FIVE
HAYA had already made her decision as to how she
would treat this stranger from the sky. She placed the
city-dwelling Singer on a stool next to hers. Seo raised an eyebrow
as he settled on his stool, set on her other side. “You honor
him?”
Warriors were coming into the tent now, so Haya
kept her voice low. “What harm? I am told he is a Singer, and I
offer him honor. If he is not, then he will have offended me and I
have reason to kill him. Either way . . .” She shrugged.
“Yet your token is not displayed.”
Haya looked at Seo out of the corner of her eye.
“Well . . . there is honor, and there is honor.”
Seo snorted. “Good to know that you have not lost
all your wits. Even if you invited all but the gurtles to see your
guest.”
“Warriors only, and the children we might release
to the armies soon.” Haya gestured to a server for kavage. “Their
curiosity is close to killing them. If I didn’t, they’d be finding
reasons to visit this tent for days.”
“True,” Seo said in agreement. “Besides, the young
need to see that city dwellers are people much like us. All
knowledge is good.”
Haya accepted kavage, and they talked of trivial
matters, surrounded as they were by warriors and young ones. The
tent was crammed for the meal and people came and went, rotating
their duties so to see the city dweller from the sky.
The Singer . . . Ezren . . . seemed to understand
that he was on display, and it did not faze him. But he was
watching everyone around him. Those green eyes followed every move
when the servers began to work their way through the crowd with
pitchers and bowls of water for the hand-washing ritual. Ezren
focused on her as Haya was offered water for her hands—and he
copied her movements. There was sharp thinking behind that smile.
She’d heard that city dwellers ate with metal, but again he watched
her using her fingers and the flat bread to eat, and he didn’t
hesitate to do the same.
He’d no fear of the unknown. He sat smiling,
drinking kavage, and trying different foods. Those nearby delighted
in his responses and at one point roared with laughter when he
tried some of the spiced meat. The burn caught him by surprise, but
after a gulp of kavage, he took more and really seemed to enjoy
it.
Nor was he stupid. He was asking what things were
called and people’s names, and picking up a fair number of them
quickly. He was learning their language. She’d have to keep that in
mind.
She noted other things as well. There wasn’t a lot
of fat on this one. In her days in the raiding armies, she’d seen
many a city dweller fleeing her blade. This one was thin, and there
was scarring at his wrists. Deep scarring that meant he’d been
restrained for some time and struggled against that
restraint.
At one point he rose, gave Haya and Seo a bow, and
stepped through the crowd. Haya expected him to leave the tent, but
instead he went to check on the woman. He just stuck his head in,
and then returned to his place, apparently satisfied. He cared for
her, that was clear. As to what he was to her, or she to him, well,
that could wait.
The meal wound down, as the warriors took their
leave and the room cleared. Seo stood, and that was the signal to
the last of them that the meal was over. The young would clean and
clear.
Ezren stood and stretched as well, then bowed to
Haya and Seo. “My thanks, Elders.”
“Our thanks as well, Singer.” Haya responded. Seo
gave the man a nod, and Gilla led him off. The young one would see
to his needs.
Seo yawned. “Time to seek my bed.”
“Share mine,” Haya offered.
“Share or talk?”
Haya smiled. “Share then talk.”
Seo smiled and reached for her hand.
GILLA and her friends got the cleaning duties.
Again. She sighed as she scrubbed a pot with clean sand, up to her
elbows in hot water.
“You truly saw them fall out of the sky?” Cosana
paused in her drying to stare, her large brown eyes wide in her
heart-shaped face.
Gilla nodded, rubbing the pot with the tips of her
fingers, looking for any burnt food.
“That must have been something to see,” El mused as
he scrubbed another mug. Gilla wasn’t sure which was worse:
scrubbing cooking pots or mugs. The pots were hard, but there were
so many mugs. When she was a warrior, there’d be none of this for
her.
“I don’t believe it,” Arbon muttered, shaking his
black-blue curls at her. He was drying mugs and placing them in
their storage baskets.
Gilla dropped her pot back into the water and
reached for her dagger, baring her teeth at him.
“Stop,” Chell said calmly, stepping between them.
The tall, thin black girl gave them both a commanding look with her
dark eyes, made even more powerful by her short clipped hair.
“Arbon, you are an idiot. Do you hold her token?”
Arbon glared at both of them from under his curls.
“She’s no right to take offense. We’re still children.”
“By a day or maybe two.” Chell started to stack the
clean, dry cooking utensils. “But once we are released, you’ll be
fighting every hour unless you watch your mouth. Think before you
speak.” The tall black girl looked at Gilla. “And you don’t need to
be so quick. It is hard to believe.”
Chell was always the sensible one. Gilla released
her dagger and returned to her pot. “There is truth in that. But it
is what happened, and I wasn’t the only one who saw. Urte saw as
well.”
“Tell us again,” Lander demanded as he added hot
water to the washing. “Tell every detail. It’s something to sing
about.”
Gilla looked at Cosana, and they both rolled their
eyes and smiled at each other. The others did the same, used to
Lander’s ways. The big blond had always wanted to be a Singer from
the day he’d learned his first chant, and he always wanted to know
what had happened.
Ouse came up with kettles of hot water in each
hand. He smiled at Gilla, his red hair and freckled cheeks made
even redder by the setting sun. His brown eyes crinkled as he
spoke. “Tell him, Gilla, or he will pester you to death.”
“A death to sing about,” Tenna spoke up from the
other side of the fire.
That made them all laugh, as Tenna always did. She
looked so sweet, with her angled eyes and straight black hair
trimmed with bangs, but she had a wicked sense of humor.
Gilla obliged, telling it again, telling Lander all
the details.
“He looks so normal,” Cosana commented. “I’d
thought city dwellers short and fat.”
“They’re supposed to stink, too,” Tenna said. “But
the Warprize didn’t, did she Gilla?”
“Gilla has all the adventures,” Lander
complained.
“I only saw her for a moment,” Gilla said. “And
only long enough to point her in the direction of the Heart. But
come to think of it, she wasn’t very tall, either.”
“Maybe only a few are short and fat.” Arbon stood,
towering over Gilla.
“I doubt the woman is short,” Chell said. “She
looks long on her pallet.”
“That horse is huge,” Ouse said.
Gilla frowned as she scrubbed at a stubborn spot.
“Yes, and then there is the cat.”
“Cat?” they chorused.
She rolled her eyes and explained. “The last I saw,
it was sleeping next to Bethral.”
“You get to see everything,” Lander
complained.
“Is this the last of them?” El straightened and
handed the last mug to Cosana. “Please tell me this is the last of
them.” He focused his smiling brown eyes on Gilla.
A chorus of “ayes,” and they all set to work to
finish the cleaning and clearing. Once they were done, they were
free to seek their tents.
“Share mine?” El asked Gilla as they walked toward
their tiny tents.
“No, thank you,” Gilla said, evading his
hand.
El shrugged, and turned to another.
Gilla walked off alone, pleased. Once her duty to
the tribe had been fulfilled, she’d earned the right to her own
small tent. She enjoyed the solitude and the quiet.
She crawled in and started to prepare for sleep.
Alone. The others thought her odd, not sharing, but she didn’t
care. She’d done her duty to the Tribe and now she was free to
decline as she willed.
At first, she’d been excited about sharing,
learning the ways of pleasure between partners. But after that it
seemed to her to lose some of its allure.
The Singers sang of the special joys of bonding, of
the love between two people who committed to each other, and each
other alone. That was what she wanted—a commitment from a partner
she respected. Someone who wanted to walk by her side for the rest
of her days.
She sighed as she settled on her pallet and pulled
the blankets up. Bonding was only for those who had done service in
the armies of the Warlords. And truth be told, she hadn’t met
anyone who she was interested in bonding with. It would take
time—maybe even years.
She was certain it was worth waiting for, so wait
she would. Who knew what the winds would bring? The others had
their plans, but she was content to wait and see.
She closed her eyes, and tried to sleep, but a pair
of green eyes flashed in her mind. That Singer was good-looking.
Old, but he had a nice smile. Were the city dwellers bonded? She
doubted it, given that Bethral had asked for separate pallets. Of
course, she was hurt, but still . . .
Gilla huffed at her own silliness and turned over
on her side. She closed her eyes, determined to sleep. There’d be
answers in the morning, and maybe, just maybe, they’d be made
adults on the morrow. Gilla shivered in excitement. To leave the
thea camp and go out in the world. To be able to challenge
and—
Winds, she’d never get to sleep at this rate.
SEO pulled Haya in close as the night air cooled
their overheated bodies. He nuzzled her neck, licking the soft skin
by her ear.
Haya hummed her appreciation, then fixed him with
her bright eyes. “We need to talk.”
Seo groaned. “You’ve worn out my body, my lovely
one.”
“I need your mind.” She arranged herself in his
arms. “And the privacy of the night.”
Seo gave her a sharp glance. “You’d not bothered
with my mind before you offered the shelter of your tent to the
strangers. Why ask now?”
Haya stroked his cheek. “Because I still have
decisions to make, wise one. I know how you feel about Keir of the
Cat and the changes he would bring.”
“Young colt.” Seo frowned. “He’s full of fire,
ready to sweep all the Plains with his changes. Now this division
within the Council of Elders, Elder fighting Elder, Warrior-Priest
fighting Warrior-Priest. What good comes of his changes, eh?”
Haya reached over and smoothed the lines of his
forehead. “Yet, you stared at the strangers’ horse until I thought
you’d forgotten to breathe.”
“It is lovely,” Seo agreed. “So big! I wonder what
its young would be like, bred into our herds. And that cat—small
and fierce.”
“I do not know what to make of this. I’d already
sent for the warrior-priests who would conduct the rites for the
children. But this matter”—Haya sighed—“it raises concerns for more
than just the Tribe of the Snake.”
“It does,” Seo agreed. “So?”
“If the Council had not been sundered, I would send
for the Eldest Elders of the Plains,” Haya said. “All of them,
including Wild Winds. They could make decisions about the
strangers.”
“Hmmm.” Seo paused. “Eldest Thea Reness went with
the Warprize to Xy. Eldest Singer Essa is somewhere close to the
Heart, he always is. There is no Eldest of the Warriors, not since
the sundering. And the Eldest of the Warrior-Priests . . . To
summon Wild Winds? Is that wise?”
“I don’t know from wise,” Haya replied. “But I’d
have this information open to the skies. No sense trying to hide
it—the tale is probably already on the wind.” Haya shivered a bit,
as her skin cooled. “Besides, I want to know more about Keir and
his actions. I must decide where to send the young soon. Do I send
them to the Heart of the Plains, for the spring contests, as if
nothing had happened? Do I send them to serve under Osa of the Fox,
and avoid all conflict? Or do I send them to Keir or Antas
directly, and choose a side?”
“You could split them up, sending some to both,”
Seo said.
“Which is like riding two horses at once.” Haya
growled. “I do not see my way clear in this. I would have preferred
to talk to Reness. She was ever the sensible one.”
“As the Elder Thea of this camp, it is your choice.
None can overrule your decision,” Seo said absently, his thoughts
wandering.
“What is it?” Haya asked.
“I . . .” Seo’s voice trailed off for a moment as
he considered. Haya watched him, waiting.
“Perhaps it is nothing, but I am uneasy.” Seo
frowned. “Maybe it is just this talk of change, but . . . I would
move the main camp.”
Haya’s eyebrows rose. “How so?”
“It is a feeling. If I leave you here with the
strangers, a handful of warriors and the young, I could move the
life-bearers, the babies, and the others off a few miles. Not to
separate, but to”—he hesitated—“to keep the littlest ones
safe.”
Haya put her hand on his cheek. “Your instincts
have always been good, warrior.”
Seo kissed her, then pulled the blankets up over
their bodies. “Let us sleep on the matter, since that is all the
wit I have left to do.”
“I’ll hold off on any decisions for a while.
There’s time.” Haya decided. “After the Rites.”
“The young ones may explode with not knowing.” Seo
yawned. “Call a senel and speak with the warriors. Consider the
truths of all, then make your decision.”
Haya nodded. “In the meantime, the Singer of the
City and his token-bearer will be my guest. We will see if they can
learn our ways.”
“They will learn, or they will perish. So it has
always been.” Seo growled. “Now sleep.”
Haya huffed out a breath, but she closed her eyes,
content.