the Fool finally followed me out.
'Starling showed me her harp last night,' I said by way of greeting.
He smirked with satisfaction. 'A crude bit of work. Ah, this was but one of his early efforts, they shall say of it someday,' he added with strained modesty.
'Kettle said you have no caution.'
'No, I have not, Fitz. What do we do here?'
'Me? What I'm told. When my watch is over, I'm off to the hills, to gather broom twigs. So that I can sweep the rock chips out of Verity's way.'
'Ah. Now there's lofty work for a Catalyst. And what shall a prophet do, do you suppose?'
'You might prophesy when that dragon will be finished. I fear we shall think of nothing else until it is done.'
The Fool was shaking his head minutely.
'What?' I demanded.
'I do not feel we were called here to make brooms and harps. This feels like a lull to me, my friend. The lull before the storm.'
'Now, there's a cheery thought,' I told him glumly. But privately I wondered if he might not be right.
'Are you going to tell me what went on last night?'
When my account was finished, the Fool sat grinning. 'A resourceful lass, that one,' he observed proudly. Then he cocked his head at me. 'Think you the baby will be Witted? Or be able to Skill?'
I had never stopped to consider it. 'I hope not,' I said immediately. And then wondered at my own words.
Dawn had scarcely broken before both Verity and Kettle arose. They each drank a mug of broth standing, and carried off dried meat as they headed back up to the dragon. Kettricken had also come out of Verity's tent. Her eyes were hollow and defeat was in the set of her mouth. She had but half a mug of broth before setting it aside. She went back into the tent and returned with a blanket fashioned into a carry-sack.
'Firewood,' she replied flatly to my raised eyebrow.
'Then Nighteyes and I may as well go with you. I need to gather broom twigs and a stick. And he needs to do something besides sleep and grow fat.'
And you fear to go off in the woods without me.
If sows like that abound in these woods, you are absolutely correct.
Perhaps Kettricken would bring her bow?
But even as I turned to make the suggestion, she was ducking back into the tent to fetch it. 'In case we meet another pig,' she told me as she came out.
But it was an uneventful expedition. Outside the quarry, the countryside was hilly and pleasant. We stopped at the stream to drink and wash. I saw the flash of a tiny fingerling in the water, and the wolf immediately wanted to fish. I told him I would after I had finished gathering my broom. So he came at my heels, but reluctantly. I gathered my broom twigs and found a long straight branch for a handle. Then we filled Kettricken's carry-sack with wood, which I insisted on bearing so her hands could be free for her bow. On the way back to camp, we stopped at the stream. I looked for a place where plants overhung the bank, and it did not take us long to find one. We then spent far longer than I had intended in tickling for fish. Kettricken had never seen it done before, but after some impatience, she caught the trick of it. They were a kind of trout I had not seen before, tinged with pink along their bellies. We caught ten and I cleaned them there, with Nighteyes snapping up the entrails as quickly as I gutted them. Kettricken threaded them onto a willow stick, and we returned to camp.
I had not realized how much the quiet interlude had soothed my spirits until we came in sight of the black pillar guarding the mouth of the quarry. It seemed more ominous than ever, like some dark scolding finger lifted to warn me that, indeed, this might be the lull but the storm was coming. I gave a small shudder as I passed it. My Skill-sensitivity seemed to be growing again. The pillar radiated controlled power luringly. Almost against my will, I stopped to study the characters incised on it.
'Fitz? Are you coming?' Kettricken called back to me, and only then did I realize how long I had been gawking. I hastened to catch up with them, and rejoined them just as they were passing the girl on a dragon.
I had deliberately avoided that spot since the Fool had touched her. Now I glanced up guiltily to where the silver fingerprint still shone against her flawless skin. 'Who were you, and why did you make such a sad carving?' I asked her. But her stone eyes only looked at me pleadingly above her tear-specked cheeks.
'Maybe she could not finish her dragon,' Kettricken speculated. 'See how its hind feet and tail are still trapped in the stone? Maybe that's why it's so sad.'
'She must have carved it sad to begin with, don't you see? Whether or not she finished it, the upper portion would be the same. '
Kettricken looked at me in amusement. 'You still don't believe that Verity's dragon will fly when it is finished? I do. Of course, I have very little else to believe in anymore. Very little.'
I had been going to tell her I thought it a minstrel's tale for a child, but her final words shut my mouth.
Back at the dragon, I bound my broom together and went at my sweeping with a vengeance. The sun was high in a bright blue sky with a light and pleasant breeze. It was altogether a lovely day and for a time I forgot all else in my simple chore. Kettricken unloaded her firewood and soon left to get more. Nighteyes followed at her heels, and I noticed with approval that Starling and the Fool hastened after her with carry-sacks of their own. With the rock chips and dust cleared away from the dragon, I could see more of the progress Verity and Kettle had made. The black stone of the dragon's back was so shiny it almost reflected the blue of the sky. I observed as much to Verity, not really expecting an answer. His mind and heart were focused entirely on the dragon. On all other topics his mind seemed vague and wandering, but when he spoke to me of his dragon and the fashioning of it he was very much King Verity.
A few moments later, he rocked back on his heels from his crouch beside the dragon's foot. He stood and ran a silver hand tentatively over the dragon's back. I caught my breath, for in the wake of his hand there was suddenly color. A rich turquoise, with every scale edged in silver, followed the sweep of Verity's finger. The hue shimmered there-for an instant, then faded. Verity made a small sound of satisfaction. 'When the dragon is full, the color will stay,' he told me. Without thinking, I reached a hand toward the dragon, but Verity abruptly shouldered me aside. 'Don't touch him,' he warned me, almost jealously. He must have seen the shock on my face, for he looked rueful. 'It's not safe for you to touch him anymore, Fitz. He is too …' His voice trailed off, and his eyes went afar in search of a word. Then he apparently forgot all about me, for he crouched back to his work on the creature's foot.
There is nothing like being treated like a child to provoke one to act that way. I finished the last of my sweeping, set my broom aside, and wandered off. I was not overly surprised when I found myself staring up at the girl on a dragon again. I had come to think of the statue as 'Girl-on-a-Dragon,' for they did not seem like separate entities to me. Once more I climbed up on the dais beside her, once more I felt the swirling of her Wit-life. It lifted like fog and reached toward me hungrily. So much entrapped misery. 'There is nothing I can do for you,' I told her sadly, and almost felt that she responded to my words. It was too saddening to remain close to her for long. But as I clambered down, I noticed that which alarmed me. Around one of the dragon's hind feet, someone had been chiseling at the miring stone. I stooped down for a closer inspection. The chips and dust had been cleared from the cut, but the edges of it were new and sharp. The Fool, I told myself, was truly without caution. I stood with the intention of seeking him out immediately.
FitzChivalry. Return to me at once, please.
I sighed to myself. Probably more stone chips to sweep. For this I must be away from Molly, while she fended for herself. As I walked back to the dragon, I indulged myself in forbidden thoughts of her. I wondered if they had found a place to shelter, and how badly Burrich was hurt. They had fled with little more than the clothes on their backs. How would they survive? Or had Regal's men attacked them again? Had they dragged her and the baby off to Tradeford? Did Burrich lie dead in the dirt somewhere?
Do you truly believe that could happen and you not know of it? Besides. She seemed more than capable of caring for herself and the child. And Burrich for that matter. Stop thinking of them. And stop indulging in self-pity. I have a task for you.
I returned to the dragon and picked up my broom. I had been sweeping for some minutes before Verity seemed to notice me. 'Ah, Fitz, there you are.' He stood, stretched, arching his back to take the ache out of it.