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Authors: Rick Cook

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Moira made a face. “An infatuation spell! But I am not in love with him.”

“Nonetheless, he will follow at your heels like a puppy. No, you are the logical one to serve as the mother hen for our Sparrow.”

“Forgive me, Lord, but I find his presence distasteful.”

Bal-Simba sighed. “In this world, child, all of us must do things which are distasteful on occasion.”

Moira bowed her head. “Yes, Lord.”
But I don’t have to like it!
she thought furiously.

“Very well, off with you then.” He turned and gestured to Wiz. “Straight on and hurry.” Wiz reeled and shook his head to clear it.

“I will need some things from the village, Lord.”

“I will have someone meet you with food and your other needs at the bridge on the Forest Highway.”

“Lord, cannot I at least go back to say goodbye? Just for a few minutes?”

Bal-Simba shook his head. “Too dangerous. Both for you and the villagers. No, you will have to move quickly and quietly and attract as little notice as possible.”

“Yes, Lord,” Moira sighed.

“Now go, girl, and quickly. I cannot shield this clearing for much longer. I will consult the Council and come to you at your destination.”

Moira bowed her head. “Merry part, Lord.”

“Merry meet again, Lady.”

“Huh?” said Wiz groggily.

“Come on you,” Moira said viciously and grabbed his hand. She jerked and Wiz staggered to his feet.

“Well, move, clumsy. Come on!” and she strode off with a lovesick Wiz stumbling along in tow.

Bal-Simba watched the ill-assorted pair disappear down the forest path. Then he sat on the rock just vacated by Wiz and turned his attention to weaving masking spells to buy the travelers as much time as he possibly could.

Two: Passage in Peril

The afternoon was as fine as the morning, warm and sunny with just a bit of a breeze to stir the leaves and cool the traveler. The birds sang and the summer flowers perfumed the air. Here and there the early blackberries showed dark on their canes.

Wiz was in no mood to appreciate any of it. Before they had gone a mile he was huffing and blowing. In two miles his T-shirt was soaked and beads of sweat were running down his face, stinging his eyes and dripping from the tip of his nose. Still Moira hurried him along the twisting path, up wooded hills and down through leafy vales, ignoring his discomfort.

Finally Wiz threw himself down on a grassy spot in a clearing.

“No more,” he gasped. “I’ve got to rest.”

“Get out of the open, you crack-brained fool!” the red-haired witch snapped. Wiz crawled to his feet, staggered a few steps and collapsed against a tree trunk.

“Sorry,” he panted. “I’m just not up to this. Got to rest.”

“And what do you think the League is doing meantime?” Moira scolded. “Will they stop just because you’re too soft to go on?”

“League?” asked Wiz blankly.

“The ones who pursue us. Don’t you listen to anything?”

“I don’t hear anyone chasing us. Maybe we’ve lost them.”

“Lost them?
Lost them!
What do you think this is? A game of hide-and-seek? You idiot, by the time they get close enough for us to hear it will be too late. Do you want to end up like Patrius?”

Wiz looked slightly green. “Patrius? The old man back there?”

Moira cast her eyes skyward. “Yes, Patrius. Now come on!”

But Wiz made no move. “I’m sorry,” he gasped. “I can’t. Go on without me. I’ll be all right.”

Moira glared down at him, hands on hips. “You’ll be dead before nightfall.”

“I’ll be all right.” Wiz insisted. “Just go on.”

Moira softened slightly. He was a nuisance, but he was a human being and as near helpless as made no difference.

“Very well,” she said, sitting down. “We rest.”

Wiz leaned forward and sank his head between his knees. Moira ignored him and stared back the way they had come.

“That old man,” Wiz said at last. “What killed him?”

“Magic,” Moira said over her shoulder.

“No really, what killed him?”

“I told you, a spell.”

Wiz eyed her. “You really believe that, don’t you? I mean it’s not just a phrase. You mean real magic.”

Moira twisted to face Wiz. “Of course I mean magic. What did you think? A bolt of lightning just happened to strike him while he was Summoning you?”

“You’re telling me there really is magic?”

Moira looked annoyed. “How do you think you got here?”

“Oh,” said Wiz. “Yeah. Well look, this magic. Can it get me home?”

“Patrius might have been able to do that, but I cannot,” she said angrily. She got to her feet. “Now come along. If you have breath enough to talk you have breath enough to walk.”

By paths and game trails they pushed on through the forest. Twice more they stopped to rest when Wiz would no further. Both times Moira fidgeted so impatiently that Wiz cut the stop short, barely getting his breath back. There were a thousand questions he wanted to ask, but Moira sternly forbade him to talk while they walked.

Once she stopped so suddenly that Wiz nearly trod on her skirt. She stared intently at a patch of woods before them. Besides a ring of bright orange mushrooms beside the trail, Wiz saw nothing unusual.

“This way,” she whispered, grasping his arm and tugging him off the path. Carefully and on tiptoe, she led him well around that bit of forest, striking the trail again on the other side.

“What was the detour about?” Wiz asked at their next rest stop when he had breath enough to talk.

“The little folk danced there on last night to honor the Mid-Summer’s Day. It is unchancy to go near such a place in the best of times and it would be very foolish to do so today.”

“Oh come on! You mean you believe in fairies too?”

“I believe in what I see, Sparrow. I have seen those of Faerie.”

“But dammit—”

Moira cut him off with an imperious gesture. “Do NOT curse, Sparrow. We do not need what that might attract.”

That made sense, Wiz admitted. If magic really worked and there was the burned husk of a man lying under the sod back behind them to suggest that it did then curses might work too. Come to that, if magic worked there was nothing so odd about fairies dancing in the moonlight. He shook his head.

“Why do you call me Sparrow?” he asked, feeling for safer ground.

“Because Bal-Simba called you so. You needed a name to use before the World.”

“I’ve got a name,” Wiz protested.

“Bal-Simba told you never to speak your true name to anyone,” Moira told him. “So we needed something to call you.”

“My friends just call me Wiz.”

“I will call you Sparrow,” Moira said firmly. “Now come along.”

Again she set off in an effortless stride. Wiz came huffing along behind, glumly admiring the swing of her hips and the easy sway of her body. He was used to being treated with contempt by beautiful women, but he had never been this taken with a woman and that made it hurt worse than usual.

One thing you have to say about my luck,
he thought.
It’s consistent.

Finally they topped a small rise and Wiz could see a road through the trees ahead. Off to the left he could hear the sound of running water. Moira crouched behind a bush and pulled Wiz roughly down beside her.

“This is the Forest Highway,” Moira whispered. “It leads over the Blackstone Brook and on into the Wild Wood.”

“Where we’re going?” said Wiz, enjoying Moira’s closeness and the smell of her hair. Instinctively he moved closer, but the hedge witch drew away.

“Yes, but not by the road. I am to meet someone here. You wait in the woods. Do not make a sound and do not show yourself.” She pulled back and continued down the trail, leaving Wiz with the memory of her closeness.

In spite of its grandiose title, the Forest Highway was a weed-grown lane with the trees pressing in on either side. The Blackstone Brook was perhaps ten yards wide and ran swift, deep and dark as its name under a rough log bridge.

As Moira predicted, there was a man waiting under the trees by the roadside. He was tall, lean, long-faced and as brown as the rough homespun of his tunic and breeches. When Moira stepped out of the trees he touched his forehead respectfully.

“I brought the things, Lady.”

“Thank you, Alber,” Moira replied kindly.

“Lady, is it true you are leaving us?”

“For a time, Alber. A short time, I hope.”

“We will miss you,” he said sadly.

Moira smiled and embraced him. Watching from behind his bush Wiz felt a pang of jealousy. “Oh, and I will miss you all as well. You have been like a family to me, the whole village.” Then she smiled again. “But another will be along soon to take my place.”

“It will not be the same, Lady,” he said dejectedly. He turned and gestured to the small pile of objects under a bush by the roadside. “The messenger said two packs. And two cloaks.”

“Correct, Alber.” Moira did not volunteer and he did not ask.

Quickly she began to sort through the items, checking them and re-stowing them into the packs.

“Shall I wait, Lady?”

“No.” She smiled up at him. “Thank you again.” The hedge witch made a sign with her right hand, first two fingers extended. “Go with my blessing. May your way home be short and safe and the journey uneventful.”

“May you be safe as well, Lady.” With that Alber turned and started down the road.

As soon as he had disappeared around a bend, Moira motioned Wiz out of hiding.

“A brave man,” Moira said as she tied the drawstring on one of the packs and set it aside.

“Why?” asked Wiz, nettled. “For bringing us this stuff?”

“Don’t sneer, Sparrow,” she said sharply. “This ‘stuff’ will sustain us on our journey. Alber was willing to chance Mid-Summer’s Day to see that we will eat and be warm in the Wild Wood.”

“Nice of him. But brave?”

Moira finished loading the second pack and shook her head. “Sparrow, how did you survive so long?”

“I survived just fine up until this morning,” Wiz retorted. “So what about Mid-Summer’s Day?”

Moira sighed in exasperation. “Mid-Summer’s Day is the longest day of the year. All magics associated with the sun and fire are at their most potent this day and magics of green and growing things are unusually potent as well. It is a day of power, Sparrow, and not a day for mortals to be about.”

“We’re out.”

“Not by choice, Sparrow,” Moira said grimly. “Now come.” She slung a large leather pouch over her shoulder and shrugged one of the packs onto her back. Then she stood and watched as Wiz struggled into the other one. As soon as he was loaded, they started off across the bridge.

Well behind them, Alber stuck to the relative safety of the road. Thus he was easily seen by a soaring raven gyring and wheeling over the green and leafy land.

Alber saw the raven as it glided low over the road. He made a warding sign, for ravens are notoriously birds of ill omen, and hurried on his way.

Above him the raven cocked his glossy black head and considered. Like most of his kind he knew enough to count one and two and one person travelling alone was not what his master searched for. There were two, and the bird’s keen eyes could see no sign of anyone else on the road.

But this was the only human he had seen today and this one was well away from the normal haunts of man.

The raven was not intelligent, but he had been well-schooled. With a hoarse caw he abandoned the search to his fellows and broke away to the south to report.

###

The forest deepened after Wiz and Moira passed over the river. They left the road around the first bend past the bridge and toiled up a winding game trail that ran to the top of a steep ridge. By the time they reached the top even Moira was breathing heavily. She motioned Wiz to rest and the pair sank down thankfully under the trees.

Through a gap Wiz could look ahead. The valley was a mass of green treetops. Beyond the valley lay another green ridge and beyond that another ridge and then another fading off into the blue distance. There was no sign of habitation or any hint of animal life. Only endless, limitless forest.

This was no second-growth woodland or a carefully managed preserve. The oaks and beeches around them had never been logged. The big ones had stood for centuries, accumulating mosses and lichen on their hoary trunks, growing close and thrusting high to form a thick canopy overhead. Here and there was an open patch where one of those forest giants had succumbed to age, rot or lightning and the successors crowding in had not yet filled the place. There were snags and fallen limbs everywhere, green with moss and spotted with bright clumps of fungus.

This is the forest primeval,
Wiz thought and shivered slightly. He had never thought that trees could make him nervous, but these huge moss-grown boles pressed in on him from all sides, their leaves shutting off the sun and casting everything into a greenish gloom. The breeze soughing through the treetops sounded as if the forest was muttering to itself or passing the news of invading strangers, like jungle drums.

“I see why they call it the Wild Wood,” he said.

“This is not the Wild Wood,” Moira told him. “We are still only on the Fringe of the Wild Wood.”

“Does anyone live here?”

“None we would care to meet. Oh, a few cottagers and a small stead or two. But most who live on this side of the Blackstone have reason to shun their fellows. Or be shunned by them. We will best avoid company of any kind until we reach our destination.”

“Where are we going anyway?” Wiz sidled closer to her.

“To a place of refuge. You need not know more. Now come. We have far to go.”

It was late afternoon when they came over the second ridge and descended into another valley. Although the forest was as dense as ever, there was a water meadow through the center of this valley. The broad expanse of grass was a welcome sight to Wiz, oppressed as he was by the constant trees. Here and there trees hardly more than shrubs luxuriated in the warmth and openness. Also interspersed were small ponds and marshy patches marked by cattails, reeds and sweet blue iris.

They halted at the edge of the open and Moira surveyed the cloud-flecked sky uneasily.

“Nothing,” she sighed. “Now listen, Sparrow. We cannot go around because there are bogs above and below. We must cross and do it quickly, lest we be seen. Once we start we must not stop.” She looked him over critically. “We will rest now.”

Moira knelt, scanning the meadow and the sky above it while Wiz caught his breath.

“Moira?”

“What?” She did not stop searching the meadow.

“We’re being chased, right?”

“That
is
why we are running.”

“Well then, can I ask a dumb question?”

“Of course,” the hedge witch said in a tone that indicated he had been doing nothing else.

“Why are we being chased? What did we do?”

“We
did nothing. It is
you
they want, Sparrow, and they want you because Patrius Summoned you at the cost of his own life.”

“Yeah, but why?”

“We do not know that, Sparrow.”

“Do they know?”

“I doubt it.”

Wiz shifted slightly. “Well, if you don’t know and they don’t know then why the bloody—heck—are they chasing us?”

“They hope to learn from you what Patrius’s aim was.”

“But I don’t know either!”

Moira snorted. “I doubt they will take your unconstrained word for that, Sparrow.”

“Look, I don’t want any part of this, okay? Can’t we talk to them? Isn’t there some way I can prove I don’t know anything and then they can leave me alone.”

“Sparrow, listen to me,” Moira turned to him. “The Dark League of the South is not interested in your innocence or guilt. The fact that Patrius Summoned you is enough to make them want you. Probably they want to squeeze you for the knowledge we both know you do not possess. Possibly they simply want you dead or worse.”

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