His grin broadened.
you can rationalize anything if you want to do it badly enough. "I'll do what I can, but the kigh decide."
"Good enough." He held out his fist. "Jonukas i'Evicka. Everyone calls me Jon."
Annice touched his fist lightly with hers. "Annice," she told him. Bards, like priests, used neither matronym or patronym, and after ten years her name alone was seldom enough to provoke a reaction.
The riverboat rode low in the water by the inn's dock, the pilot waiting impatiently on the stern deck by the sweep oar.
"What did you get hung up on?" she snarled as they approached. "And who's she?'
Jon leaped aboard, timing it expertly between swells. "She's a bard. Name's Annice. She'll be traveling with us."
The pilot's snort was nonverbal but expressive for all of that. "You payin' her weight?"
Annice swallowed another mouthful of the bread. To her grateful surprise, it seemed to be settling things. "I've offered to Sing. To help you reach Riverton before freeze-up."
"You a water?" Her tone seemed to indicate she considered it doubtful.
"I Sing all four quarters."
The pilot's brows disappeared under the edge of her knit cap. "Well, la de sink it da. You know the river?"
"I thought that was your job." The tone had been finely tuned to land just this side of insult.
The two women measured each other for a moment, then the pilot snickered. "Get on," she said, jerking her head at the tiny covered cockpit up in the bow. "River's runnin' too fast to need you today, but the Circle'll bring tomorrow around soon enough. Folk call me Sarlo. That's i'Gerda or a'Edko if you wanna do a song about me later. Make it romantic, I like them best. Now move yer butt."
More than willing to move her butt out of a wind that stroked icy fingers over any exposed skin, Annice took a deep breath and stepped across onto the narrow deck. Safely on board, she spat over the side and muttered, "We give to the river. The river gives back."
Sarlo started. "You know the rituals?"
Annice smiled up at her. "I'm a bard. Knowing the rituals is part of what we do."
One corner of the older woman's mouth twisted up. "Think highly of yerself, don't you?"
Annice's smile broadened. "I'd float with rocks in my pockets," she said.
Lashing her pack to the cargo stays, she wrestled herself, her instrument case, and the day's journey food into the tiny bullhide shelter tucked in between the cargo and the bow. When Jon and two bundles joined her a moment later, it got distinctly crowded.
"I hope you don't mind riding with the front curtain up." He tied it back as he spoke. "But I like to see where I'm going."
"Actually, right at the moment, I appreciate the fresh air." Between the smell of the hide and the lingering smell of tar clinging to the boat, Annice was beginning to regret the piece of bread.
"Still a bit queasy?" he asked, sitting down and managing to squeeze his shoulders in beside hers.
"No. I'm fine," Annice said. But she said it through clenched teeth.
Back on the stern deck, the pilot yelled a command and a pair of rope-soled boots under oilskin clad legs pounded into view.
"Sarlo's youngest, Avram," Jon explained as Annice craned around the edge of the shelter for a better look. "I think he's got a love in Riverton. Didn't take much convincing when his mother decided to take my cloth."
Late teens or early twenties, the bard decided, watching Avram expertly work the side paddle. He was short and slight like most of the Riverfolk, but the hands wrapped around the paddle's polished shaft gave an instant impression of capable strength and seemed almost out of proportion to the rest of his body.
As though he felt her scrutiny, he half-turned, flicked a shock of dusty black hair up out of dark eyes, and grinned down at her.
In spite of the lingering nausea, Annice grinned back. Good teeth and great hands, I do enjoy the scenery on the river.
At another command from the stern, he rounded the bow and moved out of sight. With only the bare branches of trees blowing about on the far shore remaining to look at, Annice stifled a sigh and settled back.
Jon propped his feet up on the bow deck and pulled a ball of gray wool and four horn needles out from a small pack tucked under the seat. "I can't sit with empty hands," he explained. "And it takes most of my travel time just to keep myself in socks. I hate having wet feet."
"As a matter of fact…" Shifting her weight against the motion of the river, Annice got comfortable in the other corner and slipped an almost identical setup out of a pocket on the side of her instrument case. The fresh air seemed to be canceling out the rocking of the boat so, while she wasn't feeling any better, at least she wasn't feeling any worse. Remembering the alternative, she decided she could live with that. "… I know exactly what you mean."
They sat knitting in companionable silence for a time, watching gray sky slide by above darker gray water, listening to the occasional profanity drifting up from the stern, when suddenly a gust of wind dove into the shelter, ripped the front curtains from the tiebacks, and belled the hide out above them.
"Bugger it!" Jon grabbed the flapping hide in one beefy hand and dragged it back against the wind.
Annice twisted around and glared up at the two kigh who were pushing against the roof of the shelter. Pursing her lips, she twice repeated the series of four notes she'd whistled at the kigh by the privy. The smaller of the two shot her a haughty glance, twisted back on itself, and ran its fingers through Jon's beard as it left. The larger circled the inside of the small area twice, then squeezed itself out the space between Annice and the curved wooden frame, lifting the ball of wool off her lap and taking it along.
She grabbed for it but not in time.
"Kigh?" Jon asked, relying the curtains.
"Kigh," Annice repeated, pulling her dripping wool back on board.
"You usually have this much trouble with air?"
"It's usually my best Song. I can't understand why they're being such a pain lately."
"I've heard," Jon said as he smoothed his ruffled beard, "that across the border in Cemandia there're those that say the kigh aren't in the Circle at all. And there're some people even here in Shkoder that say the bards should have nothing to do with the kigh."
Annice snorted. "Have these people got a way to convince the kigh to have nothing to do with bards?" There'd been enough lanolin in the wool to prevent much water from being absorbed, but it was still too wet to use. "Because if they do, I'd love to hear it."
Jon spread his hands. "Just repeating what I heard."
"Sorry." Annice felt herself flush. She'd had no call to snap at the merchant, especially not when he was passing on exactly the kind of things that bards were expected to listen for. As the crown's conduit to the people, it could be vitally important that they hear what some people say. "They weren't saying it when I was in Vidor…" She let the end of the sentence trail off; not quite a question but definitely an invitation to talk.
"I'm not actually in Vidor much," Jon admitted. "I spend the late spring and summer collecting fleece from the small holders in Ohrid and Sibiu—mountain fleece can toss lowland fleece right out of the Circle as far as I'm concerned."
"You do the traveling yourself?" While she wanted to know, it was more interesting to learn that Cemandian ideas seemed to have crossed into at least two of the mountain principalities.
He laughed. "I don't trade for anything I can't touch and I probably travel as much as you do. My family lives in Marienka, at the head of the lake. We weave for the local trade, but every fall I bring our extra fleece to the Weavers' Guild in Vidor, pick up the fabric from last year's extra, minus their percentage…"