Authors: Morgan Llywelyn
When he finished speaking, the elders took turns addressing the issue, then invited comments. Most people agreed that while none of these incidents posed a serious threat by itself, taken as a whole they were disquieting.
The Dagda pointed out that any unusual disturbance, such as a vortex in a normally quiet pool or a sudden leaping of birds into windless air, could be a dark portent. “This behavior among the formerly pacified tribes might signal the first twitch of rebellion,” he warned. “Their numbers are greatly diminished, but their primitive instincts remain.”
A rebellion! In a vague way I knew what that meant: a
chance for real excitement. I had been quiet for long enough this morning. Youth and sun and strength were coursing through me. I was eager for action.
Sitting cross-legged beside me, my father placed his hand on top of my head as if to hold me down. “Stop fidgeting, Joss. We are not playing games now.”
But my mother gave me a tiny wink. Lerys was younger than my father; she and I often were confederates in small acts of naughtiness.
I winked back at her.
The discussion was becoming heated. One of the younger men jumped to his feet and shouted, “Unbury the Earthkillers!” Another promptly cried, “We need the Sword of Light and the Invincible Spear! They will remind the savage FÃr Bolga where the real power lies!” A third added, “We must strike before they attack us and try to seize our treasures.”
Earthkillers? Sword of Light? What were those? I had never heard of them before, but the very names made my heart race.
My father lifted his hand from my head and stood up. “You all know me,” he announced in a ringing voice unlike any he used at home. “I am Mongan na Manannan Mac Lir, heir to the wisdom of my forebears. Their experience as leadersâand yes, as warriors tooâis part of me. Therefore I warn you: the treasures we possess were not acquired through war, but war could destroy them.”
“Impossible!” shouted a voice from the crowd.
Others hotly contradicted him. The argument grew more passionate. Every person present seemed to have an opinion about the Earthkillersâwhatever they wereâand was determined to express it without listening to anyone else. Tempers
flared. Men and women who had been laughing and singing together only moments before shouted furiously at each other.
I sat small between my parents, hardly daring to breathe. An event that had begun as a celebration had turned into ⦠what?
Something dangerous had been set loose in the Gathering Place.