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Sasha gave him a strange look then—blinked and looked at him, laid a chilled hand on his and clenched his fingers. “I’m all right,” he said, and Pyetr’s confusion went away from him, Eveshka’s presence suddenly so quiet he felt drawn to look and see if she was there.

Something stopped him from turning his head. Something held him looking into Sasha’s face. Something told him not to be afraid.

And by everything he had been through he knew better than that.

But Sasha said to him, quietly, “Whatever else—whatever else, it’s got to get me first, Pyetr. And that’s not easy any more.”

He felt his arm begin to shake in its awkward position. He felt the cold of the ground under his knee. “Listen,” he said, fighting it out word by word, “I’m grateful, understand. But don’t do that. Don’t wish me not to worry about you, boy! That’s damned foolish, isn’t it?”

Sasha blinked and his mouth made a desperate, thin grimace of a smile. His grip tightened. “Yes.—But she’s not fighting me. She knows it’s not good for her. It’s all right a while. I can keep her away. Don’t worry about it.”

“Try asking out loud, like a polite boy.”

The grimace broadened into something like a grin. Sasha patted Pyetr’s hand, drew a deep breath and sat back on his heels.

As if it was Sasha, a wise, bone-weary boy carrying far too much on his shoulders. Pyetr rubbed the back of his neck and looked at him a second time, refusing to ask himself what they had just buried, or whether Uulamets’ daughter had ever had a heart in her life—until she borrowed Sasha’s.

And threw it back again, maybe before Uulamets broke it altogether.

Or maybe because Sasha’s own unselfish kindness would not let her hold on to it… and that was the inevitable trap she had fallen into.

“So what are we going to do?” he asked Sasha. “Do we even know grandfather’s sane?”

“I think he’s sane,” Sasha said, and added, with a tremor in his voice: “If any wi/ard is. I think after a while—after a while—”

“You’re not crazy,” Pyetr said. “I’m not sure about him, but I do know you, boy, and you’re not going his way. If you want my ignorant advice—wish us out of here. Fast. Grandfather with us.”

“When you wish, things happen that can happen, and not always the way you want.”

“What was this thing we just buried, then? What was with Uulamets, fixing us breakfast and sleeping in his daughter’s bed? Was that something that can happen? Not in Vojvoda, it can’t!”

“I don’t know,” Sasha said in a subdued voice, and with an uncomfortable glance at the pile of dirt between them. “We know what it was—but I don’t know for sure what raised it.”

“There’s at least two choices,” Pyetr muttered.

“At least two,” Sasha said, and looked aside as Pyetr did, where Uulamets sat beyond a screen of branches, beside the ashes of last night’s fire. “Maybe wanting something so much—”

“He didn’t want herl He wanted a daughter who’d agree with him, say, ‘Yes, papa,’ and keep his house clean.”

“That’s certainly what he got,” Sasha said, “isn’t it?”

CHAPTER 23

EVESHKA WAS SILENT, withdrawn: she had surely spent a great deal of her borrowed strength to dispel the Fetch or whatever had been, as Pyetr put it, making their meals and sleeping in their company. Now she drifted as a ghost, pale, apparently aimless, among the trees that curtained the grave and Uulamets’ fireside.

So it fell to him, Sasha supposed, since Pyetr and master Uulamets were not on the best of terms, to broach urgent matters with the old man.

He had washed his hands in the little spring that ran from this place, he had washed the leaves out of his hair and used Pyetr’s razor to scrape the little mustache off his lip, which made him, aunt Denka would have said, look as if his face was dirty. It seemed respectful, at least, not to approach master Uulamets looking like a vagabond—even if master Uulamets’ clothes were mud-stained and his hair and beard were stuck through with twigs and bits of leaves.

Master Uulamets had his book with him. But he was not reading it or writing in it, only holding it in his arms and staring off into the woods, as if the forest held all the answers he wanted.

Sasha bowed and cleared his throat when master Uulamets seemed not to notice him. “We’ve taken care of everything. Pyetr thinks we might go back to the boat and think things over. I don’t think we really can, but maybe you know—”

Uulamets did not so much as look at him.

“We had no idea where you’d gone,” Sasha said. “Eveshka led us. We ran into a leshy. He helped us.”

Not a flicker of interest.

“He lent her enough strength to get here,” Sasha said. “But he said she mustn’t take any more from his woods. He doesn’t like us being here.”

Going on and on without master Uulamets’ acknowledgement seemed impertinent as well as futile. He was sure that a wizard of Uulamets’ skill had to know most of what had happened without a boy telling him more than the details; and he found himself more afraid of the old man than he had ever been—a fear from what origin he suddenly suspected.

She left me things, he had said to Pyetr, when Pyetr had tried ever so delicately to ask him if there was lasting harm in what Eveshka had done.

She taught me things, Sasha thought now.—I know why she did it. I still remember how clearly I could think on some things, and where I was blind… and I think I know why.

I knew how to be scared. That must be different than other feelings—at least when it’s for yourself.

I could worry about Pyetr… I knew he was my friend: I wouldn’t even want to be myself again without him, but only knowing he was important to me was enough to keep me doing right things—because they were the smart things.

Pyetr would say, Boy, don’t be stupid. But he’d mean, Don’t get hurt and don’t hurt people—because he never was üke those friends of his: he wouldn’t have broken aunt Ilenka’s churn on purpose, and certainly not if he knew it was her grandmother’s.

He’d say he was sorry if he knew that, and he’d really mean it, because he doesn’t always think through what he does: he can’t wish somebody dead. But he’s real smart about people, and what’s right and wrong—

And if a wizard doesn’t have somebody like him—and if he’s put his heart away someplace and he can’t feel what’s right, who’s going to tell him not to be a fool about what he wants?

Master Uulamets had stopped listening a long time ago, it seemed to him—even to Eveshka.

So he stood there and stood there, and finally cleared his throat again.

“Excuse me, sir. If you’re thinking, I apologize and you don’t have to listen, but we’re going to fix lunch and if you don’t have any idea what we ought to do after that, we’re going to pack up and start back to the boat and see if we can get it backed out i again.” I Uulamets said, “Not likely.”

“What is likely, sir?”

“Go away,” Uulamets said.

Sasha drew a deep breath, clenched his fists and told himself master Uulamets was probably listening and taking what he said into account even if he gave no sign of it.

Eveshka hardly seemed to think so. Eveshka was angry. He felt it. He wished her not to wish anything for a while… “Please,” he said aloud as he walked away and left Uulamets in peace. “Pyetr and I are tired. Please. Not now.”

He felt a shiver in the air—impatience, fear, anger. Always the anger. She was weaker, and that could only go so far—

I can’t die, she insisted he know, terrified; and other thoughts that kept bobbing up in his mind—