She'd surprised them all with the jig, so much so that they'd made her play it again and again-and
then, several times more, so that they all could dance to it.
That night had brought her a pair of copper bits, the first time she'd been paid for her fiddling. It had
been a heady moment, made all the headier by the first money she had ever owned.
She played the jig over twice more, until her fingers felt flexible and strong, ready for anything she
might ask of them.
But what she asked of them next was the very latest piece she had learned, a slow, languorous love
song. The lilting melody was the kind of song popular at weddings, but mostly not in the tavern.
A real fiddler had taught her this one; this and near two dozen more.
She smiled to think of him. Oh, he was a villainous-looking lad, with a patch over one eye, and all in
gypsy-colors, half a brigand by his looks. But he had played like an angel, he had. And he'd stayed several
days the first time he'd stopped at the Bear-because of the bad weather for traveling, so he'd said, and
indeed, it had been raining heavily during all that time. But he'd had a horse-a pony, rather-a sturdy beast
that was probably quite capable of taking him through rain and snow and anything else he might ask of it. It
wasn't weather that had kept him, but his own will.
The rains pounded the area for a week, providing him ample excuse. So he stayed, and enlivened the
tavern by night, bringing folks in from all over, despite the weather. And he'd schooled Rune by day.
Quite properly, despite her early fears as to his behavior. Fears-well, that wasn't quite true, it was half
hope, actually, for despite his rascally appearance, or even because of it, she'd wondered if he'd pay court to
her. . . .
She certainly knew at thirteen what went on between man and maid, male and female. She had taken
some thought to it, though she wasn't certain what it was she wanted. The ballads were full of sweet
courtings, wild ones, and no courtings at all-
But he was as correct with her as he had been bawdy with the men in the tavern the night before. He'd
stopped her on her way to some trivial errand, as he was eating his luncheon in the otherwise empty
common room.
"I hear you play the fiddle, young Rune," he'd said. She had nodded, suddenly shy, feeling as
awkward as a young calf.
"Well?" he'd said then, a twinkle in the one eye not covered with a patch. "Are you going to go fetch
it, or must I beg you?"
She had run to fetch it, and he'd begun her lesson, the first of four, and he had made her work, too.
She worked as hard at her fiddling under his critical eye as she'd ever worked at any task in the tavern.
He saved the love songs until the last day-"A reward," he'd said, "for being a good student"-for they
were the easiest of the lot.
If he'd introduced them at the beginning of the lessons, she might have suspected them of being a kind
of overture. But he'd waited until the last day of his stay, when he'd already told her that he was leaving the
following morning. So the songs came instead as a kind of gift from a friend, for a friend was what Raven
had come to be. And she treasured them as completely as she would have treasured any material gift.
He'd returned over the winter, and again the next summer, and this winter again. That was when he
had taught her this melody, "Fortune, My Foe." He should be coming through again, once the weather
warmed. She was looking forward to seeing him again, and learning more things from him. Not just songs-
though courting was not on her mind, either. There was so much she needed to learn, about music, about
reading it and writing it. There were songs in her head, words as well as music, but she couldn't begin to get
them out. She didn't know how to write the tunes down, and she didn't have enough reading and writing of
words to get her own down properly so that another could read them. She had barely enough of writing to
puzzle out bits of the Holy Book, just like every other child of the village, and there was no learned
Scholar-Priest here to teach her more. There must be more . . . there must be a way to write music the way
words were written, and there must be more words than she knew. She needed all of that, needed to learn it,
and if anyone would know the way of such things, Raven would, she sensed it in her bones.
Raven was weeks away, though. And she would have to be patient and wait, as the Holy Book said
women must be patient.
Even though she was almighty tired of being patient.
Oh, enough of such lazy tunes.
The trill of an early songbird woke another melody in her fingers, and that led to many more. All reels
this time, and all learned from a rough-faced, bearded piper just a few weeks ago. He'd come to play for the
wedding of some distant relations, and though he had not made any formal attempt at giving her lessons,