long, inescapable isolation, that the latter two were somehow gone from this world. But there were others to account for, including a pair named Vespana and Ga’hetman.
So far, “to hide” what wasn’t clear, but the Children had scattered near the end of the war. In the frozen castle an “orb”—for lack of a proper term—had been discovered. But where had the other ten Children gone, if any still existed, and why hadn’t they accompanied Li’kän and her companions? What had “consumed its own” beneath lost Bäalâle Seatt? And more immediately, why had the wraith committed murder for the translation folios?
The wraith had attacked Wynn on several occasions, after Chane had brought the scroll to her. Had it known what was hidden therein?
Perhaps she’d overlooked something in her one brief glimpse of the scroll’s content. But attempting to see the poem again meant raising her mantic sight. Tonight, she didn’t have Domin il’Sänke or Chap—or even Shade—to help rid her of the sight, should something go wrong.
Wynn sat there, staring at the scroll’s blackened surface and teetering between sensibility and overwhelming desire. As usual, curiosity tipped her one way. She set the scroll aside, extended her right index finger to draw a mental circle upon on the floor, and—the door burst open.
Chane rushed in behind Shade. Both halted at the sight of the scroll and Wynn’s finger poised over the floor stones.
“What are you doing?” Chane demanded. “Are you trying to summon mantic sight all alone?”
The odor of the sea filled the room from her returned companions. Chane’s clothing was stained in faint white shadows of dried salt, though much of him still looked damp. His hair was a mess, as was Shade’s crusted charcoal-colored fur.
Shade crept over, sniffed the scroll, and wrinkled her jowls. Her glittering eyes narrowed on Wynn—the suspicion there was too much like what Wynn remembered from Chap.
She searched her companions’ faces, caught between relief and trepidation over their venture.
“Did you find it?” she blurted out.
Chane scowled, matching Shade’s disapproval over what they’d caught her doing.
“Maybe,” he answered, and glared at Shade.
Wynn went numb. “What does that mean?”
“What are you doing?” Chane repeated. “I thought to find you near the market or the duchess’s inn.”
“Pointless,” she answered, rolling up the scroll and tucking it back in its case. “Reine has retired until tomorrow night. Everyone with her is apparently waiting for something. They’re going back down for days. I have no idea what’s so special about tomorrow night.”
“The new moon,” Chane said, and before she asked, he shook his head. “Something I noticed while onshore. The moon will be invisible tomorrow night.”
Wynn pondered this, though it didn’t seem to mean anything. Stonewalkers would rarely see the sky or the moon.
“Never mind . . . did you find a way in or not?”
“Ask her,” Chane replied, jutting his chin toward Shade.
Wynn blinked rapidly. How could Shade know but not Chane? Upon seeing her confusion, he explained all, up to the point when Shade led him back to the lift.
“She clearly wanted to return to you,” he added.
Wynn put aside Shade’s sneaky reluctance for language and crooked a finger at the dog.
“All right, you,” she said. “Out with it, now!”
Shade approached and Wynn reached for the dog’s face. At the touch, she raised a memory that Shade had shown her—of the grated opening beyond a sea pool in the sealed chamber that the duchess had visited.
In answer, Wynn’s head swam with new images, scents, and sounds.
The smell of the sea was overpowering, as if it clogged her whole nose. She felt cold and damp all over. Even high up the shore’s slope, the surf’s spray kept hitting her. Her feet hurt, as if she’d been walking barefooted—bare-pawed—on broken stone all night.
Inside Shade’s memory, Wynn looked down upon rock as she sniffed her way along the shore. Wet crags, cracks, and crevices glittered in her sight. She—Shade—glanced up.
The sky over the ocean was dimly lit. Dawn wasn’t far off, though the sun couldn’t have yet crested the eastern horizon beyond the mountain. Only Shade’s superior sight allowed Wynn to see as much as she did. She felt and heard herself whine, and the sound was so frustrated and tired.
In the distance, too far off, she made out the port by its tallest buildings and the few moored ships. Instead of dipping her muzzle in continued search, Wynn turned back toward the port. Her pace quickened as much as shifting rocks would allow.
Wynn’s own frustration and misery mounted on top of