“Well, he’s all taken care of
Kelder looked at her blankly.
“Oh, of course you can, I’m being foolish,” Irith said, waving a hand airily. “I don’t know how she stands it sometimes, a great wizard living with an ordinary person, I really don’t know why she does it, but then, Valder’s an old dear, and she keeps him young with her magic anyway, I wish
She looked anxiously at Kelder for a second, then resumed her good humor and her babbling.
Kelder stared at her. She was beautiful, very beautiful indeed; her hair caught the light spilling in through the window and blazed golden, and every curve of her face was soft and perfect, but somehow that didn’t matter as much as Kelder had thought.
He shook his head. “No,” he said. Zindre had never said he would
Just now, though, he did not particularly care whether he ever saw Shulara again-and what’s more, he didn’t care whether Zindre had been absolutely omniscient, or a lying old thief.
“Good!” she said. “Well, then, we’ll go on to Shan, and you can see it properly, without worrying about nasty old drunks or stealing severed heads or troublesome little children, and we’ll have a
“No,” he said again.
She stared at him. “But Kelder, why
“I’m going to Ethshar,” he said. “To stay, I think.”
“You’re still confused,” she said, patting his arm. “I’ll talk to you again when you’re feeling better, and we’ll decide what to do.” She stood. “Goodbye, Kelder,” she said.
Then she turned and left the room.
He watched her go, her white and gold tunic draping splendidly over her curves, and he realized that she hadn’t changed at all; she was just as she had been the day they met.
And after all, why shouldn’t she be? That was less than a month ago, a month out of more than two centuries, for her. Brief as the time was, though, he knew
And Irith hadn’t.
And she never would.
And really, destined or not, how could he marry a child like that?
Chapter Thirty-Six
Kelder hefted the pack onto his shoulder and looked up.
Irith waved a final farewell, then swooped eastward, her wings gleaming brightly in the morning sun. She dwindled in the distance.
He wondered if he would ever see her again. If he did, he suspected she wouldn’t recognize him, or would pretend not to. And he would not presume on old friendship, he promised himself.
Valder and Asha were busy inside, he knew, but he waved a farewell to them, as well, just in case they happened to be looking out the window. Then he set his foot firmly on the highway and set out toward Ethshar.
He was looking forward to seeing it, to finding himself a place in the city-and perhaps even finding Azraya there.
He had never heard Azraya laugh; perhaps she, too, had a laugh like birdsong. Any number of women might have such a laugh.
And Zindre might have been just a charlatan; it really didn’t matter any more whether the prophecy was absolute truth or nothing but lies. He would live out his life as he saw fit, taking it one step at a time, and not worrying about whether it fit any predictions.
He rather hoped he would meet Azraya again, when he got to Ethshar. Maybe, he thought, they could find a place together.
He smiled at his own eagerness, and shook his head. Maybe they could.
Or maybe not.