grazing sheep caught the boyâs attention. He looked up as Marit paused a stoneâs toss from him.
His eyes opened wide. Equally startled, she took a step back.
He grinned and set down the lute. âThe hells!â He whistled, and the dog pattered over to him. âUsually he barks,â the boy added. He was old enough to be sent to the high pastures with the sheep but not quite old enough to be called a man. âWhere did you come from?â
âJust over the ridge.â The box canyon wasnât all that far from here, truly, although she wasnât entirely sure how to reach it traveling on the ground. Reeves sometimes lost that skill, seeing everything from on high.
âYouâre not from around here. Are you hungry, or thirsty? Iâve got plenty.â
âI would appreciate a bit.â Reeve habit died hard: you ate and drank whenever opportunity offered, as you didnâtalways know in the course of a patrol when you might have leisure to eat and drink again.
He shared a cursed sharp cider and a ball of rice neatly wrapped in nai leaves, poor manâs food but filling nonetheless.
âIâm surprised to see anyone up here,â he said with nice manners which, together with his pleasant features, would make him a favorite among women when he got a bit older. He was water-born, judging by the pattern of tattoos ringing his wrists. An attractive youth, but forbidden to her because she was also water-born. âWeâre about as far west as folk live. You can see how the mountains rise.â He indicated a barrier of grim peaks to the west. âNothing beyond that but the flat salt desert.â
âYouâve seen it?â
He laughed. âNot myself. My uncle claims to have climbed the Wall, to see onto the deadlands. He said they stretched for a thousand mey, farther than he could see even from the mountainsâ edge, nothing but pale gold to the flat horizon. Maybe itâs true, or maybe he just said so to impress the woman he wanted to marry. He did bring back a shard of an eagleâs egg. From a nest, so he said. Said he climbed to it, and fetched it out. But he did talk blather. I bet he just found it on the trail, fallen from a high place.â
He carefully asked no questions, plying her with highlands hospitality, offering a second flask of cider. He was an open lad, sure she wasnât a bad person because the dogâwhose name was Nipâtolerated her. She was just utterly stunned to be having a commonplace conversation.
âI see youâve a lute there. Have you always played?â
âSurely I have, since I could pick one up. Would you like me to play for you?â He was sure she would like to hear him; everyone always enjoyed his playing.
She nodded, settling more comfortably cross-legged beside him. He plucked a pair of tunes and hummed amelancholy melody that made her eyes water. Thin clouds chased across the high landscape. As the sun passed into shadow, she shivered at the unexpected draft of cool air seeping down from above and pulled her cloak more tightly around her torso.
âListen, ver. Iâm called Marit. Iâm lost, truth to tell, and I got lost by running from a nasty pack of bandits who arenât too far from here by my reckoning. Iâm not sure itâs safe for you. You might be safer walking back to your village, wherever you came from, and warning them that dangerous men are wandering out here looking to make trouble.â
He shrugged with a peculiar lack of concern. âWeâve had trouble for years with that crew, most of them out of Walshow and other places north of here. But weâve made our own defenses.â With a sly grin, he indicated Nip. âYouâd be surprised what that dog can do when heâs roused. Weâve learned to defend ourselves. It wasnât so bad before, when I was a nipsterâa toddler, like. The elders say it was peaceful then. Still, the