On the walk back from Ashenmere, Elin hears something wrong in the river two days south of the pool. Not a wound. Not grief. Something quieter and more patient: a village that has been asking the water to return their dead, and a water that has been learning to comply.This time Mara stays home. Elin goes first — with Sable, who knows what the asking costs from the inside, and Tessa, who knows what it costs at the table. What they find in Alderbank is not a villain but a man who loved his wife and got the form of her practice exactly right and the understanding underneath it completely wrong.The river remembers Nora's songs. It just needs to be reminded which ones to follow.A story about the difference between naming a thing and asking it for something, and about the fifth interval, which is not a note at all, but the silence after knowing you're done.