Constables escorted a line of gang members down the street toward the city center, past a row of jeering citizens. Razai stood amongst the crowd in her Vash-like disguise, grinning widely at any of the thugs who looked her way. Sheâd had nothing to do with their arrests, but if they were set free, she wanted them to come for her rather than the divers.
As the last of them passed, she saw a flash of a familiar face through a window across the street. Renny Senshallâand if the girl had known in advance where the raid was taking place, that could only mean one thing.
Razai ducked into an alley, shedding her disguise when no one was watching. It drew too much attention. Wearing her own face, she entered the teahouse and stepped over to where the concubine was still looking out the window.
âHowâd you manage it?â
Renny jumped, startled. Stavo and the other bodyguard jerked around too, reaching for their weapons. They stopped once they recognized Razai.
âGentlemen,â Renny said to her guards, âthe lady and I have some business to discuss. Would you please excuse us?â
Stavo nodded and dragged his partner away.
Once they were out of earshot, Renny said, âOne of my closest friends warms the seneschalâs bed. It just required some nudging.â
âThen why did it take so damned long?â Speaking like that to a member of one of the most powerful families in the city was dangerous, but the words came out before Razai could stop them.
Renny frowned and looked down. âWhen Talaiâs bodyguard was killed, I complained again. Before that, the deaths had been seaborn and thugs, and the constabulary doesnât see much difference between the two. But with another death, Kirla was able to convince Seneschal Ollis to force them to take it seriously.â
Razai rolled her eyes. It sounded like politics, and she hated politics. âWhy did you bother making a deal with the seaborn anyway? Youâre sleeping with one of the richest men in the city. Iâve seen the numbersâafter your expenses, you canât be making any more profit than a shopkeeper. One with a very small shop.â
âI didnât do it for the money,â Renny said, âthough itâs good to know I can make a living on my own if I have to. I did it to prove to Varsin that Iâm capable enough to help him with his business. Besides, I still had my share of my bond price, and I needed something to do with my time. It turns out that having servants do everything for you isnât as fun as it sounds.â
This was only the third time Razai had spoken to Renny directly, but the concubine wasnât quite what sheâd expected. Still silly and naive, for sure, but perhaps smarter than Razai had assumed.
âYou got Kahlvin, but Dallo got away, and some of his men,â Razai said.
âThose are the names of the gang leaders?â the girl asked.
âYes.â
âI thought there were three.â
Razai hid a smirk. âThe third ended his association with them weeks ago. Heâs been selling off his holdings in the docks.â
âWell, the other oneâDallo?âmay have gotten away, but I donât believe heâll be able to start up his operation again. The constabulary will be keeping a closer watch on things from now on. I understand Ollis was quiteâ¦emphatic when he spoke to the Chief Constable the second time. Kirla can be very persuasive when she needs to be. Besides, the investigation discovered that the gangs had started to put pressure on the port tax authority, and the constabulary never should have allowed that to happen. Duke Voss is involved now, and heâs informed the king. Thereâll likely be a new Chief Constable soon.â
Razai couldnât help glancing around the room, just to make sure the duke hadnât decided to spy on the proceedings himself. A whispered word to a bedmate could make its way to the king? The Senshall girl lived in a different world.
âI should leave,â Razai said. âLaniiâs crew will be surfacing in an hour, and I need to tell her the news.â
âA moment, before you go?â
Razai stopped. âI have some time.â
âIf the seaborn decide they no longer need your services, Senshall Trading Company would like to hire you and your friendsâVash and that stormborn fellow. I donât recall his name.â
âSenshall doesnât hire demonborn,â Razai said, narrowing her gaze. Vash had told her that.
âIn the past, maybe, but Varsin is in charge of hiring guardsmen. I recommended you, and heâs willing to give it a try.â
Give it a try. As if demonborn couldnât be trusted as a group, and only one or two were worthy of receiving scraps from the humansâ table. It would be pointless to take her annoyance out on Renny, thoughâthe girl was trying to do them a favor. And, in truth, Razai would probably be looking for employment before the week was out. The bodyguardsâ wages had been cutting deep into the diversâ profits. If they were no longer needed, theyâd be let loose.
âVash is more than just a caravan guard,â Razai pointed out. âHeâs run his own caravans before.â
âIâll see what I can do. We have enough caravan masters at the moment, but perhaps he could work his way up. Iâd have to ask Varsin what the rules are.â
âAnd me?â
Renny hesitated. âI have a job for you if you want it, and if you can keep a secret. Five silver pieces a day.â
âFive?â That was a lot of money.
âSenshall offers three silver for specialist pay, and youâre a wizard on top of it.â
Why did people always assume mages were wizards?
âWhatâs the job?â Razai asked.
âI want to know if Varsinâs brothers are abusing their concubines.â
#
Bobo sighed as he checked the translation. This was yet another section heâd barely skimmed over before. While it described the authorâs journey, it didnât actually detail which part of the journey, and it didnât mention any distinguishing landmarks. But the translator Ellerie had assigned to these pages was the worst of the bunch, providing the gist of the passage but getting even the simplest of words wrong, so Bobo had no choice but to go through it line by line.
It was easier to rewrite the entire section than to correct the other translatorâs work. Double-checking the diacritical marks, he replaced The sun warmed the field with The morning sun shone over the meadow. Then he stretched, rubbing at a kink in his neck. Translating was tedious work, especially without a desk, but it was part of the deal heâd struck with Ellerie to be allowed access to the book again. Unfortunately, he hadnât learned anything useful yet.
Going on an adventure of his own hadnât turned out quite the way heâd expected. His grandfatherâs stories never mentioned the cold, the fatigue, or the terror of waiting to be attacked by monsters. The stories skipped over that sort of thing, going straight ahead to the exciting parts. Of course, now that heâd experienced the exciting parts for himself, Bobo rather thought he preferred the boring parts.
Ellerie had shown him the tunnel sheâd found the night before, but after peering down into it, heâd opted to stay on the surface. The others could trudge around in musty cavernsâheâd join them if they found anything interesting. In the meantime, there was plenty to explore above ground. Whenever his eyes needed a break, he went outside to examine another of the stone structures. Heâd looked through a dozen buildings the day before, and already five today, sketching out a map for himself. When he returned to Snow Crown, he planned to compare his map to the one the stormborn kept, and read up on what theyâd been able to learn about each structure, to see how closely it matched his own deductions.
Heâd started to get a sense of how the city was laid out. Despite the numerous buildings that remained, it was clear that even more were missing. Either the stones used to build them had been carried off at some point in the distant past, or the first peoples had done much of their construction work with wood after all, and that wood had gradually rotted away over the thousands of years in which the city had stood uninhabited. If there hadnât been so much snow on the ground, he suspected heâd be able to see foundations or other groundwork where the missing buildings had once stood. For now, it would have to remain another question for the stormborn.
Imagining the city full of life, Bobo found it easy to agree with Ellerieâs belief that it was one of the capitals of the first peoplesâ empireâor empires. Despite the common language, it had always been unclear whether the wide-ranging civilization had been united under a single government or whether each Tir was the capital of an independent nation.
The next line in the book caught his eye.
Winged snakes cavort in the air above the meadow, darting hither and yon.
Winged snakes. Something about that tickled Boboâs memory. Where had he seen it before?
He grabbed the book Shavala had bought in Tyrsall, Karsinâs Guide to Rare Wildlife, from his pack and thumbed through it until he found the page he wanted.
Then he shot to his feet. He had to find Ellerie.
#
Corec sneezed. âI think thereâs mold down here.â
âProbably,â Boktar said, kicking at the dust and dirt lining the floor. âI saw water marks along the tunnel walls. This area must have flooded over and over again.â
âFlooded how? Snowmelt? Or the hot springs overflowing their channels? I havenât seen any other water down here.â
âProbably heavy rainstorms,â Sarette said. âThey cause flooding throughout the mountains in the spring. Sometimes entire slopes wash away.â Sheâd accompanied them for their second day of searching the underground tunnels.
âThis oneâs just like the others,â Ellerie said, peering around the room. âI think theyâre living quarters. Why else would there be so many of them?â Theyâd spent all morning searching through one set of rooms after another, all connected to a series of parallel corridors branching off the main tunnel, half a mile south from where sheâd fallen through a day earlier.
Corec nodded. âThe main chamber and three sleeping chambers. The smallest rooms could have been for storage, or bathing, or an indoor privy.â
âWho would want to live underground, though?â Treya asked. âThere are no windows, and thereâs no chimney for a cooking fire or stove.â
âLiving underground isnât so bad,â Boktar said. âI did it for half my life. And if there isnât a place to cook, there might have been a communal meal area nearby. Thatâs how we do it in Stone Home, at least for those of us who stay underhill.â
âSarette, what do your people say these tunnels were used for?â Ellerie asked.
âIâd always heard that most of the tunnels weâd discovered were either blocked with rubble and too dangerous to excavate, or were aqueducts for the hot springs. Iâm not sure my people have seen this spot yet. Look.â She bent down to pick up a heavily tarnished spoon that had lain half uncovered in the detritus. âTheyâd have found this when they were searching, unless it washed through from somewhere else.â
âWhich it may have, since there arenât any doors in this section,â Boktar said.
âThey must have been wooden,â Corec said. After thousands of years, and with wet conditions, almost anything not made of stone or metal would have rotted away.
âI didnât see any hinges either. I think the rings on either side of the doorways are for hanging curtains across the opening. We do that in Stone Home too.â
Ellerie raised an eyebrow. âYou think the Ancients were stoneborn?â
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âIf so, the ceilings are a lot higher than they need to be.â He pointed to the spoon. âCan I see that?â Sarette handed it to him.
Ellerie said, âWhatever these rooms are, theyâre all the same and theyâre all empty. Should we give up on this section and try another direction?â
âWhat if we follow this corridor to the end, but skip past all the living quarters?â Corec suggested. âJust to make sure weâre not missing anything else before we double back.â
Everyone seemed agreeable to that. Moving much faster now, they reached the end of the corridor in less than ten minutes. Theyâd passed by two junctions, but left exploring the cross tunnels for another time.
âThis is different,â Treya said.
They gathered around her in front of a large archway leading into a cavernous room. Their lights only extended part of the way in, so Ellerie cast another mage light spell. It appeared ahead of them, illuminating the area around it.
âIt looks like they left some things behind this time,â Boktar said. There were dark shadows and mounds of debris throughout the room.
Ellerie said, âIf thereâs anything significant in there, weâll need to catalog it for the historians back in Snow Crown. They want to know the location of any object, and if itâs too large to bring back with us, they also requested a detailed description of the item and the condition itâs in.â
âWhat about the spoon?â Sarette asked.
âThe museum has a number of spoons already, so I donât know if theyâll consider it significant, but weâll take it back to them anyway. I already made a note of which room we found it in.â
Sarette nodded, and the group went through the archway, splitting up to explore.
Corec found a curved pry bar lying on the ground twenty paces to the right of the entrance. He wiped the grime from the straight end, and found the metal itself to be unblemished.
âCheck this out,â he said, handing it to Boktar.
âI wish I knew what sort of metal this was,â the dwarf replied, looking it over. Then he passed Corec a long metal bar, partly rusted through. âBut they didnât use it for everything. This one looks like iron, though I donât think iron would have lasted this long. Canât tell what it was used for.â
âThere are a lot of wood fragments left in here too,â Ellerie said. âEither this room stayed very dry until recently, or the Ancients had some way of treating wood to make it last longer. I canât tell for sure what it was, but the pieces I can see remind me of furniture. Could this have been the communal meal room Boktar suggested?â
âI donât see any sign of a kitchen,â Treya said. âAnd no chimneys.â
âThere are metal hooks all along the back wall,â Sarette said. âTwo rows of them, high and low. Maybe for clothing, but Iâve seen hooks like that used to hang crossbows.â
âI think it was for the crossbows,â Boktar said, stooping down. When he stood back up, he was holding a bodkin-point arrowhead.
âWhy?â Ellerie started as she followed his gaze. âOh.â
The arrowhead shone under the mage lights, the unknown metal still gleaming after the thousands of years since the city had been abandoned.
âThere are arrowheads like that in the museum,â Sarette said. âThe one I found was a broadhead, but they used both types.â
âLook over here,â Treya said. She was shining her lantern on the left wall, where half a dozen weapons were mounted.
Boktar whistled. âWhy did they leave all that? They took everything else interesting.â
âNot always,â Sarette said. âWeâve found other weapons here. Not many, but in a city this size, some things were left behind. Armor, too. Pots and pans. Anything made of metal.â
âThese look like plaques,â Ellerie said, peering at the wall. Near each of the weapons was a small, rectangular sheet of metal affixed to the wall, completely rusted over. Below each plaque, brownish red streaks ran down the wall. âNo way to tell what they said, though.â
âCan you read the big one?â Treya asked, pointing up.
Near the top of the wall was a much larger sign, and this one hadnât rusted. Symbols were etched onto it.
âDo you want me to go get Bobo?â Boktar asked Ellerie.
âLet me give it a try first,â she replied. âI brought my translation dictionary.â She pulled a book out of her coat pocket and flipped through the pages, looking back and forth between it and the wall.
While she did that, Corec said, âSo, what do you think? An armory? They took their regular weapons with them, but left the decorative ones behind?â
âNot all of them,â Boktar said, shining his lantern across the entire side of the room. There were additional mounts at various spots across the wall, along with more of the rusted metal plaques. âEither they took some of these too, or there was an earthquake that knocked them to the floor, and then they washed away when it flooded.â
Corec grasped the hilt of a heavily pitted longsword. The rust from the crossguard had sealed itself over the mounting hooks. When he jiggled it, flakes fell off. He left it where it was. The stormborn historians probably wouldnât be happy if he broke something.
Ellerie said, âThe top row saysâ¦tall knights?â
Sarette furrowed her brow. âHow do you pronounce it in the original tongue?â
Ellerie told her.
âThat sounds closer to our word for guard than our word for knights,â the stormborn woman said.
âYour language is descended from theirs?â Ellerie asked.
Sarette shrugged. âMost languages are. Maybe not Elven.â
âTall guard,â Ellerie said. âNo, Iâve got the emphasis wrong. High Guard? Like your own people.â
âPerhaps. Borrisur gifted us with bits of their knowledge. Some people think we modeled the High Guard after their armies.â
âDoes anyone know why the city was abandoned?â
Sarette hesitated, fidgeting with the strap on her coat. âWe donât know what happened to the people who came before, but we know that when Borrisur led the first stormborn to Snow Crown, he went north. Some historians think this is where we started from, and that the people who lived here before had already fled. Borrisur created the stormborn to take their place, but we werenât strong enough yet to survive the storms, so we left the city too, and took most of what the others had left behind.â
âWhy would the Ancients build a city here if the storms were that bad?â
âI donât know. The storms are weaker now than they used to be. Maybe it goes in cycles.â
Corec said, âIf that blizzard was a weak storm, I donât blame them for running.â
âThe next word is Tir!â Ellerie suddenly exclaimed, after holding her mage light back up to the sign. âThis is one of the Tirs!â
âUnless the sign is labeling the weapons of their vanquished foes,â Boktar said with a wink. âThe Tir that they conquered.â
She rolled her eyes. âVery funny. Let me finish translating it.â
âThis oneâs in better shape than the others,â Corec said, looking more closely at a massive greatsword hanging in the center of the wall. The blade appeared to be steel, rather than the same unknown metal as the arrowhead, but it was still free of rust or corrosion. There was no sheath, though metal bands on the ground below suggested thereâd been one in the past.
âIs that real or ornamental?â Boktar asked. He reached out to touch the blade, but a green spark arced out and hit his hand. He jerked back. âAh! What was that?â
âAre you hurt?â Ellerie asked.
He held his hand in front of his mage-light lantern to examine it. âIt stung, but Iâll be all right. It didnât leave a mark.â
âLet me see your hand,â Treya said.
âMaybe thatâs why they didnât take it with them,â Ellerie said. She whispered the words to a spell, and her eyes grew white and filmy. She peered at the sword, then spun in a slow circle to look around the room. âItâs enchanted, but itâs the only magical aura in the room. Everything else is normal.â She tentatively stretched a finger toward the blade, but it sparked green again and she drew her hand back, shaking it off. âThat does sting.â
âWhy did you touch it?â Treya asked, dropping Boktarâs hand and reaching for Ellerieâs.
The elven woman shrugged. âSome warded items can be safely handled by mages. Not this one, apparently.â
âWe canât just leave it down here,â Sarette said. âThe historians will want to see it. What if we wrap it in something?â
Corec took off his cloak and wrapped it around his hand, then grasped the hilt of the sword, lifting it off the pegs the crossguard was resting on.
Green light glowed down the length of the blade as sparks shot toward his body. He dropped the sword in surprise, and it landed on the floor with a clang.
âAre you all right?â Sarette asked.
âIâm fine, actually. It didnât hurt. I was just expecting it to.â He reached down and pulled the cloak away, then grabbed the hilt with his bare hand. Green sparks danced up and down the blade, then streaked across to his body, flitting over his chain shirt. They gradually slowed and stopped, leaving the sword glowing with a pale green light.
âItâs like Venniâs sword, other than the color,â Boktar said. âIt still doesnât hurt?â
âNo, not at all.â Corec grasped the hilt in both hands and took a few practice swings. âItâs a little heavier and a little longer than Iâm used to, but itâs a real sword.â It didnât have the parrying hooks that heâd grown to appreciate on his newer sword, but it still had an unsharpened ricasso he could grab to guide the blade with more care. âSarette, Iâm going to hold onto this for a bit, just in case more snow beasts show up. I need a sword, and there arenât any weapon smiths nearby. Iâll give it back to your people when we return to Snow Crown.â Hopefully it would fit in his sheath.
âIâ¦guess that would be all right,â Sarette said.
Ellerie said, âThat next word on the sign, the letter in the middleâ¦is that a perfect circle, or is it stretched out to the sides? Itâs hard to read this language at an angle.â
âIt looks stretched out to me,â Treya said, checking it from the side.
âThenâ¦Tir Nashis? No, that canât be right. Itâs got to beâ¦â She thumbed through her translation dictionary. âTir Navis!â Then her face fell. âOh, no!â
âWhatâs wrong?â Corec asked.
âIâve heard of Tir Navis,â Ellerie said, rubbing her temple. âNobody knows much about it, but its name means Mountain Home, or Land of the Mountains; possibly Land of the Tall Mountains. Which certainly fits this place.â
âThen whatâs the problem?â
âTir Navis is thought to be one of the first great colonies founded when the Ancients spread out from their homeland. It was the first colony they sent across the ocean. Itâs no wonder we havenât found Tir Yadar. Weâve been looking in the wrong place. Itâs not in Aravor at all.â She slumped, appearing as if the life had gone out of her.
âIsnât this good news?â Corec asked. âYou had no idea where it was before, and now you know itâs across the sea.â
âWe donât know which sea. Everyone thinks the Ancients came from here, this continent. If they didnât⦠They sent their colonies out in all directions.â
âItâs still more than we knew before,â Boktar said.
Ellerie stood up straighter. âYouâre right. Iâve only been to the libraries in Terevas and Matagor. We can check in Snow Crown, Tyrsall, maybe even Sanvar. Just the fact that Tir Navis exists proves that some of those old records about Tir Yadar must be true. We can still find it.â
âHellooo?â a voice called out in the distance.
âBobo?â Corec shouted back. âIs that you?â
âWhere are you?â the voice called back.
If they could hear him, he must already be close. Corec yelled, âEnd of the hall!â Then he cast another mage light out through the main door to light the way.
A moment later, Bobo came into the room, carrying one of the regular oil lanterns. He had two books bundled under his arm.
âIâve been lookingâ¦â He paused, panting. âIâve been looking for you for two hours!â
âIs something wrong?â
âNo, I was just reading through the book andâwhy is your sword glowing? Wait, didnât it break when you fought the snow beasts?â
For lack of anywhere else to put it, Corec was still holding the sword braced over his right shoulder. âItâs not mine. We found it down here.â
âAnd itâs glowing? Magic? Fascinatingâyouâll have to let me examine it. The first peoples knew how to create enchanted weapons, but Iâve never managed to get a close look at one. Other than Venniâs, but she said she didnât know who made hers.â
âWe found something else,â Ellerie put in. She pointed to the sign.
âHigh Army of Tirâ¦those letters donât look right. Is that Navis?â
âI think so.â
âHmm, that fits. High Army of Tir Navis, in memoriam, Battle ofâ¦I canât read that word; I think itâs a different language. Then, the next line has got to beâ¦twelve? Yes. The letters are still wrong, but itâs Twelve Yearâno, Twelfth Yearâof the Reign of King Milos. Never heard of him.â
Ellerie sighed. âI meant the part about Tir Navis. Doesnât that suggest something to you?â
âMountain Home? It makes sense, given where weâre at. I donât know much about it, though. Tir Navis isnât mentioned much after its founding. Why?â
âI meant that weâre on the wrong continent!â
âOh! Thatâs what I came down here for.â He handed Corec his lantern. âHold this. Now, letâs seeâ¦â He opened one of the books, which Corec recognized as the one Ellerie had hired Bobo to translate. âWinged snakes cavort in the air above the meadow,â Bobo said.
âWhat about it?â Ellerie asked.
âHold on.â He switched books, then read, âThe feathered serpent resembles a snake with feathery wings. Commonly referred to as a winged snake, itâs not a true snake at all, and is, in fact, warm of blood. Adults range from three to four feet in length, with a wingspan of two to three feet. The feathered serpent is only found in the Vansaira region.â
âWhatâs that from?â
âShavalaâs book on rare wildlife.â
âVansaira region?â Corec asked.
âAn old name for Bancyra.â
Corec shook his head. That didnât sound familiar either.
âItâs east of Nysa.â
âThe port of Nysa?â Treya asked. âIn Cordaea?â
Bobo nodded, grinning widely.
âDo you mean to tell me you found Tir Yadar?â Ellerie exclaimed.
âWell,â Bobo said, âthe route passes through some part of Bancyra at some point. Itâs not a lot to go on, but itâs more than we had before.â
Corec grimaced when Treya glanced his way. They both got sick on boats, and the continent of Cordaea was a long ocean voyage from Tyrsall, across the Gilded Sea.
He said, âIf thatâs the book Shavala found in Tyrsall, the fellow who sold it said he wasnât sure how reliable it is.â
âIt should be easy enough to find other sources about winged snakes when we get back to Tyrsall,â Bobo said. âI assume weâll be returning to Tyrsall now?â
Ellerie still looked stunned, and didnât respond.
Boktar said, âLanportâs closer, and ships sail to Cordaea from there.â
âNot in the winter. Besides, thereâs no library in Lanport. Perhaps we could find someone whoâs seen a winged snake, but Iâd like to have more information than just that. I know almost nothing about any of the lands east of Nysa.â
âI have to go back to Tyrsall anyway,â Corec said. âI need to tell Yelena about Prince Rusol.â
âA good point,â Bobo said. âAnd weâll need to hire a translator, too.â
âThey donât speak trade tongue?â
âIâm sure a few people do, but Iâve heard itâs not widely used outside of Nysa.â
âWe need to make plans!â Ellerie said. âHow long is the voyage? What will it cost to get there?â
âI think it takes a couple of months,â Boktar said. âWith nine people, it wonât be cheap.â
âEight people, wouldnât it be?â Corec asked. âNedleyâs from Tyrsall, so we can leave him there.â
âI feel bad for the kid. He doesnât have anyone left except for his brother, whoâs back in Larso. That is, if he wasnât turned into one of those red-eyed men.â
Corec shrugged. âIf you have work for him and he wants to come, I donât have a problem with it.â Maybe he can take my place, he added silently. He was already feeling seasick just thinking about the trip.
Ellerie said, âResearch, ship passage for nine people, mounts⦠Even if we find a ship large enough for them, we canât take our horses on a two-month journey. Theyâd need another month to recover afterward. Supplies, for who knows how long. And itâll be hard to find work if we canât speak the language. I donât think I can afford to finance the whole thing.â
âIâm running low too,â Corec said. âMaybe Yelena will have another job for us.â
Ellerie suddenly laughed. âI canât believe we actually know where to go!â
âCordaeaâs a big place,â Bobo cautioned her. âSo is Bancyra. And this passage doesnât indicate at which point in the journey it takes place. We may not be any better off than we were, other than knowing which continent we need to be on.â
She nodded. âWhen we get to Tyrsall, weâll look for any maps that show the mountain ranges, so we can decide where to start.â
Bobo said, âThe sad part about all this is that we canât publish anything about Tir Navis. Nobody will believe us if we tell them civilization arose outside of Aravor.â
âWe couldnât have published it anyway,â Ellerie pointed out. âThe stormborn arenât going to want a bunch of outsiders crawling all over their mountains to find this place. When we find Tir Yadar, thatâs the proof weâll need.â
âPublish?â Corec asked. âYou mean writing a book? I thought you were looking for treasure.â
Bobo laughed. âI told you before, treasure means different things to different people.â