She opened her mouth and began to sing the first thing that came into her head: a nursery rhyme she had learned when she was five.
Each step became a test of will. Eventually, she lost the struggle and fell over. She crawled. She had sung all the verses of the nursery rhyme. She began to make them up.
Something moved.
She looked up, blinked, tried to focus. There, behind a tree. Sweet gods. It must be seven feet tall. Goth? Cyarnac? Had she come all this way just to get eaten by something like a huge teddy bear?
A woman stepped out from nowhere.
Marghe blinked again, waited for the mirage to disappear. When it did not, Marghe reached slowly, painfully for her knife. The woman’s taar skin boots and cap, the sling and palo on her belt, were all too familiar, even if the carved disk of bone at her belt was strange and her face was one Marghe had never seen before. She would kill, the woman or herself, before being taken hostage again.
The woman stepped closer, but not within knife range.
“I am Leifin. Daughter of Jess and Bejuoen and Rolyn. Soestre to Kristen.”
“Where are you from?” Marghe’s voice was a whispery croak.
Leifin leaned forward, trying to catch what she said. “I am Leifin. There is no need for your knife.” She took another step forward. “How are you named, stranger? Who are you?”
Marghe thought about that. Who was she? She was not sure. “Where are you from?” she croaked again. The knife point glittered before her eyes.
“Where am I from?” Leifin gestured behind her. “Ollfoss. Three days’ walk away or more.”
The knife point wavered. Ollfoss. Ollfoss. Marghe fell on her face in the snow.
Chapter Nine
« ^ »
THE GYM’S NEON strips were too bright after the cool grays of Jeep’s winter light. Danner stripped out of her fatigues and into fencing whites. Time now, she thought, to lay aside the question of what trap to set for the spy in their midst, Kahn was already warming up, whipping her foil back and forth, shadow-lunging. Danner pulled a foil free of its holding field on the wall, tested it. She had been mulling over the spy problem for weeks now, getting nowhere. She clipped on her face guard. Later.
Kahn waited, her
Neon swam down her blade, twitched as Kahn effortlessly cut over and landed the buttoned tip against Danner’s throat guard.
“The derobement,” Kahn said. “I’d like you to try it with a disengage, then lunge.”
This time it was Danner who assumed the slightly overextended
“You’re bending your wrist again.” Danner straightened it. “Better. Don’t lean forward so much.”
The world focused down to the two blades, her own steady, waiting, Kahn’s moving closer, reflecting light like the scales of a predatory pike. Danner moved. Point under, feint, lunge. Kahn parried, beat aside Banner’s foil, bent her own blade against Danner’s chest.
They parted.
“Again.”
Kahn’s mesh mask glittered like the compound eye of an insect. Metal mask, metal foil. Metal.
Danner assumed the