In those days the eastern border of the elven lands lay in the
middle of a forest. A traveler leaving the high plains and heading
east came down a long gentle decline into the oaks to find several
rivers that might mark a border—if only anyone at all had
lived on either side of them. In that vast tangle of tree and
shrub, bracken and thorn, finding the lands of men (that is, the
three western provinces —Eldidd, Pyrdon, Arcodd—of the
kingdom of Deverry) was no easy job. If you wanted to go from west
to east, the sandy coast of the Southern Sea made a much more
reliable road, if, of course, you could fight your way south to
reach it. The ancient forest had a way of tricking travelers unless
they or their companions knew the route well.
The woman who rode out of the forest late on a summer day
traveled with a horde of such companions—not that most human
beings would have seen them. Sylphs and sprites hovered round her
in the air; gnomes clung to her saddle or perched on the back of
the spare horse she was leading; undines rose out of every stream
and pool she passed to wave a friendly greeting. Her friends
weren’t the only odd thing about Jill. If you looked
carefully at her silver hair, cropped short like a lad’s, and
the fine lines that webbed her eyes round and latticed her cheeks,
you realized that she had to be at least fifty years old if not
somewhat more, but she radiated so much vitality, the way a fire
gives off heat, that it was impossible to think of her as anything
but young. She was, you see, the most powerful sorcerer in all of
Deverry.
The first human settlement that any traveler corning from the
west reached on the coast was the holy precinct of Wmmglaedd,
although in those days, before the silting of the river and the
meddling of humans had extended the shore, the temple lay a little
ways out to sea on a low-lying cluster of islands. Jill rode along
the sea cliffs through meadows of tall grass to a rocky beach,
where the waves washed over gravel with a mutter, as if the sea
were endlessly regretting some poor decision. A fair mile offshore,
she could see the rise of the main island against the glitter of
the Southern Sea.
She led her pair of horses down to the two stone pillars that
marked the entrance to a stone causeway, still underwater at the
moment, though when she looked at the water lapping at the carved
notches along the edge of one pillar, she found each wave falling a
little lower than the one before. Crying and mewling, seabirds
swooped overhead, graceful gulls and the ungainly pelicans that
were sacred to the god Wmm, all come to feed as the dropping tide
exposed the rocky shallows. At last the causeway emerged, streaming
water like a silver sea snake, to let her lead her horses across
the uncertain footing. At the far end of the causeway stood a stone
arch inlaid with colored marble in panels of interlace and roundels
decorated with pelicans; it sported an inscription, too,
“water covers and reveals all things.”
About ten miles long and seven wide, with a central hill
standing in the midst of meadows of coarse sea grass, the island
sheltered four different temple complexes at that time, brochs as
tall as a lord’s dun, clusters of wooden guest houses, cattle
barns and riding stables as well as a series of holy shrines placed
at picturesque locations. Although the temple had been founded in
the year 690 as a modest refuge for scholars and mystics, during
the long civil wars of the ninth century its priests had the
shrewdness and the good fortune to play a crucial role in placing
the true king on his throne. When the wars were over, their fame
drew an occasional desperate soul seeking an oracle, and as the
long years went by, the rare case became a swarm of pilgrims, all
laden with gifts to earn the favor of the god.
Now Wmm was rich. Still leading her horses rather than riding,
Jill left the causeway and followed a fine road, paved with
limestone blocks, through the smallish town that had sprung up near
the temples. In among the round, thatched houses townsfolk and
visitors strolled around or sat in the windows of one of the many
inns, and peddlers kept accosting her with trays of sweetmeats or
baskets of little silver medals and pottery souvenirs. She brushed
them all off and strode on her way, skirting the main complex, too,
bustling with visitors and priests here in the summer season, and
took a little-used path that ran southeast through pine trees, all
twisted and bowed down from the constant wind. In a little bay of
rocky shore a jetty stood with a ferry bobbing at anchor beside it.
Beyond, a scant mile away, she could see the rise of East Island, a
long sliver of land that most visitors knew or cared nothing
about.
“Jill, halloo!” The ferryman, a stout priest draped
in an orange cloak, waved both hands at her as she led her horses
gingerly down the steep path. “Back so soon?”
“I am, at that. How have things been? Quiet?”
“They always are, out our way.” He grinned,
revealing brown and broken teeth. “His holiness has pains in
his joints again.”
“I’m surprised you aren’t all as bent and stiff as
village crones, frankly, out here in the fog.”
“True, true. But well, we’ve got a bit of sun today
at least. Enjoy it while we can, say I.”
Since the tide was running out, the journey was quick and easy,
though the ferryman was bound to have a harder trip rowing back by
himself. Jill coaxed her horses off, left him sighing at the job
ahead, and headed across a wind-scoured meadow to a complex much
smaller and plainer than those of the main island. At the base of a
low hill stood a clutter of roundhouses and a stables, shaded by a
few stunted oaks. Dust drifted and swirled over the threadbare
lawns and sickly vegetable gardens. She turned her horses over to a
groom, carried her saddlebags and bedroll to a hut that did for a
guest house, dumped her gear onto the narrow cot, and decided that
she’d unpacked. With a deferential bob of his head, a servant
came in, bringing her a washbasin and a pitcher of water.
“His holiness is in the library.”
“I’ll join him there.”
After she washed up, she lingered in the silence for a moment to
get her questions clear in her mind. Like all the other pilgrims,
she’d come to Wmm’s temple for help in making a
decision, in her case about a voyage to the far-lying islands of
the Bardekian archipelago, a very major undertaking indeed in those
days. It was likely that she’d be gone for years and almost
as likely that she wouldn’t even find what she was looking
for, the translation of a single word that she’d found
inscribed inside a ring. The word, written in Elvish characters
though it made no sense at all in any language, might have been a
name or sheer nonsense for all that she knew. What she did know, in
the mysterious way that dweomermasters have, was that the
inscription would make the difference between life and death to
thousands of people, men and elves alike. When, she didn’t
exactly know. Someday, perhaps even soon.
She suspected—but only suspected—that the answer lay
in Bardek. She was hoping that the priests of Wmm could either
confirm her suspicion or lay it to rest.
The library of Wmm was at that time an oblong building in the
Bardek style of whitewashed stucco, roofed in clay tiles to cut
down the fire danger. Inside, in a row of hearths peat fires
constantly smoldered to keep the chill and damp off the collection
of over five hundred books and scrolls—a vast wealth of
learning for the time. Jill found the chief librarian, Suryn,
standing at his lectern by a window with a view of the oak trees
beyond. Unrolled in front of him was a Bardekian scroll. He looked
up and smiled at her; as always, his weak eyes were watering from
the effort of reading.
“Oh, there you are, Jill! I’ve been looking for that
reference you wanted.”
“The history scroll? You’ve found it?”
“I have indeed, and just now, so it’s a good thing
you wandered in like this. Must be an omen.”
Although he was joking, Jill felt a line of cold run down her
back.
“In fact, I’ve found both of the sources you were
talking about.” He tapped the papyrus in front of him with
a bone stylus. “Here’s the scroll, and it does indeed
have a reference to elves living in the islands. Well, maybe
they’re elves, anyway. Take a look at it, and I’ll just
fetch the codex.”
The scroll was an ancient chronicle of the city-state of
Arbarat, lying far south in the Bardekian islands. Since Jill had
learned to read Bardekian only recently, it took her some minutes
to puzzle out the brief entry.
“A shipwrecked man was washed up on shore near the harbor. His name was Terrso, a merchant of
Mangorat . . . ” There was a long bit
here about the archon’s attempt to repatriate the man, which
Jill skipped through. “Before he left us, Terrso told of his
adventures. He claimed to have traveled far, far south, beyond even
Anmurdio, and to have discovered a strange people who dwelt in the
jungles. These people, he claimed, were more akin to animals than
men, because they lived in trees and had long pointed ears. Because
he was so ravaged by fever, none took his words
seriously.”
“Curse them all!” Jill snapped.
“They don’t truly go into detail, do they?”
Suryn came up at her elbow. “Here’s the Lughcarn codex.
Do be careful with it, won’t you? It’s very
old.”
“Of course I will, Your Holiness. Don’t trouble your
heart about that. May I take it back to the guest house to read? I
need to rest from my journey.”
Suryn blinked at her for a moment.
“Oh, you’ve been gone. Of course—silly of me.
By all means, keep it with you if you’d like. There’s a
lectern in the hut?”
“A good one, and a candle-spike, too.”
Jill bathed and ate a sparse dinner before she got around to
looking at the codex. By then, early in the evening, the fog was
coming in thick, darkening the hut and turning it chilly, too. She
lit a fire in the hearth, lit it by the simple means of invoking
the Wildfolk of Fire with a snap of her fingers, then stuck a
reading candle, as long and thick as a child’s arm, onto the
cast-iron spike built into the lectern. Before she lit the candle,
though, she sat down on the floor by the fire to watch the
salamanders playing in the flames and to think for a while about
the work she had in hand, gathering every scrap of available
information about the mysterious inscription. Although it was a
pretty thing, made of dwarven silver and graved with roses, the
ring itself carried no particular magic. It might, however, be
important as a clue.
She already knew much of its history. Once it had belonged to a
human bard named Maddyn, who had traveled to the western lands and
given it to an elven dweomermaster as a gift. That master had in
turn given it to a mysterious race of not-truly-corporeal beings
called the Guardians. She was assuming that the Guardians had added
the unintelligible inscription for the simple reason that the ring
hadn’t been inscribed before they’d got hold of it, but
when one of their kind returned it to the physical world by giving
it to another bard, elven this time and named Devaberiel, it
carried its little riddle. As far as dweomermasters could tell, the
Guardians perceived important omens about future possibilities as
easily as most men see the sun. Since they insisted that the
inscription had some important Wyrd to fulfill, Jill saw no reason
to doubt them. Abstract terms like “why,” however,
seemed to have no meaning for them, and there was much in the way
of explanation that they’d left out of their tale.
As she always did toward evening, she found herself thinking
about her old master in the dweomer and missing him. Although Nevyn
had been dead for months now, at times her grief stabbed so sharply
that it seemed he’d died just the day before. If only he were
here, she would think, he’d unravel this wretched puzzle fast
enough! A gray gnome, a creature she’d known for years,
materialized next to her and climbed into her lap. All spindly arms
and legs and long warty nose, he looked up at her with his pinched
little face twisted into a creditable imitation of human
sadness.
“You miss Nevyn, too, don’t you?” Jill said.
“Well, he’s gone on now like he had to. All of us do in
our time.”
Although the gnome nodded, she doubted if he understood. In a
moment he jumped off her lap, found a copper coin wedged into a
crack in the floor, and became engrossed with pulling it out. Jill
wondered if she would ever meet Nevyn again in the long cycles of
death and rebirth. Only if she needed to, she supposed, and she
knew that it would be years and years before he would be reborn
again, long after her own death, no doubt, though well
before her next birth. Although all souls rest in the Inner Lands
between lives, Nevyn’s life had been so unnaturally prolonged
by dweomer—he’d lived well over four hundred years, all
told—that his corresponding interval of rest would doubtless
be unusually long as well, or so she could speculate. It was for
the Lords of Wyrd to decide, not her. She told herself that often,
even as her heart ached to see him again.
Finally, in a fit of annoyance over her mood, she got up and
went to the lectern to read, but the chronicle only made her
melancholy worse. She’d been trying to recall an event that
had happened in one of her own previous lives, but she could
remember it only dimly, because even a great dweomermaster like her
could call to mind only the most general outlines and the
occasional tiny memory picture of former lives. She was sure,
though, from that dim memory, that she—or rather her previous
incarnation, because she’d been born into a male body in that
cycle—had been present at the forging of the rose ring.
During that life, as the warrior known as Branoic, she’d
ridden with a very important band of soldiers, the true
king’s personal guard in the civil wars— that much, she
could remember.
What she’d forgotten was that Nevyn had been not only
present but very much an important actor in those events, perhaps
the most important figure of all. There was his name, written on
practically every page. As she read the composed speeches the
chronicler had put into his mouth, she found herself shaking her
head in irritation: he never would have sounded so stiff, so
formal! All at once, she realized that she was crying. The flood of
long-buried grief, not only for Nevyn but for other friends her
soul had forgotten this two hundred years and more, seemed to work
a dweomer of its own. Rather than merely reading the
chronicler’s dry account, she found herself remembering the
isolated lake fort of Dun Drwloc, where Nevyn had tutored the young
prince who was destined to become king, and the long ride that the
silver daggers had taken to bring the prince to Cerrmor and his
destiny. All night she stood there, reading some parts of the tale,
remembering others, until the sheer fascination of the puzzle
buried her grief again.
In those days the eastern border of the elven lands lay in the
middle of a forest. A traveler leaving the high plains and heading
east came down a long gentle decline into the oaks to find several
rivers that might mark a border—if only anyone at all had
lived on either side of them. In that vast tangle of tree and
shrub, bracken and thorn, finding the lands of men (that is, the
three western provinces —Eldidd, Pyrdon, Arcodd—of the
kingdom of Deverry) was no easy job. If you wanted to go from west
to east, the sandy coast of the Southern Sea made a much more
reliable road, if, of course, you could fight your way south to
reach it. The ancient forest had a way of tricking travelers unless
they or their companions knew the route well.
The woman who rode out of the forest late on a summer day
traveled with a horde of such companions—not that most human
beings would have seen them. Sylphs and sprites hovered round her
in the air; gnomes clung to her saddle or perched on the back of
the spare horse she was leading; undines rose out of every stream
and pool she passed to wave a friendly greeting. Her friends
weren’t the only odd thing about Jill. If you looked
carefully at her silver hair, cropped short like a lad’s, and
the fine lines that webbed her eyes round and latticed her cheeks,
you realized that she had to be at least fifty years old if not
somewhat more, but she radiated so much vitality, the way a fire
gives off heat, that it was impossible to think of her as anything
but young. She was, you see, the most powerful sorcerer in all of
Deverry.
The first human settlement that any traveler corning from the
west reached on the coast was the holy precinct of Wmmglaedd,
although in those days, before the silting of the river and the
meddling of humans had extended the shore, the temple lay a little
ways out to sea on a low-lying cluster of islands. Jill rode along
the sea cliffs through meadows of tall grass to a rocky beach,
where the waves washed over gravel with a mutter, as if the sea
were endlessly regretting some poor decision. A fair mile offshore,
she could see the rise of the main island against the glitter of
the Southern Sea.
She led her pair of horses down to the two stone pillars that
marked the entrance to a stone causeway, still underwater at the
moment, though when she looked at the water lapping at the carved
notches along the edge of one pillar, she found each wave falling a
little lower than the one before. Crying and mewling, seabirds
swooped overhead, graceful gulls and the ungainly pelicans that
were sacred to the god Wmm, all come to feed as the dropping tide
exposed the rocky shallows. At last the causeway emerged, streaming
water like a silver sea snake, to let her lead her horses across
the uncertain footing. At the far end of the causeway stood a stone
arch inlaid with colored marble in panels of interlace and roundels
decorated with pelicans; it sported an inscription, too,
“water covers and reveals all things.”
About ten miles long and seven wide, with a central hill
standing in the midst of meadows of coarse sea grass, the island
sheltered four different temple complexes at that time, brochs as
tall as a lord’s dun, clusters of wooden guest houses, cattle
barns and riding stables as well as a series of holy shrines placed
at picturesque locations. Although the temple had been founded in
the year 690 as a modest refuge for scholars and mystics, during
the long civil wars of the ninth century its priests had the
shrewdness and the good fortune to play a crucial role in placing
the true king on his throne. When the wars were over, their fame
drew an occasional desperate soul seeking an oracle, and as the
long years went by, the rare case became a swarm of pilgrims, all
laden with gifts to earn the favor of the god.
Now Wmm was rich. Still leading her horses rather than riding,
Jill left the causeway and followed a fine road, paved with
limestone blocks, through the smallish town that had sprung up near
the temples. In among the round, thatched houses townsfolk and
visitors strolled around or sat in the windows of one of the many
inns, and peddlers kept accosting her with trays of sweetmeats or
baskets of little silver medals and pottery souvenirs. She brushed
them all off and strode on her way, skirting the main complex, too,
bustling with visitors and priests here in the summer season, and
took a little-used path that ran southeast through pine trees, all
twisted and bowed down from the constant wind. In a little bay of
rocky shore a jetty stood with a ferry bobbing at anchor beside it.
Beyond, a scant mile away, she could see the rise of East Island, a
long sliver of land that most visitors knew or cared nothing
about.
“Jill, halloo!” The ferryman, a stout priest draped
in an orange cloak, waved both hands at her as she led her horses
gingerly down the steep path. “Back so soon?”
“I am, at that. How have things been? Quiet?”
“They always are, out our way.” He grinned,
revealing brown and broken teeth. “His holiness has pains in
his joints again.”
“I’m surprised you aren’t all as bent and stiff as
village crones, frankly, out here in the fog.”
“True, true. But well, we’ve got a bit of sun today
at least. Enjoy it while we can, say I.”
Since the tide was running out, the journey was quick and easy,
though the ferryman was bound to have a harder trip rowing back by
himself. Jill coaxed her horses off, left him sighing at the job
ahead, and headed across a wind-scoured meadow to a complex much
smaller and plainer than those of the main island. At the base of a
low hill stood a clutter of roundhouses and a stables, shaded by a
few stunted oaks. Dust drifted and swirled over the threadbare
lawns and sickly vegetable gardens. She turned her horses over to a
groom, carried her saddlebags and bedroll to a hut that did for a
guest house, dumped her gear onto the narrow cot, and decided that
she’d unpacked. With a deferential bob of his head, a servant
came in, bringing her a washbasin and a pitcher of water.
“His holiness is in the library.”
“I’ll join him there.”
After she washed up, she lingered in the silence for a moment to
get her questions clear in her mind. Like all the other pilgrims,
she’d come to Wmm’s temple for help in making a
decision, in her case about a voyage to the far-lying islands of
the Bardekian archipelago, a very major undertaking indeed in those
days. It was likely that she’d be gone for years and almost
as likely that she wouldn’t even find what she was looking
for, the translation of a single word that she’d found
inscribed inside a ring. The word, written in Elvish characters
though it made no sense at all in any language, might have been a
name or sheer nonsense for all that she knew. What she did know, in
the mysterious way that dweomermasters have, was that the
inscription would make the difference between life and death to
thousands of people, men and elves alike. When, she didn’t
exactly know. Someday, perhaps even soon.
She suspected—but only suspected—that the answer lay
in Bardek. She was hoping that the priests of Wmm could either
confirm her suspicion or lay it to rest.
The library of Wmm was at that time an oblong building in the
Bardek style of whitewashed stucco, roofed in clay tiles to cut
down the fire danger. Inside, in a row of hearths peat fires
constantly smoldered to keep the chill and damp off the collection
of over five hundred books and scrolls—a vast wealth of
learning for the time. Jill found the chief librarian, Suryn,
standing at his lectern by a window with a view of the oak trees
beyond. Unrolled in front of him was a Bardekian scroll. He looked
up and smiled at her; as always, his weak eyes were watering from
the effort of reading.
“Oh, there you are, Jill! I’ve been looking for that
reference you wanted.”
“The history scroll? You’ve found it?”
“I have indeed, and just now, so it’s a good thing
you wandered in like this. Must be an omen.”
Although he was joking, Jill felt a line of cold run down her
back.
“In fact, I’ve found both of the sources you were
talking about.” He tapped the papyrus in front of him with
a bone stylus. “Here’s the scroll, and it does indeed
have a reference to elves living in the islands. Well, maybe
they’re elves, anyway. Take a look at it, and I’ll just
fetch the codex.”
The scroll was an ancient chronicle of the city-state of
Arbarat, lying far south in the Bardekian islands. Since Jill had
learned to read Bardekian only recently, it took her some minutes
to puzzle out the brief entry.
“A shipwrecked man was washed up on shore near the harbor. His name was Terrso, a merchant of
Mangorat . . . ” There was a long bit
here about the archon’s attempt to repatriate the man, which
Jill skipped through. “Before he left us, Terrso told of his
adventures. He claimed to have traveled far, far south, beyond even
Anmurdio, and to have discovered a strange people who dwelt in the
jungles. These people, he claimed, were more akin to animals than
men, because they lived in trees and had long pointed ears. Because
he was so ravaged by fever, none took his words
seriously.”
“Curse them all!” Jill snapped.
“They don’t truly go into detail, do they?”
Suryn came up at her elbow. “Here’s the Lughcarn codex.
Do be careful with it, won’t you? It’s very
old.”
“Of course I will, Your Holiness. Don’t trouble your
heart about that. May I take it back to the guest house to read? I
need to rest from my journey.”
Suryn blinked at her for a moment.
“Oh, you’ve been gone. Of course—silly of me.
By all means, keep it with you if you’d like. There’s a
lectern in the hut?”
“A good one, and a candle-spike, too.”
Jill bathed and ate a sparse dinner before she got around to
looking at the codex. By then, early in the evening, the fog was
coming in thick, darkening the hut and turning it chilly, too. She
lit a fire in the hearth, lit it by the simple means of invoking
the Wildfolk of Fire with a snap of her fingers, then stuck a
reading candle, as long and thick as a child’s arm, onto the
cast-iron spike built into the lectern. Before she lit the candle,
though, she sat down on the floor by the fire to watch the
salamanders playing in the flames and to think for a while about
the work she had in hand, gathering every scrap of available
information about the mysterious inscription. Although it was a
pretty thing, made of dwarven silver and graved with roses, the
ring itself carried no particular magic. It might, however, be
important as a clue.
She already knew much of its history. Once it had belonged to a
human bard named Maddyn, who had traveled to the western lands and
given it to an elven dweomermaster as a gift. That master had in
turn given it to a mysterious race of not-truly-corporeal beings
called the Guardians. She was assuming that the Guardians had added
the unintelligible inscription for the simple reason that the ring
hadn’t been inscribed before they’d got hold of it, but
when one of their kind returned it to the physical world by giving
it to another bard, elven this time and named Devaberiel, it
carried its little riddle. As far as dweomermasters could tell, the
Guardians perceived important omens about future possibilities as
easily as most men see the sun. Since they insisted that the
inscription had some important Wyrd to fulfill, Jill saw no reason
to doubt them. Abstract terms like “why,” however,
seemed to have no meaning for them, and there was much in the way
of explanation that they’d left out of their tale.
As she always did toward evening, she found herself thinking
about her old master in the dweomer and missing him. Although Nevyn
had been dead for months now, at times her grief stabbed so sharply
that it seemed he’d died just the day before. If only he were
here, she would think, he’d unravel this wretched puzzle fast
enough! A gray gnome, a creature she’d known for years,
materialized next to her and climbed into her lap. All spindly arms
and legs and long warty nose, he looked up at her with his pinched
little face twisted into a creditable imitation of human
sadness.
“You miss Nevyn, too, don’t you?” Jill said.
“Well, he’s gone on now like he had to. All of us do in
our time.”
Although the gnome nodded, she doubted if he understood. In a
moment he jumped off her lap, found a copper coin wedged into a
crack in the floor, and became engrossed with pulling it out. Jill
wondered if she would ever meet Nevyn again in the long cycles of
death and rebirth. Only if she needed to, she supposed, and she
knew that it would be years and years before he would be reborn
again, long after her own death, no doubt, though well
before her next birth. Although all souls rest in the Inner Lands
between lives, Nevyn’s life had been so unnaturally prolonged
by dweomer—he’d lived well over four hundred years, all
told—that his corresponding interval of rest would doubtless
be unusually long as well, or so she could speculate. It was for
the Lords of Wyrd to decide, not her. She told herself that often,
even as her heart ached to see him again.
Finally, in a fit of annoyance over her mood, she got up and
went to the lectern to read, but the chronicle only made her
melancholy worse. She’d been trying to recall an event that
had happened in one of her own previous lives, but she could
remember it only dimly, because even a great dweomermaster like her
could call to mind only the most general outlines and the
occasional tiny memory picture of former lives. She was sure,
though, from that dim memory, that she—or rather her previous
incarnation, because she’d been born into a male body in that
cycle—had been present at the forging of the rose ring.
During that life, as the warrior known as Branoic, she’d
ridden with a very important band of soldiers, the true
king’s personal guard in the civil wars— that much, she
could remember.
What she’d forgotten was that Nevyn had been not only
present but very much an important actor in those events, perhaps
the most important figure of all. There was his name, written on
practically every page. As she read the composed speeches the
chronicler had put into his mouth, she found herself shaking her
head in irritation: he never would have sounded so stiff, so
formal! All at once, she realized that she was crying. The flood of
long-buried grief, not only for Nevyn but for other friends her
soul had forgotten this two hundred years and more, seemed to work
a dweomer of its own. Rather than merely reading the
chronicler’s dry account, she found herself remembering the
isolated lake fort of Dun Drwloc, where Nevyn had tutored the young
prince who was destined to become king, and the long ride that the
silver daggers had taken to bring the prince to Cerrmor and his
destiny. All night she stood there, reading some parts of the tale,
remembering others, until the sheer fascination of the puzzle
buried her grief again.