gravely. Leaving the jug on the boardwalk, he stood and walked to where the cart lay. Righting it he moved to the dogs, untying the reins. Shamol nuzzled his hand, but Cabris took off immediately toward the woods in search of Lady. Shamol ambled after him.
Gwalch recovered his jug and went into the house. He found Sigarni sitting at the table, a dagger before her. Her hair was unwashed, her face drawn, her eyes tired. Gwalch gathered two clay cups and filled them both with mead, pushing one toward her. She shook her head. âDrink it, girl,â he said, sitting opposite her. âItâll do you no harm.â
âRead my mind,â she commanded.
âNo. Youâll remember when you are ready.â
âDamn you, Gwalch! Youâre quick to tell everyoneâs fortune but mine. What happened that night when my parents were butchered? Tell me!â
âYou know what happened. Your . . . father and his wife were killed. You survived. What else is there to know?â
âWhy did my hair turn white? Why were the bodies buried so swiftly? I didnât even see them.â
âTell me about last night.â
âWhy should I? You already know. Berntâs ghost came to me at the pool.â
âNo,â he said, âthat wasnât Bernt. Poor, sad Bernt is gone from the world. The spirit who spoke to you was from another time. Why did you run?â
âI was . . . frightened.â Her pale eyes locked to his, daring him to criticize her.
Gwalch smiled. âNot easy to admit, is it? Not when you are Sigarni the Huntress, the woman who needs no one. Did you know this is my birthday? Seventy-eight years ago today I made my first cry. Killed my first man fourteen years later, a cattle raider. Tracked him for three days. He took my fatherâs prize bull. Itâs been a long life, Sigarni. Long and irritatingly eventful.â Pouring the last of the mead, he drained it in a single swallow, then gazed longingly at the empty jug.
âWho was the ghost?â she asked.
âGo and ask him, woman. Call for him.â She shivered and looked away.
âI canât.â
Gwalch chuckled. âThere is nothing you cannot do, Sigarni. Nothing.â
Reaching across the table she took his hand, stroking it tenderly. âOh, come on, Gwalch, are we not friends? Why wonât you help me?â
âI
am
helping you. I am giving you good advice. You donât remember the night of the Slaughter. You will, when the time is right. I helped take the memory from you when I found you by the pool. Madness had come upon you, girl. You were sitting in a puddle of your own urine. Your eyes were blank, and you were slack-jawed. I had a friend with me; his name was Taliesen. It was heâand anotherâwho slew the Slaughterers. Taliesen told me we were going to lock away the memory and bring you back to the world of the living. We did exactly that. The door will open one day, when you are strong enough to turn the key. Thatâs what he told me.â
âSo,â she said, snatching back her hand, âyour only advice is for me to return to the pool and face the ghost? Yes?â
âYes,â he agreed.
âWell, I wonât do it.â
âThat is your choice, Sigarni. And perhaps it is the right one. Time will show. Are you angry with me?â
âYes.â
âToo angry to fetch me the flagon of honey mead you have in the kitchen?â
Sigarni smiled then, and fetched the flagon. âYou are an old reprobate, and I donât know why youâve lived so long. I think maybe you are just too stubborn to die.â Leaning forward, she proffered the flagon, but as he reached for it she drew it back. âOne question you must answer. The Slaughterers were not human, were they?â He licked his lips, but his eyes remained fixed on the flagon. âWere they?â she persisted.
âNo,â he admitted. âThey were birthed in
Jon Land, Robert Fitzpatrick