Read The Bitterbynde Trilogy Online
Authors: Cecilia Dart-Thornton
“The glades of Tiriendor have a wightish feel,” someone muttered. Someone else tried to begin a song, but the words and tune fell flat and trailed into nothing.
The caravan rumbled to a halt in the middle of the road, with the half-leafless boughs of elms trembling overhead. Wheels were chocked, horses were unharnessed, fires were lit. After rechecking their protective gear, the caravaners snugged in for the night.
Around midnight, strange knocking sounds erupted from among the trees a short way off the road. From another approach, a great, shaggy black dog, nearly the size of a calf, appeared at the verge of the firelight. It stood staring at a group of guards, its large eyes like flaming coals.
Not a man spoke. They stood like propped cadavers. Their own hounds growled, hackles raised, but would not attack. One man slipped away to fetch the caravan's wizard. When he arrived, the black dog turned and padded back into the forest.
The wizard trotted up and down on a gray palfrey, chanting incantations. A barrel-chested cockerel flapped on his gloved hand. The guards whistled tunelessly, eerily, well into the night.
The period just before dawn, which the Erts called
uhta
, brought an intense shang wind. Chambord's captain ordered the caravaners to stay put until it had passed over. The unstorm engendered the usual colored lights, but no tableaux.
“Nobody ever passed this way to make ghosts,” said a traveler. “I am surprised there is a road at all.”
“'Tis an old byroad,” said her companion, “very old, made in the times when they knew how to make 'em last forever.”
As soon as the last light and chime had died away, the caravaners bestirred themselves. Although gray-shadowed leaves partly concealed the sun, the knowledge of its rising cheered most people. Toward noon they struck the main Road again, now past the blocked section. From here it began to slope steadily downâmore and more often it crossed bridges. The Forest of Tiriendor, however, refused to be left behind and crowded as closely to the edges of the Caermelor Road as it had to the Etherian back road.
That afternoon, livid clouds swarmed in from the northeast and covered the face of the sun. The trees locked their branches together over the roadway. Shadows congested. The premonition of danger that had taken root the night before now intensified. Muirne sat beside Imrhien on the wagon's tailboard, her gaze darting from right to left. She had strapped her quiver to her back, and now she drew an arrow from it, nocking it to the bowstring.
“I saw something just now, by the wayside. It ran away. I want to be ready.”
Grief and loss seemed to have hardened the Ertish girl. Some of her diffidence had evaporated, and so had the antipathy she had shown to Imrhien. Grateful for the friendship that had existed between them during their time of imprisonment and knowing that after all, the wizard's patient had not been to blame for it, Muirne had come to regard her Talith companion with friendship. For her part, Imrhien respected and admired Muirne's skills at weaponry and horsemanship.
Imrhien touched her arm and pointed. <
“What?⦠Aye, I saw. It was another like the first. They move quicklike.” She narrowed her eyes. “Nasty little
skeerdas
, I'll warrant.”
Diarmid cantered past.
“Be aware, Muirne,” he called. She waved acknowledgment.
“'Tis curious for wights to be sticking out their noses so much in daylight hours,” she mused, watching her brother ride on down the line. “Their glorytime be the night. Either there be something after chasing them, or they simply be about in great numbers. Or both. No matterâthe guards say we shall be clear of these woods by nightfall.”
As she spoke, a commotion erupted from up ahead, a splintering crash and the neighing of frightened horses, shouting, the dire clash of iron. Some guards sped past, others held to their stations in case this was a planned diversion, the tactics of ambush.
“The second wagon has gone down in a rut,” called a voice. “The axle is broken. None of the others can get past.”
The disabled cart was past mending. Its contents had to be distributed among the other wains before they could go forward, and the detritus cleared from the Road. This caused a delay, which meant that the caravan was still plodding among the trees when darkness gathered. Greenish phosphorescence winked on all sides, misleading the eye. Horses blundered off the roadside and into tree trunks invisible in the murk.
Orders were shouted.
“Halt and make camp on the Road.”
Once again the drivers stationed the line of wagons, coaches, and carts along the middle of the thoroughfare. The horses were taken out of the shafts and tethered alongside. Campfires burned rosy between the wains, chasing away the shadows for a few feet around. Beyond these globes of light the silent darkness pressed heavily, a wall. Guards moved along the camp's perimeters. After the evening meal, some caravaners lay wakeful within their wagons, others sat by the fires, speaking in hushed tones. Save for the random jingling of harness and the crunch of boots, all was quiet; no hunting owls or melancholy night-birds cried.
Seated in their customary place on the wagon's tailboard, Imrhien and Muirne stared into the profound shadows interlaced between the trees.
“Mother of Warriors, save us,” Muirne whispered. “Last night was bad enough. I'll not sleep this night. This has the feel of an ambush.”
They stoked up the fires and, with the cold certainty of doom, kept vigil.
The encounters began at midnight.
It was as dark as blindness. In the total silence, not a whisper or a sigh could be heard. Eventually, somewhere in the deeps of the Forest of Tiriendor, a wind went through, rustling the leaves like the sough of the ocean. And then the firelight lit up a pearly Something coming down the Road. It was not fog. Alive, woolly, like a cloud or a wet blanket, giving off a terrible coldness and a stale smell, it slid up and all over the wagons, the carts, the coaches, the horses, the hounds, the caravaners, in every nook and cranny, and then was gone, rolling and bowling and stretching out and in, down the Road.
Nerveless, aghast, the caravaners leaned together in a lethargy bequeathed by shock.
Shortly thereafter, sounds of bubbling laughter and cheerful conversation flew out from the trees like a flock of brilliant birds. Alerted, shaken to their senses, the guards drew out their blades, the ringing rasp of their steel cutting briefly across the darkness. The other travelers stiffened, bracing themselves, grasping their charms, and muttering incantations. Lights shone out from between the trees, accompanied by strains of music and snatches of song. The rhythm of the tune was so rapid, the cadences so lilting and compellingly harmonious, that those who heard it felt their toes twitch in their shoes, tapped their fingers in spite of their dread, and quickened to the beat. There came into view, where the lights shone forth, a large circle of dancersâcharming young damsels, it seemed, skipping with grace and delighted abandon, laughing, singing, breathless in their exuberance. Their filmy robes flew about them like banners of mist, green, gold, and silver; their hair was snagged with sparkling flowers; and each face was comelier than the next.
“An old trick of the baobhansith,” murmured Muirne. “All folk know of it, and none would be foolish enough to fall.”
But they were oh, so guileless, those damselsâso lighthearted and innocent, the music utterly enticing, the movements of the dance thoroughly alluring. A thrill, akin to the exhilaration of shang yet not it, roused in the pale-haired watcher. Against all reason, it seemed that what she desired urgently in that instant was for Diarmid to come galloping up, so that she could jump up behind him, her arms about his waist; then they two would ride to join the circle, escaping the fear and dreariness of the stolid wagons.
Uproar broke out farther down the line.
A report rippled down the column. One of the younger guards had slipped into the forest before he could be stoppedâfor a better look, he had said over his shoulder as he departedânot to enter the circle, oh no, he was no foolâbut just to see the pretty creatures at closer range. Knowing too well what fate awaited the bedazzled youth, two of his comrades had plunged in after him. The captain had issued orders that on pain of flogging, no more should leave the Road, but it was too late for the three. All the caravaners could see them clearly, dancing in the lighted circle, their feet scarcely touching the ground, whirling their delectable partners in time to the piped reel. They were grinning like death's-heads.
“See how they laugh,” said someone in horrified fascination. “The baobhansith have done nothing to them.”
“Yet,” added another.
Stung to a restlessness of yearning by the music, Muirne's companion sprang down and walked, barely noticed, up the line. The attention of the caravaners was directed outward.
Something moved in from the side of the Road to where two guards were standing. Instinctively Imrhien shrank back into shadow. She saw a shining of wet leaves after rain, a moonbeamâit was not one of the caravan women approaching. Such loveliness was never of mortal ilk.
Metal pealed. The blades of the guards flashed to the ready. Stepping back a pace, and with a small gasp like the cooing of a dove, the object of their attention held out a reproachful hand, soft and white as the poisonous spathe of the arum lily.
“Do not affright me, Han! Will you not conduct me across the Road, that I may join the Dance?”
“Hypericum, salt, and bread â¦,” began one of the men.
Her pale, narrow hands flew to her ears.
“Oh, sir,” she sobbed, “do you take me for some wight? I had thought you a gentleman, alas. Well, then I shall try my own way if no help is to be found.”
She turned away a little too quickly, but the guard who had been silent sheathed his sword and moved to her side.
“If you are no wight, what do you here?”
“Have you not seen me, Han? I am a traveler.”
“I have not seen you before. But as a traveler you may not leave the Road.”
“Oh, but my sisters are in the woodsâhow shall I reach them?” she sighed, looking at him from the corners of eyes that glinted as green as jealousy.
“Weep not. I shall help you find them. Wait for me, Greb.”
The other stood uncertainly, dazed, his blade lowered and forgotten.
“But ⦔
The couple vanished among the trees. A moment later the second man followed. Unable to shout a warning that might bring back their ability to reason, Imrhien ran after them for a short distance. The tree-boles rapidly crowded in between her and the Road until, on reaching a spot where only one thin blade of firelight sliced through them, she halted. Her hair stood up. A great horror squeezed her throat, and she began to retrace her steps, but it was hard going, as if something heavy dragged at her legs, as if she were wading through the deep and treacherous mud of the fens.
At her back, a terrible scream ripped through the night.
Imrhien regained the grassy verge. Muirne was there, pulling her onto the Road.
“
Daruhshie!
What be ye a-thinking of?”
A man staggered out of the trees, corpse-white, silent, shivering convulsively.
“'S death!” cried the guards. “It is Greb! What has happened, and where is Han that was with him?”
Greb collapsed into the arms of his comrades and was borne away. At that moment, the lights that had been glowing away under the trees suddenly went out and the music stopped dead, cut off in the middle of a bar. The same heavy blanket of silence descended, muffling even the caravan's bells, which hardly dared to chink.
“Come back to the wagon with me. There be more evil things abroad here than could be dreamed of in a thousand years.” Muirne had firm hold of her friend's arm.
A far-off rumbling began, as of something approaching swiftly out of the east.
“A wickedness! A wickedness be coming this way!” The Ertish girl moved faster.
“Sain us! Aroint thee, unseelieness!” the folk among the caravans cried desperately. “Avaunt, avaunt!”
With a rattle of wheels, a crack of a whip, and a clatter of hooves, a macabre vehicle passed through the trees on a course parallel with the Road. It was a coach-and-four, lit by a lurid, flickering light of its own. Dimly through verdigrised windows could be discerned a trio of occupants. The driver wore a three-cornered hat.
As the rumor of the coach's passage faded, Muirne whispered:
“
Oghi ban Callanan
âthere be no road for wheels out among those trees. No road at all.”
Before she had finished speaking, the sound of bitter weeping began afar off. The sobs, like those of a grieving woman, were filled with despair and depthless anguish.
Dismay infected the caravaners like plague.
“It is the first cry of a weeper,” they gasped. “We are surely doomed!”
The mournful cries broke out afresh, closer this time, not as loud but far more sorrowful, as if the weeper were heartbroken and could never be consoled. And again, for the last time; the lamenting seemed closer, almost in the wagon with them, and soft.
“Tethera. The third cry,” said Muirne, tonelessly, unnecessarily.
Some of the horses began to jump and snort as if pricked by invisible spurs. Somehow they had worked loose from their pickets. Around and between the wagons they raced, kicking up their heels and bucking, scattering the caravaners and their fires. Soon all the horses had been contaminated by this frenzy. Imrhien thought she could spy, through the haze of dust and sparks, small dark things sitting astride their backs, grinning with malicious glee. Pointed caps adorned the riders' oversize heads, jammed between sharp, upstanding ears. Their legs were skinny and their feet grotesquely large. They appeared like caricatures of little men, parodies sketched by a humorous artist.
The caravaners' hounds set up a yelping and a barking. They leaped crazily in and out between the kicking hooves, snapping at the riders. The archers yelled that they could see nothing to shoot at. Men ran, shouting and swinging lanterns, trying to catch the frantic animals; others rang bells, crying advice and warnings. The whole caravan had betrayed itself in the throes of pandemonium.