leave of absence from the Shield, Nico barely recognized the man who eyed his son as though looking at a stranger, and sat by himself out in the rain, and never smiled, and seldom spoke, and drank heavily. An atmosphere developed inside the cottage. His father would shout over the smallest of annoyances, till Nico grew tense and ever-expectant of trouble.
He took to going outside more with Boon, the two of them wandering the forest and the land around their cottage. When the weather was bad, Nico would stay in his room, with the door shut, and recount in his mind the stories that he knew, or recall The Tales of the Fish he had seen in his visits to the city, thus passing the time in idle fantasy.
One night, his father drank himself into a rage so consuming that he attacked Nico’s mother, dragging her around the room by the hair while Nico yelled and begged for him to stop. He struck out at Nico and knocked him to the floor. Then, just as suddenly, stopped, blinking down at his son’s shocked expression, before he stumbled out into the night.
Returning the next morning, his father packed his personal things and left, while Nico and his mother still slept huddled together in his small bed. Nico felt as though his world had given way beneath his feet. His mother had cried for a long time after that.
Nico now clenched his fists in the close darkness of the cell, and sighed. ‘He had his reasons for leaving,’ he said to the unseen man.
The cigarillo puffed, puffed, faded.
‘Aye, well, scared or not, you’d know better than any I reckon.’
‘What do you mean by that?’
‘I mean to say the blood of the father most certainly runs through the son. What’s true of him will be true of you.’
Nico felt the heat flushing his cheeks. He turned away from the stranger, wanting no more from him.
Shouts echoed from another cell, the words barely intelligible; a madman raving about how the Mannians were coming from across the sea to burn them all alive.
The glow of the cigarillo quickly vanished as the visitor stubbed it out against his palm. He grunted as he rose, and then he paused there, muttering something to himself. As he turned back to Nico, his heavy hand sought his shoulder and patted it once.
‘You’re all right now, son,’ the man said. ‘You can sleep now.’
He left with the lingering flavour of the smoke still coiling where he had sat.
No one else bothered Nico after that.
*
His mother came in the morning, dressed all in black as though attending a funeral. Her eyes were puffy from crying and the red hair pulled tight against her head gave a pinched, determined set to her features. It was the first time Nico had seen her in over a year.
Los was with her, clad in his best, pretending to be piously shocked at this thing young Nico had done. It was Los who spoke first, as they stood facing each other through the bars that separated inmate from visitor, in the dim, cool vault that served for these occasions.
‘You look a mess,’ he said.
Nico was lost for words. His mother and Los were the last people he had expected to see before him.
‘How did you know?’ he asked her, keeping his voice low.
His mother approached as though to reach out to him, but she was prevented by the bars and anger flashed suddenly in her eyes.
In a cold tone, she replied: ‘Old Jaimeena saw you being dragged through the streets by the Guards, and was good enough to ride out and tell me.’
‘Oh,’ Nico said.
‘ Oh? Is that all you have to say for yourself?’
Her anger was like a breath of air against his own; it fanned embers that had lain dormant in him since the day he walked free from the cottage.
‘I didn’t ask you to come here,’ he snapped. ‘Nor him, either.’
Surprise crossed her face, and Los came to her side, all the while fixing Nico with hard eyes.
Nico stared back. He’d be damned if he would be the first to look away.
His mother made to speak, then faltered. All at once her shoulders