“So that is where you went?”
“Yes, that is where I went.”
“Where is this elder now?”
“With his ancestors. He tried to kill me when I told him he was lying. Here is the thing. I do not think he knew of the child.”
“So?”
“A chief elder and not know about his own? He said the youngest boy was ten and five.”
“It’s still riddles, what you say,” the Leopard said.
“I say this. The boy was not Fumanguru’s son, no matter what Bunshi or the slaver or anyone says. I am sure the elder knew Fumanguru was going to be murdered, might have ordered it himself. But he counted eight bodies, which is what he expected to count.”
“He knows of the murder, but does not know of the child?”
“Because the child was no son of Fumanguru. Or ward, or kin or even guest. The elder tried to kill me because he saw I knew he knew about the murder. But he did not know there was another boy. Whoever is behind the killing told him nothing,” I said.
“And the boy is not Fumanguru’s son?”
“Why would he have a secret son?”
“Why does Bunshi call him a son?”
“I don’t know.”
“Forget money or goods. People trade only lies in these parts.” He said this looking straight at me.
“Or people only tell you what they think you need to know,” I said.
He looked around for a while, at everybody on the fish, for a good while at the Ogo, who went back to sleep, then back at me.
“Is that all?”
“Is that not enough?”
“If you think so.”
“Fuck the gods, cat. Something has curdled between us.”
“This is what you think.”
“This is what I know. And it has happened in the quick. But I think it’s your Fumeli. He was but a joke to you only days ago. Now you two pull closer and I am your enemy.”
“Me pulling him closer, as you say, makes you my enemy.”
“That is not what I said.”
“It is what you meant.”
“Not that either. You don’t sound like yourself.”
“I sound like—”
“Him.”
He laughed and sat back down beside Fumeli, drawing up his legs to his chest as the boy did.
Daylight ran away from us. I watched it go. Venin was by Sogolon, watching her, sometimes watching the river, sometimes drawing her feet together when she saw she sat on skin, not ground. Everybody else slept, stared into the river, watched sky, or minded their own business.
We came to the shore in the evening. How much time was left for sun, I did not know. The Ogo woke up. Sogolon left the fish first, walking with her horse. The girl, right behind her, grabbed Sogolon’s robe tight, afraid to be even arm’s length away, maybe more because of the oncoming dark. The Ogo wobbled off, still sleepy. The Leopard said something at which Fumeli laughed. He swung his head left and right, then rubbed the boy’s cheek with his forehead. He grabbed the reins of the boy’s horse and walked right past me. Following him, Fumeli said, “Looking out for the date feeder?”
I squeezed my knuckles and let him pass. The girl Venin walked right beside Sogolon as did Bunshi, the fins in the back of her head disappearing. Only a hundred paces from us there it was, rising out of mist so heavy it rested on the ground, with trees tall as mountains and long branches splayed like broken fingers. Huddled together, sharing secrets. So dark green it was blue.
The Darklands.
I have been here before.
We stood and looked at the forest. The Darklands was something mothers told children; a bush of ghosts and monsters, both lie and truth. A day stood between us and Mitu. To go around the Darklands took three or four days and had its own dangers. The forest had something I could never describe, not to them about to go in. Woodpeckers tapped out a beat, telling birds far away that we approach. One tree pushed past the others as if to catch sun. It looked surrounded. Fewer leaves than the other trees, exposing branches spread out wide like a fan, though the trunk was thin. The Darklands was already infecting me.
“Stinkwood,” Sogolon said. “Stinkwood, yellowwood, ironwood, woodpecker, stinkwood, yellowwood, ironwood, woodpecker, stinkwood, yellowwood—”
Sogolon fell back. Her head jerked left like somebody slapped her, then right. I heard the slap. Everyone heard the slap. Sogolon fell and shook, then stopped, then shook, then shook again, then grabbed her belly and snarled something in a language that I have heard in the Darklands. The girl holding her robe fell with her. She looked at me, her eyes wide open, about to scream. Sogolon stood up but air slapped her down again. I drew my hatchets, the Ogo squeezed his knuckles, the Leopard changed, and Fumeli drew his bow. The Leopard’s bow. The Sangoma’s enchantment was still on me, and I could feel it the way one feels the sharp cold on the air of a coming storm. Sogolon staggered away, almost falling twice. Bunshi went after her.
“Madness has taken her,” the Leopard said.
“Cannot bind these and cover those,” Sogolon said in a whisper, but we heard her.
“She is old. Madness take her and gone away,” said Fumeli.
“If she is a madwoman, then you are dim-witted and young,” I said.
Bunshi tried to grab her but she pushed her away. Sogolon fell to her knees. She grabbed a stick and started drawing runes in the sand. In between what looked like someone punching her and slapping her she scratched them in the dirt. The Ogo had enough. He pulled on his iron gloves and stomped to her, but Bunshi stopped him, saying his fists cannot help us here. Sogolon marked, and scratched, and dug, and brushed dirt with her fingers, making runes in the dirt and falling back and cursing until she made a circle around her. She stood up and dropped the stick. Something moved through the air and dashed at her. We couldn’t see it, only hear the wind. Also this, the sound of something hitting, like sacks thrown against a wall, one, then three, then ten, then a rain of hits. Hitting against a wall of nothing all around Sogolon. Then nothing.
“Darklands,” Sogolon said. “Is the Darklands. All of them feeling stronger here. Taking liberties like they get passage from the underworld.”
“Who?” I asked.
Sogolon was about to speak, but Bunshi raised her hand.
“Dead spirits who never liked death. Spirits who think Sogolon can help them. They surround her with requests, and become furious when she says no. The dead should stay dead.”
“And they were all lying in wait at the mouth of the Darklands?” I asked.
“Many things lie in wait here,” Sogolon said. Not many people hold her stare, but I was not many people.
“You are lying,” I said.
“They are dead, that’s no lie.”
“I’ve been around those desperate for help, living and dead. They may grab you, hold you, and force you to look, may even pull you down to where they died, but none slap you around like a husband.”
“They are dead and that’s no lie.”
“But the witch is responsible and that’s no lie either.”
“Zogbanu is hunting you. There are more.”
“But these spirits on this shore are hunting her.”
“Think you know me. You know nothing,” Sogolon said.
“I know the next time you forget to write runes on sky or in dirt they will knock you off your horse or push you off a cliff. I know you do it every night. I wonder how you sleep. Tana kasa tano dabo.”
Both Bunshi and Sogolon stared at me. I looked at the others and said, “If it is ground, it is magic.”
“Enough. Nowhere is where this is taking us. You need to get to Mitu, then Kongor,” Bunshi said.
Sogolon grabbed her horse’s bridle, mounted, then pulled the girl up. “We go around the forest,” she said.
“That will take three days, four if the wind is against you,” the Leopard said.
“Still, we gone.”
“No one is stopping you,” Fumeli said.