Read The Bitterbynde Trilogy Online
Authors: Cecilia Dart-Thornton
No!' Viviana stepped forward. âYou must not goâ'
With a last grimace, the trows fled into the forest.
âIt takes more than the pulling of faces to frighten us,' Viviana called determinedly after them.
âOdd,' said Caitri, âI could have sworn that they suddenly took fright.'
âYes, but not because of usâbecause of
something coming behind us,'
said Tahquil, spinning on her heel.
It was movingâwalking or glidingâtall and straight as a chimney. At first she could not make it out between the tree trunks on the lower slopes. Two triangles flappedâthe corners of a long, black coat. Was it a man?
If it were, something was horribly wrong with his head.
Tahquil felt her insides turn to water. The ability to move drained from every limb. The head of this approaching man-thing was wrenched over to the left side, lying horizontal on the shoulder. It was twisted back in a position which would have been impossible unless the neck had been wrung. It was the head of a hanged man.
A mote of moonlight splashed down.
The skew-polled apparition glided on, reeling itself in unerringly on the thread of the travellers' paralysis.
Then, a hooting: â'Tis Wryneck! Dinnae just stand there ye ninnies, run for yer lives!'
At this, the thread snapped. The supernormal energy of panic surged through their sinews. Released from the vice of terror the mortals took to their heels in the direction of the urisk's callââThis way, this way!'
As they ran into Khazathdaur's submerged glades the autarken trees, like iron towers, closed in at their backs. They blotted out the moon.
The smell of fear was darkness. In the darkness there was no speed but instead a pressure, as though the hunted mortals ran futilely into a sponge. As if it had sensed a need for camouflage, the ring's light had dimmed.
âOver here! Over here!' The urisk's hooting was fainter now.
âA trick,' shrieked Viviana. âWe're being pixie-led.'
âNo!' shouted Tahquil.
They swam through shadow paste. It blinded their eyes, stoppered their noses and mouths. It suffocated.
A horizontal beam of wood slammed against Tahquil's face.
âClimb!' It was the reedy voice of the goat-wight.
Groping in the dark she found a series of slats in parallelâa ladder.
âYou first.' Roughly she hauled on Caitri's elbow and felt the little girl pass her, ascending energetically. The ladder wriggled like an eel.
âYour turn, Via.' The courtier needed no second urging. She swung up behind Caitri, then hesitated.
âMy ladyâ'
âGo on, if you love life. It hunts after us yet!'
Indeed it did. Fungous parasitic growths on the ramrod tree boles gave off enough corpse-light to show a more intense black in the blacknessâa chimney gliding nearer, swifter. With Viviana's boots out of the way, Tahquil grabbed a rung, hoisted herself up, hung in space, scrabbling for a footing, booted a toehold and began to climb up the serpentine rails.
But too late.
An extrusion of darkness came forth; a long, hinged jaw. With one rapid movement Tahquil pulled out her knife, aimed and threw it. It hit its mark. The blade flared cobalt as the weapon vaporised, destroyed instantly. The enemy barely flinched, yet the attack had been enough to cause a hesitation, and in that instant Tahquil had climbed beyond the reach of that long, toothy jaw. Clambering on as fast as strength permitted, she unintentionally rammed her face up against Viviana's boot heels.
âGet up!' she screamed. âIt is still coming!'
Inexorably, the twisted head was moving up the ladder. Tahquil flung down a second knife. It blazed up like the first, obliterated. The pursuer's hook-jaw reached for her ankles to pull her down.
A pipe tune puffed through the forest like smoke.
It stopped short, replaced by yelling:
âYer greet laithron doup, yer hawkie's hurdies Wryneck, ye couldnae catch me if ye had wheels on.'
The insult was not stinging enough to provoke retaliation perhaps, but sufficient to bring on another pause. Additionally, the chimney-thing was tugged backwards by the power of its spoken name. In that instant of reprieve, Tahquil surged upward to find an astonishing emptiness on the ladder. Viviana's boots were no longer there, but hands gripped Tahquil firmly under her armpits and heaved her up sideways, up and over onto a platform. With a rattling swish the ladder dropped, collapsing back to the forest floor, still bearing its singularly nightmarish burden.
Sucking in great draughts of air, the companions reclined with their backs to the tree-trunk, alone on the platform. Somewhere nearby a stream of gibberish broke out, burbled on for a while then bleated off into the distance.
It seemed that for the moment they had reached safety.
âHow did you cut down the ladder?' gasped Tahquil.
âWe did not,' panted Viviana. âSome
things
did. They were here with us but I had no chance to look at them. They helped us get off the ladder, then they dashed away.'
Their unidentified rescuers had apparently deserted them. Tahquil crawled to the side of the wooden floor. Savage spikes of iron protruded horizontally from its edge. Grasping one for security, she peered down through the gloom.
âWe're only about twenty feet from the ground. That
thing
may be able to get up here, given time. We ought to climb higher.'
âWe have no choice,' said Caitri, gazing at the overhead murk. Flush with the treetrunk, another ladder led upwards. Meanwhile, down on the leaf-mold, ill-boding footsteps went pad-padding purposefully.
âWryneck made only silence. Others are on the move down there,' said Viviana, easing her bundles where the strings cut into her flesh. âThe higher we go the better pleased I'll be.'
But the aftermath of fear was enervation. They remained drooping against the treetrunk, procrastinating against further ascent, overcome by lethargy.
Not a lateral shoot, twig or limb branched out from these autarken pillars. They stretched sheer-sided from the ground to the canopy one hundred and fifty feet above. There they burst into multiple bifurcations, forming an interweaving grid, a huge, mottled ceiling whose girders supported a natural roof thatched with layer upon layer of leaves and other types of fruition. The canopy linked all the trees of the forest, yet up there the slender twigs were so fragile that only birds and the lightest arboreal creatures might cross it.
Heavy breathing and a kind of intermittent tearing effect erupted beneath the travellers' feet. Between a pair of jutting iron spikes, two green flames were rapidly approaching. Beneath this pair of eyes, a snarl widened. Black lips everted on shiny red gums embedded with sickles of gleaming enamel.
Amazed at the previously unsuspected depths of their strength reserves, the mortals shinned up the next ladder. Before they had attained the platform above, a yowl of white rage seared their ears. Looking back they saw a massive paw, its talons unsheathed, swipe up over the edge of the recently vacated platform. Destructive, poison-coated needles of steel that could rip open a man's belly with one clout now scored furrows across the planks, generating a chilling screech. The interstices between the spikes were too narrowâone of the claws, impaled, tore off. The woodwork shuddered from a mighty blow to its underside. Part of it gave way and tumbled slowly into the gulf, revealing the cat's rabid maw, saliva-dripping fangs, flattened ears, slitted eyes and powerful, switching tail. The three birds it hunted did not wait to inspect it further. Reaching the precarious safety of the higher perch they pulled the ladder up after them.
By now, six or seven well-thewed felines were swarming up the surrounding trees. With an agility belied by their size, they leaped from trunk to trunk, twisting in midair to present themselves belly-first to their destinations, claws hooking deep into the bark as they closed on each tree stem. The forest giant supporting their human quarry stood somewhat apart from the restâthe space around it was just a little too extensive for the grey malkins to bridge it with their aerial manoeuvres. One, having hitched its way to a higher level than their platform, sprang out and across, performed the spine-wracking twist and, by inches, missed landing right beside them. It plummeted, contorting.
Their tree was protected from malkin attacks by its spiked platforms, its wide separation from sturdy outreaching boughs, and the provision of wide, rusty metal bands which clasped the circumference of its trunk at regularly spaced intervals. Claws could not penetrate these deflective bands. Higher climbed the fugitives now, forsaking the clamour of the frustrated hunters. Bundles and bottles banged between their shoulder blades. Every twenty or thirty feet the ladder passed through a cutout in a higher platform fastened against the huge trunk. Each time they reached such a haven, they rested a moment, gathering strength.
At last they could go no higher.
The reason for this was twofold: they had in truth exhausted themselves with their exertions, and there were no more ascending ladders. The light-emitting growths were sparser in these upper regions but a silver-of-blue tinge to the air hinted of moonlight behind foliage laminae. Some ropes, anchored to the tapering bole with hooks and pulleys, projected sideways in a graceful curve. Their opposite ends were lost to view. Hot and flushed, the travellers drank deeply from their water supply and sank down to wait out the night like a trio of wooden dolls, too alert for danger to fall comatose.
Tahquil laid her head against the tree bole and thought she heard the hydraulic pumping of green blood within that cortex as though it were the pulse beat of her own life. Her mind, as always, turned to Thorn.
From the moment she had first espied him beneath the trees of Tiriendor, the kernel of her thought had been always with him, so that at times she felt detached from the play of life, as though she were an onlooker viewing her physical surroundings from somewhere at his side. Since the Langothe's return, another yearning had been added to love's anguish, and now, faced with the possibility that they might never meet again, that somewhere in the world Thorn might be slain in battle and lost to her forever, the two agonies combined as one. She felt they hammered out her blood to thinness until it was but silverwater in her veins, and she with bones of crystal, so drained as to let the light through, was a wafer, a leaf of glass to be blown away in the bitter south wind.
Yet she clung on, as her hand clung to the ridged and whorled bark of the giant autarkenâfor within that crystal burned a poignant flame not yet extinguished by despair. Fancy bore her far from Khazathdaur and somewhere within her skull she stood in a starlit glade of Faêrie beside a tall knight. His dark head was crowned with sharp white stars like thorns.
Always, shadowing every word and deed, sweet sorrow and terrible longing desolate my heart.
Sounds carried long distances and rose up high, in Khazathdaur. From far below fountained a busy whirring as of spinning wheels in motion. This carried on for a while until, without warning, jolly music struck up as though a band of fiddlers and pipers played accompaniment to a rollicking peasant barn dance. Yet there was a queer element to it. It seemed only a copy, a hollow attempt to emulate the orchestrated merriment of such an occasionâeven a parody. It stopped as suddenly as it had started, chopped off in the middle of a bar.
âSooth, this
is
no picnic,' remarked Viviana. Her face, in the gloom, looked pallid as dead flesh.
The platform swayed ever so slightly with the slow dance of the tree. It moved in rhythm with winds far above, blowing among the massed leaves. The forest's lullaby soothed the weary travellers into a slumber so profound that a slight creaking of ropes and a sigh of cloven air could not waken them.
Silver-of-blue diffused, becoming a dense green twilight. The morning sun filtered through translucent tiers, millions upon millions of leaves whispering and murmuring continuously. Khazathdaur could never be truly silent. Leaves rustled in upper winds that never seemed to ruffle the airs below the leaf canopy, bringing a sound like the sifting of fingers through a coffer full of tiny crystals. Hundreds of thousands of leaves glided slowly down as though threaded on invisible filaments.
In Tahquil's breast the hard ache for the land beyond the stars drew salt water that quivered in her eyes, reflecting leaves.
By the morning light the travellers spied, on the platform's opposite side, freshly heaped vegetation. There was a dazzle of white blossoms with luteous centres, and fruits like leathery gourds with skins striped and speckled in what might have been, in another light, shades of madder. There was a leafy bough from which some of the outer rind had been stripped, and three dried, hollow gourds filled with pure water, and a small woven-twig cage packed with spun-silk cocoons like bonbons, pastel pink, softest saffron, palest pearl. From the calyxes of both fruit and flower trailed long beards of cellulose fibres.
Out of the blossoms arose a honey fragrance so intense as to be almost intoxicating. The travellers discovered these nectar-brimming blooms could be eaten. The crisp autarken leaves proved edible also, tasting of sweet angelica. Slashed open, the fruits revealed dark red flesh like a woundâa meaty, palatable pulp. The bark's inner cortex, when peeled away from the core, tasted like strips of chewy bread. Caitri slit open one of the long, oval cocoons. A pale, blind grub wriggled there, rearing its blunt head. Flinching, Caitri dropped it as if it had scalded her.
âOh, poor thing.'
Instantly remorseful, she scooped it back into the cage. They made no more attempts to dine on the cocoons.
â'Tis a wonder they didn't bring us dead birds,' said Caitri.
âHere no birds sing,' said Tahquil. âHave you not missed them?'
âNot I. I am sated on sweetmeats,' said Viviana with her mouth full of honeyed blossom. âWho ever would have thought that one could eat
flowers!'