Reunion

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Authors: Kara Dalkey

BOOK: Reunion
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Contents

Chapter One

The sky overhead was black as a raven's wing, but the stars were already fading. . .

Chapter Two

That red serpent-creature cursed or poisoned me!
Corwin thought in horror. . .

Chapter Three

It seemed to take forever to walk down the rutted, muddy road to Henwyneb's hovel.

Chapter Four

She was incredibly striking, with long, silvery-blond hair—not the silver of old age. . .

Chapter Five

“Is this the serpent from the waves that you saw this morning?” Henwyneb asked.

Chapter Six

They found a secret way out through the back of a narrow pantry beside the inn's kitchen hearth.

Chapter Seven

As the wagon bumped over the drawbridge, Corwin glanced up at the crenellated wall.

Chapter Eight

The minutes crawled slowly by as the sun reached its zenith in the sky.

Chapter Nine

The cold of the River Twy didn't matter, with the rush of Nia's breath in Corwin's mouth. . .

Chapter Ten

Corwin's heart nearly stopped in his chest as the kraken towered higher. . .

Chapter Eleven

Ma'el/Joab roared again, this time a great cry of frustration. Joab's tentacles slid. . .

Epilogue

Late summer sunlight sparkled off the ripples in Carmarthen Bay.

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

Chapter One

The sky overhead was black as a raven's wing, but the stars were already fading, and the horizon glowed through the lifting fog with the promise of a late summer's morn.

A boy of sixteen such summers trundled his wheelbarrow along a stony, rutted path. His tattered woolen tunic and leggings were scarcely enough to keep the morning chill at bay. To his left was a dense, shadowed forest. To his right, a steep, jagged cliff dropped away to a rocky, wave-battered shore.

This land was called Britain by some, Wales by others, but the boy, who was called Corwin, didn't consider himself a vassal of any kingdom. It was the year four hundred and twenty-five, but Corwin wasn't a cleric who kept track of the calendar. On this day, he was a simple beachcomber and hoped that was all anyone who saw him would think of him. For there was a price on his head, and his best hope was to avoid recognition.

Corwin's wheelbarrow sounded too loud to his ears in the predawn stillness. He wished he had thought to muffle the wheels with straw. The only other sounds were the roar of the waves below and the cries of the seagulls above. Those and a certain cawing raven that circled high over Corwin's head, a black shadow against the blacker sky, making raucous noise as if to mock him.

The raven was called Nag, and in Corwin's opinion it was an appropriate name—nagging seemed to be all that the annoying bird ever did. It had belonged to his old mentor, Fenwyck, and now that Fenwyck was gone, the bird followed Corwin. But it wouldn't take food from Corwin's hand, and it never rested on his shoulder. It was almost as though the raven blamed Corwin for his mentor's death.

At last, through the mist, Corwin saw what he was looking for—a lone, ancient, twisted and weathered cypress tree standing at the edge of the cliff. Its bent branches extended out over the precipice like an aged widow reaching for a love lost at sea. Some called it a “witch tree,” and there were many stories of how it had once been a sorceress enchanted by some god or demon. Corwin just thought of it as a lucky break. He had more practical uses for the tree than stories.

He stopped his wheelbarrow by the withered roots, as he had for many mornings in a row now, and pulled out of the barrow a long length of rope, a leather sack, and a wooden pulley. Corwin easily shimmied up the tree's twisted trunk and crawled out onto the thickest branch to hang the block pulley, avoiding looking down at the drop to the sharp rocks below. He threaded the rope through the wheel of the pulley and slithered back down the tree, holding both ends of the line.

Back on the ground, Corwin tied one end of the rope securely to the wheelbarrow. Then he kicked it off the cliff. As it swung out into the air, Corwin carefully let the rope slip through his callused hands, lowering the barrow down to the shore.

Now came the hard part. Corwin tied the end of the rope he still held around his waist and began the dangerous climb down the cliff face. The rocks were slick with dew and damp and sea spray. There had been a storm the night before, which made his footing treacherous, but his spirits hopeful. Storm waves always brought more shells and other treasures to the shore. In the past, he had found such wonders as a wooden shoe, hollow balls of green and blue glass, a carved flute of whalebone, and a very strange hairy nut that contained white meat and water. And for every ten buckets of shells Corwin gathered, the old blind button-maker Henwyneb would pay him a penny.

My life has certainly become lowly
, Corwin thought, as his hand nearly lost its grip on a slippery rock. He had known better times. How he and Fenwyck, the only guardian Corwin had ever known, used to dazzle the crowds at the county fairs. Fenwyck styled himself a sorcerer and illusionist, and the pennies flowed in amazement at his tricks. Of course, some of the pennies would flow from their unknowing owners' pockets and purses as Fenwyck and Corwin walked among the crowd. There had been more than a bit of thief in Fenwyck's conniving nature, and that had proved his undoing.

If only you hadn't seen that little silver chalice in the castle
, Corwin thought.
Fenwyck, why'd you have to get yourself killed over a pretty bauble and turn me into a hunted man?
But because Fenwyck had saved Corwin's life, in the end, Corwin felt more guilt and sorrow than anger.

It isn't like I haven't known worse times, as well,
he reminded himself, as he just barely stopped a sliding fall by grabbing a root that stuck out from the cliff. Corwin's earliest memories were of wandering alone in the woods. He'd managed—his senses had kept him out of the worst danger, and he'd grown up strong. He'd manage again, somehow.

At last, Corwin reached the bottom of the cliff. He untied the rope from his waist and untied the other end from the wheelbarrow. There was enough sand between the rocks that he was able to maneuver the barrow along without much trouble. With a now much-practiced eye, Corwin scanned the shore, looking for anything out of the ordinary, anything that wasn't driftwood, sand, or stone.

Unfortunately, the storm didn't seem to have brought him any special treasures this morning. But there were plenty of shells, and Corwin dutifully filled the leather sack. He also picked up mussels and put them in his pockets so that he might have a meal later in the day. Nag, the raven, helped himself to some shellfish on the sand, as well as whatever unlucky fish had washed ashore.

 

Time passed until the sky was bright and pink with the coming dawn. The large leather sack was now full, and Corwin trundled the barrow back to the rope and pulley. He tied one end of the rope around the top of the leather sack. Next he hauled on the other end of the line, hoisting the sack high in the air, nearly to the overhanging branch of the tree above, then found a rock to securely weight his end of the rope. It was a nuisance, but Corwin had learned with practice that it was best to raise the shells first and climb up after, rather than try to scale the cliff with a heavy sack on his back. He could grab the sack with a long, hooked stick once he was at the top, then lower another empty sack for a second round of gathering.

The rope was secured and, with a sigh, Corwin approached the cliff for his climb. It was hard to live each day by the whims of fate. But he didn't know what else to do. Fenwyck had taught Corwin little except how to fool folk with clever tricks and steal from them, and Corwin was in enough trouble as it was without getting his hand caught in someone's purse strings.

There were other lands and other peoples, he knew, but Corwin preferred living alone in a cave in the woods to living among strangers whose ways he wouldn't know and whose tongue he couldn't speak. Besides, Corwin didn't even know how far the king's men would be seeking for him.

If only I could have a
useful
vision, one that tells me what I should do
, he thought. Corwin had been afflicted with occasional, strange storms of hallucination ever since he could remember, but they had never been of any use to him. They were never
about
him, only of people and events far away in time or place. A witch-woman had once told him he had the gift of prophecy, but Corwin thought of it more as a curse than a gift. Fenwyck, of course, had tried to make money off it, proclaiming Corwin as a wise seer. Corwin had quickly learned to lie whenever he was called upon to foresee someone's future—especially when he was given a vision.
If only I'd been able to lie to the king,
Corwin thought.
Maybe Fenwyck would've lived, and I wouldn't have to hide from the world now.

Suddenly Corwin heard a raucous cawing from behind him. Talons plucked at his back and shoulder, and black wings beat him about the head. “Nag! Nag! What's the matter with you? Are you insane?” Corwin flailed his arms to shoo the raven away, but the creature wouldn't be dissuaded. “What? What? What
is
it?”

Nag rose into the air and flew off at great speed to an outcropping headland to the west, circled around several times, and flew back with screeching cries.

“You've found something,” Corwin murmured. Then, with greater hope than he'd felt all morning, he exclaimed, “You've found something!” Leaving the cliff side, Corwin bounded over the rocks, following the excited bird.

He sidled along the edge of the projecting rocks, careful not to slip into the foaming water that sucked at his feet. Corwin rounded the headland to see a portion of beach he hadn't investigated before. And something else.

Nag circled over a long, brown-and-green . . . thing that lay on the sand. It glistened too much to be a log. It was too compact to be seaweed. And it had huge golden eyes that stared back at him.

“A leviathan,” Corwin whispered. “A monster of the sea.”

Slowly, cautiously, he crept up on the creature, hoping it was dead. He had seen a small beached whale once. He had even tried to get a beached porpoise back out into the water one time, not that it had done any good—he knew the poor, confused creature would just beach itself again. He'd seen many large fish washed ashore. But this thing was neither whale nor porpoise nor fish.

A pack of seagulls were circling the leviathan, occasionally swooping down to take pecks at it. The creature didn't move
. If I'm lucky, it's dead
, Corwin thought. He walked up to it and shooed the gulls away.

Crouching down, Corwin picked up a stick of driftwood and poked gently at the thing. It had tentacles! Corwin had seen octopuses before—merchants from distant lands sold them, salted and dried, in the port markets. But those were no larger than his hand, and this creature was huge, longer than he was tall. And this thing had ten tentacles, not eight. The large, golden eyes were clouded and didn't follow his movements.
Dead, or so close to it that it barely matters
, Corwin thought.

There was a curious, not-pleasant smell around the creature, and Corwin noticed that the sand was black with its blood. The long, bulbous head had deep gashes in the skin that had clearly not been made by the hungry gulls.
Maybe the storm dashed it against the rocks
? Corwin wondered. But his instinct told him the creature had been in a fight. And had lost.

Corwin shivered, then stood up again, wondering what he could possibly do with this find. He couldn't drag the whole thing back with him and hoist it up the cliff. If he just cut off part of it, no one would believe him when he described the size—and besides, he couldn't show his face in public anyway, so who would he tell? Blind Henwyneb the button-maker would only think Corwin was playing a joke.

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