
Ishep knew, without knowing how he knew, that the voice-thought was talking about the prince, Nartal.
Nartal was Night, the prince of a Night King from a line of Night Kings. Nartal had been bred for Night,
bred to carry the soul of an Immortal, adithparu.
And then, quite suddenly, Ishep ceased being afraid. Beneath the mask, Ishep felt a strange pressure,
like that of hands molding clay, and he knew that he was being kneaded into something new and wholly
alien. But he wasn’t afraid. Why? How odd ... Ishep searched his emotions, turning over the secret
places of his heart the way a child tips over rocks for bugs. No, he wasn’t afraid, and he should have
been. Instead of fear, there were other emotions: regret for his mother, though she was moving far away
in his thoughts now, growing smaller and more distant, a memory that would soon be lost in the mists of
time. There was anger at Prince Nartal, that coward, for slinking away after the rest of the funeral
procession had left. But, most of all, there was sadness, and grief. Because Ishep knew that he was
dying, and there was nothing he could do but watch his life slip away.
The woman’s—Uramtali’s—voice-thought again:Why are you here?
Ishep said, out loud, “I love my father, and I followed the procession here, and then I hid because I
wanted to see an Immortal, adithparu, being born. Only now I don’t know the way out because Nartal
left and I got lost.”
Then, more boldly and with sudden inspiration: “That wasn’t supposed to happen, was it? The princes
have always stayed behind, because they’re supposed to carry adithparu from the Well of Souls, that’s
what they say.”
That’s true. Now... As Ishep watched, the whirling spirit-shapes bunched, shifted.We have to think
what to do next. A pause, then:Maybe you.
Then, as the thing’s thought-fingers wriggled deeper into the crevices of his mind, it was as if its thoughts
and Ishep’s merged, and then Ishep knew the truth.
They’re just spirits, and that’sallthey are. Ishep grappled after the thought, tried to hang onto it.They’re
Immortals, but they need a body, a certain kind of body, a body bred for Night.Only then, for some
reason, they have to return here,because this is the place where they live; they can’t leave this
place on their own. But now Nartal’s broken the line and now everything will change. They’ll
never get out anymore, because only Nartal knew the way out, theydon’t know the way, because
they’re spirits and they can’t know, and now they’re trapped here until time stops, and that’s
forever ...
Something was happening to the spirit-shapes. As Ishep stared, one portion of the mass seemed to bud,
then separate itself from the rest. The figure hovered before Ishep, congealing like cooling glass into
something recognizable: a snake with the head of a woman that shifted to a skull then back again, as if it
couldn’t quite make up its mind what it was, or would become. The woman’s face, when it was a face,
had ridges encircling the brows and tracking down the neck on either side, and the ridges had scales, just
as the snake’s body did below the woman’s waist. The woman’s hair was sleek and seemed to have a
life of its own, falling in undulating, liquid black waves along its shoulders. Yet the woman’s eyes were
cold and flat and the color of slate. The woman-snake—now woman, now skull, now vapor—floated
before Ishep, and Ishep saw a welter of emotions chase across its ever-changing features before settling
into one that Ishep instantly recognized: hunger.
“Uramtali,” Ishep whispered, his voice breaking. “Are you Uramtali?”