The Lady said: “Take it, Will.”
Will took two wondering paces towards the table, and the great slender stalk bent over toward him; as he put out his hand, the golden circle fell into it. Instantly a surge of invisible power struck him, an echo of what he had felt at the destruction of the Book of Gramarye — and as he staggered and balanced himself again, he saw that the table was empty. In a flash of time, everything that was on it had vanished: the strange flower and the nine great blazing candles and the Sign-shaped iron holder that had contained them all. Gone. All gone: all except the Sign of Fire.
It was in his palm, warm to the touch, one of the most beautiful things he had ever seen. Gold of several different colours had been beaten together with great craftsmanship to make its crossed-circle shape, and on all sides it was set with tiny gems, rubies and emeralds and sapphires and diamonds, in strange runic patterns that looked oddly familiar to Will. It glittered and gleamed in his hand like all kinds of fire that ever were. Looking closer, he saw some words written very small around the outer edge:
LIHT MEC HEHT GEWYRCAN
Merriman said softly: “The Light ordered that I should be made.”
They had all but one of the Signs now. Jubilantly Will flung up his arm into the air, holding the Sign high for the others to see; and from every light in the hall the circle of worked gold caught brilliance, flickering as if it were made of flame.
From somewhere outside the hall, there came a great crashing roar with a long wail of anger through it. The sound rumbled and growled and came crashing out again . . .
. . . and as it beat in his ears, suddenly Will was back again in Miss Greythorne’s hall, with all around him the familiar village faces turned wondering to the roof, and to the grumbling roar beyond.
“Thunder?” someone said, puzzled.
Blue light flickered in all the windows, and the thunder slammed so earsplittingly close that everyone flinched. Again the light came, again the thudding roar, and somewhere a child began to weep, thin and high. But as all the crowded room waited for the next crash, there was nothing. No flash came, no thunder, not so much as a distant murmur. Instead, after a short breathless silence filled only by the hissing of the ashes in the hearth, there came a soft pattering sound outside, growing gently, gradually louder into an unmistakable slurred staccato against windows and doors and roof.
The same anonymous voice cried out joyfully, “Rain!”
Voices broke out all round in excitement, grim faces beamed; figures rushed to peer out of the dark windows, beckoning to others in delight. An old man Will never recalled seeing in his life before turned to him with a toothless grin. “Rain’ll melt thic snow!” he piped. “Melt ’n in no time at all!”
Robin appeared out of the crowd. “Ah, there you are. Am I going loopy, or does this perishing room suddenly feel warm?”
“It’s warmer,” said Will, pulling down his sweater. Beneath it, the Sign of Fire was now looped on his belt, secure with the rest.
“Funny. It was so hideously cold for a while. I suppose they’ve got the central heating going again. . . .”
“Let’s see the rain!” A pair of boys dashed past them to the main door. But while they still fumbled with the handle, a series of quick, loud knocks came from outside; and there on the step, when the door opened, his hair flattened to his head by the soft, pouring rain, stood Max.
He was out of breath; they could see him urgently gulp air to make the words. “Miss Greythorne there? My father?”
Will felt a hand on his shoulder and saw Merriman beside him, and knew from the concern in his eyes that in some way this was the next attack of the Dark. Max caught sight of him and came forward, rain running down his face; he shook himself like a dog.
“Get Dad, Will,” he said. “And the doctor if he can be spared. Mum’s had an accident, she fell downstairs. She’s still unconscious, and we think she’s got a broken leg.”
Mr Stanton had already heard; he dashed for the doctor’s room. Will stared unhappily at Max. He called silently to Merriman, frightened, “Did they do that? Did they? The Lady said —”
“It’s possible,” said the answering voice in his mind. “They cannot harm you, true, and they cannot destroy men. But they can encourage men’s own instincts to do them harm. Or bring an unexpected clap of thunder, when someone is standing at the top of a flight of stairs. . . .”
Will heard no more than that. He was out of the door with his father and brothers and Dr Armstrong, following Max home.
• The King of Fire and Water • James still looked pale and distressed, even when the doctor was safely arrived and examining Mrs Stanton in the living room. He drew aside his nearest brothers, who happened to be Paul and Will, and moved them out of earshot of the rest. He said unhappily, “Mary’s disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“Honestly. I told her not to go. I didn’t think she would, I thought she’d be too scared.” Worry had sent stoical James close to tears.
“Go where?” said Paul sharply.
“Out to the Manor. It was after Max went to get you. Gwennie and Bar were in the living room with Mum. Mary and I were in the kitchen making some tea, and she got all upset and said Max had been gone far too long and we ought to go and check whether anything had happened to him. I told her not to be so daft, of course we shouldn’t go, but just then Gwen called me to go and make up the fire in there, and when I came back, Mary was gone. And so were her coat and boots.’ He sniffed. “I couldn’t see any sign of where she’d gone, outside — the rain had started, and there weren’t any footprints. I was just going to go out after her without saying anything, because the girls had enough to worry about, but then you came, and I thought she’d be with you. Only she wasn’t. Oh, dear,” said James woefully. “She is a silly ass.”
“Never mind,” Paul said. “She can’t have gone far. Just go and wait for a good moment to explain to Dad, and tell him I’ve gone out to pick her up. I’ll take Will, we’re both still dressed for it.”
“Good,” said Will, who had hastily been trying to think of arguments for his going.
When they were out in the rain again, the snow already beginning to squelch grey-white underfoot, Paul said, “Don’t you think it’s time you told me what all this is about?”
“What?” said Will, astounded.
“What are you mixed up in?” Paul said, his pale blue eyes peering severely through the heavy spectacles.
“Nothing.”
“Look. If Mary’s going off might have something to do with it, you’ve absolutely got to explain.”
“Oh dear,” Will said. He looked at Paul’s threatening determination, and wondered how you explained to an elder brother that an eleven-year-old was no longer quite an eleven-year-old, but a creature subtly different from the human race, fighting for its survival. . . .
You didn’t, of course.
He said, “It’s these, I think.” Glancing cautiously about him, he tugged his jacket and sweater clear of his belt and showed Paul the Signs. “They’re antiques. Just buckle things that Mr Dawson gave me for my birthday, but they must be really valuable because two or three weird people keep on turning up trying to get hold of them. One man chased me in Huntercombe Lane once . . . and that old tramp was mixed up with them somehow. That was why I didn’t want to bring him home, that day we found him in the snow.”
He thought how very improbable it all sounded.
“Mmm,” Paul said. “And that fellow at the Manor, the new butler? Lyon, isn’t it? Is he mixed up with these clowns?”
“Oh, no,” Will said hastily. “He’s a friend of mine.”
Paul looked at him for a moment, expressionless. Will thought of his patient understanding that night in the attic, at the beginning, and of the way he played the old flute and knew that if there were any one of his brothers that he could confide in, it would be Paul. But that was out of the question.
Paul said, “Obviously you haven’t told me the
half of it, but that’ll have to do. I take it you think these antique-chasers might have nobbled Mary as some sort of hostage?”
They had reached the end of the driveway. The rain beat down on them, hard yet not vicious; it ran down the snowbanks, poured from the trees, turned the road into the beginning of a rapidly moving stream. They looked up and down in vain. Will said, “They must have. I mean, she’d have gone straight towards the Manor, so why didn’t we see her on our way home?”
“We’ll go that way anyway, to check.” Paul tilted his head suddenly and glared at the sky. “This rain! It’s ridiculous! Just suddenly, out of all that snow — and it’s so much warmer too. Makes no sense.” He splashed off up the running stream that was Huntercombe Lane and glanced at Will with a baffled half-grin. “But then a lot of things aren’t making much sense to me at the moment.”
“Ah,” Will said. “Um. No.” He splashed away noisily to cover his remorse, and peered through the sheets of rain for some sign of his sister. The noise round them was astonishing now: an ocean noise of spattering foam and washing shingle and breaking waves, as the wind brought the rain sluicing rhythmically through the trees. A most ancient noise, as if they stood on the edge of some great ocean before men or their ancestors were ever born. Up the road they went, peering and doggedly calling, anxious now; everything they saw became strange all over again, as the rain carved the snow into new lanes and hillocks. But when they came to one corner, Will knew suddenly very well where they were.
He saw Paul duck defensively behind one raised arm; heard the harsh, raucous croaking abruptly loud and then gone; saw, even through the flying rain, the flurry of black feathers as the gaggle of rooks swooped low past their heads.
Paul straightened slowly, staring. “What on earth — ?”
“Get over the other side of the road,” Will said, pushing him firmly sideways. “The rooks go sort of crazy sometimes. I’ve seen it before.”
Another shrieking swoop of birds came at Paul from behind, driving him forward, while the first dived again to force Will against the snowbank along the edge of the drift-buried wood. Again they came, and again. Will wondered, dodging, whether his brother had realised that they were being herded like sheep, driven where the rooks wanted them to go. But even as he wondered, he knew that he was too late. The grey sheet of rain had separated them entirely; he had no idea where Paul had gone.
He yelled in panic, “Paul? Paul!”
But as the Old One in him took control, calming the fear, he cut off the shout. This was not a matter for ordinary human beings, even of his own family; he should be glad to be alone. He knew now that Mary must be caught, somewhere, held by the Dark. Only he had any chance of getting her back. He stood in the driving rain, staring about him. The light was dying rapidly. Will unbuckled his belt and strapped it round his right wrist; then he said a word in the Old Speech and held up his arm, and from the Signs a steady pathway of light beamed out as from a torch. It shone on ruffled brown water, where the road was becoming a river, deeper and flowing fast.
He remembered that Merriman had said, long before, that the most dangerous peak of the Dark’s power would come at Twelfth Night. Was that time now come? He had lost his place in the days, they ran into one another in his mind. Water washed at the edge of his boot as he stood wondering; he jumped hastily backward to the snowbank edging the wood, and a brown wave in the road-river took a large bite out of the snow-wall on which he had been standing. In the light from the Signs, Will saw that now other chunks of dirty snow and ice bobbed in the water; as it flowed past, it was gradually undercutting the hard-packed banks left on either side by the snowplough, and carrying away broken pieces like miniature icebergs.
Other things were there in the water too. He saw a bucket bob past him, and a tufted object that looked like a sack of hay. The water must be rising high enough to carry things away from people’s gardens — perhaps his own among them. How could it rise so fast? As if in answer, the rain hammered at his back, and more snow broke beneath his foot, and he remembered that the ground underneath him must still be frozen bone-hard by the great cold that had paralysed the land before the rain came. Nowhere would this rain be able to soak into the soil. The thawing of the land would take far longer than the melting of the snow — and in the meantime the snow-water had nowhere to go, no alternative but to run over the surface of the frozen countryside looking for a river to join. The floods will be dreadful, Will thought: worse than they’ve ever been before. Worse even than the cold. . . .
But a voice broke in on him, a shout through the rushing water and roaring rain. He stumbled up over the slush-edged mounds of snow to peer through the murk. The shout came again. “Will! Over here!”
“Paul?” Will called hopefully, but he knew it was not Paul’s voice.
“Here! Over here!”
The shout came from the river-road itself, out in the dark. Will held up the Signs; their light beamed out over the churning water and showed him what he took at first for clouds of steam. Then he saw that the curling steam was the puffing of breath: great deep breaths, from a gigantic horse standing four-square in the water, small wild waves foaming past its knees. Will saw the broad head, the long chestnut mane plastered wet to the neck, and he knew that this was either Castor or Pollux, one of the two great shire horses from Dawsons’ Farm.
The light from the Signs flicked higher; he saw Old George, muffled in black oilskins, perched high on the back of the massive horse.
“Over here, Will. Through the water, before it rises too fast. We have work to do. Come on!”
He had never heard Old George sound demanding before; this was the Old One, not the amiable old farm-hand. Leaning against the horse’s neck, the old man urged it closer through the water. “Come up, Polly, come by, Sir Pollux.” And big Pollux snorted puffs of steam through his broad nostrils and took a few solid paces forward so that Will was able to stumble out into the river-road and grasp at his tree-like leg. The water came almost to his thighs, but he was so wet from the rain already that it made little difference. There was no saddle on the great horse, only a sodden blanket; but with astonishing strength Old George leaned down and heaved at his hand, and with much struggling he was up. The light from the Signs strapped to his wrist did not waver through all the turning and twisting, but remained directed firmly forwards at the way they should go.
Will slipped and slithered on the broad back, too wide for his straddling. George tugged him to sit in front, astride the great curving neck. “Polly’s shoulders have taken greater weight than you,” he shouted in Will’s ear. Then they were swaying forward as the stolid cart-horse lurched off again, splashing through the growing stream, away from the rooks’ wood, away from the Stantons’ house.
“Where are we going?” Will yelled, staring fearfully out at the darkness; he could see nothing anywhere, only the swirling water in the light of the Signs.
“We go to raise the Hunt,” the cracked old voice said close to his ear.
“The Hunt? What Hunt? George, I must find Mary, they’ve got Mary, somewhere. And I lost sight of Paul.”
“We go to raise the Hunt,” the voice at his back said steadily. “I have seen Paul, he is safe on his way home by now. Mary you will find in due course. It is time for the Hunter, Will, the white horse must come to the Hunter, and you must take her there. This is the ordering of things, you have forgotten. The river is coming to the valley, and the white horse must come to the Hunter. And then we shall see what we shall see. We have work to do, Will.”
And the rain beat down on them harder, and somewhere distant thunder rumbled in the early night, as the huge shire horse Pollux splashed patiently on through the rising brown river that had once been Huntercombe Lane.
It was impossible to tell where they were. A wind was rising, and Will could hear the sounds of swaying trees above the steady churning of Pollux’s feet. Scarcely a light showed in the village; he supposed that the electric power must still be cut off, eithe
r by accident or by agent of the Dark. In any case, most of the people of this part of the village were still at the Manor. “Where’s Merriman?” he called through the loud rain.
“At the Manor,” George shouted in his ear. “With Farmer. Beset.”
“You mean they’re trapped?” Will’s voice turned shrill with alarm. Old George said, hissing close, hard to hear, “They hold attention, so we may work. And floods make them busy too. Look down, boy.”
In the churning water the light from the Signs showed a scatter of unlikely objects bobbing past: a wicker basket, several disintegrating cardboard boxes, a bright red candle, some tangled strands of ribbon. Suddenly Will recognised one piece of ribbon, a lurid purple and yellow check, as a wrapping he had seen Mary carefully pull off a parcel and roll up on Christmas Day. She was a great hoarder, like a squirrel; this had gone into her hoard.
“Those things are from our house, George!”
“Floods there too,” the old man said. “Land’s low. No danger though, be easy. Just water. And mud.”
Will knew he was right, but again he longed to see for himself. Rushing about, they would all be; moving furniture and rugs, clearing books and everything movable. These first floating objects must have escaped before anyone noticed the water was actually carrying things off. . . .
Pollux stumbled for the first time, and Will clutched at the wet chestnut mane; for a moment he had almost slipped and been carried off himself. George made soothing noises, and the big horse sighed and snuffled through his nose. Will could see a few dim lights now that must come from the bigger houses on high ground at the end of the village; that meant they must be nearing the Common. If it was still the Common, and not a lake.
Something was changing. He blinked. The water seemed further away, harder to see. Then he realised that the light from the Signs linked on his wrist was growing dim, fading away to nothing; in a moment they were in darkness. As soon as all the light had died, Old George said softly: “Whoa, Polly,” and the great shire horse splashed to a halt and stood there with the water rippling past his legs.