before them both, had been granted the power of a small god by their work. Maati's and Eiah's. The others had helped, but the three of them together in that room carried the decision. And so the weight of its consequences.

'It was ill advised,' Maati said. 'The low towns should have been our allies and support. Now they've been angered.'

'Why?' Vanjit asked.

'They don't know what our plan is,' Maati said. 'They don't know about Eiah and Wounded. All they see is that there was a glimmer of hope. Yes, I know it was a thin, false hope, but it was all that they had.'

'That's stupid,' Vanjit said.

'It only seems that way because we know more than they,' Eiah said.

'We can tell them,' Vanjit said.

'If we can calm them long enough to listen,' Maati said. 'But that isn't what I've come here for. I am your teacher, Vanjit-cha. I need two things of you. Do you understand?'

The girl looked at the ground, her hands rising in a pose of acceptance appropriate for a student to her master.

'First, you must never take this kind of action with the andat without telling me. We have too many plans and they are too delicate for any of us to act without the others knowing it.'

'Eiah sent Ashti Beg away,' Vanjit said.

'And we discussed that possibility before they left,' Maati said. 'The second thing… What you've done to the Galts, only you can undo.'

The girl looked up now. Anger flashed in her eyes. The andat gurgled and clapped its tiny hands. Maati held up a finger, insisting that she wait until he had finished.

'If you hold to this,' he said, 'thousands of people will die. Women and children who are innocent of any crime.'

'It's what they did to us,' she said. 'It's that they did to me. Maati reached forward and took her hand.

'I understand,' he said. 'I won't tell you to undo this thing. But for me, think carefully about how the burden of those deaths will weigh on you. You're angry now, and anger gives you strength. But when it's faded, you will still be responsible for what you've done.'

'I will, Maati-kvo,' Vanjit said.

Eiah made a sound in the back of her throat, its meaning unguessable. Maati smiled and put a hand on Vanjit's shoulder.

'Well. That's settled. Now, I suppose it's time to get back to work. Give these people in the low towns something to celebrate.'

'You've done it, then, Eiah-kya?' Vanjit asked. 'You've found the insight you needed? You understand Wounded?'

Eiah was quiet for a moment, looking down at Vanjit and Clarity-ofSight. Her lips twitched into a thin, joyless smile.

'Closer,' Eiah said. 'I've come closer.'

17

Seeing Balasar Gice shook Otah more than he had expected. He had always known that the general was not a large-framed man, but his presence had always filled the room. Seeing him seated at a table by the window with his eyes the gray of old pearls, Otah felt he was watching the man die. The robes seemed too large on him, or his shoulders suddenly grown small.

Outside the window, the morning sun lit the sea. Gulls called and complained to one another. A small plate had the remnants of fresh cheese and cut apple; the cheese flowed in the day's heat, the pale flesh of the apple had gone brown. Otah cleared his throat. Balasar smiled, but didn't bother turning his head toward the sound.

'Most High?' Balasar asked.

'Yes,' Otah said. 'I came… I came when I heard.'

'I am afraid Sinja will have to do without my aid,' Balasar said, his voice ironic and bleak. 'It seems I'll be in no condition to sail.'

Otah leaned against the window's ledge, his shadow falling over Balasar. The general turned toward him. His voice was banked rage, his expression impotence.

'Did you know, Otah? Did you know what they were doing?'

'This wasn't my doing,' Otah said. 'I swear that.'

'My life was taking your god-ghosts out of the world. I thought we'd done it. Even after what you bastards did to me, to all of us, I was content trying to make peace. I lost my men to it, and I lived with that because the loss meant something. However desperate the cost, at least we'd be rid of the fucking andat. And now..

Balasar struck the table with an open palm, the report like stone breaking. Otah lifted his hands toward a pose that offered comfort, and then stopped and let his arms fall to his sides.

'I'm sorry,' Otah said. 'I will send my best agents to find the new poet and resolve this. Until then, all of you will be cared for and-'

Balasar's laughter was a bark.

'Where do I begin, Most High? We will all be cared for? Do you really think this has only happened to the Galts who came to your filthy city? I will wager any odds you like that everyone back home is suffering the same things we are. How many fishermen were on their boats when it happened? How many people were traveling the roads? You could no more care for all of us than pluck the moon out of the sky.'

'I'm sorry for that,' Otah said. 'Once we've found the poet and talked to…' He stumbled on his words, caught between the expected him and the more likely her.

Balasar gestured to him, palms up as if displaying something small and obvious.

'If it wasn't your pet andat that did this, then what hope do you have of resolving anything?' Balasar asked. 'They may have left you your sight for the moment, but there's nothing you can do. It's the andat. There's no defense. There's no counterattack that means anything. Gather your armsmen. Take to the field. Then come back and die beside us. You can do nothing.'

This is my daughter's work, Otah thought but didn't say. I can hope that she still loves me enough to listen.

'You've never felt this,' Balasar said. 'The rest of us? The rest of the world? We know what it is to be faced with the andat. You can't end this. You can't even negotiate. You have no standing now. The best you can do is beg.'

'Then I will beg,' Otah said.

'Enjoy that,' Balasar said, sitting back in his chair. It was like watching a showfighter collapse at the end of a match. The vitality, the anger, the violence snuffed out, and the general was only a small Galtic man with crippled eyes, waiting for some kind soul to take away the remains of his uneaten meal. Otah rose and walked quietly from the room.

All through the city, the scenes were playing out. Men and women who had been well the night before were in states of rage and despair. They blundered into the unfamiliar streets, screaming, swinging whatever weapon came to hand at anyone who tried to help them. Or else they wept. Or, like Balasar, folded in upon themselves. The last was the most terrible.

Balasar had been only the first stop in Otah's long, painful morning journey. He'd meant to call on each of the high councillors, to promise his efforts at restoration and the best of care until then. The general had spoiled the plan. Otah did see two more men, made the same declarations. Neither of the others scoffed, but Otah could see that his words rang as hollow as a gourd.

Instead of the third councillor, Otah went back to his palaces. He prayed as he walked, that some message would have come from Idaan. None had. Instead, his audience chambers were filled with the utkhaiem, some in fine robes hastily thrown on, others still in whatever finery they had slept in. The sound of their voices competing one over another was louder than surf and as incomprehensible. Everywhere he walked, their eyes turned toward him.

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