know your heart. Take my family’s name. Our children will be so honored to have you at our table’s head.”
For an instant, Wynn thought Sliver might reach for his hand, but the smith backed away.
“I cannot, Carrow . . . you know I cannot.”
His expression turned cold. “Then marry into some lesser family, and keep your name . . . for what it is worth!”
He strode for the door.
Wynn scrambled down the passage, fumbling with her burdens. She quickly spun, pretending to stroll idly the other way. Carrow stomped past without a glance, and Wynn slowed, watching him fade down the passage.
Poor Sliver. A clan-kin of the great Hammer-Stag was in love with her. Maybe she had feelings for him, but she valued her lost heritage more.
Dwarven matrimony was complicated, leaning heavily on notoriety, honor, and status. If Sliver married into a family lesser than her own, her husband would’ve taken the Iron-Braid name. But she hadn’t done this, and from her state, living in the depths of underside, how could there be a lesser family? Sliver was proud to a fault.
Wynn turned back. With her arms full, she tapped her foot on the door frame.
Sliver raised her head where she stood slumped over the forge. At sight of Wynn, the smith’s surprise quickly vanished under ire.
“What now?” she growled.
“Might we share a meal?” Wynn asked, trying to hold up the food.
“Unless you have something to tell me alone . . . be gone!”
“Is that your mother’s wish?” Wynn returned. “Or are you now the matriarch of the Iron-Braids?”
Sliver straightened instantly but faltered in answering.
“Then your mother’s welcome stands,” Wynn claimed, and stepped in without invitation. “Shall we cook?”
She headed straight for the rear door, not looking at Sliver.
As she passed, the smith snarled, “Where is your tall friend?”
“He had business at the market,” Wynn answered.
“My mother is resting.”
“Then we’ll prepare the food first and wake her when it’s ready.”
Wynn tried to grip the door latch but couldn’t get a hold with all her burdens and her staff.
“Are you going to help?” she asked. “Or should I just kick it until your mother answers?”
Sliver appeared too weary for more argument. “You are persistent . . . little scribbler.”
Wynn shrugged. “I’ve been called worse.”
The smith’s gaze slipped to the goods in Wynn’s arms. Exhausted by labor or other pressures, or not having gone to the market herself, Sliver grabbed the latch and gave it a wrench. Wynn shouldered the door open, entering the hearth room with Shade.
Preparations proceeded silently as Wynn nosed about. Sliver often had to retrieve or point out whatever Wynn needed. Otherwise, they didn’t speak. Sliver prepped the hearth with lumps of raw coal from a battered pail. But while peeling potatoes, Wynn couldn’t stand the silence anymore.
“I understand your reasons,” she began, “for not accepting Carrow.”
Sliver half turned. “You were listening!” she accused.
“You were loud.”
The smith turned back to the hearth. “At least this time my mother did not hear.”
Soon the coals gave birth to small flames, and Wynn waited, even until the last potato was peeled and cut.
“If one of my brothers married,” Sliver whispered, “our lives would have been different . . . maybe.”
Wynn stopped cutting bread. Sliver’s tone betrayed how deeply her brothers’ chosen paths had affected her. It was surprising that she spoke of this at all. Perhaps Sliver hadn’t had anyone to talk to in a long while. This tentative truce wasn’t something Wynn wished to shatter.
“How did . . . Why did High-Tower leave to join the guild?” she asked.
Sliver glanced up in suspicion, but Wynn simply waited.
“He was always strange,” Sliver said. “Both of them were. Running off the moment work was done or sometimes before. Father would go looking for them. After the first few times, he always went straight to the temples. In the latter days, it was always the temple of Bedzâ’kenge.”
Sliver shook her head with a breathy scoff.
Wynn took up the bread to cut once more. So Ore- Locks must have spent time at that temple as well. But why? Intuition told her it wasn’t the right moment yet to speak of him—not until Sliver actually spoke his name.
“And it remained so,” Sliver continued, “at least for High- Tower. The shirvêsh told Father that my brothers would not stop asking about our family’s history, trying to learn more than what we had from our own ancestors. And High-Tower wrote everything down . . . like a human.” Her voice turned cold. “Then Ore-Locks started leaving for