Chapter 21
"It doesn't make any sense!" Ellerie exclaimed, shutting the ancient book and setting it to the side. "I have no idea if we're in the right place or not. It's just miles and miles of dead land!"
"Things change over time," Bobo said.
"Not this much! There aren't any landmarks left. I don't even know if the river we crossed yesterday is the right one. There was no bridge, and it was miles from where it should have been."
"Rivers can change course," Josip said. "I've seen it happen."
"I know, but that doesn't help! The river that the author crossed might not even exist anymore. Now we're supposed to head east through prairies and farmland until we reach a forest, and then we turn north. But there are no prairies and no farmland, and I doubt there's any forest. I knew this part would be difficult, but I thought there'd be
something
to go on."
"Should we just turn north now?" Bobo asked.
Ellerie rubbed her temples. "I don't know. Maybe we came the wrong way. Maybe there used to be
two
roads through the swamp. If we'd exited to the southeast, we'd have gone around the barrens entirely. There was definitely farmland to the south. We could have followed that, and maybe there's a forest on the other side."
"That's worth looking into if we don't find anything here, but it doesn't make sense to stop searching until we know there's nothing to find."
"Yes, I suppose," Ellerie said, sighing. "You're right. But where do we search? The barrens are huge, and there's nothing to go on." She opened up the well-worn map they'd found in Aencyr that showed the lands east of the Skotinos Mountains. Tapping her finger on their current location, she said, "I feel like I'm missing something."
"What do you mean?"
"Well, are we sure the map is accurate? It doesn't show the rivers. What else is missing?"
"I'm sorry about that," Josip said. "It was the only map I could find that showed the true shape of the barrens. The mapmaker insists he circled around the entire area, taking measurements the whole time."
"You said these were flood plains, right?" Ellerie asked, pointing just beyond the jagged eastern edge of the barrens.
"That's what the writing says."
"So it's like the flooding from the storm the other day, but wider? It's got to be from more than one river. Look at the pattern. There are four big wedges eating into the barrens, and then they all join together into the flood plains beyond that. Four rivers flowing east to the coast. And there's a smaller wedge south of us—that must be from the river we crossed yesterday."
"Sediment," Bobo said. "Even in the barrens, the rivers are transporting soil from one place to another. Better soil, it seems, if the flood plains aren't considered part of the barrens."
Ellerie nodded. "Exactly. And what if the flood plains weren't there?"
"What do you mean?"
"Ignore all the little irregularities around the border. Ignore the wedges, and extend the barrens about halfway into the flood plains." Ellerie traced a perfect circle on the map with her finger. "The barrens used to be larger ... and round."
Bobo furrowed his brow. "There's no way to know if that's true."
"Look at the borders. Before the flood plains existed, what would the barrens have looked like?"
The two men stared at the map.
"I suppose it could have been round once," Bobo said.
"Not just round. A circle." Ellerie traced her finger around the map again. "The borders have changed over time, maybe for different reasons in different spots, but the barrens were once a circle."
"What are you saying?"
"I'm saying that the interesting part will be at the center." Ellerie pointed to a mark on the map that matched where she imagined the middle of the barrens had once been. "What's that? A mountain?"
"It's labeled Lone Peak," Josip said. "I think that's just a description, not an actual name."
"The book doesn't mention any mountains on the way to Tir Yadar," Bobo said.
"Are you sure?" Ellerie asked. "What about the hills you said were in the city itself?"
"They're not described in any detail. The author says he went up the hill to visit his cousin, or down the hill to watch the horse races. A few other spots like that; nothing useful."
Ellerie tapped the map again.
Bobo said, "You think the city was built on the side of the mountain?"
She shrugged. "What I think is that we should go there and see if we can find anything interesting. But first, let's head out of the barrens and resupply, so if we do find something, there'll be time to explore."
#
"You look lovely, my dear," Queen Merice said, brushing imaginary flecks of dust off of Yassi's wedding gown.
It was cut modestly, like a Zidari dress, but was bright red, befitting a wedding ceremony conducted by the Church of Pallisur. Yassi hated it. She stared at herself in the mirror, wishing the compulsion magic would allow her to cry. She'd tried to kill herself after Rusol had decided she was going to marry him, but he'd caught her at it and ordered her not to make another attempt.
"She'll do, I suppose," Sharra said. "Though she'd never have been allowed to graduate from the Three Orders with that posture. Stand up straight, girl!"
"I just wish Rikard could be here today," Merice said. "He'll be so surprised when he finds out his little brother got married before him." She whispered to Yassi conspiratorially, "He's stationed with the knights in Fort Hightower, you know."
Sharra rolled her eyes, and Yassi couldn't bring herself to remind the queen of the truth. The Hightower story was a new one Merice had come up with to explain her son's continued absence.
Everything seemed hopeless. Samir was dead, and it was all Yassi's fault. She'd tried and tried to get him to see what was happening, hoping that if he knew the truth, he'd somehow make it all go away. He and Rusol had been friends for years—surely he could have made the prince see reason. But once he
did
learn the truth, everything happened too quickly. Before Yassi had even realized what was going on, Samir was dead. She'd killed her brother just as surely as if she'd been the one to cast the spell that did it.