Read They Mostly Come Out At Night Online
Authors: Benedict Patrick
"I have room," Mother Ogma relented to the accusing stares, "if you can stand the smell of dried herbs and flowers."
Inteus wrinkled his nose, but replied, "Well, it is better than the alternative." He picked up his small pieces of baggage and marched across to the building that Lonan had emerged from not minutes earlier. Disgruntled at having to return to the cellar after spending most of the day in it, Lonan hurried after Mother Ogma. He entered the cottage to find Inteus staring at Harlow.
"Had I not demanded that all villagers meet at the central green to share their skills with me? Is this another who seeks to avoid paying fealty to the Magpie King? And what is your trade, old man?"
"Unless the Magpie King is particularly interested in farts and dribbles, I think you could leave Harlow off of your list," Lonan said, helping Mother Ogma heft the old man down the stairs.
"He is an invalid?" Inteus queried.
"Either that or the best liar I've ever met."
"Your husband?"
"Ha," Mother Ogma grunted, lowering the old man into bed. "Just a poor soul that needs someone to look after him."
"You have quite a collection of those already," the man shot back, eyes firmly fixed on Lonan.
"Do you need the candle on, or were you planning on sleeping straight away?" his host questioned, ignoring the inference in the previous statement.
Inteus was aghast at the question. "It must not even be eight o'clock. How could you possibly contemplate going to sleep now?"
"Life here is very different from what you're used to, I gather," Mother Ogma explained. "Our day starts and ends with the sun. It allows us to work and keeps us safe."
Inteus shook his head in disgust. "I understand the concept, but to lose so much of your day... Still, if it allows you to make best use of your talents for the kingdom. Healing and… foraging, was it?"
Lonan grimaced at the suggestion. "I've no Knack for it. I just do it to help out."
"Oh? Well, where do your talents lie then? Another healer?"
Lonan looked increasingly uncomfortable. Mother Ogma answered for him, "Lonan hasn't discovered his Knack yet. He is helping me in return for room and board."
Inteus scoffed in response. "Yet? Look at him - well past his twentieth year already, isn't he? No Knack will come to him now. That is what comes of laziness and lack of application."
These were all accusations Lonan had heard before. The development of a young person's Knack was cause for great celebration in the family, as this strong talent would support the future of that bloodline. Lonan's failure to develop his father's Knack for metalworking was seen as a lack of respect for his father, his father's ghost punishing him from beyond the grave, or Lonan just simply not working hard enough at it.
"Dreams," came the unexpected response from Mother Ogma. "I'm beginning to think that dreams are Lonan's Knack."
Lonan gave the old woman a warning look, but it was too late - the snake had bitten. At Mother Ogma’s offhand remark, Inteus’ head had shot up, fixing Lonan with a penetrating stare.
"Great, thanks," Lonan replied sarcastically to the old woman, attempting to put Inteus off his scent. "She's always accusing me of sitting and watching the clouds and day dreaming, instead of hunting out herbs and flowers for her."
"Well, how else do you explain my lack of damned primroses then? Poor Mrs Cutter is going to explode before I am able to unblock her innards, and all because you keep chasing squirrels in the sky." Luckily Mother Ogma had recognised Lonan's attempts to keep the dreams quiet.
"I suspect she is correct, young man," the messenger chided him, turning to his paper and ink quills. "Otherwise, you would have developed a Knack many years ago. Even the lowliest of talents let us provide for the kingdom. Excuse me while I put my own Knack to use." With that, the tax man turned his back on the others and began scribbling frantic notes on his parchment.
Lonan signalled his thanks to Mother Ogma by raising his eyebrows, a gesture that she wished away with a wave of her hands.
A thought came to him. "You know," he began, shooting a knowing glance at Mother Ogma, "you've got it wrong. I wasn't watching squirrels the other day. I was chasing stories."
"Oh, that is much more productive, I do apologise."
"I was following the Tumulty boys. They were telling each other tales while they worked the fields. I couldn't quite catch one of them that sounded particularly interesting. The Pale Lady - have you heard of her?"
Mother Ogma looked puzzled, throwing a questioning glance at Lonan. He simply shrugged his shoulders to indicate that it was a genuine question.
"Well," she began, still a bit unsure, "she does not really have much of a story attached to her, to be honest. She is old, I remember that. Been in the forest before any of us, before even the Magpie King, they say. There is a house, deep in the woods, where nobody else would be able to survive on their own. You shall know it is hers because of the crescent moon that hangs above it. Her power is of the moon. She is a woman, and thus lives in the moon's cycle. She is of the night, and her deeds are best performed in darkness. She is of changing mood, and just as the moon waxes and ebbs so does her hospitality. She is waiting for you, young Lonan. She stands forever at her window, awaiting her next visitor. Those who seek her out are always seeking aid. They are also desperate. If she chooses to help, then they will certainly succeed in their task, but not before leaving a piece of themselves behind with her. If her mood is not hospitable…" Mother Ogma ended the tale there, watching Lonan expectantly.
"Well?" he questioned after a few seconds had passed.
"I do not have the answer to that query, I am afraid, as none who have witnessed her displeasure have returned to tell that tale." She gave a grin of triumph as she finished on that line. Lonan gave a grin too, appreciating the trap that had been woven into the story.
"But, that's it?" he pressed. "No other stories? No other characters met her, like Artemis or the Magpie King?"
She shook her head. "That is all, I’m afraid. It is an odd one for you to ask for, if I’m being honest. Normally it is a tale for women. For girls, really. The only enquiries I have ever had after her have been from girls in trouble. Not much call for that recently."
He nodded, his brow creased. So he knew very little about what Adahy was walking into. What he did know did not suggest a situation Lonan was envious of. He bade the room goodnight and lay down on his bed, willing himself to slip back into sleep. He did not fear the Wolves at the village doors tonight, he knew they had more important prey to seek.
Gallowglass had been hit hard before Adahy and Maedoc had arrived there. They had spent most of the previous night running downstream, desperate to keep moving and not leave any tracks. Both of them were very aware that they had no chance of surviving any possible attacks, so their only option had been to keep moving. Morning had greeted them not with cockcrows and people rising peacefully from their beds, but with screams and lamenting wails. Three cellars in Gallowglass had been breached last night and the villagers were dealing with the loss in the way that villagers did - fear and anger. They were not at all interested in a young boy who claimed to be a son of the man who was supposed to stop all of this from happening, and when Adahy felt that this fear and anger was in danger of being directed at the two new faces, he suggested that Maedoc and himself should quickly continue on their journey. They had walked for half an hour more, with the Eyrie to their back at all times, as suggested by the woodcarving map in the shrine, and then they climbed a tree to get some sleep.
"The Lady is of the night," Adahy explained. "My father was very clear about that fact. I would not want to wander right past her because we were travelling at the wrong time of day."
"All of this seems crazy," was Maedoc's reply, "but I’m not going to argue with the suggestion of sleep. Even if I have to do it up a tree, in the middle of the day."
When night fell, they continued, and it was not long before a clearing with a single cottage in it broke the monotony of the undergrowth they were stumbling through. The building was simple in its design, but a few key features made it stand out from those they had seen in Gallowglass earlier. Where the village buildings had been constructed of stone and thatch, this cottage was made entirely from wood, with cut planks forming the walls and in place of slates on the roof. This cottage was dominated by the gnarled tree that stood behind it, dead branches twisting like a clenched fist. From where he stood, Adahy could not tell if the tree was simply close to the house, or if the house was actually built into the thick trunk of the tree. The twin windows on the front of the building reached up high, arching at the top like those back at the shrine. The door seemed normal enough, but a simple crescent moon carved from wood hung over it. As expected, there was a pale face standing at one of the windows, waiting.
"This is where we part ways then," Adahy broke the silence, unable to hide the tremor in his voice.
"My Lord," Maedoc stammered, "perhaps I should-"
"Mind our bags," the prince interrupted, not giving the whipping boy time to make a suggestion his heart would not wish to follow through with, "I shall be back soon."
Adahy marched towards the house, not wanting to give Maedoc time to respond, but also not wanting to give himself the opportunity to change his own mind. As he moved into the clearing, the featureless pale face that had hung in the left window withdrew, disappearing. He arrived at the door and gave it a knock. He was rewarded by a breathy voice speaking to him from beyond the portal.
"Shall your young friend not be joining us?"
Adahy's eyes grew wide. Whatever he had been steeling himself for, it was not such a mundane conversation as this. "Um, no. He, uh, he's going to stay over there."
"But he has come so far to see me. It would be a shame for him to have to wait while we chat."
"He's, uh, he's fine. I have come for the Magpie King's flower. It is a task I have to perform by myself."
A child-like tutting rang out from behind the door. "Oh dear. You have not performed this task alone though, have you? He has travelled across half the forest with you and you think these last few feet shall make any difference? Oh dear."
A shiver ran up Adahy's spine, but he persisted. "He is much happier over there. I will be entering by myself, if I am permitted."
"Oh, by all means, do come in," whispered the Pale Lady, the door opening at the sound of her invitation. Adahy caught a glimpse of a white robe drifting through a doorway at the back of the hall, and then stepped inside to follow her. The room was plain, the woodwork well finished, but left undecorated. A thin layer of dust coated the floor, enough to grey the strong oak brown. A glance upwards opened Adahy's eyes to a dense collection of cobwebs, in which the owners were particularly active, travelling along the slender threads to the struggling prey they had stored there.
Adahy walked down the hall and entered what was evidently the main chamber of the building. It maintained a similar finish and cleanliness as the hallway, with the exception of the back wall of the room, which appeared to be made of the exposed trunk of the dead tree that stood behind the Lonely House. He also noted an empty fireplace with a small potted black plant sitting on the mantelpiece. Adahy would have ran and grabbed the artifact there and then, if not for the figure that hung in the air beside his prize.
The Pale Lady was small, and from the features Adahy was able to discern he could swear that she was no more than a child, yet this fact did nothing to assuage his fear of her. She wore a long night gown, finely embroidered, that fell beyond her feet. Her oil-black hair hung across her face, hiding her features from the young prince. The skin on her bare arms matched the brilliant white of her simple garment. Most unsettling of all to Adahy was the fact that no feet emerged from the gown to touch the ground. Instead a mess of tree roots curled under that white gown, trailing across the floor of the room back to the exposed tree trunk wall. When travelling here, Adahy and Maedoc had been unable to determine what her mood might have been. The half-whispered stories they remembered about her suggested that her mood would have something to do with the phases of the moon, but that brilliant orb was currently halfway to waxing full - that meant nothing, surely? Or ambivalence at best. Adahy had to be careful.