He followed my finger with his eyes and then shook his head in disappointment. ‘No. Why? There’s nothing there but grass. And then snow.’
I had no easy explanation. He was right. In the distance, the plain of stubby grass gave way to snow and then looming ice. Beyond them, a rock face shone with a frosting of ice and snow. ‘Well, that’s where I’m going,’ I said. And I struck out. I set an easy pace, but avoided looking back. Instead, I listened, and with my Wit, quested for an awareness of him. He was following, but grudgingly. I slowed my pace enough to allow him to catch up. When he was alongside me, I observed companionably, ‘Well, Thick, I think that today we will have answers to at least a few of our questions.’
‘What questions?’
‘Who or what is the Black Man?’
Thick looked stubborn. ‘I don’t really care.’
‘Well. It’s a lovely day. And I’m not just hiking on the beach any more.’
‘We’re hiking toward the snow.’
He was right, and soon enough we reached the outlying edges of it. And there, plainly, were the tracks of the Black Man, going and coming. Without commenting on them, I followed them, Thick trudging at my heels. After a short time, Thick observed, ‘We aren’t poking the snow. We might fall right through.’
‘As long as we follow these tracks, I think we’re safe,’ I told him. ‘This isn’t the true glacier yet.’
By early afternoon, we had followed the tracks across a windswept plain of snow and ice to a rocky cliff wall. Towering and forbidding, it defied the wind. Ice made columns down its face and had wedged cracks into it. At the base of it, the tracks turned west and continued. We followed. Night greyed the sky and I pushed on doggedly, giving Thick sticks of salt-fish when he complained of being hungry. As the twilight grew deeper around us, even my curiosity lagged along with my energy. At length, we halted. I felt sheepish as I turned to Thick and said, ‘Well, I was wrong. We’ll set up the tent here for the night, shall we?’
His tongue and lower lip pouted out and he beetled his brows at me in disappointment. ‘Do we have to?’
I glanced around, at a loss for what else I could offer him. ‘What would you like to do?’
‘Go there!’ he exclaimed and pointed. I lifted my eyes to follow the stubby finger. My breath caught in my chest.
I had been keeping my eyes on the tracks. I had not lifted my gaze to the looming cliff wall. Ahead of us, halfway up the bluff, a wide crack had been fitted with a door of grey wood. The rest of the crack had been filled in with rocks of various sizes. The door had been left ajar and yellow firelight shone within. Someone was in there.
With renewed haste, we followed the tracks to where they suddenly doubled back to follow a steep footpath that worked up and across the face of the cliff. Calling it a footpath was generous. We had to go in single file and our packs bumped against the rock as we negotiated it. Nevertheless, it was a well-used trail, kept free of debris and treacherous ice. Where trickles of ice from above had attempted to cross the path, they had been chopped off short and brushed away. It appeared to be a recent effort.
Despite these signs of hospitality, I was full of trepidation when I stood at last before the door. It had been constructed of driftwood, hand-planed and pegged together painstakingly. Warmth and an aroma of cooked food wafted out from it. Although it was ajar and the space in front of it small, still I hesitated. Thick didn’t. He shoved past me to push the door open. ‘Hello!’ he called hopefully. ‘We’re here and we’re cold.’
‘Please, enter do,’ someone replied in a low and pleasant voice. The accent on the words was odd, and the voice seemed husky as if from disuse, but the welcome was plain in the tone. Thick didn’t hesitate as he stepped inside. I followed him more slowly.
After the dimness of the night, the fire in the stone hearth seemed to glare with light. At first, I could make out no more than a silhouette seated before the fire in a wooden chair. Then the Black Man slowly stood and faced us. Thick drew in his breath audibly. Then, with a show of recovery and manners that astounded me in the little man, he said carefully, ‘Good evening, Grandfather.’
The Black Man smiled. His worn teeth were as yellow as bone in his black, black face. Lines wreathed his mouth and his eyes nestled deep in their sockets, like shining ebony disks. He spoke, and after a time my mind sorted out his badly accented Outislander. ‘I know not how long I’ve been here. Yet this I know. This is the first time that anyone has entered and called me Grandfather.’
When he stood, it was without apparent effort, and his spine was straight. Yet age was written all over his countenance, and he moved with the slow grace of a man who protects his body from shocks. He gestured to a small table. ‘Guests I seldom have, but my hospitality I would offer despite what is lacked. Please. Food I have made. Come.’
Thick didn’t hesitate. He shrugged out of his pack, letting it slide to the floor without regret. ‘We thank you,’ I said slowly as I carefully removed my own and set both of them to one side. My eyes had adjusted to the light. I do not know if I would have called his residence a cave or a large crevice. I could not see a ceiling, and I suspected that smoke travelled up but not out. The furnishings were simple but very well made, with both the craft and attention of a man who had much time to learn his skills and apply them. There was a bedstead in a corner, and a larder shelf, a water bucket and a barrel, and a woven rug. Some of the items appeared to have been salvaged, windfalls from the beach, and others were obviously made from the scanty resources of the island. It bespoke a long habitation.
The man himself was as tall as I was, and as solidly black as the Fool once had been white. He did not ask our names or offer his, but served soup into three stone bowls that he had warmed by the fire. He spoke little at first. Outislander was the language we used; yet it was not native to any of us. The Black Man and I worked at communicating. Thick spoke duchy-tongue but managed to make himself understood. The table was low, and our chairs were cushions with woven reed covers stuffed with dry grass. It was good to sit down. His spoons were made of polished bone. There was fish in the soup, but it was fresh, as were the boiled roots and meagre greens. It tasted very good after our long days of dried or preserved food. The flat bread that he set out with it startled me and he grinned when he saw me looking at it.
‘From her pantry to mine,’ he said, with no apology. ‘What I needed I took. And sometimes more.’ He sighed. ‘And now it is done. Simpler, my life will be. Yours, lonelier, I think.’
It suddenly seemed to me that we were in the middle of a conversation, with both of us already knowing, without words, why we had come together. So I simply said, ‘I have to go back for him. He hated the cold. I cannot leave his body there. And I must be sure that this is finished. That she is dead.’