âEvidence has been presented against you for the crimes of violating orders, falsifying orders, fraternizing with mages, causing the death of a member of our Order, and conduct unbecoming your station by fraternizing with a disgraced former member. Do you defend yourself from these charges?â
âI do,â Kevik told the assembled tribunal.
Priest Tibonâs lip twitched, as if he hadnât expected Kevik to speak in his own defense. Sir Jesson had coached him on how to respond.
âThen say what you want to say,â the priest replied.
Kevik stood. âI admit to the charge of falsifying orders. I reject the charge of violating ordersâI never received any messages ordering our return to Larso, and the tribunal hasnât presented any evidence showing that I did. On the charge of fraternizing with mages, it was those mages who spearheaded the assault against the dragon. We had no army, so we had to make do with whoever was willing to help. Iâll remind you, the expedition was assembled by the town of Four Roads. I had no say in its composition.â
âYou shouldnât have been involved at all,â Tibon said. âField Marshal Tregood himself turned down Four Roadsâ request for aid, under the kingâs seal and with Knight Commander Sir Norisâs agreement.â
Kevik shrugged. âI never received any orders to that effect. On the charge of fraternizing with Corec Tarwenââ he emphasized the family name to remind the tribunal that Corec was the son of a member of the peerage, ââhe commanded the expedition and paid for it. I was hardly in a position to do so myself.â
âCorec Tarwen is a mage and a failed knight. You know very well it goes against our precepts to associate with him.â
Every knight was aware of the strictures against fraternizing with mages, but the lesser charge of unbecoming conduct had been a surprise. Though each knight spoke the oaths, those oaths represented only a tiny fraction of the rules they were expected to obey. The more esoteric were located in musty tomes no one had bothered to read in years, except when the priests wanted to punish someone.
But the conduct charge carried a lesser penalty than the others, and Sir Jesson had warned Kevik that pleading ignorance wouldnât help his case.
âI did what I did to save lives,â he said. âWithout Corecâs help, a lot more innocent people would have died. As for Sir Willemâs death, I will always regret that, but it was the dragon that killed him. I reject the charge.â
âWe will take your defense under advisement,â Tibon said, then huddled together with the other three priests, excluding the only knight on the tribunal, Sir Loris. Loris sat back with his arms crossed, glaring at the group.
After a whispered conversation, the priests returned to their seats.
âWell, Sir Loris?â Tibon asked. âYour judgement?â
âI find Sir Kevik responsible in the charge of falsifying orders. Heâs admitted that himself. For all other charges, I find him without fault. Circumstances dictated his actions.â
âOf course you would say that,â the priest replied.
Sir Loris pushed his chair back and climbed to his feet, looming over the others at the table. âWhat are you insinuating, Tibon?â
âSit down, Loris, unless you want us to hold a second tribunal today.â
Loris returned to his seat, his fingers flexing near where his sword hilt would be if heâd been wearing the blade. But regardless of the circumstances, a Knight of Pallisur couldnât challenge a Priest of Pallisur to a duel of honor.
Tibon didnât bother to hold back his smirk as the knight obeyed the command. Turning back to Kevik, the priest said, âIn the absence of evidence, the tribunal is willing to drop the charge of violating orders. As for the rest, it seems Sir Loris has been outvoted. In the charge of causing Sir Willemâs death, we find you at fault. In the charges of unbecoming conduct, fraternizing with mages, and falsifying orders, we find you responsible. You are hereby stripped of your knighthood and ordered to depart Fort Hightower immediately.â
Sir Jesson, sitting in the small audience, gave a quick twitch of his head to remind Kevik of the next step.
âIâll appeal to Telfort,â Kevik said.
âYour appeal will be denied, Mister Kevik. Sir Noris has already approved your expulsion. You have two hours to leave the fortress, and you have until tomorrow at sundown to leave town.â
If Noris was already aware of the outcome, then the tribunalâs vote had been a sham. It would have taken several days to get a pigeon message to Telfort and back. The decision had been made before Kevik had presented his defenseâwhat little defense he could muster.
He held still, standing tall as the others filed out of the room. The Order had been his life since heâd become a page at the age of seven, working his way up to become a squire two years later. He didnât come from the peerage like Corec, or have a shopkeeper father like Trentinâs who could afford to buy his son a knighthood. This was the only life he could remember. What was he supposed to do with himself now?
Only Sir Jesson remained behind. With Kevik expelled from the Order, nobody wanted to be seen talking to him. Even Sir Loris had disappeared.
âIâm sorry,â Jesson said. âTibon and his cronies are free to do whatever they want now that the unblessed have taken over the Order. It wouldnât have happened this way twenty years ago.â
âNoris backed them,â Kevik said.
âHe only heard their side of the story. You could try going to Telfort yourself.â
âDo you think itâs worth it?â
Jesson hesitated. âHonestly, no. Even if Noris agreed to a new tribunal, it would still be made up of the unblessed. Iâve never understood why the true priests left the city. I suppose they figured they could do more good in the smaller towns, and could leave the administrative work to the unblessed, but somethingâs got to be done about it.â
âWould the blessed priests have reacted any differently to a knight fighting alongside a mage?â Kevik asked. The earliest texts in the scripture decried only dark magic, but the priests of Pallisur had always interpreted that to mean any magic used by someone other than a priest of Pallisur. In the later texts, magic and dark magic had come to mean the same thing.
âI donât know. We worked with priests of other orders during the North Border War, but wizards? I just donât know. Do you have family to go to?â
âNone worth speaking of.â
Jesson nodded. âI feel like I had this same conversation with Corec. He went off and became a caravan guard. He must have done well for himself, given what youâve told me. Your skills would certainly be in demand, whether you stay in Larso or not.â
Kevik hadnât thought that far ahead. Yes, he could find work even in Larso, but the rumors would follow him. His knighthood had been stripped away, and people would learn of it eventually.
Perhaps he should follow Corecâs example and leave the kingdom entirely. Without the Order, what else was holding him here?
âI should get going,â he said, not wanting to prolong the painful conversation. âThey only gave me two hours.â
Jesson clasped his forearm. âThank you for bringing the news about Corec. He doesnât write much. Is he still at his old boarding house?â
âI donât know about that, but he said he was planning to stay at the keep and fix up the roads. You could send a courier to him there. Or a pigeon message to Sister Treya at the Three Orders chapter house in Four Roads.â
âSister Treya? Heâs taken a concubine?â
âI didnât ask.â If Treya was a concubine, she wasnât like any concubine Kevik had ever met before.
Jesson nodded. âGood luck, then.â
They made their farewells and Kevik hurried to the small room heâd lived in since taking his oaths. No one was there to see him off.
He belted on his sword, then took the armor and shield Corec had given him out to the stable and bundled them onto his muleâs pack saddle. His other weapons all belonged to the Order, so heâd have to leave them behind. When he returned to the stable again with the rest of his belongings, Georg was there waiting for him.
âGoing somewhere?â the older knight asked.
Kevik tensedâGeorg was armored, and wearing his sword belt. Was he looking for revenge?
âThey kicked me out.â
âSo I heard. The rumors started before the tribunal was even over. The only question was whether youâd be exiled from the kingdom as well.â
Georg had testified against Kevik at the tribunal, though in fairness, heâd only spoken the truth. Kevik couldnât fault him for that.
âNo, not exiled, but â¦â
âThe free lands?â Georg asked.
âHow did you know?â
âIt seems to be the place to go for disgraced former knights. You think we can get fortresses too? I wouldnât mind being landed gentry.â
Kevik blinked in surprise. âWhy are you coming? You werenât expelled.â
âBecause itâs bollocks,â Georg said. âWe killed a dragon. We should be heroes. Instead, theyâre all treating us like we have the plague. Itâs about time I retired anywayâI donât need this nonsense anymore. I was thinking about going for Armsmaster, but Javin gave the job to someone else while we were away.â
Kevik stared at him for a moment. âWell, if youâre going with me, youâd better get your things.â
Georg clicked his tongue and his horse and mule stepped out of their stalls, already saddled and packed.
âLike I told you,â the man said, âeveryone knew before the tribunal was over. You got a girl?â
That was private, but what did it matter now? âHer father works for the priests. She hasnât spoken to me since the tribunal started. You?â
The knight snorted. âWhat woman would have me?â
âSir Kevik?â said a high-pitched voice. A page had snuck up on them. He held out a small, folded slip of paperâa pigeon message.
âNot anymore,â Kevik said.
The boy furrowed his brow in confusion.
âJust give him the damned message,â Georg said.
The page handed it over.
Warn Corec heâs in danger. âBarat
Kevik flipped it over but thatâs all there was.
In danger? From what? Corec was no longer part of the Order, and no longer subject to its rules. The priests had no say over what happened in the free lands. Even in Larso, there were areas where magic was no longer strictly illegal.
Barat was stationed in Telfort these days, which was probably how heâd heard Kevik had come into contact with their old friend, but why was the message so short? Even for pigeon post, Barat could have added more information than that.
Kevikâs first destination in the free lands had been obvious, given its proximity, but at least now there was a reason for it other than just begging for advice from the last person whoâd been expelled from the Order.
âLetâs go,â he told Georg.
#
The smell of the ocean and the sound of seagulls flying overhead brought back memories as Katrin followed the dirty urchin through the back alleys of the docks district in Circle Bay.
âHeâs right through there,â the boy said when they arrived at a seedy gaming den. âThey play in the second card room along the far wall. Iâm not allowed in.â
âThank you, Jun,â Katrin said. âHere you go.â She handed him two coppers, twice his normal fee.
He grinned at her. âYouâre a good one, Kat,â he said before scampering away.
Katrin took a deep breath and blew it out, then pushed through the swinging door and entered the smoke-filled room. As she made her way around the maze of gaming tables, the more dangerous-looking men in the place glanced up and stared before dismissing her as a threat. Some eyes lingered, but nobody seemed to recognize her.
That changed when she reached the room Jun had indicated. Besides Barz, there were three members of his old crew and two other men sheâd never seen before. They were playing a six-hand game that was much trickier than the four-person game Katrin played with her friends. Judging by the way they were seated, they were each playing on their own rather than in teams of two.
âKatrinâs back!â one of the crew said with a grin. âBarz, why didnât you tell us?â
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âHeya, Kat, sing us a song!â another added.
âLeave,â she said, allowing power to flood her voice. âThe game is over.â
The five men jumped up and scrambled out of the room without another word. Perhaps sheâd overdone it. Barz stared at her, flummoxed, his eyes darting to the door as he tried to figure out what had just happened.
âKatrin, what ⦠? Whyâd you tell them to go? We were in the middle of a game.â
âI didnât want to wait for you to finish.â
âBut I was winning!â Barz said. Heâd played the emperor of crowns, and had added both a general and a soldier to his house.
Katrin flipped over two of the cards sheâd seen on her way in. âNo, you werenât,â she said. âMelosh had the death of crowns. Youâd have had to sacrifice both your other cards to save the emperor, and then the fellow sitting next to him could have played the bard of cups. Youâd have been out before the round was over.â
Barz cursed under his breath and tossed his remaining cards on the table. âWhat are you doing here?â
âThatâs how you greet me after all this time?â
He stood and gave her an awkward hug. Barz had never been good at showing emotion. âYouâre finally home? Are you staying this time?â
âNo, I just came to see you. Iâve got a job for you, if you want it.â
He furrowed his brow. âYouâre doing a job?â
âNot that kind of job. We took over a fortress in the free lands, and I own a tavern there. I need someone to run it for me. I wonât have time to take care of the place myself.â
âThe free lands?â he said. âWhy would I want to go to the middle of nowhere?â
âItâs not so bad. Weâve got a whole little village there, and thereâs an apartment for you and Ana above the tavern. We donât have much business yet, but thereâll be trading caravans in the future.â
He gave her a suspicious look. âI donât know anything about running a tavern.â
âItâs a tavernâitâs not hard. Youâd serve drinks and manage the inventory. We donât have a brewer, so youâll need to order ale and whiskey from Four Roads. And apple brandy, apparently. Itâs a good deal, a silver a day plus half the profit.â
âI make more than a silver now at the docks.â
âWhat, eleven coppers a day? Twelve? You think you canât make up the difference in profit? And donât forget having a free place to live.â
âI donât want to work for that fellow with the sword.â
âYou mean Corec, the man who paid forty gold to get you out of prison?â She let the silence extend for an uncomfortable length of time. âWell, you wouldnât be working for him; youâd be working for me. If you steal, youâre stealing from me.â
Barz scowled. âI wouldnât steal from you!â
âOr anyone else. I mean it, Barz. Youâre my brother and I care about you, but if you cause problems, I wonât protect you from Corec.â
âWhy are you acting like this?â
Katrin sat down across from him. âYou always looked out for me, Barz. You protected me for years. I want to look out for you, too, but I canât deal with all this anymore.â She gestured to the door his friends had used. âDalloâs dead, you know. Hanged in Tyrsall for muscling in on the docks. Torse is dead, tooâsomeone left him draped over the Unity Fountain with his guts at his feet, right in front of his fatherâs house.â Razai probably hadnât known that last bit when she did it. Or maybe she had. âThe rest are either dead or working in the quarries. If you were still in Tyrsall, youâd have been with them.â
âWell, Iâm not in Tyrsall, am I?â
âAnd what about here? Youâre hanging with the old crew. How long until they bring you in on a job?â
He looked down, not answering.
âThey already have,â she said flatly. âDoes Ana know?â
âNo,â he said. âIt was just the one time. We needed the money. Anaâs pregnant, and she had to stop serving tables. When the harbormaster learned I could do figures, he promised to make me an overseer, but then he found out Iâd been in prison. Iâd already told Ana we could move somewhere nicer, and â¦â He shrugged.
Katrin took a pouch out of a hidden pocket in her skirts and dropped it on the table. It was the coin sheâd been saving for her brother until she could figure out a way to get it to him. It landed with a heavy thunk.
âYou want money? Here. Twenty gold. Enough to buy a little house if you want, or enough to live on for a while if you stop drinking and gambling.â
He hefted the bag. âWhereâd you get this much gold? I donât want any more of his money.â
âItâs mine, and youâre lucky thereâs anything left. I spent most of what I had hiring soldiers to hunt down a dragon.â
His eyes shot up to meet hers. âWhat?â
âItâs a long story. The gold is yours if you want it, but I know you, Barz. Even with the money, how long will it be before you get tempted again? How long until your friends convince you they need your help with one more job? So, I guess you have a choice. Take the gold and see how long itâll keep you out of trouble, or start a new life in the free lands.â
She waited for him to answer.
Two hours later, when she met up with Leena to return to the keep, the gold was back in her pocket.
#
As another group of well-wishers wandered off, an older gentleman grabbed Saretteâs hand and shook it vigorously. âIncredible, what an incredible tale. Do you know, I think you might be the first of our people to ever face a dragon in battle?â
âBorya, donât crowd the girl,â Head Magister Inessa chided, approaching them. âStormrunner Sarette, please meet Magister Borya.â
âA delight to make your acquaintance,â Borya said, giving her hand one last shake before letting go. âAnd I understand youâve brought us news about the expedition to find Tir Yadar as well.â
âYes, but â¦â Sarette glanced around, then waved Ariadne over. Leena had brought the Chosar woman to Snow Crown earlier that afternoon, using the warden bond to target Saretteâs location.
Sarette made the introductions, then said, âAriadne is from the Bancyra region in Cordaea, and sheâs been working closely with Lady Ellerie on the information from Tir Yadar. She can tell you more about the notes Ellerie sent than I can.â She spoke in trade tongue, since Ariadne would draw too much attention to herself if she used the Necklace of Tongues to learn the stormborn language.
âYouâre a scholar, then?â Borya asked Ariadne, then cocked his head to the side. âAnd youâre seaborn, yes? Iâve never seen one of the seaborn so far inland before. Isnât Bancyra landlocked?â
âIt is,â Ariadne said. âIâm not a scholar, but Iâm familiar with Ellerieâs notes. Iâm helping her and Bobo with the two books theyâre writing, one about Tir Yadar and the other about the Chosar.â
âIâve heard that word before,â Inessa said. Borya nodded in agreement.
âThe people who came before,â Sarette said. âThey were the Chosar.â
Borya frowned. âThereâs been speculation about all of the old tribes for which we have names, suggesting this one or that one were those who came before, but thereâs never been any evidence.â
âWeâre certain,â Ariadne said. âThe Chosar founded Tir Yadarâand Tir Navis as well. The notes we brought donât cover everything, but Ellerie promised to send copies of the books once theyâve been printed.â She kept her words circumspect, not having decided how much she was going to tell them about the Chosarâor about her own place in the story.
Boryaâs fingers twitched. âI need my books. Perhaps Evgeniâs Origins ⦠no, no, that wonât do. What aboutâ?â
Inessa laid her fingers on his arm. âI think the books can wait this one time,â she said.
âOh, yes, of course.â He turned back to Ariadne. âBut you have to tell us more! How did you learn about the connection?â
Ariadneâs expression grew anxious, but before Sarette could intervene, her mother swooped in, leading another woman.
âSarette, dear,â Natasya said, âhave you met Malina?â
Sarette tensed, but kept a careful smile on her face. âWe havenât spoken before,â she said. âItâs good to meet you, Malina.â
âA pleasure,â the older woman said. âAnd Iâm so happy to hear thereâs a new stormrunner. The others are getting on in years, and my Sascha canât do everything himself.â
Sascha barely qualified as a stormrunner at all, but Sarette couldnât say that to his mother. And in any case, he was significantly stronger than she herself had been before sheâd asked Corec to bond her.
âSpeaking of Sascha,â Natasya said, as if that hadnât been her intention all along, âheâs quite the handsome young man, isnât he? How well do you know him, Sarette?â
âWe mostly kept to ourselves at Runnerâs Summit. Weâve hardly spoken.â That wasnât quite true, but it was close enough she could get away with it.
It didnât deter Malina, though. âPerhaps now that youâve returned, the two of you could spend some time together,â she said. âAs stormrunner families, we have ties going back for centuries. This may be an opportunity to see those ties renewed.â
âIâm afraid my duties with the warden will see me away from Snow Crown for quite some time,â Sarette said. And getting longer by the minute, she promised herself.
âIf youâll excuse me, ladies,â Vartus said, cutting in just as the two women seemed to be bracing themselves for another attempt. âI need to speak with my niece. Stormrunner business.â
He ignored their scowls and led Sarette out to the veranda. âYou looked like you could use some help.â
âMotherâs doing her best to continue the dynasty.â
Vartus chuckled. âIf she really wants you to spawn a new line of stormrunners, she shouldnât be trying to marry you off to Sascha. She should send you to the snowborn.â
âThere are stormrunners among the snowborn?â
âThe runner bloodlines split evenly during the schism, but while our lines faded, theirs stayed strong. Either we were unlucky, or their meddling mothers were more successful in their matchmaking.â
âWell, I have no interest in being a broodmare, regardless of who she tries to pair me up with.â
âI wonât argue with you, but itâs a shame to see the order coming to an end.â
âThen why didnât you go to the snowborn?â
âMy grandfather did,â he admitted. âBut the mother kept the childâthatâs the custom there. I didnât have any interest in fathering a child Iâd never get to see. Then I met Marta, and we didnât learn until it was too late that she couldnât have children.â He shrugged. âBut thatâs not why I brought you out here. We really do have business to discuss.â
âOh?â
âYour story about fighting the dragon seemed to have some convenient gaps in time. You attacked, and then what happened? You talked about what everyone else was doing, even though you couldnât have been close enough to see any of it until near the end.â
Sarette sighed. âThatâs why I didnât want to tell the story tonight. I needed to talk to you about it first, but I wasnât sure how to bring it up.â
âWhat happened?â
âI fell,â she admitted. âThe dragon hit meâwith its wing, I think. Iâm not even sure it was intentional, but it hit hard enough that it knocked me into a fall, and I passed out. It couldnât have been for long. I had enough time to catch my spear and call lightning, but it was close.â
âI fell once, when I was about your age,â Vartus said. âI was only two hundred feet up, so I tried to pull in enough charge to handle the landing.â
âDid it work?â
âI shattered both my legs. Luckily, Galina was assigned to the same unitâthis was back when she still worked in the field. With a lesser priest, it might have taken weeks to recover, but she had me up in the air the next day.â
âI donât know if I can go up again. Every time I think about it, I â¦â Sarette shook her head and shivered.
âWe flew in from Runnerâs Summit just yesterday,â Vartus said. Sarette had asked Leena to take her to the isolated stormrunner headquarters in the mountains rather than directly to the city.
âThatâs different. We werenât in battle, and you were right there with me.â
Vartus nodded, then stepped to the edge of the veranda and peered up at the night sky. Sarette joined him. The stars were out, and the chilly air was a welcome change. Spring came too early in the south.
âI wish there was some big secret I could tell you that would make everything better, but there isnât,â Vartus said. âIt affects each of us differently. In your story, you managed to stay in the fight.â
âI wasnât thinking clearly, and Iâd pulled in so much power to get out of the fall that Iâm not sure what would have happened if Iâd tried to let it dissipate on its own. I gave it to the dragon instead.â
âSometimes we donât know what weâre capable of until weâre stressed beyond our normal limits.â He faced her. âIf you can still fly, then youâre halfway there already. Just fly every storm that comes. When thereâs no storm, make oneâor fly without any storm at all. Keep practicing until it feels as natural as walking. When youâre ready, youâll know.â
âIâll try.â
Vartus grinned. âBesides, youâll probably never face another enemy in the sky. Next time you get hit, youâll be much closer to the ground.â
Sarette rolled her eyes. âWell, thatâs something, I guess.â
One of the servants joined them. âSir, a message came for â¦â He saw Sarette. âAhh, Stormrunner Sarette, this is for you.â
âThank you,â Sarette said, opening the message as the man went back inside. âItâs from Oracle Galina.â
âGalina?â Vartus said. âShe already sent an apology for not coming tonight.â
âNo, this is ⦠she wants me to bring Ariadne to see her tomorrow,â Sarette said.
#
The little bit of Snow Crown Ariadne had seen so far was both familiar and foreign. Sheâd never heard of anything like the valley itself, which seemed to be some sort of massive crater in the middle of the mountain range, but the city itself wasnât all that different from Tir Yadarâs outer city. The structures and the layout were more utilitarian and uniform than the human cities of Tyrsall and Aencyr, and individuality was instead expressed through carvings on the walls. Those carvings hadnât been common in Tir Yadar, but Ariadne had heard of the practice in other Tirs. Snow Crown was familiar in other ways as well. There were no beggars on the streetâthe people were guaranteed food and shelter one way or anotherâand the High Guard maintained a presence throughout the city.
Perhaps she should have expected the familiar aspects. If Borrisur had truly gifted the stormborn with their knowledge and traditions, then that knowledge had come from the Chosar themselves.
Most of the buildings in the city were constructed of polished logs and had no more than two floors, giving the place a rustic feel, but the temple Ariadne stood in front of now was four stories tall and made from heavy granite blocks. It couldnât match the huge temples sheâd seen in Tyrsall and Aencyr, but according to Sarette, it was the largest of Borrisurâs fourteen temples in Snow Crown.
âLightning rods,â the stormborn woman said, indicating a crown of copper spikes towering twenty feet above the temple. âWhen a heavy thunderstorm passes by, lightning can strike it a dozen times a minute. All of Borrisurâs temples have themâthe ones here in Snow Crown, I meanâbut this one has the best view. People come from all around to watch it.â
There was no storm now, though.
Ariadne hesitated at the entrance. âAre you sure about this?â she asked. âWhat could she want?â
âI donât know, but she specifically asked to speak with you,â Sarette replied. âSheâs got to have a reason. The oracle can see things others canât.â
Ariadne had come to Snow Crown looking for information, but sheâd assumed if she found anything, it would come from the magisters. Galinaâs invitation had been unexpected, and Sarette had repeatedly refused to speculate over what it meant, perhaps not wanting to raise Ariadneâs hopes.
Sarette got tired of waiting and nudged her through the entrance. Inside, a priest showed them to Galinaâs study. The white-haired woman was ancient. If stormborn aged similarly to Chosar, Ariadne would have placed her age at a hundred thirty years or more.
âOracle Galina,â Sarette said respectfully, âthis is Ariadne of the Chosar people, a Mage Knight of Tir Yadar.â
âYes,â the old woman said. âThese things I knew because I know them now. Sometimes you tell me and sometimes you donât, but the past is the truth regardless of the future.â
Ariadne blinked in confusion. âOracle Galina,â she started, then paused, not sure how to finish the sentence.
Galina turned to her. âYou seek the truth about your people,â she said.
"Sarette told me you can see things. Can you tell me what happened to them?â
"I can't see the past. I can only see what might happen, not what has. I saw you, when Sarette and the warden came to the council chamber for the first time. I saw you die; I saw you sleep forever; I saw you as you are now. I saw Sarette fall to her death attempting to strike a dragon in mid-flightââ Saretteâs head jerked back at that, ââand I saw her emerge victorious as a true stormrunner. The future is always uncertainâa mortal mind can't begin to interpret all the possibilities."
âThen why ⦠?â
âWhy did I bring you here? Because change is coming to Snow Crown, and you stand at the heart of it. Or it isnât, and you donât.â Galinaâs gaze was penetrating. âWhat secrets do you know that will cause so much turmoil for my people?â
âI donât understand,â Ariadne said.
âItâs not given to me to see everything, but I see enough to be concerned. What is it you know thatâs so troubling? Is it simply the secret youâve already told me? You were found in Tir Yadar. Iâm no scholar, but I have some idea of what that meansâyour Chosar were the people who came before. A startling discovery, and even more startling that you yet live, but would that knowledge result in the strife I see? I donât believe so.â
Sarette gave Ariadne a concerned look.
âI donât want to cause any trouble,â Ariadne said.
âAhh, but thereâs the problem, you see. Change can be good or bad. Should you keep your knowledge to yourself, or should you shout it out from the rooftops? How can I know unless you tell me what it is?â
Ariadne had no intention of telling Galina about the old wardens becoming gods, and she couldnât think of anything else useful. âI donât know what youâre looking for.â
âThere must be something,â the old woman said, then furrowed her brow. âThis is new. If youâve never been here before, how is it that you know why the snowborn left us?â
âWhat?â Sarette interjected, her eyes wide.
âI donât know anything about the snowborn!â Ariadne told them both. âIâve never even seen one before!â
Galina stared at her--or possibly through her. âNo. Youâre right. Perhaps you donât know what caused the schism, or perhaps you do but donât realize it.â She sighed. âIâve been too harsh. You came to Snow Crown to learn what happened to your people, and all I can tell you is what everyone knowsâthe people who came before are long gone.â
Ariadne sighed. Another lead, however unexpected, had ended in failure. âWill I ever learn what happened?"
Galina hesitated, then said, âYou already know of those who have the answers. One in particular. But she canât be everywhere; she canât see everything. If you want her to hear you, go to where she listens.â
There were only so many ways to interpret that, and it didnât seem like Galina was referring to Ephrenia. That left the old wardens, and of those, Ariadne only knew one personally.
âIf you see that much, canât you tell me what sheâll say?â she asked.
âThe bits and pieces I can see donât make sense, not yet, and Iâve learned that having a little bit of information is often worse than having none at all. Once you take action, Iâll know more, but by then, youâll no longer need my help.â
Ariadne nodded. Ellerie hadnât been aware of any way to speak to the new gods, but perhaps the priests would know.
âWho are you talking about?â Sarette asked.
âThere are some things I need to tell you,â Ariadne said to her. âBut first, is there a temple to The Lady in Snow Crown?â