comes at twilight, that should give me about two hours. I think I can make it up there in that amount of time.”

“How shall we cross the river?” asked Valmar.

“As I recall, a little way along the bank there’s a place where we scrambled down to the water. The river’s course is very narrow there-I could jump it even when I was eight.” She turned her eyes full on him. “But I am going alone.”

Valmar swung off his own horse and seized her by the hand. “I told you I have to take care of you! I couldn’t wait here quietly while you tried to climb-perhaps slipping-and then maybe met-”

She put her free hand over his mouth. “I cannot climb in my mother’s brocade dress, so I am taking these clothes off. I am quite sure,” and for a second her lips twitched in amusement, “that your father would not want you beside me as I went up the hill naked.”

The shock silenced Valmar for a second. He dropped her hand and stared at her, wondering if she could be serious. Then he said resolutely, “In that case, you can wait here and I shall go alone.”

“You have never been as good at climbing,” she said, unfastening her cloak and turning around while she started on the lacings of her bodice. “You can help me and Roric most by staying right here. If I fall, drag me out of the river and get me back to my father’s castle if I am still alive. If I do not return, try if the Weaver back home will give you a clearer message.”

“But why do you want to risk your life like this?” he protested.

“I love Roric. Now turn your back, or you really will have King Hadros furious with you.”

He turned his back obediently, hearing the rustle of clothing coming off. He considered trying to wrestle his big sister back onto her horse, tying her to the saddle and leading the animal back down to the castle. He would seize her with his own cloak, he decided, making it hard for her to fight back while also covering up a nakedness that he startled himself by beginning to picture.

And then he realized there was silence behind him. He spun around to see a slim figure, wearing only riding gloves and a shift caught up above the knees, springing across a narrow place in the river course and scrambling up the far side.

He slowly gathered up the clothes she had dropped and folded them neatly. There were two long, blond hairs caught in the hood of her cloak. He picked them up carefully, then pulled two of his own red hairs out with a sharp tug. He leaned several tiny fir twigs together and laid the hairs across them, then struck a spark with the flint and steel at his belt. The dry twigs caught at once. The hairs twisted as though alive as they burned.

He ground out the embers with his heel and looked up the hill. Karin was now a small pale shape, higher than he had expected and apparently climbing easily. He hoped his offering was acceptable to the lords of voima.

4

At first when the cool afternoon air touched Karin’s skin she shivered, but the exercise of climbing quickly warmed her again. She wished for the sturdy boots she normally wore at home, as her toes cracked against still another stone. She had left her elegant slippers with Valmar as worse than useless, but at least her hands were protected by her riding gloves.

The hill was as she remembered, its lower slopes made up of stones that had long since wedged themselves firmly into position, now grown with weeds and moss. It made for surprisingly easy climbing, with plenty of chinks for toes and fingers. She and her brother had stopped eleven years ago because it was growing late, because their nurse, from whom they had slipped away, had finally spotted them and was shouting terrible threats, and because they were getting tired.

She felt the strain especially in the muscles between her shoulder blades. Every now and then there was a small tree, well-rooted among the rocks, and she allowed herself to rest for a moment within its crook, trying to stretch out the stiffness. But the sharp twigs caught at her skin and the light fabric of her shift when she moved again.

As the afternoon advanced the sun disappeared behind the high hills and a wind began to blow, moaning softly, not quite shaping intelligible words. Karin glanced back down into the valley, heavily shadowed now so that it was impossible to pick out detail although she could see a dark mass that must be the horses.

Then she looked up the slope before her, becoming ever steeper. Soon she would be out of the area where the stones were well lodged, into a region where no plant life grew because the stones were still constantly shifting. The sky was a thin and pale blue; she did not dare rest longer if she wanted to be at the top before twilight.

As she continued upward she startled birds nesting in crevices on the steep slope. She thought about the Mirror-seer, wondering if his willingness to give information so openly, so freely, was all a deception, that he knew it was no easier to meet a Wanderer on Graytop than anywhere else in mortal realms. If so, he must be having a hearty laugh at her expense, watching in his mirrors as a woman wearing nothing but a ripped shift risked death on a steep slope for no reason at all.

Karin kept on climbing. She had reached the gray rocks that gave the hill its bald appearance. She was high enough that she now looked down on the little clusters of distant houses that perched on the hills above the valley, and the setting sun touched the granite with a deceptively warm light.

Here she had to go very carefully, testing each step before she shifted her weight. Several times as she started to pull herself up a piece of rock broke loose and plummeted back toward the valley, sending the birds whirling dismayed out of their nests. If she fell, she thought grimly, Valmar would have trouble finding enough of her body to make it worth carrying the pieces back down to her father.

Her heart was beating so hard it shook her whole body as she reached up again and again in search of a solid grip, forcing her battered feet to follow. But then suddenly she realized that the slope against which she pressed was less steep, that she was crawling more than climbing. She raised her head. The air was darkening, though the sky above was still light, and she had reached the top.

If there was a Wanderer here, she certainly did not see him. She scrabbled away from the edge and stretched out in the minimal wind protection a large stone provided, sucking at a deep scratch on one wrist. The cool air quickly dried her sweat.

“Are you an outcast?” came a quiet voice behind her.

She spun around, wrapping her arms around herself and keeping her knees together, suddenly deeply ashamed to be found undressed.

But the Wanderer-if it was a Wanderer-gave no sign that he had noticed. He sat on a stone a short distance away, his face hidden by a wide-brimmed hat, seeming to look northward toward the sea.

Karin stared at him as though paralyzed. She had been so glad to reach the top of the hill alive that she had forgotten that she would have anything else to fear. But if the Mirror-seer was right, this was one of the immortal lords of voima who controlled mortal destinies, whose power over earth and sky, life and death, was limitless.

Somehow she had expected him to look more impressive.

Then she found her voice, forcing herself to speak without trembling. “I seek information. I regret that I have climbed up here nearly naked, with nothing to offer you, but I have come because I am trying to find Roric No-man’s son.”

As she spoke she wondered wildly if he might be right, that she really was an outcast. She had been taken out of the only home she had known for ten years, to be returned to the home that had sent her away.

The man chuckled. “Then you and I seek the same thing.”

She took a moment to analyze this. “You do not know where Roric is? But he left to go with the Wanderers!”

“When you say he left,” said the man a little sharply, “what exactly do you mean?”

Karin frowned. Wherever Roric was, this person ought to know it. “I mean that a being came and summoned him away from home, and no one has seen him since.” The twilight was rapidly hastening toward dark. Either a late-flying bird or a bat darted past her head. “Those who saw it, said the being had no back.”

The man in the wide hat, sitting half turned away from her, certainly had a back. But as she finished recovering her breath, trying unsuccessfully to see his face-if he even had one-the chill that gripped her went far deeper than the touch on her skin of the evening air.

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