"Dustfinger won't be able to read that," pointed out Cloud-Dancer equably.
"Yes, he will. I taught him how."
They looked at her incredulously. Letters. Mysterious things, rich men's tools, not meant for strolling players and certainly not for women…
Only Cloud-Dancer smiled. "Well, imagine that. Dustfinger can read," he said softly. "Fine, but I can't. You'd better tell me what you've written, so that I can tell him the words even if your note gets lost. Which can easily happen with written words, much more easily than with words in your head."
Resa looked Cloud-Dancer straight in the face. You trust people far too easily… How often Dustfinger had told her that, but what choice did she have now? In a low voice, she repeated what she had written. "Dear Dustfinger, I am in the strolling players' camp with Mo, deep in the Wayless Wood. Mortola and Basta brought us here, and Mortola" – her voice failed as she said it – "Mortola shot Mo. Meggie is here, too, I don't know exactly where, but please look for her and bring her to me! Protect her as you tried to protect me. But beware of Basta. Resa."
"Mortola? Wasn't that what they called the old woman who lived with the fire-raisers?" The man who asked this question had no right hand. A thief – you lost your left hand for stealing a loaf, your right hand for a piece of meat.
"Yes, they say she's poisoned more men than the Adderhead has hairs on his head!" Cloud-Dancer pushed a log of wood back into the fire. "And it was Basta who slashed Dustfinger's face all that time ago. He won't like to hear those two names."
"But Basta's dead!" remarked the toothless minstrel. "And they've been saying the same about the old woman, too!"
"That's what they tell the children," said a man with his back to Resa, "so they'll sleep better. The likes of Mortola don't die. They only bring death to others."
They're not going to help me, thought Resa. Not now that they've heard those two names. The only one looking at her in anything like a friendly way was a man wearing the black and red of a fire-eater. But Cloud-Dancer was still inspecting her as if he wasn't sure what to make of her – her and her mysterious message.
Finally, however, and without a word, he took the note from her fingers and put it in the bag he wore at his belt. "Very well, I'll take Dustfinger your message," he said. "I know where he is."
He was going to help her after all. Resa could hardly believe it.
"Oh, thank you." Swaying with exhaustion, she straightened UP again. "When do you think he'll get the message?"
Cloud-Dancer patted his knee. "My leg must get better first."
"Of course." Resa bit back the words she wanted to shout, begging him to hurry. She mustn't press him too hard, or he might change his mind, and then who would find Dustfinger for her? A piece of wood broke apart in the flames, spitting out glowing sparks at her feet. "I have no money to pay you," she said, "but perhaps you'll accept this." And she took her wedding ring off her finger and offered it to Cloud-Dancer. The toothless man looked at the gold ring as avidly as if he would like to put his own hand out for it, but Cloud-Dancer shook his head.
"No, forget it," he said. "Your husband is sick. It's bad luck to give away your wedding ring, I've heard."
Bad luck. Resa was quick to put the ring back on her finger. "Yes," she murmured. "Yes, you're right. Thank you. Thank you with all my heart!"
She turned to go.
"Hey, you!" The minstrel whose back had been turned to her was looking at her. He had only two fingers on his right hand. "Your husband – he has dark hair. Dark as the fur of a mole. And he's tall. Very tall."
Bewildered, Resa looked at him. "So?"
"And then there's the scar. Just where the songs say. I've seen it. Everyone knows how he got it: The Adderhead's dogs bit him there when he was poaching near the Castle of Night, and he took a stag, one of the White Stags that only the Adderhead himself may kill."
What on earth was he talking about? Resa remembered what Nettle had said: And if you're wise, you won't let too many of them see that scar on his arm.
The toothless man laughed. "Listen to Twofingers, will you! He thinks it's the Bluejay lying there in the cave. Since when did you believe in old wives' tales? Was he wearing his feathered mask?"
"How should I know?" snapped Twofingers. "Did I bring him here? But I tell you, that's him!"
Resa sensed that the fire-eater was examining her thoughtfully "I don't know what you're talking about," she said. "I don't know any Bluejay."
"You don't?" Twofingers picked up the lute lying on the grass beside him. Resa had never before heard the song that he now sang in a soft voice:
Bright hope arises from the dark
And makes the mighty tremble.
Princes can't fail to see his mark,
Nor can they now dissemble.
With hair like moleskin smooth and black,
And mask of blue jay feathers,
He vows wrongdoers to attack,
Strikes princes in all weathers.
He hunts their game
He robs their gold -
And him they would have slain.
But he's away, he will not stay,
They seek the Jay in vain.
How they were all looking at her! Resa took a step backward.
"I must go to my husband," she said. "That song… it has nothing to do with him. Believe me, it doesn't."
She felt their eyes on her back as she returned to the cave. Forget them, she told herself. Dustfinger will get your message, that's all that matters, and he'll find Meggie and bring her here.
The woman who had taken her place rose without a word and lay down with the others again. Resa was so exhausted that she swayed as she kneeled on the dead leaves covering the floor. And the tears came once more. She wiped them away with her sleeve hid her face in the fabric of her dress that smelled so familiar… of Elinor's house, of the old sofa where she used to sit with Meggie – telling her about this world. She began to sob, so loudly that she was afraid she might have woken one of the sleeping company. Alarmed, she pressed her hand to her mouth.
"Resa?" It was hardly more than a whisper.
She raised her head. Mo was looking at her. Looking at her.
"I heard your voice," he whispered.
She didn't know whether to laugh or weep first. She leaned over him and covered his face with kisses. And then she both laughed and wept.
26. FENOGLIO'S PLAN
All I need is a sheet of paper
and something to write with, and then
I can turn the world upside down.
Friedrich Nietzsche, Die Weisse und die Schwarze Kunst
Two days had passed since the festivities at the castle, two days that Fenoglio had spent showing Meggie every nook and cranny of Ombra. "But today," he said, before they set off again after eating breakfast with Minerva, "today I'll show you the river. It's a steep climb down, not very easy for my old bones, but there's nowhere better to talk in peace. And what's more, if we're in luck you may see some water-nymphs down there." Meggie would have loved to see a water-nymph. She had come upon only one so far, in a rather muddy pond in the Wayless Wood, and as soon as Meggie's reflection had fallen on the water the nymph had darted away. But what exactly did Fenoglio want to talk about in peace? It wasn't hard to guess.
What was he going to ask her to read here this time? Or, rather, who was he going to ask her to read here – and where from? From another story written by Fenoglio himself?