| 
					
				 | 
			
			
				@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ great effort, pushed him over and looked at his face. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 "His eye is dead!" she shouted. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 "Kewedjjí," Sávv said in the tongue of the East[^2]. "Ridiculous. How can 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				-an eye die and leave its owner behind?" But he saw that it was true; one 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				+an eye die and leave its owner alive?" But he saw that it was true; one 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 of his eyes was a beautiful, bright green, but the other had faded to 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 a sphere the color of wet stone, cloudy and empty. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 | 
		
	
	
		
			
				| 
					
				 | 
			
			
				@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ telling them all of Káffaśwerṯal and that he walks once again. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 "For a day, he would not move, and only stirred on occasion, to ask 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 where the red-bearded man had gone. But the next day, he sat up 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				-and spoke to Bezén, and asked for Shimákhts grains and water, and 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				+and spoke to Bezén, and asked for Śimáxts grains and water, and 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 Bezén brought them from his garden and asked him what had happend." 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 "What happened to him?" people crowded around to ask. "Why did he 
			 | 
		
	
	
		
			
				| 
					
				 | 
			
			
				@@ -124,13 +124,13 @@ said. "He and I found an inn on the way to Suráv and stayed, and he 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 asked me what I knew about it. I told him—truthfully—that I did not 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 know what it was, and he told me that he was a man of many evil things. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 He told me that in his youth he joined a gang of thieves and murderers 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				-and that his crimes were so many that they eventually forced him to 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				+and that his crimes were so many that even they eventually forced him to 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 leave. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 "He also told me that he invoked the gods constantly during this time 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 and that his prayers fell of deaf ears. The gods, he said, would not 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 grant him favors, and if his prayers came true, it was because they 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				-had come true anyway. One night, when he had been arrested and was 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				+would have come true anyway. One night, when he had been arrested and was 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 lying alone in a flooding jail cell in the summer rains, he cursed 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				 the gods so much his voice became hoarse. 
			 | 
		
	
		
			
				 | 
				 | 
			
			
				  
			 |