
Chenyth rolled over. He muttered something about eyes in the night.
"Come on. Roll out. We got a long walk ahead."
Chenyth sat up. "Phew! One of these days we've got to take time off for baths. Hey. Toamas. Wake up." He shook the old man. "Oh!"
"What's the matter?"
"I think he's dead, Will."
"Toamas? Nah. He just don't want to get up." I shook him.
Chenyth was right.
I jumped out of there so fast I knocked the tent down on Chenyth. "Fetch. The old man's dead. Toamas."
She kicked a foot sticking out of another tent, gave me a puzzled look. Then she scurried into the black tent.
I tried to get a look inside. But there were inside flaps too.
Lord Hammer appeared a moment later. His mask was paintless. His gaze swept the horizon, then the camp. Fetch popped out as he started toward our tent.
Chenyth came up cussing. "Damnit, Will, what the hell you..." His jaw drooped. He scrambled out of Lord Hammer's path.
Fetch whipped past and started hauling tent away. Lord Hammer knelt, hand over Toamas's heart. He moved it to the grass. Then he walked to the gap we thought of as a gate.
"What's he doing?" Chenyth asked.
"Wait," Fetch told him.
Lord Hammer halted, faced left, began pacing the perimeter. He paused several times. We resumed our morning chores. Brandy cussed the gods both on Toamas's behalf and because he faced another miserable breakfast. You couldn't tell which mattered more to him. Brandy bitched about everything equally.
His true feelings surfaced when he was the first to volunteer to dig the old man's grave.
Toamas had saved his life in the mountains.
"We Kaveliners got to stick together," he muttered to me. "Way it's always been. Way it'll always be."
"Yeah."
His family and Toamas's lived in the same area. They had been on opposite sides in the civil war with which Kavelin had amused itself in the interim between the El Murid and Great Eastern Wars.
