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Denynê put the anchors carefully into separate jars and sealed them. “You don’t like to think that,” she observed eventually, when Aloê said no more.

“No,” admitted Aloê. “The one companion is Deor syr Theorn, adoptive kin to my husband. The other is Noreê Darkslayer.”

“Ah.”

They went to wash their hands in the stream where Earno had died and sat in silence beside it for a while.

Before they had occasion to say anything else to each other, they heard a rumble of wagon wheels and hoofbeats on the Road. It was the Arbiter of the Peace, Ulvana, with a pair of her servants. Aloê had expected Oluma to be with them, but she was not.

“Fate on a dungfork,” swore Aloê quietly.

Denynê looked at her, eyes wide with surprise.

“Just when we could use a gravedigger,” Aloê said.

Denynê shrugged, nodded.

“Good night and greetings, Vocate,” Ulvana said formally. “I understand you can use my assistance.”

You unspeakable trull! Don’t you see how he hates you?

“Yes, Arbiter Ulvana; many thanks. I see my other second did not choose to return with you.”

Ulvana shrugged. “She said she had some other business.”

“A glut of corpses in town?” Aloê said acidly. “No—forget I said that, please. I’m always speaking before I think, Arbiter.”

“It’s a common enough complaint,” said Ulvana coolly.

“Can your servants help my other second to bring the body back into town? I’ll tend to the incineration myself later on if Oluma is disinclined.”

“I can do it,” Denynê said, her orange-brown lips pale in the coldlights of the wagon.

“No, thank you, Binder Denynê,” Aloê said. “Just tend to the body and keep it safe. At least one of his friends should be there when his body is given to the flames.”

“I was his friend as well,” Ulvana said slowly, “and I would like to be present.”

“There you have it, Denynê. Wait for our return, please. It may be a day or two, perhaps longer.”

The body, dripping cold blood, was lifted gently into the back of the cart and wrapped there with a shroud of kyllen. Denynê and the Arbiter’s servants climbed aboard and drove the cart back down the Road. Aloê and Ulvana stood without speaking until they could no longer hear the cart or its horses, its lights merely a glimmer southward on the Road.

“Do we have words to say to one another?” Aloê asked at last.

Ulvana shook her head. Aloê shrugged, guessing that these words would be said in time, but not now. They mounted their horses (Ulvana taking the one that Denynê had left) and rode northward on the Road.

It wasn’t long before they came to the first encampment. They dismounted and, without speaking, walked around the site. It was easy enough to find the perimeter: the Khnauronts had pissed and shitten where they lay in the night. Someone—Deor, Aloê suspected, from the neat uniformity of the digging—had buried most of the piles of dung, but there were feces smeared on the dry grass and the searing stench of urine all around the camp.

Aloê felt that such a place was a scar on the face of the Wardlands, and she was grimly aware that there were others and worse ones now. The lockhouse in Fungustown must be particularly nightmarish. The land was changing with the world, and not for the better.

But that was not her task to fix. She was here to look for blood, and there was none here. She didn’t need to lift into rapture to know that this was not the murder scene.

“We may be on the Road for days,” she said to Ulvana at last. “Let’s turn in soon and go on in the morning.”

“I have a timber lodge near here,” Ulvana said diffidently.

“Excellent,” said Aloê sincerely. She had a bedroll and some necessities with her, but she never enjoyed sleeping out of doors when she could avoid it.

Ulvana took her horse by the reins and led it into the woods. Aloê followed with her own. They were deep in the thin harvested woods when they came into a moonslit clearing with a bark-covered lodge in its center.

“Any of your people here?” asked Aloê.

“Should not be,” Ulvana said. “We’ve cut as deeply as we should in these woods. In a few decades, perhaps we’ll return. But I come here sometimes to—well, get away from Big Rock.”

Aloê nodded. They settled their horses with some food and water in the garth and then went into the lodge. Ulvana opened the lock by sticking a long ungainly key into it and turning it with her fingers. Aloê tried not to stare; the process seemed as old-fashioned as sailing ships, but she remembered that not everyone had the master of all makers keying their houses. There didn’t seem to be any protective spell on the lodge at all—not even fire-quell magic. That seemed an especially important omission when Aloê watched Ulvana kindle an open flame and use it to light a wick in a lamp filled with oil.

The lodge had a number of beds scattered around its single room, a wood stove in the center, and some shelves laden with storage jars and bottles up against one wall. There was a pump and a sink against another wall, but no obvious door leading to a privy. Aloê guessed that she would soon be reflecting nostalgically on the comforts of Big Rock Inn.

Ulvana rummaged around the shelves for food and drink and said, “I have a keg of cider and a few jars of wine. No beer, I’m afraid.”

“I just drink water on a job like this,” Aloê said. “I’ll need to ascend into vision from time to time.” Drunkenness did not necessarily prevent rapture, but it did limit one’s control.

She dumped her bag by a bed and walked over to the pump. There were some mugs and drinking cans there. She would have liked to wash one before drinking from it, wash it for a year and a day in bite-foam and boiling hot water, but she didn’t want to seem like a pampered princess. She blew the dust off a mug, pumped it full, drank, and then wordlessly offered what was left to Ulvana, who was watching expressionlessly from across the room. Ulvana came over and took the mug from her, drank what was left, and handed it back.

“I’ll be having some wine, though,” she said, as she turned back to the shelves. “Rapture doesn’t suit me, I find.”

That drink of water was some kind of turning point. Thereafter, Ulvana spoke to her about food, drink, sleeping arrangements, and other practicalities, as well as the task at hand. They ate fairly well: pickled cladroot and dried sleer meat, soaked in oil and fried, exchanging a word or two when needed.

After Aloê had yawned a few times and they both agreed it was time to douse the light, Ulvana said, in the quiet conversational tone they’d been using, “I hated you for years, of course.”

“What I said was unforgivable,” Aloê said. “I’ve always been ashamed of it.”

“No,” Ulvana said. “No. I didn’t find that hard to forgive. You were right, of course, about him. He doesn’t really care about any woman—except perhaps you. And that was what I hated you for. My father’s family, you know, has a little money; they work in road repair and trash removal and that sort of thing. But they aren’t, you know, the thing. But Naevros, although he has very little money and no family—he is very much the thing.”

“Yes.”

“I thought—if I were with him—that would sort of rub off. It seemed to for a while. Then it was gone and he was . . . well, he was rather cruel.”

“I’m sorry.”

“It’s not your fault. That’s what I realized, and that’s why I stopped hating you. He probably feels like that about every woman he can have. He doesn’t feel like that about you because he can’t have you.”

“Possibly.”

“Or possibly not, of course. But that was my thinking. And then I thought: what if it had been different? What if I had fucked my way into, I don’t know—being the thing? It still wouldn’t be about me. I’d be nothing—just part of him, not anything in myself.”

This struck close to Aloê’s fears about herself—that she was not Aloê Oaij anymore, but only Morlock’s wife. She said, “I understand.”