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streets and apartments and warehouses, the glitter of winter dew turning

to frost on the stone of the higher passages. He spoke of the choirs who

took the long, empty weeks to compose new songs and practice old

ones-weeks spent in the flickering, buttery light of oil lamps

surrounded by music.

"I'm amazed people don't stay down there," Nayiit said as they turned a

corner and left the white and silver paths of the palaces behind for the

black-cobbled streets of the city proper. "It sounds like one huge, warm

bed."

"It has its pleasures," Maati agreed. "But people get thirsty for

sunlight. As soon as they can stand it, people start making treks up to

the streets. "They'll go up and lie naked on an ice sheet sometimes just

to drink in a little more light. And the river freezes, so the children

will go skating on it. There's only about seven weeks when no one comes

up. Here. This street. There's a sweet wine they serve at this place

that's like nothing you've ever tasted."

It was less awkward than he'd expected, spending the evening with

Nayiit. The first time the boy had come to the library alone-tentative

and uncertain-Maati had been acutely aware of Liat's absence. She had

always been there, even in the ancient days before they had parted.

Maati knew how to speak with Liat whether she was alone or with their

son, and Nlaati had discovered quickly how much he'd relied upon her to

mediate between him and the boy. The silences had been awkward, the

conversations forced. Nlaati had said something of how pleased he was

that Nayiit had come to Machi and felt in the end that he'd only managed

to embarrass them both.

It was going to the teahouses and bathhouses and epics that let them

speak at last. Once there was a hit of shared experience, a toehold,

Maati was able to make conversation, and Nayiit was an expert listener

to stories. For several nights in a row, Maati found himself telling

tales of the Dai-kvo and the school, the history of Machi and the perils

he had faced years ago when he'd been sent to hunt Otah-kvo down. In the

telling, he discovered that, to his profound surprise, his life had been

interesting.

The platform rested at the base of one of the lower towers, chains thick

as a man's arm clanking against it and against the stone as they rose up

into the sky like smoke. Nayiit paused to stare up at it, and Maati

followed his gaze. The looming, inhuman bulk of the tower, and beyond it

the full moon hanging like a lantern of rice paper in the black sky.

"Does anyone ever fall from up there?" Nayiit asked.

"Once every year or so," Maati said. "There's winter storage up there,

so there are laborers carrying things in the early spring and middle

autumn. There are accidents. And the utkhaiem will hold dances at the

tops of them sometimes. They say wine gets you drunk faster at the top,

but I don't know if that's true. Then sometimes men kill themselves by

stepping through the sky doors when the platform's gone down. It would

happen more if there were people up there more often. Otah-kvo has a

plan for channeling the air from the forges up through the center of one

so it would he warm enough to use in the winter, but we've never figured

out how to make the change without bringing the whole thing down."

Nayiit shuddered, and Maati was willing to pretend it was the wind. He

put his arm on the boy's shoulder and steered him farther down the

street to a squat stone building with a copper roof gone as green as

trees with time. Inside, the air was warmed by braziers. Two old men

were playing tin-and-silver flutes while a young woman kept time on a

small drum and sang. Half a hundred bodies were seated at long wooden

tables or on benches. The place was rich with the smell of roast lamb

even though the windows were unshuttered; it was as if no one in Machi

would miss the chance for fresh air. Maati sympathized.

He and Nayiit took a bench in the hack, away from singers and song. The

serving boy was hardly as old as F,iah, but he knew his trade. It seemed

fewer than a dozen heartbeats before he brought them bowls of sweet wine

and a large worked-silver bowl filled with tender slivers of green:

spring peas fresh from the vines. Maati, hands full, nodded his thanks.

"And you've worked your whole life in House Kyaan, then?" Maati asked.

"What does Liat have you doing?"

"Since we've been traveling, I haven't been doing much at all. Before

that, I had been working the needle trades," Nayiit said as he tucked

one leg up under him. It made him sit taller. "The spinners, the dyers,

the tailors, and the sailmakers and all like that. They aren't as

profitable as they were in the days before Seedless was lost, but they

still make up a good deal of the business in Saraykeht."

"Habits," Maati said. "The cotton trade's always been in Saraykeht.

People don't like change, so it doesn't move away so quickly as it

might. Another generation and it'll all be scattered throughout the world."

"Not if I do my work," Nayiit said with a smile that showed he hadn't

taken offense.

"Fair point," Maati said. "I only mean that's what you have to work

against. It would be easier if there was still an andat in the city that

helped with the cotton trade the way Seedless did."

"You knew it, didn't you? Seedless, I mean."

"I was supposed to take him over," Maati said. "The way Cehmai took

Stone-Made-Soft from his master, I was to take Seedless from Heshai-kvo.

In a way, I was lucky. Seedless was flawed work. Dangerously flawed.

Brilliant, don't misunderstand. Heshai-kvo did brilliant work when he

bound Seedless, but he made the andat very clever and profoundly

involved with destroying the poet. They all want to be free-it's their

nature-but Seedless was more than that. He was vicious."

"You sound as though you were fond of it," Nayiit said, only halfteasing.

"We were friendly enough, in our fashion," Maati said. "We wouldn't have

been if things had gone by the I)ai-kvo's plan. If I'd become the poet

of Saraykeht, Seedless would have bent himself to destroying me just the

way he had to Ileshai-kvo."

"Have you ever tried to bind one of the andat?"

"Once. When Heshai died, I had the mad thought that I could somehow

retrieve Seedless. I had IIcshai-kvo's notes. Still have them, for that.

I even began the ceremonies, but it would never have worked. What I had

was too much like what Heshai had done. It would have failed, and I'd

have paid its price."

"And then I suppose I would never have been horn," Nayiit said.

"You would have," Nlaati said, solemnly. "Liat-kya didn't know she was

carrying you when she stopped me, but she was. I thought about it,

afterward. About binding another of the andat, I mean. I even spent part

of a winter once doing the basic work for one I called Returning

to-True. I don't know what I would have done with it, precisely. Unbent

things, I suppose. I'd have been brilliant repairing axles. But my mind