realize that there was only one person staring at her.
Her uncle.
He was standing at an upstairs window, looking down at her. He was perfectly motionless for a moment, then he dropped the curtain.
Léirsinn wished she hadnât seen that.
She made a production of looking at something on the other side of the path, some rubbish bit of fauna she was sure she couldnât have identified even if death had loomed, then took herself back to where she belonged as quickly as possible. She spoke to no one, ignored a pair of new lads Doghail had unearthed from heaven only knew where, then fetched a pitchfork and set to work on stalls that Acair had already done.
She fully intended that the work should drive that feeling of something she refused to call terror out of her, but it only seemed to magnify it. Something foul was afoot and she absolutely didnât want to be in the midst of it. The sooner she got herself and her grandfather out of SÃ raichte, the better, no matter what she had to do. She could only hope she would manage it before it was too late.
A seânnight. Surely nothing terrible would happen in that time.
She had no idea what she would do if it did.
Four
A cair prayed for death.
He didnât pray, as a general rule, though heâd surely listened to his share of prayers being blurted out by those he had plied his usual trade on.
Then again, those lads had been fearing for their lives from things they should have been afraid of. He was simply suffering from an abundance of sore muscles. He wondered why anyone would choose laboring in a barn for his lifeâs work. If the flies werenât biting, the horses were, and that didnât begin to address all the things on his bootsâboots that werenât his lovely, handmade, buttery-soft, black leather bootsâhe wasnât accustomed to.
He was now fully convinced the only reason Soilléir and Rùnach had sent him to his current locale was to torture him. Keep him safe? What an enormous pile of horse manure.
He had to admit it was possible that he deserved a bit of it. He didnât have very many redeeming qualities, but he was at least honest about his failings. He was a bastard and he knew it. That complete lack of kindness and mercy served him well, but it tended to earn him powerful enemies. It had never occurred to him that he might someday count a stableful of annoying horses in that number of souls who didnât care for him, but it had just been that sort of year so far.
He shifted on a rickety stool that was absolutely not equal to the task of providing him with any secure place to rest and wondered what insult would come his way next.
He watched in less astonishment than resignation as a very plump pigeon flapped into the barn and came to perch on his knee. Unoriginal, but he was generally the only one in any given locale with any imagination. He was accustomed to lesser offerings.
The bird proffered its leg as if it knew what its business was, which it no doubt did. He untied the message attached there, then unrolled it.
Do one good deed a day. Iâm counting
.
It wasnât signed, but it didnât need to be. Rùnach wouldnât have cared what the bloody hell Acair did with his days; Soilléir, on the other hand, was enjoying the entire fiasco far too much. This was exactly the sort of thing he would have done to pour salt in the wound.
The bird plucked the message out of his hands, tossed it up in the air, then managed to swallow the damned thing whole. Well, at least it hadnât left a messâ
He looked down at his boots, then back at the bird. Damn him if the beast didnât laugh at him and flap away. Acair stared at his boots and supposed pigeon leavings were no worse than horse droppings. Since at least one of the two seemed to be his lot in life for the foreseeable future, no sense in getting himself in a snit over it.
He listened to the thoughts running through what was