“Council will know.” Bern shrugged. “The main thing is we’re all here and safe.”
Oran went to Enris. “Let me fix that,” with a Healer’s insistence.
“Nothing wrong with an impressive scar,” he protested with a grin. Oran tsked at him before laying her hand on his cheek. She took great pride in her Talent. There’d be no scar, impressive or otherwise.
They were together and safe, Aryl thought, content, but where? She knew this place, she realized suddenly. Or a version of it. The lowermost carvings shouldn’t be smeared with colors and black soot. None should be chipped away. The ledges were empty of all but refuse, but there should be—seats, she remembered triumphantly. Seats, oddly shaped seats, lining every ledge. The ledges should be polished.
Her content faded. How could she remember this, and nothing of
“What’s Naryn doing?”
Enris wasn’t the only one to notice the Chosen who’d left everyone else to walk to the flat area at the foot of the walls. Conversations quieted.
After peering into the nearest stack, and taking a quick step away, Naryn turned to face them.
“Welcome to Stonerim III.” The words were as clear as if the other stood beside her.
That name . . . Aryl’s brief sense of familiarity was washed away by the flood of
She’d led them here.
Hadn’t she?
The others calmed. Aryl’s own uncertainty faded as Naryn continued to speak. “We aren’t trapped. We’re in Norval, the Layered City, on the highest of the pre-Arrival layers. This place—locals call it the Buried Theater. There’s access to the surface.” At this, a stir of
They couldn’t stay. Why had she felt at peace here, in this ruin? What could possibly make a M’hiray happy here? Aryl controlled her impatience. Naryn was right. To rush into the unknown made no sense either.
A second figure dropped easily from ledge to ledge to join Naryn. Haxel di Vendan. Why the “di?” Aryl wondered. Her Power was less. She dismissed the puzzle. Power was a matter for Council, not ordinary Chosen.
“Naryn is right,” Haxel said. “Scouts will go ahead, find a safe locate for the rest. Before that, let’s get belongings and supplies on the highest ledge, at the back where they won’t be easily seen.”
No one moved.
Naryn’s hair rose and snapped. “Do as Haxel says. She’s First Scout of the M’hiray and responsible for your safety.”
Aryl met her Chosen’s dark eyes. “Naryn knows what’s outside this place.”
“We don’t. Why?”
It wasn’t just outside they didn’t know, she realized, feeling her heart pound. “Where did we come from?”
“From our home—” She watched Enris struggle to find more to say, then give up. “We had to leave,” he said at last, frowning in earnest. “I’m sure of that. For the good of everyone.”
“We were better than the others,” Oran offered. “More powerful. We didn’t need them anymore, so they made us leave.”
“If we were more powerful,” countered Aryl, “how could they make us do anything?”
Bern chuckled. “Then we must have wanted to go. Home was too small for the M’hiray. We wanted something better.” Oran smiled at him.
Aryl felt . . . doubt. She couldn’t explain it. The words were right. They’d had to leave. They hoped for better.
They weren’t the only ones speculating, Aryl noticed. Heads were bent in conversation, verbal or silent, as the others climbed with their burdens.
Aryl shoved the pack hard with her shoulder to restore his balance. “Careful!”
“You, too.”
“I—” Aryl closed her mouth. After a look ahead for the best route, she could have run to the top with her eyes closed. Most of the others moved with excessive care, helped one another, lifted awkward bundles together; a few leaped from ledge to ledge with fluid grace. Why?
The reason slipped away, like the memory of a dream.
Enris paused and scuffed his boot toe where a seat had been attached then chipped away. “I remember this place being in better shape.” With a tinge of