height and twice his breadth.
D’ni! There was no mistaking it. It was a D’ni word!
Atrus stared at it, not recognizing it, but committing it to memory.
Until now, he had only half-believed the things his grandmother had told him. There were days, indeed, when he had imagined that she had made the books on her shelves herself, in the same way she seemed to conjure her paintings from the air, or turn a piece of unformed rock into an exquisitely carved figure.
Such thoughts had disturbed him, for he had never known his grandmother to lie. Yet the tales were so strange, so fantastic, that he found it hard to believe that such things had ever really happened.
Atrus began to back away, to head back for the entrance, but as he did he almost slipped on something beneath his feet. It rolled away from him, beginning to glow, softly at first, then brightly, its warm red light filling the tunnel.
He went across and crouched beside it, putting his hand out tentatively to see if it were hot. Satisfied it was cool, he picked it up, holding it between his thumb and forefinger to study it.
It was a small, perfectly rounded rock—a marble of some kind. He had collected rocks and crystals for almost ten years now, but he had never seen its like. He cupped it in his right hand, surprised by its lack of warmth.
Dousing the tinder, he slipped it into his pocket, then straightened up, holding the marble out and looking to see if there were any others, but several minutes’ search revealed no more.
Then, knowing that time was pressing, he turned and hurried out, meaning to raise the battery before Anna woke and wondered where he was.
IT TOOK ALMOST AN HOUR FOR HIM TO DRAG the battery back up to the rim. Anna came and helped him the last thirty feet or so, standing on the lip above him, straining on the rope, while he knelt and pushed the battery from below.
In silence they carried it down the slope to the cleft.
Anna disappeared over the cleftwall, returning a moment later with a bowl of water. Atrus sat, staring at his hands where they lay folded in his lap, waiting for her to chastise him for disobeying her, but she was silent still.
“It was my fault,” he said finally, glancing at her, wondering why she had said nothing. “I wanted to put things right.”
Expressionless, she handed him the bowl. “Drink that, then come. I’ll make you breakfast. I think it’s time I told you a story.”
ATRUS HAD BEEN SITTING ON THE LEDGE beside the kitchen window, the empty bowl beside him as he listened, fascinated, to his grandmother’s tale.
He had heard all kinds of tales from her across the years, but this was different; different because, unlike the others, there were no great deeds of heroism, no man to match the hour. Yet, finishing her tale, Anna’s voice shook with emotion.
“… and so, when Veovis finally returned, the fate of the D’ni was sealed. Within a day the great work of millennia was undone and the great caverns of the D’ni emptied of life. And all because of Ti’ana’s misjudgment.”
Atrus was silent a while, then he looked up at Anna. “So you blame Ti’ana, then?”
She nodded.
“But she couldn’t have known, surely? Besides, she did what she thought best.”
“To salve her own conscience, maybe. But was it best for the D’ni? There were others who wanted Veovis put to death after the first revolt. If their voices had been listened to … if only Ti’ana had not spoken so eloquently to the Great Council …”
Anna fell silent again, her head lowered.
Atrus frowned, then shook his head. “I didn’t know …”
“No …” Anna stared a moment longer at her hands, then looked to him and smiled. “Nor does it really matter now. All that is in the past. The D’ni are no more. Only the tales remain.”
He took the still-glowing marble from his pocket and held it out to her. “I found it on the floor of the volcano.”
At the sight of the marble her whole countenance
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