shuffled back another step, then took advantage of my inattention to snatch a few strands of grass that poked out among the rocks, proof that horses have no imagination.
I shook my head in reply to Wandelâs comment. âNah, that would have been too easy. Surely all the tales that youâve told will win you a more glorious and painful fate.â
He laughed. âIâll keep that in mind while we try this again.â
Kith was waiting for us at the top by the time Wandel urged the Lass forward. This time, I held Duck back until the Lass was on the far side of the rock sheet before letting him follow. When I reached the small meadow at the top, the others were already loosening their cinches. I dismounted and followed suit, slipping the bit so Duck could graze while he rested.
âThe place I want to camp is about a league from here,â said Kith. âThat will give us an early night, but there arenât very many good places to camp past there. Weâll make it to town by late afternoon anyway.â
âRight,â I agreed, not feeling all that fresh myself. Sitting in the dark for a week wasnât the best preparation for a trek through the mountains. Wiping the sweat from my forehead with the back of my sleeve, I looked around and tried to match what I saw with my last journey here.
âHmm,â I said, âthis isnât too far from where we camped that time, is it?â I didnât wait for Kithâs reply. âWerenât there some runes or something on some rocks down there?â
âRunes?â inquired the harper.
âMmm. Want to take a look while the horses rest?â
âIâll stay with the horses,â Kith volunteered.
There was something in his voice that caused me to look sharply at him, but the expression on his face was simply reserved.
âIâd like to see them,â replied Wandel, though he groaned as he stood up from the knee-high boulder heâd been sitting on.
âWalking will help keep you from stiffening up,â I said, trying both to sound wise and not to look as stiff as I felt.
The harper raised his eyebrows with hauteur that would have done Lord Moresh proud. âMy child,â he intoned, âwhen you have traveled as many miles as I, you will understand that nothingâ nothing âkeeps you from stiffening up.â
âIf you donât come back by sunset, Iâll come looking for you,â Kith offered, watching as I searched for the right place to set off back down the mountain. He might have been amused, but it was hard to tell.
The path I chose wasnât the same one the three of us had taken almost twenty years ago. As I recalled, weâd been trying to find a way down that would allow us to avoid the skree slope (that the boys had already been across once). Weâd run into thorn thickets at the very base of the mountain and had had to climb all the way back to our starting point, but scrambling around had led us toâ¦
âThere,â I said pointing to a large, reddish rock balanced against another, both easily taller than three men standing one atop another.
I had led us too far down, so we had to scramble back up to the site.
âHere,â I said, panting. âOn the underside, where the weather couldnât wash them away.â
They werenât as impressive as Iâd remembered them. Merely worn black lines on stone, almost pictures but not quite. Wandel didnât seem to mind.
He scrambled close to the faint marks and crouched on his heels with an ease that gave lie to the stiffness heâd been complaining about. He frowned a moment, then opened his purse and unwrapped a bit of char. With a delicate touch he added a mark here and there, sometimes merely darkening what was already there, but once he added a whole series of the little symbols.
âCan you read it?â I asked in unfeigned awe. I could read a little, thanks to Gramâbut