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a pleasure and satisfaction that seemed more intimate in that she

couldn't see its reflection in the faces around her.

Stories came pouring out as if they had only been waiting for the chance

to be told. Idaan's spectacularly failed attempts to care for a younger

half-sister when she'd been little more than fourteen summers old.

Otah's work in the eastern islands as an assistant midwife, and the

awkward incident of the baby born to an island mother and island father

and with a complexion that sang to the stars of Obar State. Eiah spilled

out every piece of secondhand wisdom she'd ever heard about keeping a

new babe safe in the womb until it was ready to be born. At one point

the armsmen broke into giddy song and, against Danat's protests, lifted

him onto their shoulders, the deck shifting slightly under them. The sun

itself seemed to shine for them, the river to laugh.

Maati alone seemed not to recover entirely from the first surprise. He

smiled and chuckled and nodded when it fit the moment, but his eyes were

reading letters in the air. He looked neither pleased nor displeased,

but lost. Otah saw his lips moving as Maati spoke to himself, as if

trying to explain something to his body that only his mind knew. When

the poet hefted himself up and came to take Ana's hand, it was with a

formality that might have been mixed feelings on his part or only a fear

that his kind thoughts would be unwelcome. Ana accepted the formal,

somewhat stilted blessing, and afterward Eiah took Maati's hand, pulling

him down to sit at her side.

Even braided together, Otah's anger and distrust and sorrow couldn't

overcome the moment. The blood and horror of the world lifted, and a

future worth having peeked through the crack.

It was only much later, when the sun fell carelessly into the treetops

of the western bank and shadows darkened the water, that the celebration

faltered. The boat passed a brickwork tower standing on the riverbank,

ivy almost obscuring the scars where fire had burned through timber and

stripped the shutters from the empty windows. Otah watched the structure

with the eerie feeling that it was watching back. The river bent, and a

great stone bridge came into sight, gaps in its rail like missing teeth.

Birds as bright as fire sang and fluttered, even in the autumn cold.

Their songs filled the air, the familiar trills greeting Otah like the

wail of a ghost.

The ruins of the river city. The corpse of a city of birds.

They had come to dead Udun.

28

Maati tramped through the overgrown streets, Idaan walking silently at

his side. The hunter's bow slung over her shoulder was meant more as

protection from feral dogs than to assassinate Vanjit, though Maati knew

Idaan could use it for either. To their left, an unused canal stank of

stale water and rotting vine. To the right, walls stood or leaned, roofs

sagged or had fallen in. Every twenty steps seemed to offer up a new

display of how war and time could erase the best that humanity achieved.

And above the ruins, rising like a mountain over the city, the ruined

palaces of the Khai Udun were grayed by the moisture in the air. The

towers and terraces of enameled brick as soft as visions.

He had lost Eiah too.

Squatting on the boat as they made their way upriver, he had watched her

turn to Otah, watched her become his daughter again where before she had

chosen the role of outcast. She had lost faith in Maati's dream, and he

understood why. She had delighted in the Galtic girl's condition as if

it weren't the very thing that they had feared and fought against.

Maati had wanted the past. He had wanted to make the world whole as it

had been when he was a boy, none of his opportunities squandered. And

she had wanted that too. They all had. But with every change that

couldn't be undone, the past receded. With every new tragedy Maati

brought upon the world, with each friend that he lost, with failure upon

failure upon failure, the dim light faded. With Eiah returned to her

father's cause, there was nothing left to lose. His despair felt almost

like peace.

"Left or right?" Idaan asked.

Maati blinked. The road before them split, and he hadn't even noticed

it. He wasn't much of a scout.

"Left," he said with a shrug.

"You think the canal bridge will hold?"

"Right, then," Maati said, and turned down the road before the woman

could raise some fresh objection.

It was only a decade and a half since the war. It seemed like days ago

that Maati had been the librarian of Machi. And yet the white-barked

tree that split the road before them, street cobbles shattered and

lifted by its roots, hadn't existed then. The canals he walked past had

run clean. There had been no moss on the walls. Udun had been alive,

then. The forest and the river were eating the city's remains, and it

seemed to have happened in the space between one breath and the next. Or

perhaps the library, the envoys from the Dai-kvo, the long conversations

with Cehmaikvo and Stone-Made-Soft had been part of some other lifetime.

The sound was low and violent-something thrashing against wood or stone.

Maati looked around him. The square they'd come to was paved in wide,

flat stones, tall grass a yellow gray at the joints. A ruined fountain

with black muck where clear water had been squatted in the center.

Idaan's bow was in her hands, an arrow between her fingers.

"What was that?" Maati asked.

Idaan's dark eyes swept over the ruins, and Maati tried to follow her

gaze. They might have been houses or businesses or something of both.

The sound came again. From his left and ahead. Idaan moved forward

cat-quiet, her bow at the ready. Maati stayed behind her, but close. He

remembered that he had a blade at his belt and drew it.

The buck was in a small garden with an iron fence overgrown now with

flowering ivy. Its side was cut, the fur black with dried blood and

flies. The noble rack of horns was broken on one side, ending in a

cruel, jagged stump. As Idaan stepped near, it moved again, lashing out

at the fence with its feet, and then hung its head. It was an image of

exhaustion and despair.

And its eyes were gray and sightless.

"Poor bastard," Idaan said. The buck raised its head, snorting. Maati

gripped the handle of his blade, readying himself for something, though

he wasn't certain what. Idaan raised her bow with something akin to

disgust on her face. The first arrow sunk deep into the neck of the

onceproud animal. The buck bellowed and tried to run, fouling itself in

the fence, the vines. It slipped to its knees as Idaan sank another

arrow into its side. And then a third.

It coughed and went still.

"Well, I think we can say how your little poet girl was planning to get

food," Idaan said, her voice acid. "Cripple whatever game she came