oath to uphold our
race and pursue each and every troll to an unhallowed grave. I see how you uphold the folk of Deche;
now show me the trolls in their unhallowed graves."
The yellow-haired man cocked his fist, but my clothes were stained with the blood of my kith and
kin. While I met his stare with one of my own, he didn't dare strike me.
"Where are the trolls?" I demanded. "Have they returned to the plains? Have they ravished
Corlane as they ravished Deche?" Corlane was another Kreegill village, somewhat higher in the valley.
"Have they vanished into the mountains above us? I know their old places. I can take you to them."
Behind my eyes I saw the folk of Corlane not as I had known them, but as my own people were:
mutilated, faceless, and bleeding. I felt nothing for them; I felt nothing at all, except the need for
vengeance.
"You can slaughter them as they slaughtered Deche."
"Slaughter!" the yellow-haired man snorted. "Us? Us slaughtering trolls? Risking our lives for the
likes of them... or you?"
There was a secret in his eyes. I saw that, and a challenge. He'd answer my questions if I had the
guts, the gall, to ask them, but he didn't think I'd survive the knowing. Perhaps, I wouldn't have if he
hadn't tempered me, then and there, in his contempt.
"Why are you here?" I demanded, returning to my earlier questions. "Why do you feast with the
dead as witnesses?
Why don't you hunt and slaughter the trolls who hunted and slaughtered us?"
The yellow-haired man smiled. His teeth were stained, and one was sharpened to a fang point.
"That's for the Troll-Scorcher, boy. He's the one, the only one, who slays trolls. We hunt 'em, boy, an'
hunt 'em an' hunt 'em, but that's all we do. He comes an' scorches 'em. We touch one gray wart an' we'd
be the ones getting cindered-up from the inside out. I seen it happen, boy. This"—he cocked his callused
thumb at poor Dorean—"this ain't nothing, boy, compared to scorching. Trolls could take you an' yours a
thousand times, an' it don't matter to me, so long as there's trolls for scorchin' when he comes."
I stood mute, strung between disgust and rage. The woman beside me squeezed my arm.
"It's the truth, boy," she said.
Swallowing my disgust, I let my rage speak, soft, slow, and cold. "Where is Myron of Yoram?" I
asked. "When does the Troll-Scorcher come?" I thought I knew the answer, but I needed to hear it.
Another smile from the yellow-haired man. "Maybe tomorrow, maybe the next day. We been
following these trolls since the start of High Sun." The grin soured. "He knows where we are, boy. He'll
come when it suits him, not before. Till then, we follow the trolls an' we follow 'em close, so no man
knows we're here."
"I'm a man," I said, "I know."
He drew a bone knife from his belt. "Trolls leave meat behind, not men."
I should have died. Everything I loved and cherished had already died. Their shades called me
through the darkness. I belonged with Deche, with my family, with my beloved. But my rage was
stronger and my thirst for vengeance against trolls, men, and Myron of Yoram couldn't be slaked by
death. A voice I scarcely recognized as my own stirred in my throat.
"A good-for-nothing farmer's boy? What can you do, boy—besides dig furrows in the dirt?"
"I'll keep him," the woman, still beside me, said before I could speak.
"Jikkana! Jikkana! You break my heart," another man cried out in mock grief. "He's a boy. He
won't last ten nights in your bed!"
She spun around. "My second-best knife says he lasts longer than you did!"
Her knife was never at risk.
* * *
A lavender glow had appeared above the painted mountains on the eastern wall of Hamanu's
cloister. The quiet of night gave way to the barked commands of the day-watch officers taking their posts
along the city's walls. Another Urik morning had begun. Setting his stylus aside, Urik's king massaged his
cramped fingers. Bold, black characters marched precisely across several sheets of
Jonathon Burgess
Todd Babiak
Jovee Winters
Bitsi Shar
Annie Knox
Krystal Shannan, Camryn Rhys
Margaret Yorke
David Lubar
Wendy May Andrews
Avery Aames