"True. And I wonder why?"
Mirage shrugged. "They don't have many children. Maybe magic somehow causes miscarriages, so they don't carry most of their babies to term."
"Or maybe they
just have
half as many because they don't ever seem to have sons."
"We don't
think
they do. Who knows what really goes on in Starfall? For all we know, they kill off all the boy children."
"You have such a cheerful imagination, Sen, you know that?"
"All right, all right. Maybe they miscarry when it's a boy. It could be a magic thing. Who knows? Ask them, if you really want to know."
He shuddered. "I've had enough of facing down witches for information, thank you."
The conversation died then, but Mirage kept thinking as they rode. What
would
things be like, if there were more witches? She didn't like the idea, but she was biased. When she thought about it logically, it might not be so bad. Witches
did
do healing, for example; they could do a lot of good if there were enough of them in the Water Ray to cover the towns properly. And the Earth witches worked to prevent droughts or blights, and they kept the starving wolves at bay during harsh northern winters. Fire witches she had less use for; they served the rulers in their political games, and Mirage tended to think the rulers didn't need any encouragement or help. She also didn't particularly care about the Void Ray, which did very little to touch the outside world.
Of all the Rays, she felt the most affinity for Air. They were like Silverfire Hunters, traveling constantly, addressing problems where they found them, no matter who it was that needed help.
She envisioned ordinary people having houses with the hot water spells Tari-nakana had set up, spells to keep food fresh, spells to make life a little easier or simpler. ,
And deep in her mind, something clicked.
Mirage realized that she had stopped Mist, and Eclipse was staring at her. She glanced forward and back up the road; there weren't any travelers in sight, but some might come along.
"You've thought of something," Eclipse said.
"Let's get off the road."
They dismounted and led their horses through the thick trees until they found a good place to pause. Mirage teth-ered Mist and hopped up onto a boulder, where she bit one knuckle and stared at the ground. "What is it?" Eclipse asked when his patience ran out. Mirage started, then looked at him. "If you were searching someone's belongings and found papers you wanted to destroy, what would you do with them?" He blinked. "Burn them, probably."
"Where?"
"Where? As long as I didn't care about biding it, on site. If there was a fireplace."
"
Exactly
. You'd burn them in the fireplace. So would I. There's no point in going to the trouble to light a splinter from a lamp or whatever and burn each paper individually, where you found it."
He saw the connection now. "Yet the ashes in Tarinakana's house were all over, in tiny piles, no more than a sheet's worth or so in any one place. Why?"
"Magic," Mirage said.
Eclipse's eyes widened, then narrowed, considering it.
"I can't imagine it would take more than a tiny bit of power to light each one. A witch wouldn't think twice about it. She'd find a paper, conjure a lick of flame, and up it goes."
"So you think a witch trashed her study." Something else occurred to Mirage then. "And another thing—
haw
did that Wolfstar get into her house in the first place? It's one thing for that Water witch to leave her house lightly warded; she expects mundane visitors, living where she does. But Tari-nakana lived in Starfall, and whatever her wards are, they're strong enough that our contact felt the need to protect us from them. What about the Wolfstar? How did he get inside to set up his second trick, if he didn't have help?"
Eclipse stared at her. "You think he was
hired
by a witch?"
She hadn't considered it until just now, but… "Maybe."
"Why? And why would they then hire us to investigate it?"
"I can't answer the first, but for the second… we tend to think of the witches as all getting along. Why should they? Do the Hunter schools?" They both knew how ludicrous that thought was. Even within Silverfire, there were rivalries. "It's flat-out
stupid
not to expect factionality within them. So maybe one faction had Tari-nakana killed, and the ones who hired us are on the other side. Assuming there's only two sides."
He exhaled slowly, thinking it through. "Warrior's blood. I thought this might turn out to be messy, but this is…"
"Ugly."
"Uglier than the Crone with leprosy. Before, we had to worry that we'd die if we didn't solve this. Now we have to worry that we'll die if we
do
."
"It could explain lots of things, though. Like why witches of so many different Rays are involved in our side; these factions don't necessarily stick to Ray boundaries."
"And why our Water contact bolted. Do you think Kekkai-nakana is on the side that hired the Wolfstar?"
"Maybe, maybe not. Our contact might fear that, though. It's too simplistic to assume right now, but Kekkai-nakana might have had Tari-nakana killed out of ambition alone. And if our contact knows, or at least suspects, that other witches were behind the assassination, no wonder she's afraid." Mirage whistled suddenly. "And it explains Avalanche, too. Remember what he said? He was the only one she trusted. Tari-nakana had to have known the ones after her were witches; that's why she couldn't rely on Cousins as her bodyguards."
It was making more and more sense. Mirage wished Avalanche were alive to confirm it, but even without that, the explanation was becoming more and more plausible. And more and more frightening. "Do we say anything yet?" Eclipse asked. Mirage chewed on her knuckle for a long time before answering. "No. Not until we talk to Jaguar. He can tell us about the Void witch who delivered it, if she behaved oddly or seemed to hold any information back."
"And now we have another reason for going to Silver-fire," Eclipse said soberly. "What?"
"Protection. If we're right, and witches are behind this, we're going to be very unpopular with that faction. We may have no choice but to ask for shelter from Silver-fire—since I
don't
want to depend on 'our' side to keep us safe."
Mirage shivered. Eclipse was all too right. She could feel the eyes upon her already, hunting her, after her blood, like a palpable weight on the back of her neck. Eyes that were closing in with every heartbeat. They hadn't even told anyone their suspicions yet; when they did, the pursuit would begin in deadly earnest.
And however well-trained a fighter she might be, she had no way to protect herself against magic.
Miryo had ample opportunity to doubt her decision as they rode east. The journey through Currel's rocky countryside was uneventful, verging on tedious, and gave her far too much time to question whether she should have gone north.
They traveled at a good pace, and by the fifth day were crossing the smoother, fertile lands of Seach's southern coast. The road was lined with thick hedges and low stone walls; it was very different from the mountainous lands around Starfall, or Tsurike Hall's airy forests in Insebrar, where. Miryo had spent her first ten years. She rode upright in her seddle, drinking in the sights.
The road wound between farms and the occasional, pasture. Often she could see people in the distance, hip-deep in the rapidly maturing grain. Farmers, of course, yet they seemed so different from the Cousins who performed the same work in Starfall's domain, simply because they weren't associated with witches. Miryo found herself squinting at these distant figures, and then realized she was trying to see if any of them had red hair.
The question of her doppelganger never left her mind for more than a moment. How had it spent the past twenty-five years? Where would she find it? It was, she figured, probably masquerading as a normal person. Would it be a farmer? Or had it taken up some craft? It would look like her, she remembered, and so she imagined herself in a dozen different contexts, each one stranger than the last. Miryo tried not to be distracted by these, and hunted the elusive flicker of instinct deep inside
her mind
.
It was extraordinarily difficult. She repeatedly considered backtracking and going north, where she had a more concrete lead to follow. She never did it, though. Having committed to this path, she was determined to keep to it. For a while, at least. Until she could no longer stand to depend on the vague thread of direction that was all she had to guide her.
She was relieved when at last they came to something other than a village or a farm, simply for the distraction from her own doubt. And also, she had to admit, because once those villages and farms lost their exotic aura, they all mostly looked alike.
Haira's capital consisted of a central keep surrounded by a city that sprawled across the forking of the Nuna and