vital.”
“Then you lied to the princess as well,” he returned.
Willful deceit was notable among dwarven vices; doing so to Princess—Duchess—Reine was just that much worse. And there was little she could do to amend it.
“Only about High-Tower,” she answered. “Look around. I brought the food. Sliver works too hard and long to go to market, and your mother is too—”
“No, no,” Mother Iron- Braid cut in, petting her son’s chest. “We are well enough, and you have come back.” She turned her head a little toward Wynn. “Do not speak so, or you will drive him away!”
Ore-Locks winced at this. He carefully took his mother’s hands and cast a not-so-gentle glance at Sliver. Hers in turn was even less kind for him.
Wynn knew nothing of the Stonewalkers’ ways or their lives apart from their people. But she had some notion of what it had cost Ore-Locks to come home.
“Sit and rest,” he said, guiding his mother toward the table.
As yet, Sliver hadn’t greeted him. Instead, she intercepted him and gripped her mother’s shoulders.
“Get your hands off her!” she hissed.
Ore-Locks backstepped, and Sliver settled her mother in the only chair.
The sight of his family clearly pained Ore-Locks, as if this were the last place in the world he wished to be. He glanced once at the door. Sliver crossed her arms, daring him to leave. Ore- Locks remained. Even as Mother Iron-Braid reached for his hand, he fixed his gaze on Wynn again. She couldn’t help fidgeting under his scrutiny.
“I never introduced my . . .” she began. “I am—”
“I know who you are,” he answered.
A chill sank straight through Wynn. The duchess had told him—perhaps all the Stonewalkers—about her. They knew exactly who she was and had been warned against her.
“Yes, I’m the one who . . . brought those texts back,” she confirmed. “I’m responsible for the translation project, the one you and Master Cinder-Shard warned High-Tower to stop.”
Ore-Locks carefully pulled from his mother’s clinging grip and backed toward the door.
“Forgive me, Mother,” he said. “There is great treachery here, and I cannot stay.”
“Treachery?” Sliver echoed, glancing at Wynn. “From her?”
Mother Iron- Braid frantically turned from one to the next. “What is this . . . ? What are you all talking—”
“No!” Wynn snapped at Ore- Locks. “I simply need to see the texts, for all our sakes. Just listen—”
“Enough from you!” Sliver shouted, then lunged one step at her brother. “You speak of treachery? Look to yourself! We have suffered enough without you bringing your false ancestor among us!”
Ore-Locks didn’t wince this time, but he didn’t quite meet his sister’s eyes.
“We want no part of you . . . or it,” she went on. “I will not let you taint us further. Get out!”
Wynn was confused by this exchange.
“I never imagined High- Tower would leave,” Ore- Locks whispered. “But deny our past all you want. It changes nothing. One of ours, long gone before us, called me to serve . . . and I am no longer part of this world.”
Ore-Locks stepped out into the dim workshop, and his mother let out a mournful wail.
Wynn panicked, rushing for the doorway. “Ore-Locks, stop!”
He’d already reached the outer door and didn’t turn. Wynn tried desperately to think of something to halt him. He wouldn’t speak of the texts, but there must be something to give him pause, even for an instant.
“Who is Thallûhearag?” she called.
Ore-Locks paused.
“No, daughter!” Mother Iron Braid shouted.
Shade’s deafening snarl came quickly, but Wynn never had a chance to turn.
Something struck her back, and her head whiplashed as she shot out of the hearth room. Tumbling and scraping across the smithy’s floor, she heard Shade barking and snapping. She tried to push up and roll over, but her hands stung sharply when she pressed against the floor.
Sliver shrieked, and Shade yelped, and Wynn flopped over on her back.
Shade stood between her and the hearth room’s door, all her fur on end and her ears flattened as she lowered her head in menace. Sliver stood in the doorway with mixed shock and revulsion on her broad features. She was gripping one forearm. A bit of blood seeped between her thick fingers.
“Oh, no!” Wynn breathed. “Shade was only—”
In one fluid motion, Sliver chucked out Wynn’s pack and staff.
“Don’t!” Wynn cried, reaching out where she lay.
To her shock, Shade lunged sideways and under the falling staff. Its sheathed crystal’s end struck near Shade’s shoulders, and the haft rolled off her rump to the floor. Wynn’s surprise at Shade’s action was