Authors: Robert Carter
Will folded his arms. âThen let us hope we find all the battlestones. Whatever it was that made the Sightless Ones leave here, I'm glad.'
âBravely said.' Morann clapped him on the back. âThe red hands tell all who will listen that they bring freedom,
life and peace, but they trade in slavery, death and war.'
Now Gwydion hastened forward like one who has suddenly found what he was looking for: a steep stone stair that led down into the cellars. They followed him into the stinking darkness, until he struck up a pale blue light for them to see by. The place was vacant now, the treasury emptied of its gold and all the strongroom doors thrown open. The blue glow that lit the palm of the wizard's hand seemed reluctant to penetrate the gloom. He walked alone in the magelight shadows, and unguessable thoughts troubled him. âBehold!' he said, raising his staff. âIt is as I suspected. This is more than a thieves' hoard-room.'
As Will's eyes adjusted there appeared in the cellar wall a low gate of iron bars. It was meant to stop off the way, but it was wrecked. A hole had been rent in it as if by some powerful beast.
âWhat is it?' Will asked. The magelight did not penetrate far beyond the bars.
Morann clasped his arm tightly, hushing him. Gwydion's voice was rising: âI can smell it! Truly these are dungeons of despair!'
âWhat could have done this to iron bars?' Will asked, looking to Morann and putting his finger on the place where brute strength had torn the barrier.
Morann whispered, âDo you know what this is? It's a passageway into the Realm Below. Can you feel the air moving up, and with it the salt of the Desolate Sea?'
And Will could feel it. On his face, a dank draught that issued up from a hidden place below the earth. Air that bespoke tremendous depths, great caverns, ceaseless tunnels, dark rivers that had never seen the light of the sun. This was truly the air of another world.
And something in Will wanted to go beyond the bars and venture into that darkness. He wanted to see for himself what lay below, but Morann drew his knife and said he
thought the cellar unwholesome and that the fissure had the whiff of sorcery about it and needed to be blocked up. He wanted to leave the vile place for the sake of his lungs.
Will, and then Gwydion, followed him up the stone stair and out into the light. They stepped back across the rubblestrewn yard, and Will blew out a great breath. âLet's go. Just being here makes my flesh crawl.'
Gwydion set a bleak eye on him. âThe Sightless Ones are involved in a bigger way than I thought.'
The wizard quickly turned away and Will said, âSo big that you daren't speak of it?'
He was not sure Gwydion had heard, and the wizard offered no reply, saying only, âHave you forgotten why we set out?'
âWhat's bothering him?' Will whispered to Morann as they followed on.
âI think he's found what he came here for. And whatever it is, he doesn't like it.'
Out in the open again the wizard climbed quickly aboard the cart and clicked his tongue at the horse. Will looked up at the dismal tower and his eyes sought the lone gargoyle that he had seen on his arrival, but it was nowhere to be seen.
They rode on in silence, their spirits overcome by the stagnant earth streams that ran sluggishly now under the cloister. But Will's low mood stemmed more from the gloom that Gwydion showed. Their walk in the ruins had put the wizard in a mighty sulk.
When the road rose and Bessie laboured in her pulling, Morann and Will jumped down and walked the meadows for a while. Morann renewed the flowers in his hat with bright yellow dandelions and purple knapweed. Will cooled his toes in the lush grass. He said, âWhat are the Sightless Ones involved in? Finding the stones? Did Gwydion mean that?'
Morann looked back towards the cart. âYou must ask him that yourself, but if I had to hazard a guess I'd say he's most worried about those broken bars and what must have come through them.'
âI can feel the lign right here,' Will said. He stopped suddenly.
Morann took his hazel wand and began to scry, but unsuccessfully. âI feel nothing unusual.'
âIt's dispelled the bad taste left by the ruins. It's running strongly under my heels.'
âWhere?'
Will ignored the question. âOh, how can I explain it? It's like a fiddle string, and once the chapter house was a finger pressing down on it in the wrong place, making a discordant note. And now the string is open the note is more pure again.'
âWe'll tell Master Gwydion that. Maybe it'll cheer him up.'
It was not long before they arrived in Nadderstone. Will hardly recognized the place. Flow along the lign was swift and joyous, like water in a new-dredged channel. Where once there had been abandoned buildings now there were new, white cottages. Lime-washed walls were bright in the noonday sun and new thatch shone neat and golden. Much of the land round about was under cultivation or had been fenced to keep cattle in. Men, women and children were busy in a barn threshing grain with flails. When they saw the cart approaching they came out. The place was clean and prosperous and the four or five young families who lived here now were courteous and welcoming.
Gwydion approached the foremost. âWhere have you come from?' he asked. âAnd who is your lord?'
For a moment it was as if a shadow had passed over them. The man fell under the spell of Gwydion's voice. He shifted his feet and said, âWe are poor, landless folk. We
came here from a faraway place on the strength of a rumour that there was good land here that might be had.'
Gwydion smiled. âHave no fear â that rumour was mine. Enjoy Nadderstone and make it your own, for your hard work and care have already won me as your protector. I offer you a blessing of words upon your new homes, so that all will be well and when the time comes your sons and daughters will find good husbands and wives in the villages round about.'
While the wizard talked, Will and Morann went up into the meadows north of the hamlet. As soon as Will began to feel the lign running strongly underfoot again he took back his hazel wand and began to pace out the limits of it, scrying just as Gwydion had first taught him in this very same place.
Either the flow had increased several fold since then, or his own talents had developed greatly. âAll the pain's been cleaned out,' he said. âIt's the difference between dirty ditchwater and a mountain stream.'
They came to the spot where the Dragon Stone had once lain. Its hole was filled in and there was a bed of pretty yellow flowers growing there. âI'm sure the Dragon Stone hasn't been returned to the place where we found it. Let's go and tell Gwydion the good news.'
Morann laughed. âI think he already knows. It doesn't take a talent such as yours to see that this place is flourishing as never before.'
Will scrubbed at his head. âYou know what I think? I think Nadderstone's now taking its fair share of earth power â flows that were for too long pent up by that chapter house.'
Morann looked eastward. âThis is the lign of the ash, you say?'
âYes. Its taste is unmistakably Indonen.' Will shaded his eyes and looked east also.
âTaste?' Morann said, turning to look back the way they had come. âThat seems a curious way to speak of it. Did you not just tell me that the tower and chapter house were like the finger that stops a fiddle string?'
âI could just as easily have said it's like the grip that pinches off a vein in a man's arm and so holds back the flow of blood to his hand, bringing numbness and robbing his grasp of strength. I said “tasted”, but it's not really a flavour I'm talking about.' He shrugged, finding his talent impossible to describe.
Morann let out a piercing whistle and beckoned to Gwydion. âLet me see now. There are supposed to be nine ligns that make up the lorc. The one that runs by the Giant's Ring is “Eburos”, the lign of the yew. The battlestone that you say is planted at Aston Oddingley lies upon the lign of the rowan, and the true name of that lign is “Caorthan”. While this lign is “Indonen” of the ash. What of the others?'
âI've felt other ligns sometimes as we crossed them. There's the one named “Mulart” for the elder tree, and “Tanne” for the oak. The rest are named in honour of the hazel, the holly, the willow and the birch. I've not felt them at all, or if I have I can't easily call to mind their particular qualities.'
The wizard came up to join them. He leaned on his staff, seeming troubled still.
âA fair old morning's work,' Morann said.
Gwydion wiped his brow and resettled his hat. âBut as is so often the case, work begets more work, for now I must go urgently to the place that I was called away from.'
âFoderingham?' Will said.
âPlainly, the Dragon Stone is not here, so I must go there.'
âNow?'
âAs the rede says: “No time is as useful as the present.”
Nor, in this case, is there any reason to delay. I shall leave at once.'
âWhat are you going to do?' Will murmured, sure that Gwydion had set his heart on a perilous path.
âIn what I must now do you cannot help me. I mean to gain entry to the dungeon of Foderingham. I will do it with or without Richard of Ebor's consent. Once there, if the Dragon Stone is present, I shall lay hands upon it. Recall the rede: “By his magic, so shall ye know him!” I shall search for Maskull's signature, and if I find he has not meddled with the stone, then I shall renew the holding spells in which I first wrapped it, and perhaps add a few more for good measure.'
âYou won't try to drain it?' Will said, only half convinced by the wizard's assurances.
But Gwydion smiled an indulgent smile. âI promise, I will not try to do that.'
âAnd if you find that Maskull
has
been there?' Morann asked.
âThen I shall have to undo that which he has done, before renewing my own spells.'
Will brightened. âSurely we can help you, if only in keeping the jacks who guard the walls of Foderingham occupied for a while.'
âI have greater need of stealth than assistance.' The wizard regarded him thoughtfully for a moment. âBut, Willand, if you would help me then make a promise.'
âAnything.'
âGo to the Plough and wait quietly for my return. Do not stray far from that place. Dimmet will begrudge you neither board nor lodging if you tell him of my request. If you will heed my advice, you'll lay low. Speak to no one, and do not advertise yourself widely abroad. This is most important.'
âI'll do my best.'
The wizard took his hand briefly and nodded as if sealing a bargain. Then he clasped Morann to him and words passed between them in a language that seemed ancient to Will, though it was not of his ken.
He watched Gwydion go down into the hamlet, speak to one of the farmers and then he was up on a piebald horse and riding away east out of the village, while Bessie was being led towards the farmer's stable.
âWell, I like that!' Will said as he realized their ride back to Eiton had just been bargained away.
âThat's wizards for you,' Morann said. âFor a man who cannot be in two places at once he's powerful good at being in one place not very much at all.'
Will put his hands on his hips. âI suppose we'd better start walking. It'll be thirsty work in this warmth. I guess Gwydion'll be right about Dimmet's charity. I just hope it lasts when he finds out that Bessie's been handed to a farmer in Nadderstone to ease a wizard's emergency!'
The walk back to the Plough was indeed hot work and much was talked over as they wended their way towards Eiton. When they were about halfway there Will cut and whittled for himself a staff. It was fit for a quarterstaff, though he wanted to use it as a walking stick. Morann would have nothing of it, and was not content until Will had whittled a second staff and given him the choice of which to use.
Gwydion had once said that the quarterstaff was the diamond among weapons, striking like a sword and thrusting like a spear, it was able to disable and dispirit without inflicting undue damage. âThe skilled wielder of a staff has the advantage against even two swordsmen, for a staff has two ends, and if one opponent should break his distance against a skilled staff he will suffer a hit. Against the single sword, a staff always has four paces in hand.
Such is its dignity it metes out humiliating reminders while barely drawing blood.'
Will had never forgotten that lesson, and had practised the staff until he could easily beat the best who lived in the Vale. But there were many more whacks that Morann was able to teach him, and their journey back to Eiton became in part a running fight.
They got back aching and bruised and laughing. Once they were in the Plough's yard Will found Dimmet among his flitches of bacon. They told him what had happened to his horse.
âNo matter,' Dimmet said, wiping his hands on his apron. âOne good turn deserves another, or so they say. And all things have a way of coming full circle in the end. If Master Gwydion's gone off all of a sudden, there's bound to be something needful at the root of it. I know he'll return her to me some time. Now, what's it to be for you?'
Morann grinned broadly. âA quart of your finest nutbrown ale. And we'll take it to the snug, if we may.'
âThat you may, and with pleasure. Stew and leftovers all right for you?'
âEnough is as good as a feast, as my friend the Maceugh always used to say.'
âThe Maceugh?' Will said, his brow rutting. âHave I heard of him before?'
âMaybe you have not,' Morann said lightly, then added, âBut maybe you will come to know him one day.'
Will took a tallow dip, passed behind the inglenook and the snug door opened at Morann's touch. The space inside was soon golden with candlelight. They slaked their throats with first-mash ale, and then set to work on a supper of spoon-meat, barley bread and cold roast goose before they pushed their bowls and trenchers away from them and sat back content.