"The dreams," she said.
Otah took a pose of acknowledgment.
"If we had hand loom, you should weave," she said. "Put your mind to something real. Is unreal things that eat you."
"I'll be fine," he said.
"You are homesick. I know. I see it."
"I suppose," Otah said. "And I wonder now if we did the right thing."
"You think no?"
Otah turned his gaze back to the water. Something burst up from the surface and vanished again into the darkness, too quickly for Otah to see what shape it was.
"Not really," he said. "That's to say I think we did the best that we could. But that doing that thing was right . . ."
"Killing him," Maj said. "Call it what it is. Not that thing. Killing him. Hiding names give them power."
"That killing him was right . . . bothers me. At night, it bothers me."
"And if you can go back—make other choice—do you?"
"No. No, I'd do the same. And that disturbs me, too."
"You live too long in cities," Maj said. "Is better for you to leave."
Otah disagreed but said nothing. The night moved on. It was another week at least before they would reach Quian, southernmost of the eastern islands. The hold, filled now with the fine cloths and ropes of Saraykeht, the spices and metalworks of the cities of the Khaiem, would trade first for pearls and shells, the pelts of strange island animals, and the plumes of their birds. Only as the weeks moved on would they begin taking on fish and dried fruits, trees and salt timber and slaves. And only in the first days of spring—weeks away still and ten island ports at least—would they reach as far north as Nippu.
Years of work on the seafront, all the gifts and assistance Maati had given him for the journey to the Dai-kvo, everything he had, he had poured into two seasons of travel. He wondered what he would do, once he reached Nippu, once Maj was home and safe and with the people she knew. Back from her long nightmare with only the space where a child should have been at her side.
He could work on ships, he thought. He knew enough already to take on the simple, odious tasks like coiling rope and scrubbing decks. He might at least make his way back to the cities of the Khaiem . . . or perhaps not. The world was full of possibility, because he had nothing and no one. The unreal crowded in on him, as Maj had said, because he had abandoned the real.
"You think of her," Maj said.
"What? Ah, Liat? No, not really. Not just now."
"You leave her behind, the girl you love. You are angry because of her and the boy."
A prick of annoyance troubled him but he answered calmly enough.
"It hurt me that they did what they did, and I miss him. I miss them. But . . ."
"But it also frees you," Maj said. "It is for me, too. The baby. I am scared, when I first go to the cities. I think I am never fit in, never belong. I am never be a good mother without my own itiru to tell me how she is caring for me when I am young. All this worry I make. And is nothing. To lose everything is not the worst can happen."
"It's starting again, from nothing, with nothing," Otah said.
"Is exactly this," Maj agreed, then a moment later. "Starting again, and doing better."
The still-hidden sun lightened water and sky as they watched it in silence. The milky, lacework haze burned off as the fire rose from the sea and the full crew hauled up sails, singing, shouting, tramping their bare feet. Otah rose, his back aching from sitting so long without moving, and Maj brushed her robes and stood also. As the work of the day entered its full activity, he descended behind her into the darkness of their cabin where he hoped he might cheat his conscience of a few hours' sleep. His thoughts still turned on the empty, open future before him and on Saraykeht behind him, a city still waking to the fact that it had fallen.