particular about bloodlines in your clan?” he asked.
She looked at him questioningly. “Good thing for me they’re not, no. Why?”
“Then swear me in, do whatever you need to do, and let me take my turn.” He smiled. “Have pity on me. Adena will have my hide if you don’t get some rest.”
Her lips pursed. “They’re not your people. This isn’t necessary.”
“Does it break any taboos if I do?”
“No, I guess not, but…” She gazed around, as if looking for someone to give her a better reason.
“Is it going to help them if you fall over where you stand?” He pressed on, feeling a twinge of guilt at using dirty tactics. “Don’t you want to be in good shape tomorrow, when we meet with someone who might be able to tell us anything about the children and Layla?”
She glared at him. “Of course, I do. That’s not fair.”
“But you know I’m right.” The guilt wasn’t nearly strong enough to overcome the need to see that she rested.
And whatever her gift revealed to her of his thoughts, she finally gave in.
“Thank you again.” She shuffled back to the fire, curling into a ball on the blankets.
He knelt by her side, pulled the second blanket over her. “Is there anything special I should do or say?” he asked, suddenly aware of the magnitude of his offer. “I’m not much of a singer.”
“Just stay with them, let them know they’re not forgotten,” she murmured. “Let me know when you need a break, all right?”
“Of course.”
The pale moons gave more than enough light to work by, and Gavin made good use of the time.
When Esme stirred with the first morning rays, he moved to her side.
“Still warm enough?”
She struggled out of the blankets he’d piled on her through the night, eyes wide. “You didn’t get me! You said you--”
He held up a hand. “You said someone needed to stay with them. I did.”
Esme rocked back, pulling the blankets tightly around her shoulders against the cool fall air. “All night? By yourself?”
“It wouldn’t be the first time,” he said. He rubbed at the back of his neck. “I told them stories of places I’d been. Figured them being a traveling people, they might like to hear.”
A slow smile spread over her face. “That was perfect. I wish I’d been awake to hear.”
The nervous knot only tightened in his gut. “I can tell them again, if you really want. And, um. I did another thing.”
A dark eyebrow raised, but she said nothing.
He held out a hand, and she took it.
That was a good sign, right?
If he hadn’t just ruined everything.
“Stop worrying,” she said, as they picked their way across the camp in the pre-dawn mist.
And then she froze.
“What did you do?” she whispered.
He watched her face. He knew what she saw, he’d spent the long hours of the night digging them all, one by one, grave by grave.
“Is it right?” he asked.
She knelt by the first shrouded body, stared blankly into the neatly dug grave beside it. “How did you do this?”
Gavin coughed, embarrassed. “I told you. We’re built as weapons.”
“Nonsense,” she snapped, flying to her feet. “However you were born, whatever your gifts are, it’s what you do with them that counts.” Her eyes softened. “And what you did was an act of kindness. Don’t forget that.”
It didn’t take long to complete the burial of her clan. As the sun rose, Esme took one last walk around the destroyed camp while Gavin watched her every step.
“Is there anything you want to bring back with you?” he asked as she finally turned away, walking quickly towards the air sled.
“No,” she shook her head. “I’ll get a message to the other clans, see what can be reused. But none of this matters to me, not anymore.”
6
As they traveled back to the strange black castle they insisted on referring to simply as Ship, Esme realized how little of the outbound trip she remembered.
The land unrolled below them like a green and gold quilt, the turning leaves of autumn like gentle fires far below.
A night on the ground was nothing new, but a night on the ground after nearly dying seemed to have left her stiff.
Gavin was silent behind her, his solid presence more comforting than he could know.
And what he’d done...
How had he accomplished it?
So many graves should have been the work of multiple days and multiple people.
But he’d done it all in a single night, like a jinn of the old stories, quiet enough for her to sleep