Dutiful cleared his throat. ‘I don’t think they’re fighting.’
‘Then … Yes they are! Look how he bites her! Why does he seize her like that, if not to hurt her?’ Elliania shaded her eyes with one hand as she looked up in wonder at them. Her dark hair fell tangled down her shoulders and back and her uplifted chin bared the long straight column of her neck. Her tunic strained over her breasts. Dutiful made a small sound in his throat. He lifted his eyes from looking at her and his gaze went from me to Peottre. Her uncle had one arm around his sister’s shoulders and held Kossi in his other. I think the Prince decided that our opinion of the matter no longer concerned him. He stepped closer to Elliania and took her in his arms. ‘I’ll show you,’ he said to her astonishment. He clasped her firm and close, and lowered his mouth to hers.
Despite all that had befallen me that day, despite every loss I had sustained, I found myself smiling. That which surged between the dragons above must affect any man sensitive to the Skill. The Narcheska broke the kiss at last. Lowering her brow to his shoulder, she laughed softly. ‘Oh,’ she said. Then she lifted her face again to be kissed. I looked aside.
Oerttre did not. She was scandalized. Despite her rags and filth, her reaction was regal. ‘Peottre! You allow a farmer to kiss our Narcheska?’
He laughed aloud. I was shocked to realize it was the first time I’d ever heard the man laugh. ‘No, my sister. But she does, and she allots to him what he has earned. There is much explaining to do yet. But I promise you, what happens there is not against her will.’ He smiled. ‘And what is a man that he should oppose the will of a woman?’
‘It is not proper,’ Oerttre replied primly, and despite her stained dress and caked hair, her words were that of a Narcheska of the Out Islands. It struck me how completely she had come back to herself.
Abruptly it came to me that if the Fool still lived, then with the dragon’s death, whatever Forging had been done to him would have come undone as well. Wild hope leapt in me and the world lurched around me. ‘The Fool!’ I exclaimed, and then when Peottre looked at me in disapproval, to see if I mocked the Prince, I clarified, ‘The tawny man. Lord Golden. He might yet live!’
I turned and ran over the crusted snow. I reached the edge of what had been our pit and tried to find a safe way down into it. The upheaval of the dragons had made it a treacherous place. The opening that Peottre and the Narcheska had emerged from was gone. Rawbread’s final landing in the side of the pit and his struggles to get out of it had obscured that gap into the Pale Woman’s palace. But I knew where it had been and surely, surely, it could not be buried that deeply. I set out down the unstable slope, trying to hurry and yet keep my footing as the broken ice crunched and then cascaded past me. I halted and forced myself to walk more carefully. I picked my way down the sliding slope, hating the delay. Every chunk of ice I dislodged now was yet another I must move. The opening had been at the deepest end of the pit. I was nearly to it when I heard someone call my name. I halted and looked over my shoulder. Peottre stood at the edge of the excavation, looking down on me. He shook his head, his eyes full of pity. He spoke bluntly.
‘Give it up, Badgerlock. He’s dead. Your comrade is dead. I’m sorry. We saw him when we were searching the cells for our people. I had promised myself that if he were still alive, we would try to steal him, too. But he wasn’t. We were too late. I’m sorry.’
I stood staring up at him. Suddenly I couldn’t see him. The contrast between the brightness of the day and his dark silhouette seemed to blind me. Cold crept up me followed by a wave of numbness. I thought I would faint. I sat down very slowly in the ice. I hated the stupid words that came from my mouth. ‘Are you sure?’
Peottre nodded, and then said reluctantly, ‘Very sure. They had –’ He stopped speaking suddenly. When he resumed, he said flatly, ‘He was dead. He could not have lived through that. He was dead.’ He took a breath and then sighed it out slowly. ‘They are calling for you, down at the camp. The boy, Swift, he is with the dying man. They want you there.’
The dying man. Burrich. He jolted back into my thoughts like one of Chade’s explosions. Yes. I would lose him, too. It was too much, far too much. I put my face down in my hands and curled up, rocking back and forth in the snow. Too much. Too much.
‘I think you should hurry.’ Blackwater’s voice reached me from some distant place. Then I heard someone else say quietly, ‘You go tend to your own people. I’ll see to mine.’
I heard someone working his way down the slope of ice to me, but I didn’t care. I just sat there, trying to die, trying to let go of a life where I failed everyone that I cared about. Then a hand fell heavily on my shoulder and Web said, ‘Get up, FitzChivalry. Swift needs you.’
I shook my head childishly. I would never, never let anyone depend on me again.
‘Get up!’ he said more sternly. ‘We’ve lost enough people today. We’re not going to lose you, too.’
I lifted my head and looked up at him. I felt Forged. ‘I was lost a long time ago,’ I told him. Then I took a deep breath, stood up and followed him.
TWENTY-SIX
Healings
The Chalcedean practice of tattooing one’s slaves with a special mark of ownership began as a fashion among the nobility. In the early days of it, only the most valuable slaves, slaves one expected to own for a lifetime, were so marked. The custom seems to have escalated when Lord Grart and Lord Porte, both powerful nobles in the Chalcedean court, entered a rivalry to display their wealth. Jewellery, horses and slaves were the measure of wealth at that time, and Lord Grart chose to have all of his horses prominently branded and all of his slaves tattooed. Ranks of both accompanied him everywhere he went. It is said that Lord Porte, in imitation of his rival, actually bought hundreds of cheap slaves of little or no standing as craftsmen or academics, simply for the purpose of tattooing them as his and displaying them.