lapsed into morose silence, he decided it must be the latter and wondered if bringing the youth to… home was a good idea. Faced with a choice between druidry and farming, Zvain might have preferred to remain in Urik. He’d been doing all right for himself mere, apparently.
“What did you do after I left?” he asked, curiosity getting the better of him. “Not stealing every day, I hope.”
“No, not stealing.” The boy stared at his feet a long time, then looked up and said: “I’m tired. I want to go to sleep now.”
He curled up in a blanket with his face toward the fire, eyes wide and staring at the flames. He was still staring when they wrapped Akashia in the thickest blanket and settled her between Ruari and Yohan, to keep her warm and to keep her from wandering off in the night.
Pavek laid Dovanne’s sword across his lap and took the first watch. Guthay set early. The skies became darker and a handful of shooting stars streaked across the sky.
He leaned over to tell Zvain, to share this small magic with the city-raised boy, but Zvain’s eyes were closed now, asleep with his fists tucked childlike beneath his chin and cheek.
The blanket had slipped. Pavek picked up a corner to pull it taut, but Zvain cringed and whimpered when he tried to tuck the cloth beneath those clenched fists.
Not stealing, he’d said. How many ways were there for an orphan youth to survive in Urik? Between what he’d known as a templar and what he’d lived as an orphan himself, Pavek figured he knew them all, and promised himself that he wouldn’t ask any more questions.
Recalling Yohan with Akashia, he stroked Zvain’s hair, murmuring a soft reassurance. But it seemed that his touch wasn’t comforting. The boy started shivering, and Pavek simply left him alone.
* * *
They made their way home as steadily as they could when none of them knew exactly where home was. Akashia was a growing concern, for all, but thanks to Yohan’s patience and determination, she neither starved nor grew parched from thirst. Otherwise her condition remained the same: unaware of everything, except sunlight if it chanced to touch her eyes. Then she would flail and scream.
At last, however, the dazzling white expanse of the Sun’s Fist flooded their vision with shimmering heat waves, whirlwinds, and a beautiful mirage: a tree-crowned village in the middle of a swaying, green-grass sea. As the mirage drifted through Pavek’s thoughts, into the dark hole, which it filled precisely, he breathed out the single word: “Quraite,” He realized he had not spoken alone.
“Quraite?” Zvain asked. “What? Where?”
And they all realized that Telhami had left the mirage strictly for them, to restore their strength and faith, and guide them across the featureless salt flats.
The heat and brilliance of the Sun’s Fist was brutal, though not, by his memory, as brutal as it had been the first time Pavek had crossed it, when he hadn’t known what lay on the other side. To spare Zvain that anxiety, he’d asked both Ruari and Yohan to describe the guarded lands to a city-bred boy before they set foot on the salt.
But nothing they said erased the shadows of panic that rimmed Zvain’s eyes. When they made a quick camp at sundown to water the kanks and themselves, he asked an exhausted-looking Zvain if he would prefer to ride the last leg of the journey with him or Yohan.
“I’ll be all right. I’ll be fine once I see Quraite with my own eyes.”
Zvain got that chance not long after dawn when the mirage and the village merged. The whole village, druids and farmers alike, had turned out to greet them as they approached the fertile green fields.
“This is home,” Ruari cried eagerly. “This is Quraite. It can’t hurt Kashi’s eyes!” And he tugged the cloth down until it hung below her chin and circled her neck.
The half-elf was wrong. Akashia shrieked with pain and terror, but they were within the larger expanse of Quraite now, where the land itself was a living thing, and where the guardian would carry Telhami wherever she wished in an instant.
The kank skittered when Telhami materialized at its side. But a bug’s panic was no match for Telhami’s determination to see Akashia for herself. The creature trilled once, then stood stock-still. The claws of all six feet dug into the ground as Telhami approached.
Kashi’s screams had ceased. She sat motionless in front of Ruari, face buried in her