said Conley Murdock was killed by the Legendary Beast of the Sea. What is there to hide?”
Abel shrugged. “For all we know, she could’ve had something to do with it too.”
“And either way,” Ethel continued, “she can’t be that good of a teacher, can she? Not after a performance like that.”
Barclay didn’t want to fight with his friends—he barely even knew Runa, and they did know more about Lore Keepers than he did. But he still felt guilty, talking about her like this.
So he stood up and muttered, “I’m going on a walk,” and he left the Guild House.
He’d only wanted to clear his head, but it was hard to get the lectures out of his mind. How Scholars could read books banned from the general public. How Apothecaries brewed medicinal tonics or traps, and Surveyors mapped out places never before discovered. And especially Guardians, who protected vulnerable towns like Dullshire from the Beasts… even if Dullshire didn’t realize it.
The world of Beasts was more fascinating than he’d ever imagined it.
And then there was the matter of what he’d read in A Traveler’s Log. That maybe Root had not bonded with him by accident. Maybe that was exactly what Root had been trying to tell him.
As he turned down a cobbled alley, still lost in his thoughts, he spotted Runa in the distance, dragging Tadg with her.
“You need to stop this. Stop going to him,” she snapped at Tadg. “It won’t change anything.”
Tadg ripped his arm away from her. “I don’t have to listen to you. What happened was your fault too.”
They’re talking about his father, Barclay realized with shock.
“That’s not fair.” Runa’s voice nearly shook from anger.
“Then tell me I’m wrong.”
When Runa didn’t answer, Tadg growled, “I thought so.”
Then he turned around and stormed away. Barclay, not wanting to be caught eavesdropping, ducked around the corner, his back against the crooked stone wall.
“I don’t want to hear about you going to the Bog’s Inn again!” Runa shouted after him.
“Then stop listening!” Tadg called back.
Tadg passed Barclay without noticing him, and Barclay let out a strangled breath. If Tadg was visiting the Bog’s Inn, then that proved that Tadg and Soren were working together. Which meant it didn’t matter what Barclay thought about Root or the world of Lore Keepers.
Surviving the second exam could be just as hard as passing it.
He ran the entire way back to the Ironwood Inn, as though he could sense a monster chasing him.
SEVENTEEN
The morning of the second round of the Exhibition, all the students and the Lore Masters gathered at the edge of Sycomore. The sky was gray from an oncoming blizzard, and snow whipped across the street, stinging Barclay’s already sleep-deprived, bloodshot eyes. This exam’s proctors, Floriane and Athna, distributed pieces of parchment and canvas bags while Erhart spoke at the crowd’s center.
“The second exam is a scavenger hunt,” he told them. He was bundled up so heavily that only his blue eyes were visible between his wooly hat and scarf. “You will have three hours within the Woods to collect the items on that parchment. Stow them in your bags, and return to this spot for the proctors to count them. Speed and correctness are important. You must finish quickly, and you must try to collect as many items as you can. Fewer items will result in a lower score.”
Ethel locked arms with Barclay. “We should work together!”
“We can do that?” he asked incredulously.
“Of course we can,” said Abel. “There aren’t rules, remember?”
After an entire night worrying about Soren and Tadg plotting his demise, Barclay’s hope rekindled. Ethel and Abel could protect him—they wouldn’t let him die, or fail.
When Floriane handed Barclay the list, his spirits lifted further. Viola had done a good job teaching him. Already he guessed the proper places to find all the items. And Soren, who usually watched him menacingly across the crowds, was nowhere to be seen.
“What are you smiling about?” Tadg asked Barclay as the students queued up at the starting line. “Eager to die, are you?”
Barclay’s skin prickled at his words. Ethel and Abel shot him suspicious, knowing glances. Last night Barclay had told them everything he’d overheard between Tadg and Runa.
“We’ll be waiting for you at the finish, fish food,” Abel told him.
“I told you to stop calling me that,” Tadg growled. Barclay realized Abel must’ve done so when he’d first overheard Abel and Tadg fighting in the Exhibition registration line. Considering how Tadg’s father had died, it was a pretty mean thing to