
I knew the moment that King Eadwig died. I woke in the night with a sigh escaping me, as my heart felt faint. I felt him close his eyes just as mine opened. There was no one wail for him. Not yet.
“Osburga,” I whispered. She stirred next to me. “Osburga, he’s dead.”
She didn’t respond. I slipped from beneath the blanket, stirred the fire, set a few more logs in the hearth, and pulled my shawl around my shoulders. The sight had given me the knowledge of now. The problem was not that I could not see things present. The problem was that I was too afraid to see some things at all.
I watched the fire, trying to find my way back to King Eadwig. The sight showed me him easily, now that I had seen him once. His body was still warm. I pondered how long it would be before anyone knew. A servant had recently replenished the fire. It was crackling wonderfully while his body cooled in the bed. I shivered, watching his cheeks grow gray, his lips ashen. I listened, but his body made no sound. There was no life in the room at all.
But then I heard a faint whisper. The sight showed me a woman, a nun, praying. She was on her knees beside her bed, her habit slipping back, showing her brown hair. I listened until the words she prayed filled me.
“May his days be few; may another seize his position. May his children be orphans and his wife a widow.”
An odd prayer. A curse.
Osburga stirred in the bed and I startled at the noise. The sight left me.
“Did you find her?” Osburga asked.
My gaze flew to where my teacher was, now sitting up in the bed, the blank piled in her lap. “You did know where she was.” It was almost an accusation.
She shook her head. “I knew nothing,” she said, “except that you would find her, hunched over the fire like that.”
I stood, surprise moving through me, propelling me towards the bed. “You can see the future?”
She laughed. “Sometimes,” she said. “Only when I really care to know.”
This puzzled me, and I cocked my head the way a curious dog would. “Why did you care to know where my mother was?” I asked.
Osburga’s long hair was loose around her shoulders. She brushed with her fingers, gathering it into a braid. “It is good to know who the wise women are,” she said simply.
The sight came back to me, and I saw my mother end her prayer. She pulled the habit higher, covering her hair again. She smiled to herself, a coy smile, before she rose from her knees and slipped back into the bed. I felt her pleasure. The curse had worked.
A distant scream echoed through my mind. The sight took me back to King Eadwig, who was cold now, and stiffening. The maid standing over him was yelling, and soon the room was filled with men with lanterns, crowding around him, afraid to touch him, afraid of death.
“It was her,” I realized. “That’s why he was sick.”
Osburga raised her eyebrow. “Perhaps,” she said.
I swallowed down the fear that felt like a frog climbing my throat. “Do you think, if I go to the nunnery, she’ll remember me?”
Osburga stared at me blankly, for long enough that I almost looked away. “You are a wise woman now, little witch,” she said. “She will recognize you.”
Somewhere, far away, I heard a woman whisper my name. I closed my eyes. I’m coming, mother.


