Are you married? That was the only one of the child’s phrases that stuck with him. Are you married?
No, he didn’t say. But I should be.
The three of them continued after the trail quietly, each wrapped up in their own thoughts. He should be married. After so long, that single thought resurfaced from where he had buried it. Before, the knowledge had held apprehension, but now… like so many things, now there was nothing. It was an entirely human concept, marriage, and one he’d given little thought to before the verdict at the beginning of summer: all eligible men must marry.
And this, the tattered tents, the tang of blood, the shadow of destruction… this was why. To marry… to bring new life to take the place of the old. For little ones, many little ones, to ally with another to rebuild that which had been thrice broken. It was the animal part of him that had shied from the thought of such an alliance, but here, now, it was the Drykas part of him that bid the animal to be silent. There was no longer apprehension, but neither was their hope. The need to marry was the same as the need to move every fortnight, to tie up the tents and to follow the Run. It was the same at the need to put the yvas to Akaidras’ back and to trade his kills for trinkets and gold-rimmed stones. An immovable fact, one that he didn’t need to justify in order to do.
Khida stopped short of the thick grass, turning to throw a cautious this. The little one tensed, gripping even more tightly to Shahar’s hand. Cautiously, the hunter turned to the boy. Stay here.
The child cooperated, for now, at least, and allowed the Drykas’ hand to leave his. Shahar, too, could hear the sound of death, and he moved forward cautiously. The thicket that they had come to was small and tight, forcing him to crouch in an attempt to peer through the shade. The death-flies buzzed forcefully over something, and it was something he sincerely hoped wasn’t their quarry.