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Uncle Thulu’s dark face creased in a grin. “The Bearer is hungry!”

“Yes.” He smiled back around a mouthful of meat. “I am.”

“Good.”

For a long time, neither of them spoke. There was only the sound of teeth rending meat, the murmurs of gladdened bellies. Between them they picked the bones clean and sucked them. Their little fire crackled merrily. Dani had lit it himself, twirling a sharpened stick between his palms until the pine mast he had gathered caught and glowed, sending a tendril of smoke into the clean air. A good thing, as cold as they were.

When they had done, Uncle Thulu leaned back and patted his belly. “Ah,” he sighed. “That’s good.”

“Uncle.” Dani hunched forward, wrapping his arms about his knees, staring at their fire. Afternoon shadows played over his features and the clay vial strung about his neck bumped his bare, bony kneecaps. “Where are we? What has become of us? What has become of Malthus?” He rested his chin on his knees, his expression miserable. “What do I do now, Uncle?”

“I don’t know, lad.” Uncle Thulu’s voice was brusque. Leaning forward he placed another deadfall on the fire. “We’re in Staccia, I think. Or Fjeltroll country. North.”

“It’s cold.” Dani shivered.

“Aye.” Uncle Thulu watched a shower of sparks rise. “A good job that Blaise bought cloaks for us. Wish I’d taken him up on the boots. Might have, if they’d fit.”

Dani regarded his own feet, bare and calloused, broadened by a lifetime of walking on the desert floor. He did not mind the stones, but the beds of his toenails were faintly blue. “It’s cold here.”

“Aye.” Uncle Thulu nodded. “We’re in the north, all right.”

He lifted his head. “He must have had a plan.”

“Malthus?”

Dani nodded.

“I don’t know, Dani.” His uncle picked at his teeth with a splintered bone, thoughtful and frowning. “I don’t think he reckoned on the Sunderer’s army being in the tunnels. I think he did his best to protect us, that’s all. Sent us as far away as he could. As to what happens next, that’s up to you.”

“I don’t want to decide!”

His voice sounded childish. Uncle Thulu gazed at him silently. He sighed and bowed his head, cupping his hands in front of him. The radiating lines that marred his palms conjoined, forming a perfect star. What a simple, silly thing! Why should it mean he, and he alone, could draw the bucket from the well? But it did, and he had. The proof of it was bound on a cord around his neck. Dani swallowed, remembering the words that had first stirred him, spoken by Malthus. Yet in the end, the fate of Urulat rests in your hands, Bearer. He had heeded the Counselor’s words. He had drawn the Water of Life. He had borne it. In Malumdoorn, it had drawn life out of death. He remembered that, the green leaves springing from dead wood, the surge of joy he had felt at the sight.

“The choice is yours, Dani.” Uncle Thulu’s voice was gentle. “Always and forever. That is the trust Uru-Alat bequeathed to the Yarru-yami, revealed to us by Haomane’s Wrath. We ward the Well of the World. You are the Bearer.”

Dani hunched his shoulders. “What if I refuse?”

“Then that is your choice. Do you want to go home?” With the tip of his bone-splinter toothpick, Uncle Thulu pointed southward, to the left of the lowering sun. “It lies that way, Dani. The rivers of Neheris run south. We have but to follow them until they sink beneath the earth and the desert begins.”

It was heavy, the vial. It hung about his neck like a stone. The water in it—the Water of Life—could extinguish the very marrow-fire. It had seemed like a glorious destiny at Birru-Uru-Alat. To think he held the power, cupped in his hands, to heal the world! The danger had seemed very far away. Even on the marsh-plains, when they had been attacked, it seemed there was no danger from which Malthus could not protect them. Not any more. Not since the Were had come out of the forest, silent and deadly. Not since he had seen the army of Darkhaven in the Ways in its incomprehensible numbers, led by one of the Three. All that Malthus said; it was true. Satoris the Sunderer had raised a vast legion and he meant to conquer the world.

And the Company that had sworn to protect the Bearer …

“Do you think any of them are left alive?” he asked.

“I don’t know, Dani,” Uncle Thulu said. “It didn’t look good.”

He turned his head and gazed in the direction of the setting sun, thinking about their companions. Malthus, whom he had believed could do anything. Blaise, steady and competent. The Haomane-gaali, Peldras, so gentle and wise. Proud Hobard, whose anger was not really anger, but a thing driven by fear. Fianna, who was kind and beautiful. And Carfax—oh, Carfax! The Staccian had saved him in the end. Tears stung Dani’s eyes. A golden wash of light lay over the mountain peaks, casting the valleys in shadow. Already the sun’s warmth was fading. He dashed away his tears with the back of one hand and took a deep breath. “How far is it to Darkhaven?”

Uncle Thulu shook his head. “I cannot be sure. A long way.”

“Can you find it?”

There was a pause. “Are you sure that’s what you want?”

“Yes.” Dani laced his fingers about his knees to hide their trembling and met his uncle’s somber gaze. “If they died, they died trying to protect me. And if they did not …” He swallowed. “I would be ashamed to have them know I failed without trying.”

Picking up his digging-stick, his uncle hummed deep in his chest, a reassuring and resonant sound. “Then we will find it, Dani. You are the Bearer, and I have promised the Yarru-yami to remain at your side, to guide your steps no matter how you choose.” He turned the stick in his hands, humming absently. “Where water flows beneath the earth, I will chart the ways. When we find the taint of the Shaper’s blood, we will follow it to Darkhaven.”

“Good.” His burden felt lighter for having decided. He edged closer to his uncle. They sat in companionable silence, sharing the warmth of their cloaks, watching blue twilight descend over the mountains. “Uncle?”

“Aye, lad?”

“We’re not likely to live through this, are we?”

The deep humming faltered. He looked up to meet his uncle’s gaze. “No,” Uncle Thulu said quietly. “Venturing into the bowels of Darkhaven? Not likely, lad.”

He nodded, remembering the gleam of moonlight on the pelts of the Were, the companions they had abandoned. “That’s what I thought.”

“I’m sorry, Dani.”

“It’s all right.” Beneath his cloak, Dani fumbled for the vial at his throat, closing his fingers about its strange weight, obscurely comforted by his burden. “Uncle, what do you think he meant?”

“Who?”

He shivered. “The Slayer. The man with the black sword. ‘Listen,’ he said.”

Uncle Thulu gazed at the fire, his hands gone still on his digging-stick. It was dark now, and the flickering light cast shadows in the hollows of his eyes and the crease beside his broad nose. “I don’t know, Dani,” he murmured. “I am only the guide. You are the Bearer.”

“He sought to kill Malthus.”

“Aye.” His uncle nodded. “Aye, that I believe he did.”

He held the vial, pondering its heft. “Well,” he said at length. “It is a long way to Darkhaven. We will see.”

“Aye,” his uncle said softly. “That we will.”

The marasoumië was loosening its grip on Tanaros.

The terrible will he exerted was only part of it. In truth, he should not have been able to prevail against Malthus; not with the wizard wielding the Soumanië. Once he regained a measure of his depleted strength, Malthus should have been able to wrest himself into the Ways, sealing Tanaros in the Marasoumië.