towards Fear's betrothed.
After a moment, Tomad sighed. He seemed to be studying his large, scarred hands where they rested on his thighs. 'We have grown complacent,' he rumbled.
'Father, is it complacency to assume the ones with whom we treat are honourable?'
'Yes, given the precedents.'
'Then why has the Warlock King agreed to a Great Meeting with the Letherii?'
Tomad's dark eyes flicked up to pin Trull's own. Of all Tomad's sons, only Fear possessed a perfect, unwavering match to his father's eyes, in hue and indurative regard. Despite himself, Trull felt himself wilt slightly beneath that scornful gaze.
'I withdraw my foolish question,' Trull said, breaking contact to disguise his dismay. A measuring of enemies. This contravention, no matter its original intent, will become a double-pointed blade, given the inevitable response to it by the Edur. A blade both peoples shall grasp. 'The unblooded warriors will be pleased.'
'The unblooded warriors shall one day sit in the council, Trull.'
'Is that not the reward of peace, Father?'
Tomad made no reply to that. 'Hannan Mosag shall call the council. You must needs be present to relate what you witnessed. Further, the Warlock King has made a request of me, that I give my sons to him for a singular task. I do not think that decision will be affected by the news you deliver.'
Trull worked through his surprise, then said, 'I passed Binadas on the way into the village—'
'He has been informed, and will return within a moon's time.'
'Does Rhulad know of this?'
'No, although he will accompany you. An unblooded is an unblooded.'
'As you say, Father.'
'Now, rest. You shall be awakened in time for the council.'
A white crow hopped down from a salt-bleached root and began picking through the midden. At first Trull had thought it to be a gull, lingering on the strand in the fast-fading light, but then it cackled and, mussel shell in its pallid beak, sidled down from the midden towards the waterline.
Sleep had proved an impossibility. The council had been called for midnight. Restless, nerves jangling along his exhausted limbs, Trull had walked down to the pebble beach north of the village and the river mouth.
And now, as darkness rolled in with the sleepy waves, he had found himself sharing the strand with a white crow. It had carried its prize down to the very edge, and with each whispering approach, the bird dipped the mussel shell into the water. Six times.
A fastidious creature, Trull observed, watching as the crow hopped onto a nearby rock and began picking at the shell.
White was evil, of course. Common enough knowledge. The blush of bone, Menandore's hateful light at dawn. The sails of the Letherii were white, as well, which was not surprising. And the clear waters of Calach Bay would reveal the glimmer of white cluttering the sea bottom, from the bones of thousands of slaughtered seals.
This season would have marked a return to surplus for the six tribes, beginning the replenishment of depleted reserves to guard against famine. Thoughts that led him to another way of seeing this illegal harvesting. A perfectly timed gesture to weaken the confederacy, a ploy intended to undermine the Edur position at the Great Meeting. The argument of inevitability. The same argument first thrown into our faces with the settlements on the Reach. "The kingdom of Lether is expanding, its needs growing. Your camps on the Reach were seasonal, after all, and with the war they had been all but abandoned.'
It was inevitable that more and more independent ships would come to ply the rich waters of the north coast. One could not police them all. The Edur need only look at other tribes that had once dwelt beyond the Letherii borderlands, the vast rewards that came with swearing fealty to King Ezgara Diskanar of Lether.
But we are not as other tribes.
The crow cackled from atop its stone throne, flinging the mussel shell away with a toss of its head, then, spreading its ghostly wings, rose up into the night. A final drawn out cawl from the darkness. Trull made a warding gesture.
Stones turned underfoot behind him and he swung about to see his elder brother approaching.
'I greet you, Trull,' Fear said in a quiet voice. "The words you delivered have roused the warriors.'
'And the Warlock King?'
'Has said nothing.'
Trull returned to his study of the dark waves hissing on the strand. 'Their eyes are fixed upon those ships,' he said.
'Hannan Mosag knows to look away, brother.'
'He has asked for the sons of Tomad Sengar. What do you