And certainly that was something he could anchor to within himself-a great sin that he had committed, that he could experience shame over and avoid the larger shame that threatened to swallow him whole.
If I’d been here. If I’d kept the throne and ring, this would have never happened. It would all still be here.
Yet he knew it wasn’t true, that evaluating the present based on imagined and different pasts was an unsolvable cipher. Yet he felt it, and it didn’t matter that it was a lie. It squeezed his heart and caught in his throat.
If I’d been here.
He ran the Whymer Maze inside himself as he shuffled forward on wooden legs. And then stopped.
He saw it now. What he had been looking for. He’d thought they were sticks, but how could there be so many sticks? And he thought they were stones but they were all nearly the same size, though certainly some where smaller. Bones scattered across the charred and cratered city. Seeing them, Petronus knew what he had to do.
He would bury Windwir’s dead.
Jin Li Tam
Jin Li Tam wasn’t sure what she expected. The scouts had been waiting for her, and though her own magicks were fading fast, theirs held true. Surrounded by ghosts, she ran with them across the hills beneath a morning sky until they reached the safety of Rudolfo’s camp.
The camp of the Wandering Army was ablaze with unbridled color. There was no rhyme or reason to it, no theme that interconnected the rainbow hues of the Ninefold Forest Houses. Unless maybe, she thought, the theme was chaos.
One of Rudolfo’s captains had greeted her upon her arrival, explaining that the general himself was busy. They’d even had a bird ready so that she could get word to her father of her recent change of situation. She composed her note over breakfast, using three different codes for the message, and flung the white bird at the sky.
The c [w R
He appraised her with his dark eyes. “We will be riding to the seventh manor, Lady Tam.” She calculated the leagues. “Four days?”
“Three,” he said. “We’ll be moving fast.”
Jin looked at the hill where the officers sat on their horses and the soldiers gathered. “When do you think the fighting will start?”
He looked at the sky as if the sparse clouds could predict pending violence. “Soon, Lady. And General
Rudolfo wants us far away when that happens.” She nodded. “I’m ready to ride.”
They brought a roan for her, and she climbed easily into the saddle. A half-squad of scouts pressed in, their stallions magicked to muffle their hooves and increase their stamina and speed. When she looked to
the captain, he shifted uncomfortably. “We have another rider coming.”
It was the biggest horse she’d ever seen, its hooves still flecked with the powder that would muffle their sound to a whisper. It was black as midnight, and upon the stallion’s back was a robed figure that sat too high in the saddle. The robed figure hissed and clanked as it shifted. A small gout of steam released from high in its back, and Jin realized that the back of the robe had been cut away to expose a small square grate made of metal. From a distance, it would look like an Androfrancine on the ride. But up close, Jin could clearly see the shining hands, the metal feet, the dim specks of golden light from beneath the hood.
“Lady Jin Li Tam,” the metal man said, “I bear a message from Lord Rudolfo of the Ninefold Forest
Houses, General of the Wandering Army.”
As he turned, light fell on his face. This newer mechoservitor was far sleeker, far more refined than
Sethbert’s older model. She felt her eyes narrow as she examined him.
“I am to tell you,” he continued, “that you have chosen well and that Lord Rudolfo will come to you when he can.”
“Thank you,” she said. Then she paused. “What am I to call you?”
The metal man nodded slightly. “You may refer to me as Mechoservitor [Mec"juNumber Three. Lord
Rudolfo calls me Isaak.”
Jin Li Tam smiled. “I will call you Isaak, too.”
The soldiers were double-checking their gear, tightening the straps on their saddlebags and testing their bow-strings.
The captain took the lead. “We leave fast-west, then north, then east-and we don’t slow for the first twenty leagues.” He pointed to Jin Li Tam and then to Isaak. “I want you two just behind me. The rest will hem us in.” He nodded to a young scout with blond hair peeking out beneath his turban. “Daedrek, you’ll take first scout. Brown bird for danger, white bird for stop.”
Daedrek reached over to take the small partitioned bird basket. He looped it over the pommel of his saddle and laced the pull strings through the fingers of his left hand.
Jin Li Tam watched, fascinated. She’d heard stories about the Gypsy Scouts… legends, really, going back to the first Rudolfo, that desert thief who’d led his tribe of Gypsy Bandits into the far off forests of
the New World to avoid the desolation of the old one. She’d heard the legends, but she’d never seen them in action.
She hoped they were better fighters than Sethbert’s Delta Scouts. From the looks of them, she was pretty sure they were. There were only five plus their captain, but she could see the danger in their narrow eyes, their tight smiles and the way they cocked their heads at the slightest noise.
Daedrek surged forward, and the others waited now until he made the league.
She looked over to the metal man. It explained the larger horse. Obviously the mechanicals weren’t nearly as heavy as they looked, but still easily twice that of a large man. Yet he rode well enough. She wondered if he’d ridden before now.
The captain whistled and they took off, riding low and pushing their horses hard. They rode with bows
tied to their saddles and swords tucked beneath their arms.
As they moved over the first hill, Jin saw the Desolation of Windwir to her right, an expanse of scorched, pockmarked earth. She thought she saw a horse moving out there along the edge of the wasteland, but she couldn’t be sure because the sun came out from behind a cloud and blocked out her view.
They rode for three hours before the white bird flashed back into the captain’s short bird net. They stopped then to change out first scouts, then pressed on.
The day flashed by, and when the sun set, they could see the next river’s low line of hills in the distance-the beginnings of the prairie ocean that hid Rudolfo’s nine forests and their houses. The [ir hily made a fireless camp, pitching their tents in a ring around the tent she shared with Isaak.
He sat in the corner and she lay in her bedroll. He clicked and clacked faintly, even when he wasn’t moving, and she found it both disturbing and comforting.