âWell,' he grinned. âBet you can't work it out. Bet I read the message first.'
The Spirit of the Sun was weakening. Every day the hours of light grew shorter. Ket watched the druid anxiously as he scanned the skies. Surely soon Faelán would call for the ceremony of Midwinter to coax back the departing sun. Hunger loomed over the druid's camp. The offerings of oxflesh, cheese and bread were long gone. There were no more apples on the trees and the birds had eaten the last of the blackberries.
âWhat are you all lolling about for?' Maura demanded. âTake your slingshots and go find something for the pot, or we'll all be eating boiled water for dinner.'
âTake care!' warned Goll, when he saw the fosterlings headed for the forest. âI hear the fians are about.'
âHey, I want to see them!' yelled Lorccán, sprinting forward.
Nath-Ã faltered.
âMaybe we shouldn't go in then,' he said.
âThey're not stopping me looking for my dinner,' said Nessa, not slowing her stride.
Ket halted next to Nath-Ã.
âDo you think they'll attack us?' asked Nath-Ã.
âWe don't have anything to steal,' said Ket.
They both hesitated, remembering stories they'd heard of the wild young outlaws who roamed the forests, thieving and raiding.
âScared, little minnows?' jeered Bran from the edge of the trees.
âNo,' snapped Ket. âWe're coming.'
As soon as they entered the forest, Nath-Ã crouched down and began to poke among the fallen leaves. âI think I'll just look for nuts,' he said.
âI don't want acorns for dinner again,' said Ket crossly. âWhere are the others? Why didn't they wait?' He paused, listening, but all he could hear was the gentle gurgle of the river. He started through the trees, calling their names. âNessa? Bran? Lorccán?'
A crow flew upwards with a screech of alarm, âGaug! Gaug!'
Dense thickets of gorse and blackthorn flanked the path, and overhead, the bare, wintry branches of oaks and hazel trees curled like claws.
Ket looked round for something to eat. Maybe he could find a few leaves of chickweed. Even the bitter sloes of the blackthorn would be better than nothing. He followed the eager
chat chat
of a field-fare, hoping she had found a last bunch of blackberries they could share. But he found her pecking at bright red holly berries, and shook his head in disappointment.
âThose you can keep for yourself,' he muttered.
From beyond the bushes, came the thud of hoofs, and then the whinny of a horse. Ket jerked round in panic. Only chieftains and fians rode horses. He began to run, but a stallion burst out of the trees, rearing and crashing, and blocked his path. The rider was a boy not much older than Ket, with gleaming eyes in a filthy face.
âHand over your silver,' he demanded.
âI . . . I don't have any,' stammered Ket.
The boy hooted.
âThis fine young lord claims to have nothing!' he shouted.
Ket heard other fians whistling and jeering among the trees.
The boy slid from his mount and sauntered forward. Hot animal scent emanated from the strips of untanned, bloody fur he wore as clothes. âWhat's that, then?' he demanded, thrusting a finger at Ket's cloak pin. âGive it.'
Ket felt a surge of fury. He lifted his knee and aimed a kick right into the boy's stomach.
âOoof!'
The young fian reeled back, his eyes wide with astonishment.
Ket whirled round, looking for a way to escape. There were shouts from the other riders, and he could hear their horses crashing towards him. Another horse lunged out of the trees.
Ket dived at the river. He gasped as he hit the cold water, and sank. His feet touched bottom, and he burst up, gulping for air, his long wet hair streaming over his face. A horse leapt in after him as he plunged for the opposite bank. He was slithering and scrambling up the side when a whip
thwacked
the ground beside him, and mud shot into his eyes. He hurtled forward, threw himself under a gorse bush, and burrowed among the branches, ignoring the spikes clawing at his clothes.
âSpirit of the Gorse,' he panted, âhide me, protect me!'
He hunched there, soaked and shivering, and, just for a moment, above the noise of the fians' angry thrashing, he thought he heard the tinkle of bells.
One of the outlaws heard it too.
âHey, listen.'
âIt's the druids. They're coming.'
âThey'll cast a spell on us.'
âI'm leaving.'
There were a few scuffles and grunts, a stifled whinny, and then the thud of hoofbeats fading into the distance.
The ringing of bells grew louder and Ket crawled from his hiding place just as Goll and the other anruth marched into view on the far bank.
âKet, are you all right?' Nath-Ã burst out of the group. âI saw the fians attacking you and I ran for help!' He skidded on the muddy slope and Goll grabbed him by the tunic.
âHey, Ket!' The anruth pointed to a dead birch tree fallen across the water. âYou don't have to swim back, you can cross there,' he called.
Ket edged his way along the slippery trunk, his teeth chattering with cold. âTh-they ran when they heard your bells,' he stammered.
As he reached the other side, Bran, Nessa and Lorccán bounded out of the trees. Nessa's face shone with triumph. She was twirling her slingshot and dangling two dead hares across her shoulder.
At the sight of Ket's bedraggled figure, the three hunters stopped short.
âWhat happened to you?!'
âThe fians,' said Nath-Ã, âtheyâ'
âOh Ket, did they hurt you?' cried Nessa.
Ket felt more pathetic than a wet feather. His cheeks flamed.
âWhere'd they go?' demanded Lorccán, scanning the forest in frustration.
âThey'll be far on their way now,' said Goll.
âIf I'd been here, I would have shown 'em!' Lorccán dropped his slingshot and began to punch an imaginary opponent.
âI did show them!' said Ket. âIâ'
Lorccán spun round and made a feint at his jaw. Ket blocked it and skipped backwards.
âHey!' squawked Nath-Ã as Ket stepped on his toe.
âEnough horsing around,' said Goll. âLorccán, did you catch something for our dinner?'
âHuh.' Lorccán snatched up his weapon. âI saw this really big juicy badger, and I would have got it, only Nessa was hogging all the good stones.'
There was a spluttered exclamation from Nessa.
âI found some hazelnuts,' said Nath-Ã.
âAnyway, I bet the fians don't hunt with silly old slingshots,' said Lorccán. âI bet they have big long spears. And bows and arrows. If I was a fian I'd have a spear as long as that tree, with five spikes on it. And I could kill anything.' He snapped a branch off the fallen birch, and as they headed back to camp he whipped every bush and fern that grew along the path.
It was three days until the next new moon. The camp lay sodden under winter rain. The fire was reduced to a pile of smouldering wood, where only a few embers glowed under the shelter of the cauldron.
The fosterlings, waiting for their morning lesson, huddled beneath the dense, spreading branches of the Sacred Yew. They were bundled in every scrap of fur they possessed and their breaths hung in the air in white clouds.
Nath-Ã wiped his streaming nose with his sleeve.
âI've thought of a poem,' he snuffled. The others turned to him in surprise. âSee if you can guess who it's about.'
âFleetest of foot
Bravest and bold
Keenest of mind
When tales are told
. . .
'
Ket saw Lorccán draw himself up expectantly.
âHair of fire
With beads of gold!'
Nath-Ã finished.
âIt's Nessa!' cried Ket.
Lorccán tossed his head.
âNath-Ã, thank you!' Nessa's cheeks were flushed, her eyes sparkling. Ket wished he'd been the one to compose a poem for her.
âHey, listen to this one!' Lorccán flung back his fox-fur cloak and took up a stance, arms flexed. His fair hair shone, and the raindrops on his cape glittered like jewels.
âMuscles so strong
And hair so long.'
He thumped himself on the chest. âHow's that?'
âYou're not supposed to make up poems about yourself,' said Ket.
Bran jumped to his feet.
âHere's another stanza.' He copied Lorccán's pose.
âWriter of
The worst song!'
He squealed and ducked as Lorccán aimed a blow at his shoulder.
Nath-Ã chuckled, then doubled over with a hacking cough. Nessa rubbed his back anxiously.
âNath-à isn't tough enough to be a druid,' said Lorccán. âLook at me!'
He strutted into the rain and held out his arms, tilting his face to the sky.
âAh, Lorccán, I am pleased to see you participating in the Greater Harmony,' said Faelán.
Ket, swinging round, realised that Lorccán had spied the druid approaching. The druid's eyes were grey as the clouds, his hair and beard dripping with rainwater. The feathered cloak was spiky and bedraggled.
Abashed, the other fosterlings shuffled out from the shelter of the tree.
âFeel the elements,' cried Faelán.
âI feel them all right,' muttered Bran in Ket's ear. âThey're cold and wet.'
âMaster Faelán,' said Nessa. âI think Nath-à needs one of your cures.'
Faelán turned his attention to Nath-Ã, who was holding his chest and struggling to breathe. âYou must place an oak log on the fire to draw off your illness. While to soothe your cough, grind some hazelnuts and mix them with nectar from those blooms . . .' The druid gestured to the hollow oak. Shining like a crown in the winter gloom, a cluster of greenish-white flowers sprang from the ivy that clambered over the bare branches. âNow, how about the rest of you? What did you observe, skulking there under the trees? Have you learnt anything about the Greater Harmony?'
Lorccán looked smug while the others glanced at each other.
âUuh . . . the leaves have fallen off some of the trees,' said Nessa, âthat oak tree, and the birches, and the aspen . . .' Her voice tailed away and there was a pause.
âAnd what else?'
âSome of the birds have gone away,' offered Ket.
âBut now there are different ones,' Lorccán burst in. âI saw the wild geese arriving. I saw them first, before anyone else!'
âAnd you tried to get one with your slingshot, and missed,' hooted Bran.
âBran, I have told you before, we do not point out others' errors or failings unless it is necessary,' admonished the druid. âHave you a useful contribution to make? What changes have you observed?'
âI've seen fieldfares, and redwings about.'
âThat is so,' said the druid, âbut what else has changed, apart from the birds and the leaves? Nath-Ã, what have you observed?'
Nath-Ã bit his lip and looked baffled. âIt's got colder!' he blurted out at last.
This time, they all started to giggle, until the druid held up a finger.
âThat is not to be scoffed at,' he said. âNever take the weather for granted. An oddity out of season â a warm night in winter, or a frost in summer â is a message from the spirits. An omen. If you become a druid, if you want to foretell the future . . .' His voice grew deep and solemn. âYou must be alert for omens.'
Behind the druid's back, Bran crossed his eyes and pretended to tug solemnly at an imaginary beard. Hurriedly, Ket averted his gaze. The druid was pointing at two fieldfares squabbling over holly berries.
âThose tiny birds have travelled over the sea from far-off lands,' he said. âEvery year they fly here, knowing that in our forest they will find berries to sustain them through the winter. If a tiny creature like a fieldfare can detect and use the pattern of the seasons, so can you.' He looked down again. A spider was crawling up his robe, spindly legs wavering and wobbling. When it was halfway up, Faelán coaxed it onto his finger, and gently transferred it to the trunk of the Sacred Yew. âSo . . .' He looked around at the upturned faces of the fosterlings. âYou must learn the pattern, the natural order of all things, in such intimate detail that you will recognise the unusual â the omens. Then, if you are chosen to be an anruth, I will teach you what those omens mean.'