They all returned at sunset, Kuari last of all, and as they ate fish caught by Wintersky and grilled over the fire, each Hawkbrother related what his bird was telling him.
And in the end, even Kel looked troubled by what they had
“Wherrre arrre the people?” Kel said finally. “We have flown herrre and therrre - and therrre isss no sssign of people.”
“No sign that anyone has traveled the Pass recently either,” Darian pointed out, frowning. “There were tiny tribes in the other valleys - shouldn’t there be
“If it had - why wouldn’t Snow Fox have brought it with them?” Keisha asked. “They only had Wasting Sickness and a few other things we already knew how to clear up.”
Hywel poked at the fire with a stick. “People do things differently, up here,” he said at last. “It could be that they are off fishing.”
“Fishing?” Wintersky said incredulously.
Hywel looked uncomfortable. “I have heard - heard - that on the other side of that mountain there is a great expanse of water so far that you cannot see the other side, and it tastes of salt. This is where the peoples round about here get salt with which to trade. And I have heard that in the spring, there are torrents of fish coming up the streams. People gather at the rivers and catch these fish for as long as they come, and it is said that the fish are so thick in the rivers that one can walk from bank to bank upon their backs and keep dry feet. It is said that they can thus dry and smoke enough of these fish to serve them the rest of the year.”
“That sounds like some sort of fable to me,” Wintersky said skeptically.
Hywel shrugged. “It is only what I have heard. Also, I
“Huh.” Wintersky still looked skeptical.
“White Grrryphon liesss bessside sssuch a sssalty waterrr,” Kel observed, tilting his head to the side. “We call it an ‘ocean’ or ‘sssea.’ Could thisss be the sssame sssea?”
“I don’t know why not,” Steelmind replied. “There is no reason why the coastline here could not be
“No, it doesn’t, but we’ve only looked close to the mouth of the Pass,” Darian said. “Now, if I were living up here, and I knew that this place existed and might be used by war parties or even armies, I certainly wouldn’t want to live near it.”
Nods all around the campfire showed that Darian had come up with a reasonable explanation - for now.
But Keisha had the shivery feeling that this was not the real explanation.
After half-a-day’s travel, they had finally come upon signs of people - but the signs weren’t good.
“I don’t like this,” Darian said, staring at the remains of the village. This place had been more like the permanent village that Ghost Cat had built in Valdemar, before it had been deserted.
“Hywel?” Darian said, turning to their only expert. Hywel looked just as troubled, and just as puzzled. “I do not know,” he said, looking around at the rumbled houses, the fallen poles. “There are no bodies, and no belongings. Perhaps they - ”
Then he shook his head. “No, I do not think they walked away, and it would be foolish to say so. I do not know what happened here.”
Darian scratched his head. “Do you see any signs of attack?” he asked reluctantly. “What would we be looking for?”
“There would be no signs,” Hywel told him. “If the tribe was under attack, the men would go out to meet the enemy, and the women and children would remain here. And if the men did not come back - ” He paused. “Well, until Blood Bear began taking other tribes’ women, the women and children of the defeated would have been left in peace to rebuild their tribe as best they could.”