is—
Don’t think.
Rysn scrambled to the rope, causing her guards to cry out. She grabbed the length of rope and let herself over the side, climbing down beside the greatshell’s head. The god’s head.
Passions! This was hard in a skirt. The rope bit into the skin of her arms, and it vibrated as the creature below crunched on the fruit upon its end.
Talik’s head appeared above. “What in Kelek’s name are you doing, idiot woman?” he screamed. She found it amusing that he’d learned their curses while studying with them.
Rysn clung to the rope, heart rushing in a mad panic. What was she doing? “Relu-na,” she yelled back at Talik, “approves of boldness!”
“There is a difference between boldness and stupidity!”
Rysn continued to climb down. It was more of a slide. Oh, Craving, Passion of need . . .
“Pull her back up!” Talik ordered. “You soldiers, help.” He gave further orders in Reshi.
Rysn looked up as workers grabbed the rope to haul her back upward. A new face appeared above, however, looking down. The king. She raised a hand, halting them as she studied Rysn.
Rysn continued on down. She didn’t go terribly far, maybe fifty feet or so. Not even down to the creature’s eye. She stopped herself, with effort, her fingers burning. “O great Relu-na,” Rysn said loudly, “your people refuse to trade with me, and so I come to you to beg. Your people need what I have brought, but I need a trade even more. I cannot afford to return.”
The creature, of course, did not reply. Rysn hung in place beside its shell, which was crusted with lichen and small rockbuds.
“Please,” Rysn said. “Please.”
What am I expecting to happen? Rysn wondered. She didn’t expect the thing to make any sort of reply. But maybe she could persuade those above that she was bold enough to be worthy. It couldn’t hurt, at least.
The rope quivered in her hands, and she made the mistake of glancing down.
Actually, what she was doing could hurt. Very much.
“The king,” Talik said above, “has commanded that you return.”
“Will our negotiation continue?” Rysn asked, glancing up. The king actually looked concerned.
“That’s not important,” Talik said. “You have been issued a command.”
Rysn gritted her teeth, clinging to the rope, looking at the plates of chitin before her. “And what do you think?” she asked softly.
Down below, the thing bit down, and the rope suddenly became very tight, slapping Rysn against the side of the enormous head. Above, workers shouted. The king yelled at them in a sudden, sharp voice.
Oh no . . .
The rope pulled even tighter.
Then snapped.
The shouts grew frantic above, though Rysn barely noticed them as panic struck. She did not fall gracefully, but as a flurry of screaming cloth and legs, her skirt flapping, her stomach lurching. What had she done? She—
She saw an eye. The god’s eye. Only a glimpse as she passed; it was as large as a house, glassy and black, and it reflected her falling form.
She seemed to hang before it for a fraction of a second, and her scream died in her throat.
It was gone in a moment. Then rushing wind, another scream, and a crash into water hard as stone.
Blackness.
* * *
Rysn found herself floating when she awoke. She didn’t open her eyes, but she could sense that she was floating. Drifting, bobbing up and down . . .
“She is an idiot.” She knew that voice. Talik, the one she’d been trading with.
“Then she fits well with me,” Vstim said. He coughed. “I have to say, old friend, you were supposed to help train her, not drop her off a cliff.”
Floating . . . Drifting . . .
Wait.
Rysn forced her eyes open. She was in a bed inside a hut. It was hot. Her vision swam, and she drifted . . . drifted because her mind was cloudy. What had they given her? She tried to sit up. Her legs wouldn’t move. Her legs wouldn’t move.
She gasped, then began breathing quickly.
Vstim’s face appeared above her, followed by a concerned Reshi woman with ribbons in her hair. Not the queen . . . king . . . whatever. This woman spoke quickly in the barking language of the Reshi.
“Calm now,” Vstim said to Rysn, kneeling beside her. “Calm . . . They’ll get you something to drink, child.”
“I lived,” Rysn said. Her voice rasped as she spoke.
“Barely,” Vstim said, though with fondness. “The spren cushioned your fall. From that height . . . Child, what were you thinking, climbing