
"Don't be mean." She watched him carefully-she could see he would not change his mind-he could be as stubborn as a bent nail. "Very well, let me do it."
He hesitated, clearly unwilling to do something as unmanly as surrender his blade to his sister, but at last let her take it. She held the sharp edge over her finger for long moments, biting her lip.
"Hurry!"
When she did not immediately comply, he shot out his good arm, seized
her hand, and forced her skin against the knife blade. It cut, but not loo deeply; by the time she had finished cursing him the worst of the sting was over. A red pearl appeared on her fingertip. Barrick took her hand, far more gently now, and brought her finger against his.
It was a strange moment, not because of the sensation itself, which was nothing more noteworthy than the girl would have expected from rubbing a still-sore finger against her brother's, smearing a little blood across the whorled fingertips, but because of the intensity in Barrick's eyes, the way he watched that daub of red with the avidity of someone witnessing some¬thing far more arresting: lovemaking or a hanging, nakedness or death.
He glanced up and saw her staring. "Don't look at me like that. Do you swear you'll never reveal what I tell you? That the gods can punish you horribly if you do?"
"Barrick! What a thing to say. I'm not going to tell anyone, you know that."
"We've shared blood, now. You can't change your mind."
She shook her head. Only a boy could think that a ceremony with knives and finger cutting was a stronger bond than having shared the warm darkness of a mother's womb. "I won't change my mind." She paused to find the words to convey her certainty. "You know that, don't you?"
"Very well. I'll show you."
He stood up, and to his sister's surprise, clambered onto a block of wood that had been used as a pantry stool since before either of them could re¬member, then scrabbled in the back of one of the upper shelves before pulling out a bundle wrapped in a cleaning rag.
