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Authors: Diana Wynne Jones

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BOOK: Power of Three
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He spent the rest of the morning lurking from tree to bush, watching Gerald and trying to decide. It was not truly difficult. Gerald strode about crushing grass and shaking the earth, his dark face set in a lonely, private look which Gair found very familiar. It was not Ondo's look. Gair knew it was his own. The Giant did not look happy. Gair wondered why. He wondered, too, if he looked that unhappy himself.

The difficult thing was that the Giant seemed to sense he was being watched. He kept swinging round irritably, and Gair was several times only just quick enough in sliding out of sight. It happened so often that the feeling affected Gair, too. He turned round quickly a number of times, sure that he would catch somebody sliding out of sight—probably Ayna and Ceri again. But there was never anything but a bird, or a gray squirrel clinging to a tree. It became so tiresome that Gair would have gone away, had he not wanted so badly to know why the Giant behaved like Ondo, too.

When the Sun showed midday, Gerald went back to his pulsing house. As Gair could not follow him there, he was forced to trot back to Garholt without having settled the question. Most of the way, he went very briskly, but, as soon as Garholt was in sight, his trot faltered. He dropped to a walk. Finally he stood still, wondering whether to go on to Islaw to see his aunt rather than face the depression he knew was waiting to clutch him in Garholt. He had not felt it yet, but he knew he would. He decided Islaw was too far, if he was to spend the afternoon watching the Giant again. So he braced himself and went to the hive door.

No sooner was the door open than, sure enough, the feeling was there, climbing up out of the walls of Garholt and clutching at Gair. It was more like a solid thing than a feeling. He had to force himself down the steps against it. And when he was down, there was bustle and bad temper and far too many people. Everyone was irritable. Gest was in a very bad humor and Ceri had fallen foul of him.

Gair could not quite understand what had happened, because the trouble appeared to have something to do with himself. No one quite liked to tell him what Gest had said. But Gest had said it, and Ceri had replied. They had yelled at one another.

“Only fancy!” said Miri. “Ceri threatened to put a Thought on his own father! I don't know what we're coming to, I really don't!”

Gest told Ceri he would risk the Thought and asked him which he preferred: a belting, or not going on the hunt. Ceri promptly opted for staying at home. Gest had replied with some well-chosen words about Ceri's character, and that was that. Ceri was not going hunting either.

When Gair saw Ceri at the eating-square, Ceri looked sulky, but Gair could tell he was thoroughly satisfied. “I don't know what's the matter with Father at the moment,” he grumbled, trying to hide a secret smile. “If you say anything, he snaps your head off.”

“Gest has a great deal on his mind,” Adara explained to Gair when Gair went to find her among the stores, “now that there are twice as many people here. And I don't think Orban is being as helpful as he might. Don't cross your father.”

Gair's one wish was to keep out of Gest's way. There were other things he wanted to say to Adara. “Mother,” he said, “what are the lines of luck from now to next year? Are they good or bad?”

Adara screwed her face up thoughtfully. “I hardly know. Nothing's clear at the moment. Why?”

“Is it clear for Dorig, or Giants?” Gair asked.

“Ban's bones!” said Adara. “Let me think. Dorig are clear enough. Their fortunes follow Saturn and the Moon, and both are strong for some time to come. But Giants—Their luck is no clearer than ours. Why?”

Lines of luck were strange and confusing, Gair thought. To look at the Giant Gerald, you would have thought his fortunes followed gloomy Saturn, if ever anyone's did. He suspected his own did, too. But he had other things to ask about. “Mother, could the Moor ever turn into a lake?”

Adara looked at Gair anxiously. One thing she knew all about was the secret unhappiness that made people ask strange questions. But she did not think Gair had any reason to be unhappy. “The Moor was a lake once,” she said. “When they were enlarging Beckill, they found skeletons of fish, and shells, embedded in the earth— and even stranger things in Islaw. And sometimes, the way the luck lies, the Moor still behaves like water. The Moon draws it. I think that's why the Dorig live here. Gair, are you unhappy?”

“Oh no,” said Gair. He did not want to talk about his unreasonable depression, and he was afraid of being led to confess to following a Giant about. “There's a certain kind of person,” he said hurriedly, “who's private and lonely and—anyway, why do people think those kind of people are proud? Aren't they just ordinary?”

“I wouldn't say they're ordinary,” Adara said, hoping this got to the seat of Gair's trouble. “Some people find it more difficult to be easy with other people, and perhaps, if they seem proud, it's the best they can do. Such people usually have a lot going on inside their heads.”

“I see.” Gair felt his face going red. “Is Ondo that kind of person?”

“Ondo?” Adara said dryly. “I wouldn't say that was one of Ondo's troubles. No. Reserve and conceit are rather different things.”

“Thanks,” said Gair, and he dashed away, much comforted.

Adara, as soon as she had finished with the stores, went to try and find him. He had worried her. But by that time Gair was halfway to the Giant's house, thinking as he trotted that he was in a fair way to becoming a Giant addict.

The Giant was ranging about in the wood again. And now Gair was comforted by what Adara had said, he almost felt he knew him. If he was in doubt about any feeling which crossed the Giant's gloomy face, he only had to look into his own mind and he knew—or knew more or less. After five minutes of lurking and watching, he discovered that the reason Gerald had been so unpleasant to the Giantess was that Gerald felt the same way about the wood that Gair did about his windowsill. The wood was Gerald's windowsill—his private place—but, being a Giant, Gerald needed a larger place than Gair did. He was jealous of it and, as he had done in the morning, he kept turning round to make sure he was alone.

Gair caught the feeling, just as he had done in the morning. He had a notion that it had something to do with the pulsing house. He could feel it, at the corner of his mind, queerly shifting from ugly to lovely just beyond the wood. It made him uneasy. He kept needing to turn his head.

One time he turned, he found the old mild dog had ambled into the wood out of the Sun. When Gair saw it, it was amiably staring at a gray squirrel, which was clinging halfway up a tree trunk, obviously not at all scared by the dog. Gair softly spoke the words and the dog came amiably to him. He made a fuss of it. It was so old and so good-humored that he wondered again what possible use it could be to the Giants.

The Giant saw the dog and called to it. But the dog was enjoying Gair scratching its chin and did not bother to move.

The next second, the Giant was crashing among the trees toward Gair. “Tober! Tober, come here!”

Gair let go of the dog, slid round a tree and flattened himself against it. He was terrified. All he had been told about the ruthlessness of Giants, all he had discovered about their strength and violence, made his heart bang and his stomach turn. If the Giant found him in his private place—! But he wanted to know Gerald. He yearned to talk to him. He was the only being Gair knew with whom he had anything in common. But he dared not move.

“My father could do it!” Gair told himself angrily. “Why can't I?”

He stayed flattened against the tree while Gerald trampled up and took the dog away.

Later, Gair returned slowly and moodily to Garholt. He was ashamed of his failure. He was also dreading the feeling he knew would meet him as soon as he went inside the mound.

But the feeling took him by surprise by climbing out of Garholt and seizing him by the throat before he had reached the gate. It took Gair and shook him. It was like a great living creature. Gair choked and almost fell over. “What
is
it?” he said. “Stop it, can't you?” It made no difference. The feeling clenched itself on Gair's neck and seemed to wrap itself round his shoulders. But it was all round, too. Gair had to fight his way into the mound against it, and, inside, it was even worse. It made Gair want to shout things, peculiar things. He went down the steps very slowly, biting his teeth together, determined not to open his mouth except to eat. He knew it was going to force him to say something stupid if he gave in to it for a moment.

Garholt was quiet and businesslike by this time. All the preparations for hunting were made. Those who were going were ready to eat supper and be off. The only one bustling was Kasta. Since Ondo was still in bed, wringing the last drop out of his injuries, Kasta was free to fuss noisily round Orban, to remember this, recall that and generally make a stir.

“Must draw attention to herself, that one!” Miri said savagely. Then she looked at Gair's face. “What's the matter? Where have you been?”

“Gair, what is it?” said Adara.

“Nothing,” said Gair, and bit his teeth together again. Miri and Adara looked at him so anxiously that Gair wondered what was the matter with his face. But he dared not ask, for fear the feeling made him say something insane. It kept forcing at him and forcing at him, jabbing him with horror, racking him with anxiety, trying to make him shout out nonsense, so that he had to resist it all the time.

Over supper, Gest gave Adara instructions about what to do while the hunt was gone. Everything he said seemed to make Gair's feeling worse. “Don't trouble with the building,” he said. “Unless the old men want to do the carpentry. And be careful of strangers—don't let them know we're all away. Will you need to send any parties out of the mound?”

“Yes. The strawberries should be ripe,” said Adara. “I was going to send the children, with Gair for a guard.”

Gest looked at Gair, who was listening with his head bent and his teeth clenched against the feeling. “Hm,” he said. “But do make sure—”

Kasta turned from sending Fandi to Ondo with a plover's egg. “No need to worry, Gest,” she said. “I'll be in charge.”

Gest looked at her as if he could not believe his ears. “In charge?”

Kasta wriggled and gave a preening sort of smile. “Of course. I am the senior wife, after all.”


You!
” said Gest.

“Now, Gest,” said Orban. “We can settle this reasonably.”

“NO WE CANNOT!” said Gest. “I give orders in Garholt. Not you, and certainly not Kasta. Is that clear?”

“Well, I—” said Orban.

“Don't be ridiculous, Gest!” said Kasta. “You can't pass over me for Adara, when my experience—” The quacking noise was in her voice. Everyone sighed.

“Shut
up
!” said Gest. Kasta stopped, with her mouth open, outraged. “No amount of noise from you,” said Gest, “is going to make any difference. Adara is in charge while I'm gone. If you don't like it, you can come on the hunt, too. Now hold your tongue!”

Kasta's face twisted with rage. She opened her mouth again, to point out that she was far too important to go hunting. Gest stared at her, daring her to say another word. And, to everyone's surprise, Kasta slowly shut her mouth again. There was an uneasy, admiring silence, which grew longer and longer, as everyone realized Gest had actually worsted Kasta.

To Gair, it was unbearable. The feeling grabbed him in the silence, and squeezed and squeezed, forced at his throat and squashed words out of him before he could stop it.

“Don't go hunting,” he said. “Please. Don't any of you go.”

Everyone at the eating-square turned and stared at him. Orban's eyebrows went up; Fandi tittered. Gest looked exasperated.

“Why did you say that, Gair?” Adara asked quickly.

Gair had no idea, except that he had been unable to stop. He felt ashamed and stupid. All he could do was shake his head. He dared not speak.

“Poor little soul!” Kasta said maliciously. “He's overwrought!”

She could have said nothing better calculated to annoy Gest. He looked coldly from Gair's shamed face to Ceri's puzzled one. “I seem to have fathered a rare couple of ninnies,” he said, and for the rest of supper he pointedly talked only to Ayna and Adara.

The people going on the hunt were mustering by the main gate. Gest got up to join them. The feeling rushed at Gair so fiercely that it was all he could do not to shout out.

Orban said, “Won't be a moment,” and hurried into the house.

He was gone some time. The muster by the main gate grew, and was surrounded by ladies tightening buckles and reminding their relatives that they had spare socks in their bag and the
green
blanket was waterproof. Gest became impatient. Kasta ran about wondering what Orban was doing.

Orban came out of the house towing Ondo. Ondo was dressed, and very sulky indeed. There was not a sign of a bee sting on him, except for a small purple blotch on one cheek, but Kasta screamed at the sight of him, and wrung her hands.

Ondo liked hunting even less than Ceri. He took instant advantage of it. “I'm not well enough, Mother! Don't let him make me go hunting!”

BOOK: Power of Three
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