Read The Book of Three Page 14


  Taran heard Doli grunt as the dwarf loosed an arrow at the nearest warrior. Gurgi’s shot had been lucky; now the shafts hissed through the air only to glance off the attackers’ light shields. Behind Taran, Melyngar whinnied and pawed the ground frantically. Taran remembered how valiantly she had fought for Gwydion, but she was tethered now and he dared not break away from the defenders to untie her.

  The horsemen circled. One turned his exposed side to the companions. Doli’s arrow leaped from the bowstring and buried itself in the warrior’s neck. The other horsemen spun their mounts and galloped across the meadow.

  “We’ve beaten them!” cried Eilonwy. “That’s like bees driving away eagles!”

  The panting Fflewddur shook his head. “They’ll spend no more men on us. When they come back, they’ll come back with a war band. That’s highly complimentary to our bravery, but I don’t think we should wait for them. A Fflam knows when to fight and when to run. At this point, we had better run.”

  “I won’t leave Hen Wen,” cried Taran.

  “Go look for her,” growled Doli. “You’ll lose your head as well as your pig.”

  “Crafty Gurgi will go,” suggested Gurgi, “with bold seekings and peekings.”

  “In all likelihood,” said the bard, “they’ll attack us again. We can’t afford to lose what little strength we have. A Fflam never worries about being outnumbered, but one sword less could be fatal. I’m sure your pig is able to look out for herself; wherever she may be, she is in less danger than we are.”

  Taran nodded. “It is true. But it grieves me to lose her for the second time. I had chosen to abandon my search and go to Caer Dathyl; then, after Gurgi found Hen Wen, I had hoped to accomplish both tasks. But I fear it must be one or the other.”

  “The question is,” said Fflewddur, “is there any chance at all of warning the Sons of Don before the Horned King attacks? Doli is the only one who can answer that.”

  The dwarf scowled and thought for a few moments. “Possible,” he said, “but we’ll have to go into the valley. We’ll be in the middle of the Horned King’s vanguard if we do.”

  “Can we get through?” asked Taran.

  “Won’t know until you’ve tried,” grunted Doli.

  “The decision is yours,” said the bard, glancing at Taran.

  “We shall try,” Taran answered.

  For the rest of that day they traveled without a halt. At nightfall, Taran would have been glad to rest, but the dwarf warned against it. The companions pressed on in weary silence. They had escaped the attack Fflewddur expected, but a column of horsemen bearing torches passed within bowshot of them. The companions crouched in the fringe of trees until the streaks of flame wound behind a hill and vanished. In a short time, Doli led the little band into the valley, where they found concealment in the wooded groves.

  But the dawn revealed a sight that filled Taran with despair. The valley roiled with warriors wherever he turned his eyes. Black banners whipped against the sky. The host of the Horned King was like the body of an armed giant restlessly stirring.

  For a moment, Taran stared in disbelief. He turned his face away. “Too late,” he murmured. “Too late. We have failed.”

  While the dwarf surveyed the marching columns, Fflewddur strode forward. “There is one thing we can do,” he cried. “Caer Dathyl lies straight ahead. Let us go on, and make our last stand there.”

  Taran nodded. “Yes. My place is at the side of Gwydion’s people. Doli shall lead Gurgi and Eilonwy to safety.” He took a deep breath and buckled his sword belt more tightly. “You have guided us well,” he said quietly to the dwarf. “Return to your king with our gratitude. Your work is done.”

  The dwarf looked at him furiously. “Done!” he snorted. “Idiots and numbskulls! It’s not that I care what happens to you, but don’t think I’m going to watch you get hacked to pieces. I can’t stand a botched job. Like it or not, I’m going with you.”

  Before the words were out of his mouth, an arrow sang past Doli’s head. Melyngar reared up. A party of foot soldiers sprang from the woods behind the companions. “Begone!” the bard shouted to Taran. “Ride as fast as you can, or it will be death for all of us!”

  When Taran hesitated, the bard seized him by the shoulders, pitched him toward the horse, and thrust Eilonwy after him. Fflewddur drew his sword. “Do as I say!” shouted the bard, his eyes blazing.

  Taran leaped to Melyngar’s saddle and pulled Eilonwy up behind him. The white horse shot forward. Eilonwy clung to Taran’s waist as the steed galloped straight across the bracken, toward the vanguard of the Horned King. Taran made no attempt to guide her; the horse had chosen her own path. Suddenly he was in the midst of the warriors. Melyngar reared and plunged. Taran’s sword was out and he struck right and left. A hand clutched at the stirrups, then was ripped away. Taran saw the warrior stumble back and drown in the press of struggling men. The white horse broke free and streaked for the brow of the hill. One mounted figure galloped behind them now. In a terrified glance, Taran saw the sweeping antlers of the Horned King.

  The black steed gained on them. Melyngar turned sharply and drove toward the forest. The Horned King turned with her, and as they crashed through the underbrush and past the first rows of trees, the antlered giant drew closer until both steeds galloped side by side. In a final burst of speed, the horse of the Horned King plunged ahead; the animal’s flanks bore against Melyngar, who reared furiously and struck out with her hoofs. Taran and Eilonwy were flung from the saddle. The Horned King turned his mount, seeking to trample them.

  Taran scrambled to his feet and struck blindly with his sword. Then, gripping Eilonwy’s arm, he pulled her deeper into the protection of the trees. The Horned King sprang heavily to the ground and was upon them in a few long strides.

  Eilonwy screamed. Taran swung about to face the antlered man. Dark fears clutched Taran, as though the Lord of Annuvin himself had opened an abyss at his feet and he was hurtling downward. He gasped with pain, as though his old wound had opened once again. All the despair he had known as Achren’s captive returned to sap his strength.

  Behind the bleached skull, the eyes of the Horned King flamed, as he raised a crimson-stained arm.

  Blindly, Taran brought up his sword. It trembled in his hand. The Horned King’s blade lashed against the weapon and shattered it with a single blow.

  Taran dropped the useless shards. The Horned King paused, a growl of savage joy rose in his throat, and he took a firmer grasp on his weapon.

  Mortal terror goaded Taran into action. He leaped back and spun toward Eilonwy. “Dyrnwyn!” he cried. “Give me the sword!”

  Before she could move, he tore belt and weapon from her shoulder. The Horned King saw the black scabbard and hesitated a moment, as if in fear.

  Taran grasped the hilt. The blade would not come free. He pulled with all his strength. The sword moved only a little from its sheath. The Horned King raised his own weapon. As Taran gave a final wrench, the scabbard turned in his hand. A blinding flash split the air in front of him. Lightning seared his arm and he was thrown violently to the ground.

  The sword Dyrnwyn, blazing white with flame, leaped from his hand, and fell beyond his reach. The Horned King stood over him. With a cry, Eilonwy sprang at the antlered man. Snarling, the giant tossed her aside.

  A voice rang out behind the Horned King. Through eyes blurred with pain, Taran glimpsed a tall figure against the trees, and heard a shouted word he could not distinguish.

  The Horned King stood motionless, his arm upraised. Lightning played about his sword. The giant flamed like a burning tree. The stag horns turned to crimson streaks, the skull mask ran like molten iron. A roar of pain and rage rose from the Antlered King’s throat.

  With a cry, Taran flung an arm across his face. The ground rumbled and seemed to open beneath him. Then there was nothing.

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  The Secret

  Sunlight streamed through the high window of a chamber ple
asantly cool and fragrant. Taran blinked and tried to lift himself from the low, narrow couch. His head spun; his arm, swathed in white linen, throbbed painfully. Dry rushes covered the floor; the bright rays turned them yellow as wheat. Beside the couch, a white, sun-dappled shape stirred and rose up.

  “Hwoinch!”

  Hen Wen, wheezing and chuckling, grinned all over her round face. With a joyful grunt, she began nuzzling Taran’s cheek. His mouth opened, but he could not speak. A silvery laugh rang from a corner of the chamber.

  “You should really see your expression. You look like a fish that’s climbed into a bird’s nest by mistake.”

  Eilonwy rose from the osier stool. “I was hoping you’d wake up soon. You can’t imagine how boring it is to sit and watch somebody sleep. It’s like counting stones in a wall.”

  “Where have they taken us? Is this Annuvin?”

  Eilonwy laughed again and shook her head. “That’s exactly the sort of question you might expect from an Assistant Pig-Keeper. Annuvin? Ugh! I wouldn’t want to be there at all. Why must you always think of unpleasant things? I suppose it’s because your wound probably did something to your head. You’re looking a lot better now than you did, though you still have that greenish-white color, like a boiled leek.”

  “Stop chattering and tell me where we are!” Taran tried to roll from the couch, then sank back weakly and put a hand to his head.

  “You aren’t supposed to get up yet,” Eilonwy cautioned, “but I imagine you’ve just discovered that for yourself.”

  Wriggling and grunting loudly, the delighted Hen Wen had begun to climb onto the couch. Eilonwy snapped her fingers. “Stop that, Hen,” she ordered, “you know he isn’t to be disturbed or upset and especially not sat on.” The girl turned again to Taran. “We’re in Caer Dathyl,” she said. “It’s a lovely place. Much nicer than Spiral Castle.”

  Taran started up once more as memories flooded over him. “The Homed King!” he cried. “What happened? Where is he?”

  “In a barrow, most likely, I should think.”

  “Is he dead?”

  “Naturally,” answered the girl. “You don’t think he’d stand being put in a barrow if he weren’t, do you? There wasn’t a great deal left of him, but what there was got buried.” Eilonwy shuddered. “I think he was the most terrifying person I’ve ever met, and that includes Achren. He gave me a dreadful tossing about—just before he was going to smite you.” She rubbed her head. “For the matter of that, you pulled away my sword rather roughly. I told you and told you not to draw it. But you wouldn’t listen. That’s what burned your arm.”

  Taran noticed the black scabbard of Dyrnwyn no longer hung from Eilonwy’s shoulder. “But then what …”

  “It’s lucky you went unconscious,” Eilonwy continued. “You missed the worst of it. There was the earthquake, and the Horned King burning until he just, well, broke apart. It wasn’t pleasant. The truth of the matter is, I’d rather not talk about it. It still gives me bad dreams, even when I’m not asleep.”

  Taran gritted his teeth. “Eilonwy,” he said at last, “I want you to tell me very slowly and carefully what happened. If you don’t, I’m going to be angry and you’re going to be sorry.”

  “How—can—I—tell—you—anything,” Eilonwy said, deliberately pronouncing every word and making extravagant grimaces as she did so, “if—you—don’t—want—me—to—talk?” She shrugged. “Well, in any case,” she resumed, at her usual breathless rate, “as soon as the armies saw the Horned King was dead, they practically fell apart, too. Not the same way, naturally. With them, it was more sort of running away, like a herd of rabbits—no, that isn’t right, is it? But it was pitiful to see grown men so frightened. Of course, by that time the Sons of Don had their chance to attack. You should have seen the golden banners. And such handsome warriors.” Eilonwy sighed. “It was—it was like—I don’t even know what it was like.”

  “And Hen Wen …”

  “She hasn’t stirred from this chamber ever since they brought you here,” said Eilonwy. “Neither have I,” she added, with a glance at Taran. “She’s a very intelligent pig,” Eilonwy went on. “Oh, she does get frightened and loses her head once in a while, I suppose. And she can be very stubborn when she wants, which sometimes makes me wonder how much difference there is between pigs and the people who keep them. I’m not mentioning anyone in particular, you understand.”

  The door opposite Taran’s couch opened part way. Around it appeared the spiky yellow head and pointed nose of Fflewddur Fflam.

  “So you’re back with us,” cried the bard. “Or, as you might say, we’re back with you!”

  Gurgi and the dwarf, who had been standing behind the bard, now rushed in; despite Eilonwy’s protests, they crowded around Taran. Fflewddur and Doli showed no sign of injury, but Gurgi’s head was bound up and he moved with a limp.

  “Yes! Yes!” he cried. “Gurgi fought for his friend with slashings and gashings! What smitings! Fierce warriors strike him about his poor tender head, but valiant Gurgi does not flee, oh, no!”

  Taran smiled at him, deeply touched. “I’m sorry about your poor tender head,” he said, putting a hand on Gurgi’s shoulder, “and that a friend should be wounded for my sake.”

  “What joy! What clashings and smashings! Ferocious Gurgi fills wicked warriors with awful terror and outcries.”

  “It’s true,” said the bard. “He was the bravest of us all. Though my stumpy friend here can do surprising things with an axe.”

  Doli, for the first time, grinned. “Never thought any of you had any mettle to show,” he said, attempting to be gruff. “Took you all for milksops at first. Deepest apologies,” he added, with a bow.

  “We held off the war band,” Fflewddur said, “until we were sure you were well away. Some of them should have occasion to think unkindly of us for a while to come.” The bard’s face lit up. “There we were,” he cried, “fighting like madmen, hopelessly outnumbered. But a Fflam never surrenders! I took on three at once. Slash! Thrust! Another seized me from behind, the wretched coward. But I flung him off. We disengaged them and made for Caer Dathyl, chopping and hacking all the way, beset on all sides …”

  Taran expected Fflewddur’s harp strings to sunder at any moment. To his surprise, they held firm.

  “And so,” Fflewddur concluded with a carefree shrug, “that was our part. Rather easy, when you come down to it; I had no fear of things going badly, not for an instant.”

  A string broke with a deep twang.

  Fflewddur bent down to Taran. “Terrified,” he whispered. “Absolutely green.”

  Eilonwy seized the bard and thrust him toward the door. “Begone!” she cried, “all of you! You’ll wear him out with your chatter.” The girl shoved Gurgi and the dwarf after Fflewddur. “And stay out! No one’s to come in until I say they can.”

  “Not even I?”

  Taran started up at the familiar voice.

  Gwydion stood in the doorway.

  For a moment Taran did not recognize him. Instead of the stained cloak and coarse jacket, Gwydion wore the shining raiment of a prince. His rich mantle hung in deep folds. On a chain at his throat gleamed a sun-shaped disk of gold. His green eyes shone with new depth and power. Taran saw him now as he had always imagined him.

  Heedless of his wounded arm, Taran sprang from the couch. The tall figure strode toward him. The authority of the warrior’s bearing made Taran drop to one knee. “Lord Gwydion,” he murmured.

  “That is no greeting from a friend to a friend,” said Gwydion, gently raising Taran to his feet. “It gives me more pleasure to remember an Assistant Pig-Keeper who feared I would poison him in the forest near Caer Dallben.”

  “After Spiral Castle,” Taran stammered, “I never thought to see you alive.” He clasped Gwydion’s hand and wept unashamedly.

  “A little more alive than you are.” Gwydion smiled. He helped Taran seat himself on the couch.

  “But how did …” Taran began, a
s he noticed a black and battered weapon at Gwydion’s side.

  Gwydion saw the question on Taran’s face. “A gift,” he said, “a royal gift from a young lady.”

  “I girded it on him myself,” Eilonwy interrupted. She turned to Gwydion. “I told him not to draw it, but he’s impossibly stubborn.”

  “Fortunately you did not unsheathe it entirely,” Gwydion said to Taran. “I fear the flame of Dyrnwyn would have been too great even for an Assistant Pig-Keeper.

  “It is a weapon of power, as Eilonwy recognized,” Gwydion added. “So ancient that I believed it no more than a legend. There are still deep secrets concerning Dyrnwyn, unknown even to the wisest. Its loss destroyed Spiral Castle and was a severe blow to Arawn.”

  With a single, firm gesture, Gwydion drew the blade and held it aloft. The weapon glittered blindingly. In fear and wonder, Taran shrank back, his wound throbbing anew. Gwydion quickly returned the blade to its scabbard.

  “As soon as I saw Lord Gwydion,” Eilonwy put in, with an admiring glance at him, “I knew he was the one who should keep the sword. I must say I’m glad to have done with the clumsy thing.”

  “Do stop interrupting,” Taran cried. “Let me find out what happened to my friend before you start babbling.”

  “I shall not weary you with a long tale,” Gwydion said. “You already know Arawn’s threat has been turned aside. He may strike again, how or when no man can guess. But for the moment there is little fear.”

  “What of Achren?” Taran asked. “And Spiral Castle …”

  “I was not in Spiral Castle when it crumbled,” Gwydion said. “Achren took me from my cell and bound me to a horse. With the Cauldron-Born, we rode to the castle of Oeth-Anoeth.”

  “Oeth-Anoeth?” questioned Taran.

  “It is a stronghold of Annuvin,” Gwydion said, “not far from Spiral Castle, raised when Arawn held wider sway over Prydain. A place of death, its walls are filled with human bones. I could foresee the torments Achren had planned for me.

  “Yet, before she thrust me into its dungeons, she gripped my arm. ‘Why do you choose death, Lord Gwydion?’ she cried, ‘when I can offer you eternal life and power beyond the grasp of mortal minds?’