Daj led her to where an old man sat on a carved and painted bench. His face was grooved like a winter road. A cane rested at each knee; his feet were almost in the fire. Daj curtsied to him, not elaborately, but the way a sandpiper might dip its beak, natural and fast, without reverence. “If a woman might pass among you and speak,” said Daj. And then, without waiting for an answer, she said: “Rye Baro. I have brought a guest. This is Plain Kate Carver, of Samilae. She would go the Roamer way.”
Rye Baro had eyebrows like caterpillars before a long winter. He raised one. “With these
“Aye,” said Daj. “She’s orphan, I’m told, and has nowhere else.”
Behind them, someone said, “Are we a pack of dogs, then, taking in strays?” Plain Kate turned. The man had Behjet’s face, but the whole way he held himself was different. He sat hunched up like a drawn bow.
“Are we dogs, then, talking piss at the fire?” Daj clouted the man on the head affectionately. “Show manners, Stivo.”
The man—Stivo—shrugged. Twins, Plain Kate realized. Behjet and Stivo were the twins she had seen selling horses in the Samilae market, a few weeks before.
“Well, it wouldn’t be manners to set her loose in wild country, would it?” said Rye Baro. He had a voice like a fine rasp: rough but polishing. “Makes a man wonder how she got into wild country with the Roamers in the first place.”
“Hmmm,” said Daj with a wink in her voice. “That is a puzzle.”
No one seemed puzzled or much surprised. “Behjet says her people want to burn her for a witch,” said Stivo.
“Aye,” said Daj. “He said that to me too.”
The whole circle turned to Stivo, and waited. He poked at the fire, sending sparks spiraling up into the rainy darkness. The fire hissed. Stivo said nothing. A log snapped and crackled. And still Stivo said nothing.
At last Daj spoke again. “Plain Kate is a carver,” she said. “We need one of those.”
“We get by well enough, seems to me,” Rye Baro mused.
“If the yellow
“Do they carve those now?” Firelight played across Rye Baro’s face. “I hadn’t heard.”
“She makes objarka.” Daj wrapped an arm around Plain Kate like a wing around a chick. “Best I’ve seen. They’ll sell, and for silver too, not copper.”
“In the market of Toila?” said Rye Baro.
Daj nodded. “That was my mind.”
“Come here,
Plain Kate stood up.
“This is your duty, then, child,” said Rye Baro. “To earn a place by your skill, and coins for your clan.” Plain Kate took a step back, staggered by the weight of the words
Burji. While objarka drew good luck, objarka burji scared bad luck away. They had the faces of demons.
Plain Kate had no interest in ugly things, but she answered, “Yes, Rye Baro.”
And back at her own fire she lifted her face into the kiss of the rain.
Only much later did she remember what Behjet had said:
¶
The Roamer
Plain Kate greased her boots and bandaged her feet, and soon she could walk like a Roamer born. She helped Drina with the water and the wood, and in the long, wet evenings she carved the objarka burji.