Authors: Katharine Kerr
enough by morning to disguise me existing trail, leaving a new
path to lead us astray. I have to be vigilant to keep ahead of such
tricks, if we are to find Lady Arameth." Rahnnic's gaze seemed
to penetrate deep into the woods, as if he were already fathoming
which way to travel in the morning.
He had finally mentioned her name aloud- "They say she was
the most beautiful princess of her generation," Oxal said.
Rahnnic smiled in a melancholy way. "It would please her to
hear such words. A hundred years ago, it was her voice that folk
complimented. To hear her sing to our children—every father
should have such an experience."
Oxal found it odd to hear someone talk of bygone days with
such immediacy. Odder still to sit next to a legend. For all Oxal's
life, the story of Rahnnic and bis bride had been told at the
hearthfires: How Theron raiders had attacked me capital without
warning, hidden until then by the most simple of illusions—fog.
How Rahnnic's defense of the palace allowed his grandfather,
the king, to escape and, with reinforcements, recapture the city
that same year. Such tales of valor had been what drew Oxal to
a martial career. He would often visit the shrine in the old throne
room of the palace, where Rahnnic stood like a statue, frozen in
time within the ward he had formed in the last desperate mo-
ments of battle. Everyone knew that someday the ward would
burst and Rahnnic would rejoin the world, but when it happened
at last, Oxal was not the only one who had to make a pilgrimage
to the shrine and see it empty before he would believe the hero
lived and breathed once more.
The prince's voice fell to a whisper. Oxal averted his glance.
Obviously, it pained Rahnnic to speak of children gone to the
grave. After ninety-seven years suspended in time, the prince had
lost nearly everyone he had known. His grandson now ruled
Irithel, and for the sake of political stability Rahnnic had agreed
not to seek the throne, accepting an honorary role as adviser to
the crown.
But the story was not yet over. There was a chance that
Arameth, wife of Rahnnic, still lived. She had not been able to
bear living out her life without her prince. She waited ten years,
THE HEART OF THE FOREST 247
until her children were of an independent age, and then she van-
ished into the forest to give herself to the dryads. As a dryad, she
would be nigh immortal, and survive until Rahnnic's release.
The talespinners always spoke of how Rahnnic and Arameth
would one day be happily reunited. But in truth, no one knew if
that could happen.
"Your Highness ..."
"Yes?"
"How can you be sure the lady is alive? The search parties her
father sent found no sign of her. How is it you know where to
look?"
To Oxal's relief, Rahnnic took no offense at the question. "In
truth, I have no way of knowing if she lives. But if the sylvan
folk accepted her pledge to become one of them, they would
have taken her to dwell in only one place—the Heart of the For-
est."
"But no one knows where that is," Oxal protested. "Some say
it does not exist."
"It exists. I can find it."
Rahnnic seemed to glow in the numinous way of the Arith as
he spoke. Oxal was reminded of passions he had felt at one glo-
rious moment of his youth when, in the span of three seasons, he
won the city wrestling tourney, was accepted into the palace
guard, and came to know the favors of the potter's fine, worldly
daughter. Oh, to feel such a fire again.
"Are you married, soldier? Do you have children?" the prince
asked.
Oxal shifted uncomfortably. It seemed a sacrilege to speak.
His had been a marriage of convenience. His cousin's foster sis-
ter had needed a husband; he had needed a companionable
woman to make a home. It had been a suitable match, with few
arguments over the years, but how could his situation possibly
compare to that of legend? "My wife's name is Ayana. Four chil-
dren. The youngest still lives at home," he mumbled.
Rahnnic nodded respectfully. "I am sure you miss them. With
luck, this task of mine will soon be over, and you will soon be
with them."
"I think of tittle else," Oxal lied, and felt relief as the prince
returned to his pavilion.
In the morning, the sprites had indeed altered the trail.
Rahnnic forged on, leading the column through brambles and
around thickets. Often he was forced to meditate in order to di-
248 Dave Smeds
vine the correct path. They could have made better time, but the
Arith lord refused to allow his men to cut living branches, even
when it meant a considerable detour.
The latter courtesy did not seem to temper the forest's animos-
ity. Pines dropped heavy green cones. Twice hornets attacked,
forcing Rahnnic to lay a charm to keep them away. The more the
men progressed, the more the trees seemed to moan in protest.
Something was moaning, Oxal realized. A faint, keening chant
drifted on the wind. It was fascinating.
"Hold!" cried Prince Rahnnic.
Oxal stopped. He and several other riders had turned away
from the column and were edging toward the lip of a ravine. The
prince had to cut off the lead pair of soldiers and drive them
back before they would turn away.
"The willows in the ravine are singing a siren melody to make
us tumble into the rapids," Rahnnic explained. "Plug your ears.
Watch each other carefully. We must leave now."
The men obeyed. Eventually the trail turned away from the ra-
vine, and the call faded.
"By the gods," grumbled the old fletcher behind Oxal. "A
man can't void his bowels in this forest without fretting that a
snake will jump into his undergarments."
Camp was made near a lake in a spot clear of trees. The men
preferred to brave the resident hordes of mosquitoes than sleep in
the shadows of the wood.
Rahnnic retired early. Oxal noticed bags under the prince's
eyes and a stoop to his shoulders. The continual use of magic
was taking its toll.
Oxal needed rest, too, yet two hours after bedding down, he
woke. Sleeplessness was me bane of his middle age. After an-
other hour of tossing, he gave up the struggle, put on his boots,
and relieved one of the sentries.
The frogs had fallen silent. Sibilant whispers seemed to filter
from the groves of pine and ash. Oxal shivered. To ease his ner-
vousness, he paced back and forth along the stream bank.
Well after midnight, as the waning moon approached zenith, a
scream roused the camp. Oxal whirled. A sentry, who had been
perched on a fallen log for most of his watch, was frantically try-
ing to lift his feet from me ground. Oxal rushed over.
Surely, he thought, the moonlight was deceiving him. A mesh
of pallid root tendrils poked from the humus and into the leather
seams of the sentry's boots.
THE HEART OF THE FOREST 249
'They're in my skin!" cried the man as if in the throes of a
nightmare. In fact, Oxal was sure that the soldier had been doz-
ing at his post. He sliced through the tendrils with his knife. The
man lifted his feet.
Screams were now radiating over the camp. Soldiers struggled
in their bedrolls. Oxal saw an archer claw at his feet.
"It has everyone," the sentry moaned.
An hour later, Rahnnic set down the foot of his afflicted cap-
tain. A pale nimbus of sorcery faded from the prince's hand.
"I can do nothing," he announced. He dragged his gauntlet
across the ground, disturbing the network of vines that had
emerged from the soil of the camp. Thin as capillaries, they were
tough and sticky, like spider web made of plant matter. At the
juncture of each branching lay a thorn as narrow as a mosquito's
snout.
Oxal shifted self-consciously from foot to foot, worried that he
might yet be stung. He and two of the sentries had escaped be-
cause they had stayed mobile while the vines had done their evil.
All the other men in the company had been punctured by a least
one thorn, save the prince, who would have sensed the encroach-
ment.
"These vines must be woodcutter's bane," the prince added.
**0nce they poison a man's blood, roots will grow from whatever
part of his flesh is closest to the ground. The cure takes weeks
to administer. You must return to the city and convalesce in high
stone towers. Go quickly. Do not let yourselves become thor-
oughly rooted or you will never be able to move again."
He pointed to Oxal and the two unafflicted sentries. "You men
have charge of their safety. Watch them carefully. Within a few
hours, they will begin to wish to take root."
"You aren't returning with us?" Oxal asked.
••No."
"Take me with you," Oxal said.
The prince raised his hand to protest.
"You'll need someone to watch your back, someone to share
the watch at night. A single attendant is far better than none."
Rahnnic let his hand fall. "You are right. If I wish to succeed,
I must not refuse aid."
The captain of the guard spoke. "Your Highness, how are we
to find our way out without you?" His tone implied shame at
seeming weak.
250 Dave Smeds
"Follow our path in reverse. The forest will not hinder you as
long as you ride for its borders."
Oxal did not begrudge the captain his fear. Any sensible man
would abandon the quest. He found a place away from the patch
of woodcutter's bane and waited for the prince.
The next three mornings began at first light after hasty
gulpmgs of cold radons- They rested each midday, making up for
nights spent peering anxiously into shadows. Oxal was reminded
of a campaign across the Far Dunes. The regiment had risked
ambush for days on end crossing the sand. This trek did the same
things to his mind. Alert to every mouse scurry and every sigh
of the breeze, the soldier lived for the moment, storing little in
memory.
Yet they were not attacked. The prince, with only one extra
body to protect, managed to keep peril at a distance. Once, Oxal
was forced to put an arrow in a rabid wolf that appeared in their
wake. Otherwise, the only visible hostility was the forest's con-
tinued attempts to lead the men astray.
Rahnnic spoke less and less. Though his gaze remained alert,
he slouched in his saddle. He sat listlessly beside the fire each
night, leaving the care of the horses and other essentials entirely
to Oxal. His cheeks grew gaunt. By late on the third day after-
noon, Oxal was beginning to worry that his lord would fall from
the saddle.
Abruptly, Rahnnic straightened up. Oxal followed his gaze.
Across the path lay a row of unusually targe trees of many types.
They seemed to be part of a huge circle.
"We have arrived," the prince stated.
Abruptly the massive walnut directly ahead of them swung its
branches, flinging its hard fruit. The horses, stung, reared back.
Only quick hands on the reins kept the animals from bolting.
"Dryad trees!" Oxal yelled, cupping a bruise on his forehead.
"Yes," replied the prince. "The greatest of all. We dare not ap-
proach. The branches are nigh as supple as our own arms, and
nearly as fast."
As if to prove Rahnnic's point, the walnut and a neighboring
juniper reached out, shaping their outer branches like great
claws. The men were only a few paces from the closest twigs.
"What now?* asked Oxal.
The prince dismounted, shaking a nut from his cuff. He led
Oxal and the horses out of the range of more such missiles. "We
wait for moonrise."
THE HEART OF THE FOREST
* * *
251
As twilight arrived, the forest's numerous murmurs grew
clearer. Oxal heard the thumping of log drums and the trill of
reed pipes. Gone was the oppressive air of enmity. The soldier
felt as though he'd sampled a fine ale, sipping just enough to
loosen his muscles and dissipate anxiety, but not so much that his
senses were dulled.
"Is this a trick?"
"The music is not intended for us," Rahnnic explained. "Have
you not heard the tales? This is the anthem of the forest, sung
here every night."
The fey symphony grew louder until it was all Oxal could do
to resist seeking its origin. This was not like the siren call of the
willows. That had been a sinister compulsion. This urge came
from within him. He knew he could stifle it, but had no wish to.
Rahnnic stood. He pointed at me moon, which had risen above
the treeline. "Now we can proceed."
Leaving the horses tethered, the men approached the guardian
ring. The trees swayed menacingly, but Rahnnic raised his arms,
palms open to the sky. He caught the moon's light and fashioned
cords of glowing silver. When he had accumulated two huge
coils, he flung the strands forward. They wrapped two of the
trees, pulling their branches to either side, opening a passage.
"Quickly," the prince said.
Oxal sensed the frustration of the trees. The limbs trembled. A