"No, sir. You've got a lot more hair than he does, and yours is white. His is kind of a dark gray, and there isn't that much of it."
"As tall as I am?"
"No, sir. More like me, like I said. Sir, don't you think we ought to go back to the fire?"
"If you wish, Hide. I intend to ask you a great many more questions, however." I started up the hill to our left. "Will it trouble you to talk where the others can overhear us? I'm going to ask you about the place you came from, your mother and your brothers and so forth. Will you continue to be open and honest with me then, with Duko Sfido and the rest listening?"
"Yes, sir. I'll try, sir. Only..."
"Only what?"
"They'll know I'm a foreigner then, sir."
He was hanging back, and I motioned to him to follow me. "They will. But if I call you Cuoio, and you continue to eat as they do and speak as they do-you didn't mention that, but it's the most important thing of all-it will make very little difference. Besides, I'm going to adopt you. You've searched here for your father without finding him. Will it trouble you to call me Father?"
He hesitated, but when we had walked a short distance more he said, "No, sir."
"Good boy!" Oreb bobbed his approval.
"Does he understand everything we say, sir?"
"Call me Father, Cuoio."
"All right. Father, the camp's back that way. Why are we going up here?"
I slipped on a snow-covered stone, saved by my staff. "Because it's shorter. That's one reason, at least. I want to ask you about your mother and your home, Cuoio; but I can do it when were sitting at the fire warming ourselves. I want to ask about your father, too; and I had better do that now, since we're going to tell others you're my son. What sort of man was he?"
"He's a good man, sir."
I shook my head.
"Father, I mean. He always worked really hard so we'd have enough to eat, and he protected my mother and my brothers and me. Things are pretty bad where we live. People stealing and killing. Only nobody ever tried anything like that when he was around, and he didn't do it himself, either."
"Did you love him, Cuoio?"
"Yes, Father."
"Good boy!" Oreb hopped from the head of my stick to Hide's shoulder.
"For duty's sake? To make your mother happy?"
"No, sir. Father, I mean. He was my father, and I just loved him. He used to take me out in our boat sometimes so I could fish, even when he was really tired."
"I see."
"He was always pretty strict with us, but that was because Sinew got bitten by a inhumu when he was real little and almost died. After that he was really worried Hoof and me would get bitten too, and so was Mother. Then there was people from New Viron that would come out to the Lizard sometimes. That's where we live. On the Lizard, Lizard Island."
"I want you to sling that slung gun you're holding, Private Cuoio. First engage the safety. You may sling it behind your left shoulder, if you don't want to disturb my bird."
"All right." The click of the safety was followed by the rattle of sling swivels.
"Try not to make so much noise. Listen to me now-listen very carefully."
"Yes, Father."
"I've been trying to get you to walk beside me, motioning for you to catch up."
"Yes, Father. It's just that I'm kind of tired after riding all day."
"I'm tired too. Can you hear me when I speak this softly?"
"Yes, Father."
"Good. You have good ears. I no longer want you beside me. Do you understand? Stay well behind me. Oreb, it might be best for you to go; but if you insist on staying here, you must be completely quiet."
"No talk."
Hide chuckled softly.
"That's the way, Oreb, but quieter than that." I had an idea then, and said, "I'm going to hold my staff in back of me, like this. Take hold of the end and follow me."
He did. "Father?"
"What is it?"
"It's all thorns up there where the hill's sort of split. I don't think we can get through there."
"The worst thing we could do would be to turn back here. To turn our backs. He wouldn't harm my horse this afternoon. Perhaps the god-spell hasn't worn off yet, and he won't harm us tonight."
"Sir? Father?"
"Keep your grip on my staff," I said as we stepped into the crowding thornbushes; and then I saw him. I had expected him to crouch, although I cannot tell why. He was standing instead, with all eight feet solidly planted, so large that his great green eyes were on a level with mine. Catching the starlight, they seemed luminous, shining in the darkness like gems malign as Green itself.
"Sir...?" Hide was pulling the staff so hard he almost took it out of my hand.
"Be quiet. Winter is hard on animals. He's very hungry."
Hide let go of my staff. I heard the faint jingle of his sling swivels, and said as sharply as I dared, "Stop that!"
The baletiger came toward us, slipping between the thorns step by slow step. I ought to have been terrified, but I was merely weak and sick. I pitied him, and now that I have leisure to look back upon that moment, I think it likely that he pitied me.
"Is Mucor there?" I whispered. "Is it Mucor?"
There was no reply save the merciless winter wind's. I heard Oreb stir on my shoulder, fluffing out his feathers.
"Yes," I whispered to the baletiger, "make them come to us."
He sniffed the hand that grasped my staff as a huge dog might. For a moment his mighty body rubbed against me, and I could feel his muscles slither beneath his thick, soft winter fur. A second later he was bounding down the slope past Hide, and was gone.
"Come up here," I told Hide. "I want you to sit beside me on this flat stone. We won't be going back to the fire for another hour or so."
"I can't, Father." (I could hear his teeth chatter.) "I can't even move, sir."
"The thornbushes?"
"Yes. F-Father. That animal?"
"What about it?" I went to him and took him by the sleeve.
"Was it a-a...?"
"I believe so, yes. Come with me, Cuoio."
He did, and sat upon Fava's grave when I pointed out the stone. I sat down beside him; instinctively we huddled together for warmth, father and son.
"Bird talk?"
My nose had been running all day, and was running worse than ever. I had it in a rag that one of the troopers had given me the day before, and did not reply. Hide said, "I think so, only not loud."
"We're going to shoot game here, Oreb," I explained when I could. "He's going to drive it toward us, if he can find any; and we're going to shoot it for him. I should say Cuoio is. I promised he would, so he must."
Hide nodded; I felt the motion rather than saw
"Are you a good shot?" I asked him.
"Pretty good, Father. My father, I mean my real one, had a needier he'd brought from the Long Sun Whorl, only he took it with him when he went away."
"To Pajarocu."