voice lifted together.
The servant finished his work and with a deferential nod to Eiah, made
his way to the servants' house. It was less than half a hand before he
emerged with a thin woman and a sandy-haired Westlands boy trailing him.
Eiah pushed her hands back through her sleeves and made her way to the
small, rough shack.
He was sitting beside the fire, frowning into the flames and eating a
mush of rice and raisins from a small wooden bowl. The years hadn't been
kind to him. He was thicker than he'd been when she knew him, an
unhealthy fatness that had little to do with indulgence. His color was
poor; what remained of his hair was white stained yellow by neglect. He
looked angry. He looked lonesome.
"Uncle Maati," she said.
He startled. His eyes flashed. Eiah couldn't tell if it was anger or
fear. But whatever it was had a trace of pleasure to it.
"Don't know who you mean," he said. "Name's Daavit."
Eiah chuckled and stepped into the small room. It smelled of bodies and
smoke and the raisins in Maati's food. Eiah found a small chair and
pulled it to the fire beside the old poet, her chosen uncle, the man who
had destroyed the world. They sat silently for a while.
"It was the way they died," Eiah said. "All the stories you told me when
I was young about the prices that the andat exacted when a poet's
binding failed. The one whose blood turned dry. The one whose belly
swelled up like he was pregnant, and when they cut him open it was all
ice and seaweed. All of them. I started to hear stories. What was that,
four years ago?"
At first she thought he wouldn't answer. He cupped two thick fingers
into the rice and ate what they lifted out. He swallowed. He sucked his
teeth.
"Six," he said.
"Six years," she said. "Women started appearing here and there, dead in
strange ways."
He didn't answer. Eiah waited for the space of five slow breaths
together before she went on.
"You told me stories about the andat when I was young," she said. "I
remember most of it, I think. I know that a binding only works once. In
order to bind the same andat again, the poet has to invent a whole new
way to describe the thought. You used to tell me about how the poets of
the Old Empire would bind three or four andat in a lifetime. I thought
at the time you envied them, but I saw later that you were only sick at
the waste of it."
Maati sighed and looked down.
"And I remember when you tried to explain to me why only men could be
poets," she said. "As I recall, the arguments weren't all that
convincing to me."
"You were a stubborn girl," Maati said.
"You've changed your mind," Eiah said. "You've lost all your books. All
the grammars and histories and records of the andat that have come
before. They're gone. All the poets gone but you and perhaps Cehmai. And
in the history of the Empire, the Second Empire, the Khaiem, the one
thing you know is that a woman has never been a poet. So perhaps, if
women think differently enough from men, the bindings they create will
succeed, even with nothing but your own memory to draw from."
"Who told you? Otah?"
"I know my father had letters from you," Eiah said. "I don't know what
was in them. He didn't tell me."
"A women's grammar," Maati said. "We're building a women's gram„ mar.
Eiah took the bowl from his hands and put it on the floor with a
clatter. Outside, a gust of wind shrilled past the shack. Smoke bellied
out from the fire, rising into the air, thinning as it went. When he
looked at her, the pleasure was gone from his eyes.
"It's the best hope," Maati said. "It's the only way to ... undo what's
been done."
"You can't do this, Maati-kya," Eiah said, her voice gentle.
Maati started to his feet. The stool he'd sat on clattered to the floor.
Eiah pulled back from his accusing finger.
"Don't you tell that to me, Eiah," Maati said, biting at the words. "I
know he doesn't approve. I asked his help. Eight years ago, I risked my
life by sending to him, asking the Emperor of this pisspot empire for
help. And what did he say? No. Let the world be the world, he said. He
doesn't see what it is out here. He doesn't see the pain and the ache
and the suffering. So don't you tell we what to do. Every girl I've
lost, it's his fault. Every time we try and fall short, it's because
we're sneaking around in warehouses and low towns. Meeting in secret
like criminals-"
"Maati-kya-"
"I can do this," the old poet continued, a fleck of white foam at the
corner of his mouth. "I have to. I have to retrieve my error. I have to
fix what I broke. I know I'm hated. I know what the world's become
because of me. But these girls are dedicated and smart and willing to
die if that's what's called for. Willing to die. How can you and your
great and glorious father tell me that I'm wrong to try?"
"I didn't say you shouldn't try," Eiah said. "I said you can't do it.
Not alone."
Maati's mouth worked for a moment. His fingertip traced an arc down to
the fire grate as the anger left him. Confusion washed through his
expression, his shoulders sagging and his chest sinking in. He reminded
Eiah of a puppet with its strings fouled. She rose and took his hand as
she had the dead woman's.
"I haven't come here on my father's business," Eiah said. "I've come to
help."
"Oh," Maati said. A tentative smile found its way to his lips. "Well. I
... that is ..."
He frowned viciously and wiped at his eyes with one hand. Eiah stepped
forward and put her arms around him. His clothes smelled rank and
unwashed; his flesh was soft, his skin papery. When he returned her
embrace, she would not have traded the moment for anything.
1
It was the fifth month of the Emperor's self-imposed exile. The day had
been filled, as always, with meetings and conversations and
appreciations of artistic tableaux. Otah had retired early, claiming a
headache rather than face another banquet of heavy, overspiced Galtic food.
The night birds in the garden below his window sang unfamiliar songs.
The perfume of the wide, pale flowers was equal parts sweetness and
pepper. The rooms of his suite were hung with heavy Galtic tapestries,
knotwork soldiers slaughtering one another in memory of some battle of
which Otah had never heard.
It was, coincidentally, the sixty-third anniversary of his birth. He
hadn't chosen to make it known; the High Council might have staged some
further celebration, and he had had a bellyful of celebrations. In that
day, he had been called upon to admire a gold- and jewel-encrusted
clockwork whose religious significance was obscure to him; he had moved
in slow procession down the narrow streets and through the grand halls
with their awkward, blocky architecture and their strange, smoky
incense; he had spoken to two members of the High Council to no
observable effect. At this moment, he could be sitting with them again,
making the same points, suffering the same deflections. Instead, he
watched the thin clouds pass across the crescent moon.
He had become accustomed to feeling alone. It was true that with a word
or a gesture he could summon his counselors or singing slaves, scholars
or priests. Another night, he might have, if only in hope that this time
it would be different; that the company would do something more than