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Shades came at her frail barrier, throwing up sparks, making Silence open her eyes. They backed away, then others came, beating against the silver, their red eyes illuminating writhing black forms.
"Night comes upon us," Silence whispered, choking at the words, "but sunlight will break."
William Ann arched her back, then fell still.
"Sleep now ... my ... my dear one ... Let your tears fade. Darkness surrounds us, but someday ... we'll wake ..."
So tired. I shouldn't have let her come.
If she hadn't, Chesterton would have gotten away from her, and she'd have probably died to the shades then. William Ann and Sebruki would have become slaves to Theopolis, or worse.
No choices. No way out.
"Why did you send us here?" she screamed, looking up past hundreds of glowing red eyes. "What is the point?"
There was no answer. There was never an answer.
Yes, that was light ahead; she could see it through the low tree branches in front of her. She was only a few yards from the waystop. She would die, like Grandmother had, mere paces from her home.
She blinked, cradling William Ann as the tiny silver barrier failed.
That ... that branch just in front of her. It had such a very odd shape. Long, thin, no leaves. Not like a branch at all. Instead, like ...
Like a crossbow bolt.
It had lodged into the tree after being fired from the waystop earlier in the day. She remembered facing down that bolt earlier, staring at its reflective end.
Silver.
Silence Montane crashed through the back door of the waystop, hauling a desiccated body behind her. She stumbled into the kitchen, barely able to walk, and dropped the silver-tipped bolt from a withered hand.
Her skin continued to pull tight, her body shriveling. She had not been able to avoid withering, not when fighting so many Shades. The crossbow bolt had merely cleared a path, allowing her to push forward in a last, frantic charge.
She could barely see. Tears streamed from her clouded eyes. Even with the tears, her eyes felt as dry as if she had been standing in the wind for an hour while holding them wide open. Her lids refused to blink, and she couldn't move her lips.
She had ... powder. Didn't she?
Thought. Mind. What?
She moved without thought. Jar on the windowsill. In case of broken circle. She unscrewed the lid with fingers like sticks. Seeing them horrified a distant part of her mind.
Dying. I'm dying.
She dunked the jar of silver powder in the water cistern and pulled it out, then stumbled to William Ann. She felt to her knees beside the girl, spilling much of the water. The rest she dumped on her daughter's face with a shaking arm.
Please. Please.
Darkness.
"We were sent here to be strong," Grandmother said, standing on the cliff edge overlooking the waters. Her whited hair curled in the wind, writhing, like the wisps of a shade.
She turned back to Silence, and her weathered face was covered in droplets of water from the cras.h.i.+ng surf below. "The G.o.d Beyond sent us. It's part of the plan."
"It's so easy for you to say that, isn't it?" Silence spat. "You can fit anything into that nebulous plan. Even the destruction of the world itself."
"I won't hear blasphemy from you, child." A voice like boots stepping in gravel. She walked toward Silence. "You can rail against the G.o.d Beyond, but it will change nothing. William was a fool and an idiot. You are better off. We are Forescouts. We survive. We will be the ones to defeat the Evil, someday." She pa.s.sed Silence by.
Silence had never seen a smile from Grandmother, not since her husband's death. Smiling was wasted energy. And love ... love was for the people back in Homeland. The people who'd died to the Evil.
"I'm with child," Silence said.
Grandmother stopped. "William?"
"Who else?"
Grandmother continued on.
"No condemnations?" Silence asked, turning, folding her arms.
"It's done," Grandmother said. "We are Forescouts. If this is how we must continue, so be it. I'm more worried about the waystop, and meeting our payments to those d.a.m.n forts."
I have an idea for that, Silence thought, considering the lists of bounties she'd begun collecting. Something even you wouldn't dare. Something dangerous. Something unthinkable.
Grandmother reached the woods and looked at Silence, scowled, then pulled on her hat and stepped into the trees.
"I will not have you interfering with my child," Silence called after her. "I will raise my own as I will!"
Grandmother vanished into the shadows.
Please. Please.
"I will!"
I won't lose you. I won't ...
Silence gasped, coming awake and clawing at the floorboards, staring upward.
Alive. She was alive!
Dob the stableman knelt beside her, holding the jar of powdered silver. She coughed, lifting fingers-plump, the flesh restored-to her neck. It was hale though ragged from the flakes of silver that had been forced down her throat. Her skin was dusted with black bits of ruined silver.
"William Ann!" she said, turning.
The child lay on the floor beside the door. William Ann's left side, where she'd first touched the shade, was blackened. Her face wasn't too bad, but her hand was a withered skeleton. They'd have to cut that off. Her leg looked bad, too. Silence couldn't tell how bad without tending the wounds.
"Oh, child ..." Silence knelt beside her.
But the girl breathed in and out. That was enough, all things considered.
"I tried," Dob said. "But you'd already done what could be done."
"Thank you," Silence said. She turned to the aged man, with his high forehead and dull eyes.
"Did you get him?" Dob asked.
"Who?"
"The bounty."
"I ... yes, I did. But I had to leave him."
"You'll find another," Dob said in his monotone, climbing to his feet. "The Fox always does."
"How long have you known?"
"I'm an idiot, mam," he said. "Not a fool." He bowed his head to her, then walked away, slump-backed as always.
Silence climbed to her feet, then groaned, picking up William Ann. She lifted her daughter to the rooms above and saw to her.
The leg wasn't as bad as Silence had feared. A few of the toes would be lost, but the foot itself was hale enough. The entire left side of William Ann's body was blackened, as if burned. That would fade, with time, to grey.
Everyone who saw her would know exactly what had happened. Many men would never touch her, fearing her taint. This might just doom her to a life alone.
I know a little about such a life, Silence thought, dipping a cloth into the water bin and was.h.i.+ng William Ann's face. The youth would sleep through the day. She had come very close to death, to becoming a shade herself. The body did not recover quickly from that.
Of course, Silence had been close to that, too. She, however, had been there before. Another of Grandmother's preparations. Oh, how she hated that woman. Silence owed who she was to how that training toughened her. Could she be thankful for Grandmother and hateful, both at once?
Silence finished was.h.i.+ng William Ann, then dressed her in a soft nightgown and left her in her bunk. Sebruki still slept off the draught William Ann had given her.
So she went downstairs to the kitchen to think difficult thoughts. She'd lost the bounty. The shades would have had at that body; the skin would be dust, the skull blackened and ruined. She had no way to prove that she'd taken Chesterton.
She settled against the kitchen table and laced her hands before her. She wanted to have at the whiskey instead, to dull the horror of the night.
She thought for hours. Could she pay Theopolis off some way? Borrow from someone else? Who? Maybe find another bounty. But so few people came through the waystop these days. Theopolis had already given her warning with his writ. He wouldn't wait more than a day or two for payment before claiming the waystop as his own.
Had she really gone through so much, still to lose?
Sunlight fell on her face and a breeze from the broken window tickled her cheek, waking her from her slumber at the table. Silence blinked, stretching, limbs complaining. Then she sighed, moving to the kitchen counter. She'd left out all of the materials from the preparations last night, her clay bowls thick with glowpaste that still shone faintly. The silver-tipped crossbow bolt still lay by the back door. She'd need to clean up and get breakfast ready for her few guests. Then, think of some way to ...
The back door opened and someone stepped in.
... to deal with Theopolis. She exhaled softly, looking at him in his clean clothing and condescending smile. He tracked mud onto her floor as he entered. "Silence Montane. Nice morning, hmmm?"
Shadows, she thought. I don't have the mental strength to deal with him right now.
He moved to close the window shutters.
"What are you doing?" she demanded.
"Hmmm? Haven't you warned me before that you loathe that people might see us together? That they might get a hint that you are turning in bounties to me? I'm just trying to protect you. Has something happened? You look awful, hmmm?"
"I know what you did."
"You do? But, see, I do many things. About what do you speak?"
Oh, how she'd like to cut that grin from his lips and cut out his throat, stomp out that annoying Lastport accent. She couldn't. He was just so blasted good at acting. She had guesses, probably good ones. But no proof.
Grandmother would have killed him right then. Was she so desperate to prove him wrong that she'd lose everything?
"You were in the Forests," Silence said. "When Red surprised me at the bridge, I a.s.sumed that the thing I'd heard-rustling in the darkness-had been him. It wasn't. He implied he'd been waiting for us at the bridge. That thing in the darkness, it was you. You shot him with the crossbow to jostle him, make him draw blood. Why, Theopolis?"
"Blood?" Theopolis said. "In the night? And you survived? You're quite fortunate, I should say. Remarkable. What else happened?"
She said nothing.
"I have come for payment of debt," Theopolis said. "You have no bounty to turn in, then, hmmm? Perhaps we will need my doc.u.ment after all. So kind of me to bring another copy. This really will be wonderful for us both. Do you not agree?"
"Your feet are glowing."
Theopolis hesitated, then looked down. There the mud he'd tracked in shone very faintly blue in the light of the glowpaste remnants.
"You followed me," she said. "You were there last night."
He looked up at her with a slow, unconcerned expression. "And?" He took a step forward.
Silence backed away, her heel hitting the wall behind her. She reached around, taking out the key and unlocking the door behind her. Theopolis grabbed her arm, yanking her away as she pulled open the door.
"Going for one of your hidden weapons?" he asked with a sneer. "The crossbow you keep hidden on the pantry shelf? Yes, I know of that. I'm disappointed, Silence. Can't we be civil?"
"I will never sign your doc.u.ment, Theopolis," she said, then spat at his feet. "I would sooner die, I would sooner be put out of house and home. You can take the waystop by force, but I will not serve you. You can be d.a.m.ned, for all I care, you b.a.s.t.a.r.d. You-"
He slapped her across the face. A quick but unemotional gesture. "Oh, do shut up."
She stumbled back.
"Such dramatics, Silence. I can't be the only one to wish you lived up to your name, hmmm?"
She licked her lip, feeling the pain of his slap. She lifted her hand to her face. A single drop of blood colored her fingertip when she pulled it away.
"You expect me to be frightened?" Theopolis asked. "I know we are safe in here."
"City fool," she whispered, then flipped the drop of blood at him. It hit him on the cheek. "Always follow the Simple Rules. Even when you think you don't have to. And I wasn't opening the pantry, as you thought."
Theopolis frowned, then glanced over at the door she had opened. The door into the small old shrine. Her grandmother's shrine to the G.o.d Beyond.
The bottom of the door was rimmed in silver.
Red eyes opened in the air behind Theopolis, a jet-black form coalescing in the shadowed room. Theopolis hesitated, then turned.