Authors: Robert Carter
Morann exchanged a mystified glance with Willow. âHad no face, you say?'
The big mastiff paced round them, still excited. Will said, âIt was like something from a bad dream.'
Gwydion stepped into the lantern light. âWhatever else it was, it was not a bad dream.'
âWhat I want to know,' Willow said, rubbing her arms, âis what that
thing
was! The one that tried to get in at our window.'
âIt was a goggly,' Will said.
âA what?'
Morann explained. âHere the country lore calls such creatures “gogglies” or bat-elves. They're supposed to come out of burrows in the ground. It's said they steal babies away.'
Willow put down the bloodied rag and clutched her daughter tighter. âWas it after Bethe, then?'
Gwydion sat down at the table and made the candle flare. He said sternly, âI have already warned that you and your child are in danger here.'
Will shook his head. âI don't think it was after Bethe. It was trying to lure me outside.'
Morann said, âIn the Blessed Isle it's said these creatures
come up from the Realm Below. They prowl the places where there are vents leading up to our world.'
He looked meaningfully to Will, who straight away thought of the strongroom that lay under the abandoned chapter house and of the cleft that led down into the measureless depths below.
âIt was surely the same kind of creature that bit my hand,' he said. âAnd I've seen things like it before. They were clustering in the roof vaults of the great chapter house of Verlamion.'
Morann put his hat on the table and raked his fingers through his long hair. âThen my guess is that your attacker was an agent of the red hands.'
âThe Sightless Ones?' Willow said, looking around, worried. âDo you think so?'
Will grunted. âRather the Sightless Ones than Maskull.'
He looked from Morann to Gwydion, who said flatly, âWe must go from here at first light. Until then, you should all try to sleep. I shall keep watch.'
When Willow had finished cleaning the blood from Will's face and looking over his bruises they took to their beds. Gwydion went out into the darkness, insisting that Dimmet bar the doors behind him. âLet no one in or out for any reason while night reigns. I will knock three times when dawn comes.'
As Will laid his head down for the second time that night he ached and smarted in a dozen places, but he was pleased to have taken no serious hurt. He took the red fish from his pouch and decided to put it under his pillow, just as he had once put Morann's protection against nightmares under his pillow at home. Yet the fish seemed oddly cold to the touch, and in the muted moonlight its green eye looked at him with a baleful stare. He wondered again about what had happened that night.
Where had Gwydion been while the attack was going
on? And if he had webbed the Plough about with magic to counter harm, then how come the flying creature had almost got in through the window? Nor had Gwydion cast any magic to help capture the attacker. Why?
He yawned but could find no rest. More disjointed doubts bubbled up from the mud at the bottom of his mind. Maybe Morann was right â maybe the would-be killer was an agent of the Sightless Ones. What if the sorcery the Fellowship employed was stronger than Gwydion's magic?
As sleeplessness gripped him, Will's thoughts began to riot, turning ever darker. What if Gwydion had left him alone at the Plough deliberately, knowing that he would make himself known to the whole district? Maybe he had been used as bait to draw Maskull here! Gwydion never told all that he knew; wasn't his mysteriousness no more than deceit and manipulation?
The more he thought about it the more reasonable it seemed. But, whatever Gwydion's game was, he was right about one thing â Willow must be persuaded to go home. And soon.
Eventually, the first faint glimmerings of daybreak began to creep in around the edges of the shutters. He heard Dimmet and Duffred moving about, and so he got up and went down to help them prepare the farewell breakfast. He found Morann was already dressed for the road.
âI couldn't sleep either,' he said. âAnd since Master Gwydion has stood sentinel over us through the darkest hours, I thought I'd set another pair of eyes to watch over him while the light came up.'
Three knocks came at the door. Gwydion appeared. He nodded at Morann who spoke a brief word in the true tongue, then let him in. âOld friend, you have a stout heart. There are few like you remaining in the world, which is a great sadness to me. And as for you, Willand, we must be gone from here as soon as the sun is risen.'
Will waited for Gwydion to sit down, then he leaned forward and lowered his voice. âListen â I want to help prevent the war if I can, but after what happened last night I can hardly believe that Willow and Bethe will be safe anywhere. You told me the Vale was in danger of ending up like Little Slaughter. How can I ask Willow to go back there?'
âThe Vale may recently have been in as much danger as Little Slaughter,' Gwydion said, seeming to choose his words with care. âBut it is not in danger now.'
âHow can you be so sure?'
âBecause the Vale would only be in danger if Maskull had found it.'
âBut maybe he has.'
âMaybe. But you are no longer there. And Maskull knows that now.'
Will sat back, unsettled. âHow do you know he knows?'
Gwydion's eyes were steady on him. âBecause last night's assailant was sent by him.'
âWhy do you say that?'
âRemember the rede, “By his magic, so shall ye know him.” Last night I went to see if I could smell him out.'
âAnd did you?'
âIt is surprising what the weak of character will do when they believe they are not being watched. Maskull's reek was faint but clear.'
Will rubbed at his chin, night doubts still swirling in his head. âI'm scared for Willow and my daughter â I can't deny it.'
âThen persuade her to return home.'
He nodded at last. âI'll try.'
When Willow appeared she cuddled her daughter and sat down. âMorning,' she said, looking at them in turn.
Will took her hands. âWill you do something to help me?'
âIf I think it
will
help you.'
âDo you remember my talisman? The green fish?'
She searched his face and he saw she had not been expecting the question. âYou mean the one you usually wear around your neck? What about it?'
âI don't have it with me.'
âI know. You left it on a nail by the back door. Don't worry, I put it safe.'
He shook his head. âBut I need it.'
She gauged him suspiciously. âWill, if this is your way of getting me to go homeâ'
He pressed her hands earnestly. âI wouldn't lie to you, Willow â this is important to me. The fish was with me when Gwydion first carried me into the Vale as a baby. It was in my hand when I cracked the Verlamion Doomstone. I've always been comforted by its touch. I need it with me.'
She met his look squarely, part of her still thinking she was being pushed around, but then she sat back and sighed. âWell, if you're sure you need it, then I suppose I'll have to go and fetch it.'
âThank you,' he said, truly relieved. âI knew you would.'
But she did not seem pleased to have been thwarted. âThere's a couple of questions I have for you, Willand. Just how do you expect me to find my way home? And how am I to find you again once you've moved on from here?'
âThat is easy,' Gwydion said. âMorann brought you here. He will guide you home again. Is that not so, Morann?'
And Morann sighed and nodded. âIt looks that way.'
W
ill waved farewell as Avon followed Morann's horse from the Plough.
âMind how you go,' he told Willow as she left the yard.
âAnd you.'
âLook after her,' he told Morann.
âI surely will.'
Gwydion lingered for a while, talking with Dimmet, then he gathered up his staff and called Will after him and they also went on their way. Will chose the south road out of Eiton. They followed it for a little while, then, as soon as they reached the place where the road and the lign of the ash tree crossed, they set off across the meadows. After a short while they came to a brook.
âThis is the north fork of the Charrel Brook,' Gwydion said. âThe stream wanders many leagues southward, through lands owned by the Sightless Ones. These waters join up with a greater river in the domain of the Earl of Ockhamsforth. That river, called Iesis, flows on to the great city of Trinovant. Do you see what example in the fundaments of magic this little stream holds for us?'
âI would say the lesson it shows is that all things are
connected â all places and all times, as all flowing waters are,' Will answered.
âWell said, indeed!'
Will waded across, confidently following the lign. By now the phase of the unrisen moon was almost at full, and so the lign was hard to lose. Even so, the influence would ebb and flow as the day progressed, and Will knew they would almost certainly wander off the true line. He hunted along the bank of the Charrel for a little way among the osiers then found what he was looking for. A hazel tree. He cut himself a nice fresh wand, and split it ready for scrying. As they walked, Will thought about Willow and her leaving.
âYou take care now, Willand,' was all she had said as they parted, but a moment before she had squeezed him tight and hung on to him as if she might never see him again. Now he wondered what Gwydion had told Morann to do once Willow and Bethe were back in the Vale. Would he just leave her there, no matter what she wanted?
He looked at Gwydion, wondering at the fears that had plagued his sleepless night. They had faded away as soon as he had got up, and now Gwydion seemed once more to have his best interests at heart. The morning sun was bright. They were two again, two against a tide of troubles, and a dangerous journey stretched ahead of them through a land filled with endless possibilities.
âIt's strange,' he said, âhow a man remembers what's passed in his life while he's walking the land.'
âA man journeys through life much as he journeys upon the road,' Gwydion said. âWhat memories have you come across?'
âOh, fond memories mostly. I was thinking about Wortmaster Gort. A picture of him came to me when I passed that field of meadowsweet back there. How I'd like to see him again!'
Gwydion looked at the meadows with their verges of nettle and dock leaf. âAnd who are you reminded of in this place?'
âThe beast that bit my hand.'
âAnd what have you decided?'
âI know it's never a good plan to question a wholesome cure, but I was wondering if you could have closed up my wound quite so easily without knowledge of the creature's true name.'
âSo you suppose I have that knowledge.'
âYes.' He glanced across at the wizard. âWhat is it?'
The wizard inclined his head as if he had decided he had no choice but to vouchsafe a secret. He said, âIt is called a ked.'
âA ked,' Will said, weighing the word.
âAll that was said about them by loose tongues is true â except the part about child-stealing. That is just a tale encouraged by the Sightless Ones.'
âI knew the beast wasn't malicious,' he said triumphantly.
âOf course you knew, because you have unusual fellow feeling â “affinity” as Gort calls it. Keds come from the upper regions of the Realm Below. You saw them in the chapter house at Verlamion. Many of the Fellowship's cloisters, including the Verlamion chapter house, are built over old vents. The creatures are encouraged up to the surface by the Fellows who make promise of mushrooms to them.'
Will looked askance. âMushrooms?'
âAnd earth-tongues. The creatures like them very much, especially when spread with honey. They are tempted and so come up. But then the red hands trap them and make them roost among their roof beams.'
âBut why would they want to do that?'
âThey keep them for food.'
Will's brow furrowed. âWho would think it right to eat
such a creature? And, anyway, I thought the red hands lived only on blood.'
âQuite so, but they regard ked blood as the sweetest. Anstin the Hermit told me long ago, it is the practice of the Fellows to shoot the captive creatures down with crossbow and line so there may be plenty of the “best wine” on the most sacred days of the Fellows' calendar.'
âThat's disgusting!'
âThe Sightless Ones must keep control over the minds of those they enslave. How could they do that if they allowed their own people to live in the ordinary way? They have rituals that take the place of every activity of life, rituals that are meant to dissolve away the individual spirit of a man until he feels he is no more than a mote floating rudderless in a powerful current. That way he is forced to
belong.
'
âYou think this ked escaped when Isnar had the chapter house pulled down?'
âIt is possible.'
âNo wonder it bit me. I'd have done the same in its place.'
âIt is a sad day when one of the creatures is tempted to the surface for any reason, but thankfully such days are rare. Most are lured up by the Fellowship, but occasionally they do come up into this world of light of their own accord, for they are by nature as curious as young cats. Those that escape into the open are unjustly persecuted as villains.'
âWhat can be done about that?'
âIt is the task of all people to make life less unfair if they can.'
Will fell silent. Despite the hot sun on his back, the cool green grass under his feet and the sweet smell of wildflowers that was on the air, he was troubled by what Gwydion had told him. He tried to turn his mind to something else, and found a ready subject at hand.
âI've been meaning to ask if Duke Richard gave you permission to enter Foderingham in the end.'
Gwydion thought for a moment then struck the ground ahead with his staff. âIt is well that you be told how things stand among the lords, for it has a bearing on how we must proceed. When I went to Foderingham I found the castle infested with soldiers and everyone alert for war. The queen has been plotting again, this time with Henry de Bowforde, son of the late Edgar de Bowforde, Duke of Mells, the same that was slain at Verlamion.'
âHow could I forget him?' Will said, recalling the stripped and bloodied body he had seen. It was said that Duke Edgar had secretly fathered Queen Mag's son, and that child, now a five-year-old boy, had been officially named as heir to the throne by King Hal.
Will said, âNow Henry is Duke of Mells, and I imagine he's as committed to Queen Mag as his father was. After all, she's the mother of Henry's half-brother.'
âCorrect.' Gwydion stroked his beard. âThe queen is considered by those who look no further than skin-deep to be a blemishless beauty. She has always used her looks to ensnare those whom she would use. I have no doubt she encourages Henry. And I have no doubt that is done at the behest of Maskull.'
âI've heard she's used to treating courtiers as her playthings. It's surprising how easily she's become a pawn herself.'
âMaskull is hard to resist.' Gwydion sighed. âHe does not believe in restraint and so many have become his tools down the years. The queen and Henry de Bowforde make a formidable pair. Ever since Henry put on his father's ducal robes he has burned to revenge himself against Richard of Ebor. Four years ago he swore to humble the man he blames for his father's death. He is, at twenty-two years of age, the most lawless blade in Trinovant.'
Will brought down his wand and planted his feet in the grass. âThere seems to be little enough law for noblemen to obey.'
Gwydion stood clear a pace. âLittle enough now that King Hal has been found to be well again. That was announced by a committee of eminent leeches who were, I happen to know, paid very handsomely by the queen herself for their convenient decision.'
âSo the Protectorship has fallen?'
âAnd worse. Once again there is a plan to call a Great Council of Lords. That does not bode well for Richard of Ebor. He fears that he will be impeached and sentenced to death all at a single stroke. Friend Richard is politicking furiously in Trinovant in an effort to save the peace, but his position is fast crumbling.'
âWhat will happen?'
âHe will be forced out. My bet is that he will retreat into his heartland, go once more to his castle of Ludford. There, in the Western Marches, he will begin drawing to him forces and friends, calling Lord Sarum down from the north, and the Earl Warrewyk to come to his aid from across the Narrow Seas. I think he may be forced into a glorious last stand.'
Will scratched his head, realizing that he had lost the lign. He looked out across the patchwork of greens and yellows, a land that seemed so peaceful and well-ordered, yet was on the brink of terrible bloodshed. âYou must ask Duke Richard to give us men and horses so we can go more swiftly about the country to find what must be found! With horses to ride and to draw and men to dig and to guard we'd root out the infection all the quicker!'
Gwydion bent down to look at the ground at his feet. âAlas, Friend Richard will afford us no such help. Perhaps he is already falling under the spell of the lorc.'
âThen he must give us enough strength to move against
the Sightless Ones at Verlamion! We must pull out the Doomstone and see if it has truly healed itself!'
âNo lord dare move in strength against the Sightless Ones.'
Will scried a little, picked up a pebble and threw it ahead of him to where the grass sprouted in unruly fashion. The bleakness of Gwydion's words gnawed at him. âThen what shall we do?'
âWork patiently,' the wizard said. âAnd keep putting one foot in front of the other â though you presently seem to be leading us into ever more boggy ground.'
It was true. The grass was wet underfoot now, and soon Will found his feet being sucked down. He tried to press on where the hazel wand showed, but then it was as if the sun had gone behind a cloud, and he felt a sudden chill eating at his flesh. When he lifted his wand again he thought he felt a faint hint tingling in his hands, but the feeling was indistinct, as if the power had for the moment retreated deeper underground.
The flavour of it was wrong â like Indonen, yet not quite. He shivered, looking about. There were no birds flying here. It was damp underfoot, a shadowy mire where none of the trees had grown tall but had become gnarled like those that grew on a windswept moor. A ball of midges danced above a pool of fetid water. He thought it a dismal place, and felt his heart squeeze tight. More than anything he wanted to see Willow. It suddenly felt as if he would never see her again.
He began to feel his feet slowly sinking into the boggy ground. He warned Gwydion of the unpleasantness in the place, saying it would be better if they tracked around to the south. But Gwydion stood back on firm ground and leaned heavily on his staff. He began to question Will closely about his thoughts and feelings.
âIt's likeâ¦like treading through a field of open graves
with my eyes shut,' he said, feeling a new ripple of horror pass through him. âNo birds or animals come here. See those midges dancing madly? Look at them! Do you see how insane they are? They're trapped. I can feel my heart faltering and my courage with it, Gwydion. It's a cold, deadly feeling. I don't like it here.'
When he tried to move his legs again he found that his feet had sunk under the surface. The suction was hard to break. First he tried to pull one foot free, then the other, but he only trod himself deeper. He felt coldness clutching at his calves, then black water closing over the backs of his knees.
Panic tore through him. âGwydion! I can't get out!'
âTread softly, Willand.'
He tried, but it was no use. âGwydion, help me! I'm sinking!'
âAre you truly unable to free yourself?' Gwydion asked, watching him calmly, doing nothing.
âGwydion, please! Look at me! I'm stuck fast and it's pulling me down!'
But the wizard only watched dispassionately as Will struggled. It was as if the meadow bog itself did not want to let him go. As his legs churned the ground a stink rose up from the filth. It was vile, like rotten eggs. And now the mud had reached almost to his waist.
âGwydion!' He felt panic rising as easily as his body sank.
And then the wizard danced. He came forward lightly and laid his staff towards Will, then muttered words until the head of the staff glowed with a blue incandescence. Only then did Will find that he could begin to fight free. He staggered to firm ground and lay down.
âThank you, friend!' he said accusingly as Gwydion came up.
He pulled his spare shirt out of his bundle, marched a
hundred paces away to sit alone on a tussock of grass. Still angry, he wiped his legs clean then went down to the stream and washed himself and his spoiled clothes, wrung out the grey sodden mass of his shirt and laid it out to dry. His anger flashed, but then he felt the sun warm on his back once more, and his mood lifted. He knew that he had been in a place of unquiet horrors.
âI thought you were going to leave me to go under. Why didn't you act sooner?'
Gwydion waved his staff vaguely at the bog. âI wanted to see exactly where the battlestone lies.'
Will shook his head ruefully. âThis is no work for a grown man. We've found a battlestone, though we've come barely two leagues from Eiton. At this rate we'll have stopped the war before it's begun!'