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“And a cheerful face would be good. Days been hard for Syodor lately,” she added. “Specially after he found that cursed white bronze. .” The after-statement was whispered to herself, but Cerryl heard it as clearly as though she had spoken loudly.

He only nodded, knowing she would not want him to know what she had said, and walked quickly across the threshold, stopping by his pallet and slipping the book inside it before continuing and picking the ironbound wooden pail off the long peg set into the cross-timber behind the door. His bare feet carried him out the door and off the stoop and toward the path leading to the stream uphill and in back of the house.

He wished they could use the stream where it wound in front of the old house, but there it had turned orangish from the tailings. And it smelled like brimstone, sometimes rusty like iron as well. Cerryl’s nose twitched at the thought of the odor as he trudged up the path toward the spring from which the smaller stream flowed.

A sharp terwhit slashed through the early dusk-a bird hidden somewhere in the scrub junipers that sprouted willy-nilly in the areas untouched by tailings or the orange leachings. Cerryl glanced to his right, in the direction of the stone arched tunnel with a foreboding name carved in the rock over the beams. While he couldn’t read the name, he could sense that something left better alone lay deep in the tunnel. Still, the dusk that strained Nall’s eyes, or his uncle’s, was as bright as dawn just before the sun rose-something he’d tried not to let them know.

The bird did not call again, and the chirping of insects rose in the dusk. Cerryl wondered if they were crickets or something else. He shrugged. Insects had never been that interesting. He turned westward, heading up the foot-packed clay toward the spring.

The faint gurgling of the brook did not rise over the insects’ chirping until he reached the end of the spring itself, dark silver waters nearly still, except where they flowed over the rock dam created years back and covered in thick green moss.

Cerryl edged along the south side of the spring until he reached the rock embankment from which the waters flowed. There, in the long shadows and the gathering dusk, he looked at the dark waters bubbling over the rock ledge and into the narrow basin, then at the mockgrape vines clinging to the reddish rocks above the ledge.

Where did the water come from?

He frowned and looked at the ledge, then at the dark-silvered and rippled surface of the pond, so much like a mirror, and so unlike it. Could he make the mirror trick show him where the water started?

He squinted at the twilight-dark springwater, imagining. . what? Was there a hole in the red sandstone that led to the depths of the earth? Cerryl took a deep breath, his lips pressed tightly together, the empty bucket at his feet forgotten for the moment.

Silver mists swirled across the pond, silver mists, Cerryl realized, that only he could see. “Nall and Syodor couldn’t, anyway,” he murmured under his breath, puzzled over why he had even to say that, but knowing that he did, knowing that his whispered words were a sort of defiance that were somehow important, if only to him.

The gray-haired image of Nall flitted through the mists, and Cerryl pushed it away, seeking the source of the waters. Darkness spilled across the water, only darkness.

After a time, as his head began to ache, he finally took another deep breath, a gasping one, before bending down to pick up the bucket and dip it into the spring. Water splashed across the ragged bottoms of his trousers, across his bare feet, and onto the dry clay of the path.

He lifted the heavy bucket and turned back downhill, bare feet sure on the beaten clay path. Once he slipped past the juniper barely his own height at the base of the trail, his eyes went toward the south path.

A deep breath followed when he saw the distant figure of Syodor, still more than a kay away on the lower part of the south path. Cerryl stepped up his pace, but slowly, so that the water wouldn’t slosh out of the bucket.

“Uncle Syodor’s on the bottom of the south path now,” he announced as he stepped into the house.

“Cerryl. . you took a time. Be not good woolgathering out in the twilight. The demons abide then.”

“I am sorry, Aunt Nall,” he said dutifully, lugging the pail across the room to the hearth.

Without looking at Cerryl, she checked the biscuits in the baking tin before replacing the tin sheet that served as a cover. “Bein’ sorry like as not save you from bein’ carried off.”

“I got back before full dark.”

“See as you do.” She lifted the bucket and poured water into the gray crockery pitcher, then set the bucket on the floor to the right of the hearth.

“Put the pitcher on the table.”

Cerryl carried the pitcher from the worktable to the eating table.

Behind him, Nall lifted the lid on the cookpot, stirring the heavy soup with the long-handled wooden spoon.

“Yes, Aunt Nall.” Cerryl glanced at the corner where he had been sitting before he’d gotten the water. Then he waited.

Shortly, the heavyset woman turned as the door squeaked.

“Evening, woman.” The one-eyed and gray-haired man set the heavy iron hammer on the rough, one-plank table inside the door and the patched canvas pack beside the table on the floor with a thud. Dust puffed from the fabric, settling slowly toward the polished floor stones that had come from an abandoned grinding mill.

“How was the day?” Nall replaced the tin cover on the ancient iron cookpot and stepped away from the hearth composed of battered yellow and brown bricks.

“Better since I’m seeing you.” Syodor laughed, moving toward his consort. He hugged Nall, the gnarled and stubby fingers of his hands meeting for a moment before releasing her.

“Supper be a-waiting. The day?” Nall smiled, then bent and swung the iron arm and the cook pot back out over the coals, ignoring the squeal of the ancient iron swivel bracket.

“The day be fine. One bit of malachite, looks to be solid, and mayhap Gister will pay a copper for it. A fine pendant it would make for a lady, ground and polished.”

“Aye, and he’ll cut it and wrap it in two silvers and then sell it for a gold.” Nall checked the biscuit tin once more. “Best you wash up.”

“Wash up. . that be all you think of, woman?”

“After all your grubbing through tailings and tunnels? Should I be thinking of aught else?”

Syodor turned and walked toward the pitcher and wash table in the corner on the far side of the room from the hearth.

“You as well, Cerryl.”

“Right, lad,” added Syodor with a grin.

Cerryl waited for Syodor, then washed his own hands with the heavy fat-and-ash soap, rinsing them with the clean water from the pitcher.

His hands still damp, Cerryl sat down on the bench across from Syodor, his left side to the fire.

Syodor lifted the crockery mug. “What have you done here?”

“Little enough,” said Nall. “Arelta had some of the bitter brew. She said it wouldn’t last. So I brought it home.”

“Poor enough to take the brewer’s youngest daughter’s charity, are we?”

“Should I have let her pour it out?”

“No. Waste be worse than charity.” Syodor laughed, not quite harshly.

“Don’t be so hard on yourself,” Nall said softly, slipping a pair of biscuits from the tin onto the chipped earthenware. “All know you work hard.”

“Much good it did me when they closed the mines.”

“It did you good. Who else has a patent to grub the tailings?”

Syodor shrugged, then grinned. “No man has a better consort. No man.”

“You’ll not be turning my head, either.” Nall set the large tin bowl filled with steaming root stew before Syodor, then turned back to the cookpot and filled a smaller bowl with the wooden ladle. “Cerryl, here you go. You want more, let me know.”

“Thank you, Aunt Nall.” Cerryl offered a smile.