"It’s me friend," he said urgently. "Well, not really me friend 'cause me and my mates don’t like girl tykes none. But I knowed her. She lived in the Fen."
Thomas was listening too. "The one who was singing?" he asked.
Matt nodded enthusiastically. "Her name be Jo. She always be singing in the Fen. I didn’t never hear her cry like that none."
"Shhh." Kira tried to quiet Matt but he had a difficult time whispering. "Let’s go back," she suggested. "We can talk in my room."
Branch led now, happy to be retreating and enthusiastic about the possibility of more food back where breakfast had been. Stealthily they climbed the stairs and returned.
Safe in Kira’s quarters, Matt perched on the bed with his bare feet dangling and told them about the girl who sang. "She be littler’n me," he said. He jumped briefly to the floor and held his own hand level with his shoulder. "She be about this high. And all the peoples in the Fen? They get so happy, hearing her sing." He climbed back onto the bed; Branch jumped up beside him and curled on Kira’s pillow.
"But why is she here?" Kira asked, puzzled.
Matt gave an exaggerated shrug. "She be an orphan now. Her mum and pa, they died," he explained.
"Both of them? At the same time?" Kira and Thomas looked at each other. They both knew loss. But had it happened again? To another tyke?
Matt nodded importantly. He liked being the messenger, the bringer of information. "First her mum gets the sickness, and then when draggers take her mum to the Field? And her pa go to watch the spirit?"
Kira and Thomas nodded.
"Well," Matt said, making a dramatically sad face, "her pa be so sad at the Field, sitting there, that he taken a big pointy stick and stab hisself through the heart.
"That’s what them all said, anyways," he added, seeing the shocked looks his story had produced.
"But he had a tyke! He had a little girl!" Kira said, finding it unbelievable that a father would do such a thing.
Matt shrugged again. He considered that. "Maybe he didn’t like her none?" he suggested. Then after a moment he frowned and said, "But how could he not like her none when she sing so good?"
"And how did she get here?" Thomas asked. "What is she doing here?"
"I been told they give her away to someone who had a craving for more tykes," Matt said.
Kira nodded. "Orphans always go to someone else."
"Unless —" Thomas said slowly.
"Unless what?" Kira and Matt asked together. He pondered that. "Unless they sing," he said at last.
Jamison came to Kira’s room, as he always did, later in the day. Outside, the rain still fell. Matt, undaunted, had gone off with his dog to find his mates, wherever they might be in such weather. Thomas had returned to his own quarters to work, and Kira too with extra lamps lighted by the tender, had settled to her task, stitching carefully throughout the afternoon. The interruption when Jamison knocked on her door was welcome. The tender brought tea and they sat companionably together in the room while the rain spattered against the windows.
As usual, he examined her work carefully. His face was the same creased, pleasant face she had known now for many weeks. His voice was courteous and friendly as together they scrutinized the folds of the outstretched robe.
Yet the memory of the harsh sound of his murmured speech in the room below prevented Kira from asking him about the singing child.
"Your work is very fine," Jamison told her. He leaned forward, looking carefully at the section she had just completed, where she had meticulously matched the subtle differences of several yellows and filled in a background area with tiny knotted stitches that formed a texture. "Better than your mother’s, although hers was excellent," he added. "She taught you the stitches?"
Kira nodded. "Yes, most of them." She didn’t tell him how others seemed simply to come to her untaught. It seemed boastful to speak of it.
"And Annabella the dyes," she added. "I’m using many of her threads still, but I’m beginning now to make my own when I’m at her cott."
"She knows all there is, the old woman," Jamison said. He looked at Kira’s leg with apparent concern. "The walk is not too hard for you? One day we’ll have the fire pit and the pots here for you. I’m thinking of preparing a place just below." He gestured toward the window, indicating an area between the building and the edge of the woods beyond.
"No. I’m strong. But —" She hesitated.
"Yes?"
"Sometimes I’ve been fearful on the path," Kira told him. "The forest is so close all around."
"There is nothing to be afraid of there."
"I do fear beasts," she confessed.
"As you should. But stay on the path always. The beasts will not come near the path." His voice was as reassuring as it had been the day of her trial.
"I heard growling once," Kira confided, shuddering a little at the memory of it.
"There is nothing to fear if you don’t stray."
"Annabella said the same thing. She told me there was nothing to fear."
"She speaks with four-syllable wisdom."
"But, Jamison?" For some reason, Kira hesitated to tell him this. Perhaps she didn’t want to question the old woman’s knowledge. But now, feeling reassured by Jamison’s interest and concern, she told him the startling thing that the old dyer had said with such certainty. "She said that there are no beasts."
He looked at Kira oddly. The expression on his face seemed a mixture of astonishment and anger. "No beasts? She said that?"
"There be no beasts," Kira repeated. "She said it just that way, several times."
Jamison laid the section of robe he’d been examining back down on the table. "She’s very old," he said firmly. "It’s dangerous for her to speak that way. Her mind is beginning to wander."
Kira looked at him dubiously. For weeks now she had worked with the dyer. The lists of plants, the many characteristics of each, the details of the dyeing procedures, so much complex knowledge; all of it was clear and complete. Kira had seen no sign, no hint of a wandering mind.
Might the old woman know something that no one else — even someone with the status of Jamison — knew?
"Have you seen beasts?" Kira asked him hesitantly.
"Many, many times. The woods are filled with them," Jamison said. "Never stray past the village limits. Do not go beyond the path."
Kira looked at him. His expression was hard to discern, but his voice was firm and certain.
"Don’t forget, Kira," he continued, "I saw your father taken by beasts. It was a hideous thing. Terrible."
Jamison sighed and patted her hand sympathetically. Then he turned to leave. "You are doing a fine job," he said again, appreciatively.
"Thank you," Kira murmured. She put her hand, still feeling his touch, into her pocket. Her special scrap of cloth lay folded there. She felt no comfort from it. As the door closed behind Jamison, she stroked the cloth, seeking its solace, but it seemed to withdraw from her touch, almost as if it were trying to warn her of something.
The rain still fell steadily. Through it, she thought for a moment that she could hear the child sob on the floor below.
14
The sun was shining in the morning but Kira woke groggy after a fitful sleep. Following an early breakfast she tied her sandals carefully, anticipating the walk to Annabella’s. Maybe the clear, cooler air after the rain would wake her a bit and make her feel better. Her head ached.
Thomas’s door was closed. He was probably still asleep. There were no sounds either from the floor below. Kira made her way out of doors, relishing the breeze that lingered after the storm and was pinescented from trees that were still glistening and wet. It blew her hair away from her face and the misery of her sleepless night began to subside.