The Other Side of the Sky - Amie Kaufman Page 0,99
what I want for her—just this small moment to laugh and run from the rain.
Even if one moment is all we get.
TWENTY-THREE
NIMH
In my dream, I am a child again, walking the byways of the floating market with my mother. She is inspecting a piece of fruit while I gaze hungrily at the vendor across the way, who is frying dough and heating honey. I want to taste it so badly I’m trembling. I am about to ask my mother if she will buy me a sweet when the barge below us gives a great shudder, nearly knocking me over. I run to my mother, but she recoils, just out of reach no matter how hard I try.
No, Nimh, she tells me. I cannot hold your hand.
The floor quakes again, and then begins to crumble away all around me like shale in an earthquake, until I am on a floating island, alone. Then that too fractures and disappears, and I’m falling, falling—
I wake midair, disoriented and uncertain how long I’ve been falling. My body gives a loud thud when I hit the floor, my head reeling as I turn to look up at the hanging berth I fell from in confusion. The sound of breathing, a faint snore, and then a mumble, makes my gaze swing over to the other side of the room—North. He is still asleep, curled up in a ball on his side, and the bindle cat sits with perfect composure and dignity on his hip, looking down at me.
The riverstrider’s boat. The rain. The moments just before …
Still dazed, I sit up, my pulse speeding from the fall—but as I look at North, my heartbeat settles into something steadier.
I feel my face heating, the night flooding back to me in a wild rush. It’s like his hand is there again, drawing the blood to my cheeks and my lips as if his fingers were a lodestone. I find myself touching my own cheek as I watch him sleep. Looking at him is like gazing at a map to a land I only ever walked in a dream—I’m utterly lost, and utterly certain I know exactly where I am, all at once.
His thick curls have tumbled down over his brow in his sleep, and my hand itches with the unbearable urge to touch them. To touch his hair would not be to touch him, surely. I find my hand outstretched before I’ve decided one way or the other, and so I linger there, fingers hovering.
Would I know? If I touched his hair, and that was enough to drive the divinity from me, would I feel it? I don’t remember when the divinity settled on me—I was so young I might have dismissed it as a passing fever or an imagined sensation. Would I know?
I try to imagine what it would have been like for Jezara. To give up everything she knew, everything her people needed her to be, for a moment like this one. Did she feel the divinity leave her?
Did she regret her choice?
The barge gives a sudden lurch, and I grab for the ring where North’s berth is strung up before I can tumble on top of him.
The shaking ground in my dream was no dream at all—the barge is moving, and it’s just struck something hard enough to make my bones ache.
I stumble upright, heart pounding though I cannot think what could be happening, and make it to the ladder up to the deck.
Early morning has dawned gray and wet, the diffuse light still enough to make me squint after the dark inside of the barge. The rain has slowed, but the river is swollen and quick, and the mooring lines …
Are gone.
“North!” I croak, stumbling back inside. “Wake up!”
“You wake up,” he mumbles, curling into a tighter ball.
I suck in a steadying breath and lean a little closer. “North, I cannot shake you—you must wake up! The river has swept us downstream, and I need your help.”
The urgency in my voice gets him moving, and all it takes is one look at my face in the dim gray light and he’s scrambling free of his berth.
He’s close on my heels as I emerge on deck. The barge has been caught against a mud bank, the coursing river pushing it over at an angle, which explains why I fell out of my berth. For once, we don’t stop to argue or converse, but work in simple, easy harmony—I shout at North to grab the starboard