“That’s how I came to know about the fen. At this very place, the south end of the fen, I hid for several years; until I felt that I was safe, that everyone had forgotten me, that the trail had grown cold and the hunt been given up. So I came out of the fen and, wouldn’t you know it, almost immediately was gobbled up.”
“But the fen is death,” said Duncan. “Or so we have been told.”
“If one knows the way …”
“And you know the way?”
“A water sprite showed me. A grumpy little sprite, but he took pity on me. One must be careful, but it can be done. There are certain landmarks …”
“It’s been a long time since you’ve been in the fen. Landmarks can change.”
“Not these. There are certain islands.”
“Islands change. They can shift or sink.”
“The hills come down to the fen and stop. But a part of them, very ancient parts of them, still remain, much worn down and lower than the hills. These are the islands that I speak of. They stand solid through the ages. All rock, they cannot sink. Rock ledges run underwater between them, connecting them. The ledges are what you follow to get across the fen. They are covered by water and just by looking, you cannot see them. One must know.”
“Deep water?”
“Up to my neck in places. No deeper.”
“All the way across? To the western shore?”
“That is right, my lord. A hidden ridge of rock, a part of the ancient hills, but there are tricky places.”
“You’d recognize the tricky places?”
“I am sure I can. I have a good memory.”
“You would lead us, show us the way?”
“Honored sir,” said Scratch, “I owe you a debt I had never hoped I could repay. Showing you across the fen would be only partial payment. But if you would accept …”
“We do accept,” said Duncan. “If events so order themselves …”
“Events?”
“It may be the main Horde of Harriers will block our way. They are moving up the west bank of the fen. If they should continue moving north, as they were when last seen, then, with your help, we can cross the fen and be clear of them.”
“There is one thing else.”
“Yes?”
“At the western edge of the fen stands a massive island, much larger than the others. It is guarded by dragons.”
“Why dragons?”
“The island,” said Scratch, “is a wailing place. The Place of Wailing for the World.”
26
Diane, Meg, and Nan were sitting together by the fire, a little apart from the others, when Duncan returned, trailed by the limping, lurching Scratch. A short distance off, Andrew was stretched out on the ground, covered by a sheepskin, fast asleep and snoring. A long, slender fold of black velvet lay on Diane’s lap.
Meg cackled at Duncan. “You should see what Diane has. You should see what Snoopy gave her.”
She gestured at the fold of velvet.
Duncan turned to look at Diane. Her eyes were sparkling in the firelight and she smiled at him. Carefully she unfolded the velvet to reveal what lay within it.
The naked blade shone with a hundred fiery highlights and a nest of inset jewels glinted in the hilt.
“I told him,” she said, “that it was too magnificent for me, but he insisted that I take it.”
“It is splendid,” Duncan said.
“The goblins have guarded it for years,” said Nan, “as a sacred treasure. Never, in their wildest dreams, did they ever think they’d find a human they would want to give it to.” She shrugged. “Of course it is far too massive for a goblin or any other of our kind to ever think of wielding.”
Duncan went down on his knees in front of Diane, reached out to touch the blade.
“May I?” he asked.
She nodded at him.
The steel beneath his fingers was cold and smooth. He ran his fingers along its length in something that was close to a caress.
“Duncan,” Diane said in a hushed voice, “Duncan, I’m afraid.”
“Afraid?”
“Afraid I know what it is. Snoopy didn’t tell me.”
“Then,” said Duncan, “I don’t think you should ask.”
He picked up one end of the velvet and folded it back to cover the sword.
“Cover it,” he said. “It is a precious thing. It should not be exposed to the damp night air. Snug it safe and tight.”
He said to Meg, “There is something I should ask you. Some days ago you told us about the wailing for the world. You told us very little. Can you tell us more of it?”
“No more than I told you then, my lord. We spoke of it when we heard the keening from the fen.”
“You said there were several such wailing places, probably widely separated. You seemed to think one of the wailing places was located in the fen.”
“So it has been told.”
“Who is it that does the wailing?”
“Women, my lord. Who else would wail in this world of ours? It is the women who have cause for wailing.”
“Do you have a name for these wailing women?”
Meg wrinkled up her face, trying to remember. “I believe there is a name for them, my lord, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard it.”
“And you,” Duncan said to Nan. “You banshees are wailers.”
“Wailers, yes,” said Nan, “but not for the entire world. We have trouble enough to wail for those who need it most.”
“Perhaps the entire world stands in need of wailing, of a crying out against its misery.”
“You may be right,” the banshee told him, “but we wail at home, on the land we know, for the widow left alone, for the hungry children, for the needy old, for those bereft by death. There is so much to wail over that we can take care of only those we know. We crouch outside the lonely cottage that is overrun by grief and need and we cry out against those who have occasioned the grief and need and we …”
“Yes, I understand,” said Duncan. “You know nothing of the wailing for the world?”
“Only what the witch has told you.”
A soft step sounded behind Duncan, someone moving lightly.
“What is this about the wailing?” Snoopy asked.
Duncan swiveled around to face the approaching goblin. “The demon says there is a wailing in the fen.”
“The demon’s right,” the goblin said. “I have heard it often. But what has that to do with us?”
“Scratch tells me the fen can be crossed. He claims he knows the way.”
Snoopy puckered up his face. “I doubt that,” he said. “It has always been told the fen is impassable.”
“But you do not know for sure?”
“I do not know for sure. No one has ever been fool enough to try. No one ever puts a boat upon its waters, for there are lurking dangers there that rise up to seize one.”
“Then,” said Duncan, “look upon a fool. I am about to try.”
“You’ll be swallowed up,” said Snoopy.
“We’ll be swallowed up in any case. You say the Horde pens us in. That leaves the fen the only way to go.”
“With the main body of the Horde on the western shore?”
“You told me Ghost had reported they were moving north. If they continue to move north, if they move far enough to the north, the way will be clear.”
“The ones surrounding us are beginning to move in,” said Snoopy. “A closing of the net. There is some movement from the east. They’ve tripped some of our magic traps.”
“Then all the more reason,” said Duncan, “for trying the fen. And as quickly as we can.”
“If the forces surrounding us know that you are here, and most certainly they must for otherwise there would be no movement, then surely the main body on the fen’s western bank also must know.”
“But the Horde on the western bank can have no idea we will try to cross the fen.”
Snoopy threw up his hands in disgus
t. “Go on,” he growled. “Do what you wish. You will in any case. You do not listen to me. You have never listened to me.”
“I’m sorry,” Duncan said. “You offer no alternatives. The fen does offer an alternative. I have decided I will go. The demon will go with me to point the way. Conrad, I am sure, will come along.”
“And so will I,” Diane said softly. She said to Snoopy, “You spoke of buckskins for me. When will they be ready? I can not essay the fen in such dress as this.”
“By first morning light,” said Snoopy. “Our people have been working all the night.”
“We can’t leave by morning light,” said Duncan, “although I would like to. Before we leave a search for the griffin must be made.”
“There has been searching in the night,” said Snoopy. “He has not been found. At the first hint of dawn the area will be swept again. We have slight hope of finding him. He was tied too closely for too long to the wizards and the castle. He was old and worn out with long service and may not have wished to survive the castle. It is unlikely he would have survived with the final wizard gone. Milady, I think, shares our beliefs.”
“Yes, I do,” said Diane. “But without Hubert I still will go.”
“You could ride Daniel,” Duncan said.
“No. Daniel is your horse. He’s too accomplished a war-horse to be hindered by a rider save that he and the rider fight as one. In all the encounters on this journey you have never ridden him. The two of you have fought side by side. That is as it should be.”
“I will go with you,” said Nan. “The fen holds no terrors for me, since I can fly above it, although haltingly and with no grace at all, flapping like a crow. Perhaps I can be of some help in spying out the land.”
“And since I started this adventure with you,” Snoopy said, “you cannot leave me out.”
“There is no need,” said Duncan. “You have little faith in what is proposed and certainly you should stay here to direct your people.”
“There is no need of my direction,” Snoopy told him. “In truth, I never have directed them. I simply sent out a call for their gathering. And they came, as if to a picnic, for the adventure they might find. But they are not ones who will face up to great danger. Rather, being wise people, all of them, they run from danger. To tell you the honest truth, they’re beginning to scatter now. By the time you are gone, they will be as well.”
“Then, in good common sense, why don’t you scatter with them? We thank you for the thought of going with us, but it is beyond …”
Snoopy broke in with a fine display of rage. “You would deprive me of a feat of which I can talk for years, with all the others of them sitting about to listen, intent on every word as it drops from off my lips? The life of the Little Folk, as you are wont to call us in your patronizing manner, is a boring life. We have but few occasions to perform feats of derring-do. Few of us ever have the chance of becoming even minor heroes. It was different in those days before you humans came and pushed us off our land. The land was then our own and we played out upon it our little dramas and our silly comedies, but now we can do none of this, for we have not the room, and halfway through are certain to run into some stupid, loutish human who reminds us of our present poor estate and thereby robs us of what little fun we’re having.”
“Well, all right, then,” said Duncan, “if that’s the way it is. We’ll value your company. Although I must warn you that somewhere along the way we may meet with dragons.”
“I give that for dragons,” said Snoopy, snapping his fingers.
Twigs snapped in the darkness and Conrad came blundering into the firelit circle. He made a thumb, pointing into the air above him.
“See who I’ve found,” he said.
They all looked up and saw that it was Ghost, who floated down to mingle with them.
“I had given you up, my lord,” he said to Duncan. “I searched and searched for you, but there wasn’t any trace. But even as I searched I held true to the task I had been assigned. I watched the Horde, in its many various parts, and lacking anyone to whom I could report, since you were gone, I passed my knowledge on to Snoopy. He was as puzzled as I was as to what could have happened to you, but he had suspicions that your disappearance had something to do with the castle mound and this has now been confirmed by Conrad, whom I was delighted to stumble on just a while ago and …”
“Hold up,” said Duncan, “hold up. There’s word I want from you.”
“And I, my lord, have word to give you. But first I must ask, for mine own peace of mind, if you still intend, despite the many interruptions, to continue on to Oxenford. I still retain the hope of getting there for, as you know, I have many troublesome questions to ask the wise ones there. Troublesome questions for me, perhaps, but I hope not for them. It is my most earnest dream they can give me answers that will set me more at ease.”
“Yes,” said Duncan, “we do intend to continue on to Oxenford. But now my question. What about that part of the Horde traveling up the west bank of the fen?”
“They continue north,” said Ghost. “They’ve picked up speed. They are traveling faster now.”
“And show no sign of stopping?”
“There is no sign of their slackening their pace. They continue lunging onward.”
“That settles it,” said Duncan, with some satisfaction. “We start tomorrow, as soon as we are able.”
27
At the first paling of the eastern sky, they searched for Hubert. They swept the grounds surrounding the castle mound and the stretch of river meadows below and to every side the castle without finding a trace of the griffin. There were, now, fewer of the Little People than there had been the night before, but those who were left aided in the search with a will. Once the search was done, they disappeared, drifting off with no one able to mark their going. All that remained to show they had ever been there were a dozen smoldering, dying campfires spread out on the slope above the castle mound.
Duncan and Conrad pulled their small force together and started out, heading for the fen. To the north loomed the great mass of the hill through which Duncan and his band had passed, its western end cut off sharply where it met the fen. To the south the river wound lazily through the marshy meadows.
The band traveled spread out now rather than in a column, through open land broken here and there by small groves of trees and sparse woodland, the space between covered by low ground cover and patches of hazel. The morning, which had dawned clear and bright, became dismal as heavy clouds moved in from the west, not covering the sun, but dimming it so that it became little more than a pale circle of light.
Less than an hour after starting, they heard the first faint sound of wailing. Subdued by distance, it still was clear, a far lament of loneliness with an overtone of hopelessness, as if the cause of wailing would never go away, but would endure forever.
Walking beside Duncan, Diane shivered at the sound of it.
“It goes through one,” she said. “It cuts me like a knife.”
“You’ve never heard it before?” he asked.
“Yes, of course, at times. But from far off and I paid no attention to it. There are always funny noises coming off the fen. I had no idea what it was and …”
“But the wizards would have known.”
“Knowing, they might not have told me. Except when I went to search for Wulfert, I seldom left the castle. In many ways, although I was not aware of it, I lived a protected life.”
“Protected? You, a warrior maid …”
“Don’t mistake me,” she said. “I am no forlorn waif, no damsel in distress. I rode on certain forays and I learned the art of arms. And that reminds me, there’s something I must thank you for. You believed with me in the blade.”
She carried it naked in her hand, for there was no scabbard for it. She cut a small figure with it and it flashed even in the faint sunlight.
“It is a good piece of steel,” he said.
“And that is all?”
/>
“Snoopy told you nothing. You should ask no further.”
“But there was a sword lost long ago and …”
“There have been many swords and many of them lost.”
“All right,” she said. “That’s the way we leave it?”
“I think it’s for the best,” said Duncan.
They had been breasting the uplift of a long and gentle swale and now they came to the top of it, all of them bunched together and staring toward the west, where they could see the thin faint blueness of the fen. At the bottom of the uplift lay a long thin strip of forest lying between them and the fen, running from the cut-off mass of the northern range of hills as far south as they could see.
Scratch edged up to Duncan, tugging at his jacket for attention.
“Scratch, what do you want?” asked Duncan.
“The woods.”
“What about the woods?”
“It wasn’t there before. I remember from the time that I was here. There wasn’t any woods. The land ran smooth down to the fen.”
“But that was long ago,” said Conrad. “A long, long time ago.”
“Several centuries,” said Diane. “He’s been chained in the castle for that long.”
“In several centuries,” said Duncan, “a woods could have grown up.”
“Or he remembers incorrectly,” said Conrad.
Andrew growled at them, thumping his staff on the ground. “Pay no attention,” he said, “to that imp of Satan. He is a troublemaker.”
“Meg,” asked Duncan, “do you know about this woods?”
“How could I?” asked the witch. “I’ve not been here before.”
“It looks all right to me,” said Conrad, “and I always am the first to sniff out trouble. Just an ordinary woods.”
“I can detect nothing wrong with it,” said Snoopy.
“I tell you,” shrilled Scratch, “it was not there before.”
“We’ll proceed cautiously,” said Conrad. “We’ll keep on the watch. To get to the fen, it is quite clear that we must make our way through the woods.”
Duncan looked down at Scratch, who still was standing close beside him, still with a hand upon the jacket as if he meant to tug it once again, In the other hand he held a long-handled trident, its three tines barbed and sharp.