me.
“Though I don’t know why I would,” he said as we returned from our outing to the sea.
“Well, maybe you’ll accidentally drop me some night, and you’ll have to make your way back here by yourself,” I said.
“I won’t accidentally
“Well, that’s good to know,” I said.
I had opened the trapdoor, and enough light spilled out to let me see him shaking his head.
“Oh, you’d have done that long before now if you were going to,” I said cheerfully. “You’ve gotten used to me by now.”
“I don’t know—does anyone really get used to you?”
I laughed. “I’ll have to think that over.”
“So, where shall we go tomorrow night? I think we should head north again—past the mine, toward Windy Point.”
“Maybe,” I said. “But the moon’s already only half full. It’s getting smaller and rising later, so it’s harder for me to see landmarks. We might have to stay close to home for a while or risk getting lost.”
His face showed a quick frown. “If you’ve got the compass—”
“Which I also can’t see in the dark.”
“Well, maybe we don’t need you to see. If we go to the mine and north from there, I think I can find my way.”
“In which case, you don’t need me anyway,” I said.
His frown deepened. “Of course I need you,” he snapped. “I
“We’ll see,” I said. “But we might have to stay close to home and fly for strength, not distance, until the moon starts waxing again.”
“Very well,” he said reluctantly. “We’ll talk about it tomorrow.”
But we didn’t talk about it the next day, because everything changed; and a few days after that, everything changed again.
CHAPTER 6
Over the past four days, I had continued to spend a few hours in the kitchen, though now I went in early enough to help with the work of preparing dinner. I rarely encountered Rhesa, but I guessed she had complained incessantly to Deborah, because within two days the head cook was asking me when I thought Alma would be well enough for me to resume the overnight shift. I knew Corban was not yet ready to announce his existence to the rest of the world, but pretty soon I would either need to return to my old post or lose my job. Or explain exactly what was taking up all my time at the Great House.
The day after the flight to the ocean, all those options were put on hold. I made my way down to the kitchen in midafternoon to find the place in chaos. Deborah was the only cook in evidence, though she was attended by a small army of students who were rushing between stove and table and pantry, trying to do her bidding.
“No, not the
“What’s going on? Where are the others?”
“Sick. All of them. With something”—she patted her stomach—“that has made them vomit through the night.
“Oh, no,” I said. “I suppose everyone will get it eventually.”
“I suppose,” she said. “But as long as
I put on an apron. “Obviously not,” I said. “Let’s get dinner ready.”
The illness made its way quickly through the school. About half the students and three- quarters of the staff succumbed over the next few days, though most of them recovered after a couple of bad nights. But two older men, one a teacher and one a handyman, couldn’t seem to shake it. They came down with a fever as well as the stomach disorder, and they languished on their beds, refusing to eat or drink.
Judith, who had some healing skills, had turned nurse the minute she recovered enough to get out of bed. I had no interest in tending the patients, but I didn’t mind doing the extra laundry and scrubbing down the sickrooms.
“I’m worried about David,” Judith told me on the afternoon of the third day. We were folding what seemed like a thousand towels that had just come through the wash. “Jonathan’s beginning to improve, but David is getting worse, and I’m almost out of drugs to give him.”
“Maybe we should hoist a plague flag,” I suggested. People in settlements all over Samaria would catch the attention of angels flying nearby by raising distress signals—called plague flags, though it didn’t really matter what disaster they portended. “Ask an angel to pray for more medicine.”
“I thought of that,” she said. “But I don’t know that anyone would see it. We’re so remote here—and most of the angels are likely to be headed for the Plain of Sharon.”
Startled, I did a quick calculation. Spring had tiptoed to the border of winter while I had not been paying attention, and the equinox was almost here. “You’re right! It’s less than a week till the Gloria.”
“So I don’t think we can expect help from any angels,” she ended with a sigh. “I’ll do what I can for him.”
I didn’t answer as I continued to fold linens. I wondered if Corban would be willing to sing a prayer to Jovah if the situation was dire. I didn’t know much about it, but I believed angels usually offered their prayers from a high altitude, and Corban had never gone too far off the ground since he began flying again. I didn’t know if he was afraid of the winds or the disorientation, but I had to confess I didn’t like the idea of getting way above land, either.
Meanwhile, since that first week when I had spotted him on the roof of the Great House, I hadn’t heard him sing a note. That was odd, because angels were all steeped in music; they couldn’t live without it, or so it seemed. Corban had told me he composed songs in his copious free time, but I’d never heard him play, either. I wondered if he had abandoned music in a bitter response to the god he thought had abandoned him.
But surely if he thought a man’s life was at stake . . .
I decided that, if David took a turn for the worse, I would ask Corban if he was willing to petition the god. And if he said no, I would mock him and shame him until he agreed. And then he would fling himself aloft and offer his prayers to Jovah and be successful and feel proud of himself and fall in love with me because I always pushed him beyond his fears—or he would be tumbled off course by a swift, unfriendly wind, and fail to sing a note, and return to land full of doubt and self-loathing and never wish to speak to me again.
Well, then. Always something to look forward to.
I was still asleep early the next morning when there was a frantic pounding at my door and the sound of someone calling my name. My schedule had changed again during this time of illness, so I had gone to bed around midnight, but I still was not ready to rise with the sun.
“Moriah! Come quickly! He’s gone!”
For a moment, I didn’t recognize the woman’s voice and couldn’t think who
Alma stared at me, her lined face a study in worry. “Moriah, Corban’s not in his room. I don’t know where he could be.”