She chuckled a little more, shook her head, then opened her mouth to speak. But something caught her attention. She looked up, then cursed quietly.
“You!” a voice called. “Come here.”
She did not look at Lorkin, but hissed words out between her teeth.
“Ashaki. He’s seen me. Stay hidden. Stay here.”
Then she walked away, disappearing through the bushes. Lorkin pushed himself up into a crouch. He listened carefully, and heard the tinkle of a horse’s harness somewhere behind him. Behind the fallen tree.
Moving to the mass of roots, he straightened and peered through them. A Sachakan man was standing beside a horse, staring at something below him. His clothing was not the decorated garb of an Ashaki, but it was well made and more practical for riding.
Then Lorkin saw the knife on the man’s belt. His mouth went dry.
“Get up,” the Ashaki said.
From the ground before him, Tyvara rose. Lorkin fought the urge to rush after her.
“What are you doing here?” the man demanded.
Her reply was meek and quiet.
“Where’s your water bottle? Your supplies?”
“I put them down. Now I can’t find them.”
The man regarded her thoughtfully. “Come here,” he said finally.
She took a step closer, her shoulders stooped. Lorkin felt his heart freeze as the man placed his hands either side of her head.
After a moment the man let her go.
“Seems you are as stupid as you say. Follow me. I’ll take you back to the road.”
As the man turned away to mount his horse, Tyvara glanced back at Lorkin and smiled. The triumph in her expression blew away his earlier alarm. He watched as she meekly followed the man away into the forest. When they were no longer in sight Lorkin turned and sat down on one of the thicker lower roots of the tree.
It was a long hour. Time dragged by. Sunbeams raked the undergrowth with excruciating slowness. As the mud dried, he scratched and brushed it off his skin and clothes. He tried to stop himself imagining what might happen to her, if the magician discovered who and what she was. He tried not to worry that the magician would find out he was here, come back for him and …
“Good to see you know how to follow orders,” a voice said behind him.
He whirled about to find her standing on top of the stump, smiling down at him. Heart pounding in his chest, he watched her step out into thin air and float down to hover in front of him.
“How did you do that?” he asked.
She frowned and glanced at the shimmering disc of magic just visible beneath her feet. “Same way you did.”
“Not levitation. Stopping him from reading your mind.”
“Ah. That.” She rolled her eyes. “Don’t you remember me telling you we have a way of making mind-readers see what we want them to see?”
He thought back to the first place they’d hidden, and of the other slave women. “Ah. Yes, I do. Some sort of blood gem, right?”
She smiled. “Might be. Might not be.”
“What is it?” she asked.
He shook his head. “What if it had been me he’d spotted? My mind he’d read?”
“I’d have stopped him.” She shrugged. “While it’s always best to avoid confrontation, that isn’t always possible.”
“You’d fight him? Wouldn’t that draw attention to us?”
“It might.” She waved a hand at their surroundings. “But we’re well hidden. I’d try to finish him off quickly.”
“You’d kill him?”
“Of course. He’d come after us if I didn’t.”
“And when his body was discovered, someone else would come after us. Wouldn’t it be better overall if I could hide my thoughts?”
She chuckled. “Even if I was prepared to give the Traitors another reason to be angry with me, even if I thought we couldn’t reach Sanctuary without me revealing this secret to you, I couldn’t do it. I simply don’t have the materials or the time.”
He felt his heart skip. “It’s like a blood gem, isn’t it?”