Biters, too? The silliness of it restored her confidence. The creature might be confused—and confusing—but she made the gesture of gratitude. It was trying, in its way, to convey a warning. “That should keep them too busy to be trouble,” she suggested.
“Trouble. Tikitik trouble. Tikitik other. Not Makers! Notnot not!! Not First. Not Only. Tikitik Least Is!” The words made no sense, but the Oud flung itself backward in a paroxysm of emotion, limbs writhing. Somehow its cloak remained attached to its back. Whirr/clicks threw themselves into the air and hovered, like a cloud of interested bystanders.
Aryl, having jumped in the other direction, gazed worriedly at the creature.
“I’m going to guess this means no more water.” Her Chosen came to stand beside her. If amused by the spectacle of the Oud Speaker flat on its back, Enris kept it to himself.
“It claims we have enough now, that we’re wasting it.” Aryl let him sense some of her
They’d kept their voices quiet, though the sound didn’t appear to bother the Oud Speaker. However the creature, finished whatever display it required, rolled back to its feet and reared, stones and dirt sliding off its cloak, whirr/clicks settling to the ground. “Waste,” it agreed, as if the other matter—of Om’ray “tunnels” and Tikitik and care—had been forgotten.
Then it made the
“What was—” Enris gripped her arm, stared at the Oud. “Is it a Torment?”
“No Power I. Speaker.” The Oud lowered itself slightly. A conciliatory posture, Aryl decided. Hoped. “Balance good. Peace good. Om’ray, Oud. Best is. Us. Best is. Tikitik. NononoNO. Water more than?”
It couldn’t mean what she feared, could it? Their two races, somehow working against the third . . .
He was right. The mug would shatter on the floor. The world would end. Taisal had warned there’d be no safety for Om’ray if the Oud and Tikitik weren’t at peace. None for the life inside her.
“Sona abides by the Agreement,” Aryl said calmly, though inside she trembled. Rage or terror? They felt the same. They were the same. “You will abide by the Agreement, you will keep the peace of Cersi, or I will tell the Strangers to leave, now. You will never know about your past.”
The Oud sank lower and lower until it was flat against the ground.
She took a shaky breath. “Good.”
He was right, of course. Now that Hoveny artifacts had been found, not even Marcus could stop his people from coming.
And it wouldn’t be a lie.
“I—”
Every Oud in the clearing suddenly reared and turned to face in the direction of Sona. The Speaker rocked back and forth, uttering that
“Stop—” she pleaded. The
“Sona Om’ray less than.”
Enris stiffened. “Who!?”
She
Eyes shut, she buried her face into his chest and closed her mind until all she could feel was her place in the world and his presence, until she no longer heard the echo of
Until she knew it was over.
Everything became too quiet.
“Someone’s gone into the M’hir. Gone in and not—not come out.” She’d never heard his voice break before. “Who?”
The quiet trapped the name, protected her for a heartbeat, let her breathe. Once. Again.
Then, she knew.
Ael d’sud Sarc.
Her uncle, with his bright eyes and clever wit. Fostered with Haxel’s family. Connected to everyone . . .
Aryl clung to Enris with all her strength; his arms were like bands of metal, keeping her safe, keeping them together. They had to be; there was no other Choice. She didn’t care if Oud or Human watched or wondered. They were not-
Only Om’ray knew their fate, should their Chosen die.
Ael was gone.
And Myris, his Chosen, was Lost.
The First Scout burst into the Meeting Hall. “What happened?” The scar was drawn stark and white against her reddened skin. Aryl wouldn’t have been surprised to see a knife in her hand.
For what good it would do.
The others looked up, weary with grief, unsettled by Haxel’s barely contained