“Nobody is fighting anyone without going through me.”
“What do you think you’re doing?” Rachelle demanded.
She felt his back stiffen. “If they want to punish you for shedding innocent blood, they can hardly cut through me to do it.”
“Did nobody teach you how vengeance works?”
“Besides, I doubt I’d survive walking back through the woods on my own, so if they want you dead, then this will save time, really.”
“Stand back!” a woman called out. A moment later, the crowd parted.
Aunt Léonie stepped out.
For one sick, horrifying moment, that was whom she saw. Then she realized that the woman clad in white and red was too tall to be Aunt Léonie; her hair was too light, her face too pointy. It was just another woodwife.
“I will deal with them,” she said.
André grabbed her by the arm. “You don’t understand, it’s—”
She gave him a single look and he let go. “I understand perfectly,” she said. “This is the girl from your village who murdered my predecessor and became a bloodbound. Is that not so?” She looked around at the crowd. “Then I have the right, don’t I, to administer justice in this matter?”
Silence. Nobody moved as the woman strode forward toward Rachelle.
“Mademoiselle,” said Armand, “she just helped save your village. And she has saved a lot of other people in the last few years. It doesn’t seem right to repay her with death.”
“She killed the previous woodwife of this village,” said the woman. “Did you know that?”
“I knew she was bloodbound,” said Armand. “The person she murdered had to come from somewhere.”
“You have the right to kill me,” said Rachelle. Her voice felt like a great length of rusty iron chains. “But I can’t die right now. So I will fight my way out if I must.”
The woman looked her up and down. “I don’t intend to kill you,” she said. “I know what would happen to this village if we killed the King’s bloodbound. But you will come to my house and speak with me before you leave.”
“I won’t go back to that house,” said Rachelle.
“We burned that house,” said the woodwife. “Did you think anything human could bear to live in it again? They built me a new one when I came here.”
The new house was closer than Aunt Léonie’s had been, just on the other side of the village wall. “It’s too dangerous, now, to live further away,” Aunt Léonie had said.
Rachelle was hardly paying attention at that point. Between exhaustion and the still-bleeding wound in her arm, she could barely see straight.
“I’m going to sleep,” she said, and then lay down on the floor without waiting for an answer. Nobody kicked her, so she supposed it must be all right. She fell asleep almost instantly.
When she awoke the next morning, the woodwife was sitting beside her, watching her with a narrow, unyielding gaze. Behind her was the normal clutter of a woodwife’s house: spindles and baskets of wool. Bunches of herbs hanging from the ceiling, and in between them many-colored charms, like woolen snowflakes. It was so comfortingly familiar that for a moment she almost felt safe.
Then she realized who was missing.
She bolted up. “Where’s Armand?”
The woodwife waved a hand. “Your friend? Safe. Outside. I didn’t want him hearing us.”
“I remember, you said you wanted to speak with me.” Rachelle paused. “Thank you for last night.”
“It wasn’t for you.”
“Who are you?” asked Rachelle.
The woodwife handed her a bowl of porridge and a spoon. “My name is Margot Dumont,” she said. “I apprenticed beside Léonie and I do not intend to forgive you for her death.”
Rachelle’s hand clenched on the spoon. “I didn’t ask you to.”
“No.” Margot nodded in acknowledgment. “I need to know, and on whatever honor you have left, I charge you not to lie: What did she tell you about Durendal?”
“Nothing,” said Rachelle, and took a bite of the porridge. It tasted like her childhood, and her throat ached with tears.
“Nothing?”
“Just what everyone knows. That it was Zisa’s sword, forged from the bones of the Devourer’s victims. That it was lost. That’s all.” One spoonful had made her hungry; Rachelle gulped down the rest of the porridge.
Margot watched her eat. When Rachelle had finished, she said, “Léonie knew where it was.”
“What?”
“It was her duty to know where it was. She was entrusted with it by the woodwife who trained us. You were her apprentice; she must have told you.”
“She never told me anything,” said Rachelle. “She never did anything, just—”
Just, she realized, guarded Durendal. Rachelle had despised