Murder. Anger and hurt—half-crazed and hungry and half-killed by her father’s wanting her to be different than she was… that was what had killed her. All her life she had fought just to be Eveshka, while her father was trying to wish Eveshka to be something else… and she wanted him to stop it, stop it, stop it—she wanted him dead—
“Shut up!” he yelled at her, and the whole woods seemed hushed, Uulamets and Pyetr both looking at him in startlement, while he stood in the middle of the clearing with his fists clenched. “Shut up, I did what you want, I killed my father and I killed my mother, and you don’t know what you’re talking about! I do, so shut up!”
And while Uulamets was looking his way in shock, while he had the old man’s attention and Pyetr’s, he plunged ahead with the rest of what she had set boiling in him, which he had no certainty he could ever remember in cold blood—
“You,” he said, pointing at Uulamets, and wanting his attention as Eveshka wanted Uulamets to know what he had to say, “you drove your daughter away, every day you wished she was exactly what you wanted—”
“That’s not so,” Uulamets said. “That’s not so. I gave her every opportunity…”
“As long as you thought she was right. What if she just wanted—”
“Was Kavi Chernevog right?” Uulamets stood up, wild-haired, wild-eyed, and turned on Eveshka. “Was it your wishes got you here, girl? Was what you wanted so wise?”
Eveshka dimmed and retreated.
“Young folk,” Uulamets said, “have such potent wishes, and so damned little brains to make them doubt what they’re doing—”
“Old ones,” Pyetr said, from his seat on an old log, “get so damned self-centered.” Uulamets rounded on him and Pyetr said, “Turn me into a toad, why don’t you?” with Uulamets so furious Sasha wished with everything he had that Uulamets would not take that suggestion, but Pyetr kept right on going: “—because you haven’t done so well either, grandfather, or our boat wouldn’t be stuck in sand in the river, and we wouldn’t have had to track you days through the rain and the muck in this woods to rescue you from your own damned foolishness!—And you—” he said, with a look at Eveshka—
The raven screamed from its perch on a limb and made a sudden dive at Pyetr’s face. Pyetr flung up his arms and Sasha flung out an angry wish to drive it away, but quick as he could think it was already kiting skyward, and blood was welling up in a scratch on Pyetr’s wrist.
While Babi, a suddenly very much larger and more ominous Babi, was growling and hissing and bristling about the shoulders, not at Pyetr, as seemed, but looking up after the raven.
So was Uulamets looking skyward, frowning as the raven came back to sit in the top of a tree.
Sasha said, “Remember what I told you, master Uulamets? I’ll remember everything you do. And I don’t need you so much as I did.”
Uulamets turned, wild of eye, finger trembling as he pointed at him. “Now there’s a fool! Don’t need me, do you? You’re going to walk out of here, hike down to Kiev, you and your friend and my daughter, and make your fortune in the streets. Of course you are!—Fool! You can’t get him free of her, you can’t get him free of yourself’, there’s his difficulty! There’s no family for a wizard, there’s no friend, there’s no daughter either. Take a lesson from me! I brought up a wizard-child, I let her grow the way a weed grows, without wishing more than her safety and her good sense, and that, it seems, was unfatherly neglect. When she got to a reasonable age and took to selfish wishes she didn’t want me to know about, we had discussions, oh, indeed we had discussions, boy, about wisdom and self-restraint and consequences—lessons you apparently learned by native wit and my own offspring abjectly failed to learn from my teaching, because my daughter was far more concerned with being a weed—and, like a weed, going her own way and getting what she wanted, having everything I forbade her to touch! My daughter grew up a fool, boy, against every principle I tried to teach her—because of course I was wishing her to learn, and wishing her to use good sense—”
“Your good sense!” Eveshka cried, drifting into the way of things. “What about mine?”
“Oh, indeed! Is there a mine and thine to good sense? There’s one good sense, daughter, and if I have it and you don’t, then you’d do well to listen and do what you’re told!”
“And what if you’re the one who’s wrong? Pyetr’s right! You’re not doing so well, papa! You wouldn’t listen to me, you didn’t want me back, you took that thing in my place and let it sleep in my bed and you treated it the way you never did treat me, because I wouldn’t put up with your nonsense—”
“One hopes his daughter grows! One hopes his daughter learns something after all these years!”
“Everybody shut up!” Pyetr shouted, and quietly then, from his log, elbows on knees: “Does it occur to anyone that maybe something’s wanting us to act like fools, the way something wanted that sail to rip, and maybe it’s not having a real hard go of it, considering what it’s got to work with.”
It certainly made sense. “Pyetr’s got a point,” Sasha said before Uulamets could say anything. “We felt the River-thing out there. It’s somewhere around here. And if that’s what’s happening, maybe we ought to trust Pyetr’s sense about it—being as he’s not magical, and it’s harder for it to confuse him, isn’t that what you told me?”
Uulamets gnawed his lip and cast a narrow glance at Pyetr.
“I’d advise,” Pyetr said, “we get back to the boat, but Sasha says we’ll never make it that far, so what are we going to do? Go on believing the River-thing who told us this was a good idea? Or just salt it down once for all and see if that doesn’t improve our luck.”
“You can’t kill a magical creature,” Uulamets said in a preoccupied way, and walked off to the log where he had been sitting.
“What—?” Pyetr started to say, but: “Shut up!” Uulamets hissed, and went and picked up his book from the log, sat down and started leafing through it.
“More magic,” Pyetr said, and looked at Sasha. “I hope he’s got a way to wish us out of this. Maybe if you and he and Eveshka got together on what you wanted—”
“You can wish a rock to fall,” Uulamets snarled, turning pages. “You can wish a man to rise. But you won’t wish either to fly, and you won’t wish a force of nature not to exist, not if you have any sense.”
“So what would happen?”
“That depends.”
“On what?”
“On strength and intent. Shut up! You’d try a stone’s patience.”
“I want to know,” Pyetr said in a low voice, looking back at Sasha, “how if you can’t wish what can’t happen—what we just buried back there could be walking around and calling him papa.”
Eveshka vanished, just shredded like smoke and whipped away across the clearing to take shape again with her back to them.
“I don’t know the answer,” Sasha said under his breath.
“I didn’t mean to upset her. But that thing’s damned scary. How do we even know the old man’s what he seems to be?”
Pyetr always had had a knack for scary questions. Sasha cast a look over at Uulamets and wished hard, that being all he could think of, to see the truth about him. All he saw was a bony, frightened old man with a book that preserved the things he had done or thought of doing, but which would tell him very little about the things he had never thought of at all.