Like that lake, this water was impossibly clear. From the esask’s back, she could see to what had to be the bottom of the world, lit by floating glows somehow held at varied depths. That bottom was pale and smooth, with muscular curved lines like the flow of an impossible river, a river that didn’t move.
He surprised her with a calm answer. “Melted rock, gone cold and solid again.” His esask and Naryn’s moved up beside hers, then all three mounts stopped, perhaps because Thought Traveler’s had. “I saw the same outside Vyna. Melted rock used to make a dam. I thought they’d made it.” She felt his
Made. The barrier was a made thing, too. Aryl let her gaze follow its shape, how it outlined the clear, lit water. Inward there, out again. Another sharper curve. On the far side, narrowed to no more than a few strides wide, wrapping back around to almost touch the larger portion. Another such protrusion, circle back, and narrowing. Around it all, the brown muddy, natural stream. “It’s a symbol,” she said in amazement. The full shape would be more obvious from above, but still . . . it looked familiar.
She twisted to look at Thought Traveler’s wristband. The paired wavy lines meant “traveler”; the trio of widening circles, “thought.” The rest of the complex markings she’d been told represented important names and tasks from an individual’s “kin-group.”
One, set by itself above the rest. One that matched the shape she saw here.
Four eyes locked on her. Then, a long clawtip touched the shape. “Cersi.”
“CERSI!! CERSI!! CERSI!!” Aryl and the others looked up at the cries. There you are, she thought, very carefully not reaching for her knife. All the Thought Travelers who’d preceded them.
And more. From the overlapping voices, more Tikitik than she’d known existed.
Interwoven branches roofed the huge space. Thin shapes walked within its shadows, bold with color or shadow-black themselves. Some lay flat, dangling an arm, the tasseled end of a sash. Others sat with feet hanging through. All at a height she envied.
To see this, she realized. The symbol for Cersi. The name of their shared world. “Can—I want to go up there,” she told their Thought Traveler, changing from a question just in time.
“No, you don’t,” Enris objected.
“Some other time,” Aryl said, gesturing a discreet apology to her Chosen. He was right. She shouldn’t think only of herself, not now.
Though this structure—it was the first thing about Tikitik she envied, the first indication of something common between them and—if not Om’ray—then those Clans who lived high in the canopy. Yena. The long-ago Xrona.
The echoes of “Cersi, Cersi” were swallowed by the still, humid air. The canopy was like that, the warmth of midday stifling sound.
Then her esask stamped its foot. Slowly. The result was more expanding ring of ripples than splash. With a sidelong twist of its long neck to stare at Thought Traveler’s. Which did the same.
If they started squabbling like esans, Aryl intended to smack hers. Though maybe that would make it crouch—not a good idea, away from any solid surface other than the narrow barrier. Not a good idea at all.
Thought Traveler, this one, continued to watch her with all four eyes. For once, the protuberances writhing around its mouth stilled. Waiting, she thought. For what? She hoped it wasn’t another staring game; she may have won the first, but she’d looked into its face more than anyone should.
“Aryl. Aryl!”
She glanced over her shoulder to see the esasks of Naryn and Enris moving away. Naryn looked desperate. Enris, grim-faced, had his big hands on the short-bristled hair of his, pulling hard enough to raise its neck. The creature opened its toothed mouth in a soundless protest, but kept walking.
“There is food and drink,” Thought Traveler informed her. “An opportunity for cleanliness.”
Having experienced the Tikitik’s notion of a bath—which involved the application of
Enris drummed his heels into the sides of his poor esask, kept pulling.
As this was unlikely to do more than increase
“I do not.” With a bark of amusement. “It is their choice to stay on the esasks. Or not.”
“Or not” meant the water. None of them could swim; no telling what hunted beneath the muddy surface.
He stopped punishing his mount, but his shoulders were hunched.