Cerryl glanced down at the items in his hands, then at Nall.
She met his glance. “There be no denying what a man be. Your da, he couldn’t ha’ been other than he was. Nor you, Cerryl. He was a-fiddling with the light afore he could talk, or so your mother said. Too young, she said.” Nall shrugged. “You be a mite older. I seen you with the glasses and the white fire. Tried to keep you from a-burnin’ yourself too young.”
Syodor nodded. “Anyways, we thought . . . we wanted you to have them, not when you be too young, though. I kept them away from the house,” the miner added. “Knew as you’d feel them somehow.”
“There be a warm winter coat there. You da’s . . . saved it for you, and a scarf, your ma’s best scarf . . .” Nall sniffed. “Know as you can’t use a scarf . . . but felt you ought to have something that was hers.” She stepped forward and abruptly hugged Cerryl. “Did the best we could for you . . . and for your ma.” Tears streaked her face.
Cerryl could sense the absolute certainty of her words, and, swallowing hard, he had to fight to keep his own eyes from watering. “I know you did. Always be thankful . . . always.” He swallowed again and hugged her back, realizing how thin and frail she had become.
As suddenly as she had hugged him, Nall backed away in two swift steps, sniffed, and blotted her eyes. “Had to come with Syodor. Wouldn’t ha’ been right, otherwise.”
Syodor grasped Cerryl’s forearm with both hands and squeezed, and gnarled and bent as the one-eyed miner was, Cerryl could still feel the strength. “You be not a burly man, young Cerryl, but strong you be in ways not of the eye. If you be careful, you be doing well for yourself.” Syodor released the grip and stepped back quickly. “We be right proud of you.” After a moment, he added, “Best we be going, now. A long trip tomorrow.”
“Take care . . . please . . .” Cerryl stammered, feeling somehow numb, as though he should say more, do more, but not knowing what else he could say or do.
“Best as we can, lad,” said Syodor, “and you the same.”
Nall sniffed again and nodded. The two turned and began to walk down the lane.
Cerryl wanted to run after them. Instead, still holding the canvas pack, in which he had carefully replaced the mirror and the knife, Cerryl watched as his aunt and uncle walked slowly down the lane, back to the main road, and the mines—and Vergren.
“Cerryl? What you doing—” Dylert stopped talking as he saw the two figures walking quickly toward the main road. “That Syodor?”
“They came to say good-bye,” Cerryl said slowly. “The duke canceled his patent, and they have to leave the mines. After all those years . . .”
“Where are they going?” Dylert’s voice was softer.
“Uncle has a cousin in Vergren. He’s going to tend sheep, he said.”
“Sad thing it be,” offered Dylert. “The masterminer of Lydiar, and a shepherd he must end his days.”
“I offered to help them.” Cerryl looked down at the causeway. “Uncle Syodor—he insisted I stay here.” He looked at the millmaster. “That’s all right?”
Dylert laughed sadly and shook his head. “Cerryl, you be worth more than I pay you. Would that I could pay more, but stay you can, young fellow.” His gaze went to the distant figures. “Darkness if I can figure the ways of the world. Older I get, the stranger it seems. Masterminer, best there ever was, and a shepherd he must be.” The millmaster shook his head again.
Cerryl swallowed and continued to watch, long after Dylert had left, until Syodor and Nall vanished on the dusty road, amid the fast-moving shadows of the clouds.
XVI
UNTO THE GENERATIONS stood the black tower on the heights of the Westhorns, and from it issued forth the demon warriors and their blades, controlling trade and using the very blood of those who displeased them to create the mortar that bound their stone roads.
Nor did they suffer any man grown to survive upon their heights, discarding him like an empty husk of maize once they had wrested his seed from him . . .
For all this wickedness, Westwind survived and prospered, until the day when the Guild at Fairhaven sent a hero to Westwind, a stranger who beguiled the Marshal of the heights with song. Yet once she had borne son and daughter, the Marshal laughed and sent away that hero. In her evilness, she had her guards slay him in the depths of the Westhorns.
That son, who was called Creslin, grew strong, and cunning as his mother the Marshal, and before he was grown to the age of death or exile, he sneaked away from the heights, taking the talismans of darkness that had held the forces of white and right at bay for long generations.