Wasn’t Tintallion in the middle of a civil war, at last report?
That might explain a great deal. It could explain her references to a war, and perhaps the rules were different there, and she had been able to apprentice at a younger age than twelve, which would explain why she seemed to have done so much for a girl of fifteen. If that was it, then she must have fled to the Small Kingdoms because they were about as far away from her angry master as she could possibly get.
It all hung together.
So Irith was Tintallionese? He looked at her speculatively, listened to her chatting with the merchant in Trader’s Tongue, and wished he knew some Tintallionese himself.
He forgot all about the little girl by the gate and listened to Irith and the merchant, trying to spot clues to the Flyer’s origin. Her accent didn’t sound particularly northwestern to him, but then, he had never actually heard anyone from Ethshar or beyond, only local people imitating them. There was no reason to think that barbarians would have accents much like the people of the northwestern Small Kingdoms.
Irith didn’t seem to have any noticeable accent of her own at all, really; she spoke Trader’s Tongue with the sharp simplicity of an experienced traveler. She spoke Trader’s Tongue better than did the merchant she was haggling with, in fact.
Kelder considered. He could just ask her where she was from, of course. Asking where a person came from was a harmless and natural thing to do.
He would wait until the appropriate time, though, when he had a chance to bring it up in the course of the conversation; she was annoyed enough by his questions about demonology, and asking her out of the blue would be rude.
Irith turned away; the cloth merchant called a “final” offer after her, but she just laughed and walked away, with Kelder close beside her.
“You never did plan to buy anything, did you?” he asked.
She smiled and winked. “Of course not,” she said. “What would I do with a bolt of black brocade on the road to Shan, carry it over my shoulder?” She laughed again, then paused, and added, “If I were staying in town it might be different. It’s good fabric.”
Kelder nodded.
“The inn is down this way,” Irith told him, pointing at a narrow alleyway.
“Really?” he said, dubiously.
“Really,” she replied. “It’s a shortcut, a back way. I’ll show you.”
She led the way, and he followed. A few feet into the passage — for it was little more than that, a corridor between buildings, not a street — he glanced back at the market.
That young girl who had been watching them from the gate was now standing near the cloth merchant’s stall, and still watching them. Something about her made him uneasy.
“That girl’s watching us,” he said to Irith.
She turned and looked, then shrugged and walked on. “People do that sometimes,” she said.
He took another look, and then he, too, shrugged and walked on.
The alleyway opened out into a small kitchen yard; to one side a bantam cock stared at them through the slats of his coop, a well and windlass occupied a corner, and a big gray cat slept on the sill of a candelit window beside a heavy black door. Irith marched directly across and rapped on the door.
A sliding panel opened, and a nervous face peered out.
“Hello, Larsi,” Irith said. “It’s me.”
“The Flyer?” a woman’s voice asked.
Irith nodded.
The panel slid shut, and the latch rattled. The gray cat stirred slightly. Kelder took a look back up the alleyway.
The girl in the blue tunic was running down the passageway toward them.
The door opened, and Irith stepped up on the granite threshold. The person she had addressed as Larsi, a plump woman of forty or so, beckoned for her to enter. “I brought a friend,” Irith said, gesturing at Kelder.
Kelder saw the expression on the little girl’s face as it caught the light that spilled from the open door, and on a sudden impulse he said, “Two friends.”
“You will be a champion of the lost and forlorn,” Zindre had said, and that child certainly looked lost and forlorn.
Startled, Irith turned and looked as the little girl panted into the dooryard. The waif turned pleading eyes up toward the Flyer, and Irith corrected herself.
“Two friends,” she said.
Kelder smiled with relief. Irith could be compassionate toward the living, however callous she might have appeared toward the dead bandits, and Kelder was very pleased to see it. Maybe he could use this miserable creature to draw himself and Irith closer, as well as fulfilling the prophecy.
“Well, come in then, both of you,” Larsi said, beckoning. Kelder hastened to obey, and the girl scrambled after him.
They found themselves in a great stone-floored kitchen, surrounded by blackened oak, and black iron, and stone in a dozen shades of gray. A wooden cistern stood on an iron frame over a stone sink; stone-topped tables lined stone walls between wooden doors. Pale tallow candles shone from black iron sconces. The only touches of color in the entire place were the fire on the great hearth, and the vegetables spread on a counter — orange carrots and pale green leeks and fresh red-skinned potatoes.
“Go on, then, out with you,” Larsi said, waving them toward one of the doors. “You’ve no business in my kitchen, and Irith, I wish I’d never shown you that back way!”
“I’d have found it anyway,” Irith retorted, grinning. “You can see it from the air.”
Larsi huffed, and herded the three of them through the door into the main room.
This was brighter than the kitchen, but not much more colorful; here the dominant hues were black and brown, rather than black and gray. Brown wood tables and chairs, wood-paneled walls, a black slate hearth, and a wooden floor were illuminated by a dozen lanterns and in use by a dozen patrons.
“You’ll have the stew,” Larsi said, as she showed them to chairs at the near end of one of the two long tables that took up most of the space.
Irith nodded. “And that beer you make,” she said.
Larsi threw a significant glance at the blue-clad girl, and Kelder said, “She’ll drink water.”
The girl nodded eagerly.
Larsi snorted, then turned back to the kitchen.
When the door was shut again Kelder commented, “Doesn’t look like much.” He looked around himself at the complete absence of paint, brass, or brightwork of any kind.
Irith shrugged. “It isn’t,” she admitted, “but it’s the best food in Angarossa.” Then she turned to stare at the girl.
Kelder turned his attention to her, as well. Here was his chance to show Irith that he could be kind and understanding and firm, all at once. “Now,” he said, “who are you, and why were you following us?”
The girl blinked, hesitated, and then said, “My name is Asha of Amramion — and I think you killed my brother.”
Kelder and Irith stared at the girl. That was not an answer they had expected.
She stared defiantly back.
“I’ve never killed anyone,” Kelder informed her.
“I don’t think I killed your brother,” Irith said.
Something in the back of Kelder’s mind took note of the fact that Irith hadn’t said, “Neither have I.” He was not happy about the implications of that, and fought down the entire subject, preferring to concentrate on Asha.
At least for the moment.
“Well, somebody killed him,” Asha said, “and you were there.”
“We were?” Kelder asked, startled.