We both fell silent for a time, pondering the few bits of information we had. If their
destination had been Withywoods, they should have arrived. Perhaps they had, and then
passed through the town to a more distant destination. There were not enough facts
to make even a puzzle, let alone a solution.
Here is another interesting bit for you. When my spies reported back to me that they
had no news of either a pale traveler or those merchants, one asked if I had interest
in tales of other strangely pale folk. When I replied that I did, he told me of a
murder along the King’s Road four years ago. Two bodies were found, both in foreign garb. They were discovered by the King’s Guard
during a routine patrol. One fellow had been bludgeoned to death. Beside him was found
another body, described as a young girl, pale as a fish’s belly with hair the color
of an icicle. She, too, was dead, but there was no sign of violence done to her. Instead
she appeared to have been dying of some wasting disease. She was near-skeletal but
had died after the man, for she had torn strips from her cloak to try to bandage his
wound. Perhaps her companion had been tending her, and when he was slain she had died
as well. She was found a short distance from his corpse, near a small campfire. If
they had had supplies or mounts, they were stolen. No one ever came to ask after them.
It seemed a strange murder to my spy. They killed the man, but left the sickly woman
alive and untouched. What sort of highwaymen would do that?
I felt oddly chilled by the tale. Perhaps she was hiding when they were attacked. It could be nothing.
Or, it could be something. Chade’s considering tone invited me to speculate. A small bit of information. She wore yellow boots. As did your messenger.
Unease prickled my scalp. That Winterfest night flooded back into my mind. How had
Revel described the messenger? Hands as white as ice. I had thought them bloodless
with cold. What if she had been a White? But Chade’s news of a murder was four years
old. My messenger had come three winters ago. And his spies had brought him news of
another messenger, or perhaps two, only twenty days ago. So possibly a succession
of messengers, possibly Whites. Possibly from the Fool? I wanted to think about it
alone. I wanted none of it to be so. The thought of a missed message from him tore
my heart. I denied it. And it could be something that has absolutely nothing to do with either of us.
Somehow, I doubt that. But I shall let you go back to your bed now. Lack of sleep
always made you irritable.
You saw to that often enough, I retorted, and he annoyed me even further by laughing. He vanished from my mind.