the ground. He made it all look somehow
   … well … dashing.
   He worked a hard half hour, at which
   time Nettie came out of the house,
   carrying a glass of water and a handful of
   fat carrots with the loose greens still
   attached. “I’m sure that’s at least six
   carrots’ worth of work,” she said,
   smiling at him.
   Bast took the glass of water, drank half
   of it, then bent over and poured the rest
   over his head. He shook himself off a bit,
   then stood back up, his dark hair curling
   and clinging to his face. “Are you sure
   there’s nothing else you could use a hand
   with?” he asked, giving her an easy grin.
   His eyes were dark and smiling and
   bluer than the sky.
   Nettie shook her head. Her hair was out
   of her braid now, and when she looked
   down, the loose curls of it fell partly
   across her face. “I can’t think of
   anything,” she said.
   “I’m a dab hand with honey, too,” Bast
   said, hoisting the axe to rest against his
   naked shoulder.
   She looked a little puzzled at that until
   Bast nodded toward the wooden hives
   scattered through the overgrown field.
   “Oh,” she said, as if remembering a half-
   forgotten dream. “I used to do candles
   and honey. But we lost a few hives to
   that bad winter three years back. Then
   one to nits. Then there was that wet
   spring and three more went down with
   the chalk before we even knew.” She
   shrugged. “Early this summer we sold
   one to the Hestles so we’d have money
   for the levy …”
   She shook her head again, as if she’d
   been daydreaming. She shrugged and
   turned back to look at Bast. “Do you
   know about bees?”
   “A fair bit,” Bast said softly. “They
   aren’t hard to handle. They just need
   patience and gentleness.” He casually
   swung the axe so it stuck in the nearby
   stump. “They’re the same as everything
   else, really. They just want to know
   they’re safe.”
   Nettie was looking out at the field,
   nodding along with Bast’s words
   unconsciously. “There’s only the two
   left,” she said. “Enough for a few
   candles. A little honey. Not much. Hardly
   worth the bother, really.”
   “Oh come now,” Bast said gently. “A
   little sweetness is all any of us have
   sometimes. It’s always worth it. Even if
   it takes some work.”
   Nettie turned to look at him. She met his
   eyes now. Not speaking, but not looking
   away either. Her eyes were like an open
   door.
   Bast smiled, gentle and patient, his
   voice was warm and sweet as honey. He
   held out his hand. “Come with me,” he
   said. “I have something to show you.”
   The sun was starting to sink toward the western trees by the time Bast returned to
   the lightning tree. He was limping
   slightly, and he had dirt in his hair, but he
   seemed to be in good spirits.
   There were two children at the bottom
   of the hill, sitting on the greystone and
   swinging their feet as if it were a huge
   stone bench. Bast didn’t even have time
   to sit down before they came up the hill
   together.
   It was Wilk, a serious boy of ten with
   shaggy blond hair. At his side was his
   little sister Pem, half his age with three
   times the mouth.
   The boy nodded at Bast as he came to
   the top of the hill, then he looked down.
   “You hurt your hand,” he said.
   Bast looked down at his hand and was
   surprised to see a few dark streaks of
   blood dripping down the side of it. He
   brought out his handkerchief and daubed
   at it.
   “What happened?” little Pem asked
   him.
   “I was attacked by a bear,” he lied
   nonchalantly.
   The boy nodded, giving no indication of
   whether or not he believed it was true. “I
   need a riddle that will stump Tessa,” the
   boy said. “A good one.”
   “You
   smell
   like
   granda,”
   Pem
   chirruped as she came up to stand beside
   her brother.
   Wilk ignored her. Bast did the same.
   “Okay,” said Bast. “I need a favor, I’ll
   trade you. A favor for a riddle.”
   “You smell like granda when he’s been
   at his medicine,” Pem clarified.
   “It has to be a good one though,” Wilk
   stressed. “A stumper.”
   “Show me something that’s never been
   seen before and will never be seen
   again,” Bast said.
   “Hmmm …” Wilk said, looking
   thoughtful.
   “Granda says he feels loads better with
   his medicine,” Pem said, louder, plainly
   irritated at being ignored. “But Mum says
   it’s not medicine. She says he’s on the
   bottle. And granda says he feels loads
   better so it’s medicine by dammit.” She
   looked back and forth between Bast and
   Wilk, as if daring them to scold her.
   Neither of them did. She looked a little
   crestfallen.
   “That is a good one,” Wilk admitted at
   last. “What’s the answer?”
   Bast gave a slow grin. “What will you
   trade me for it?”
   Wilk cocked his head on one side, “I
   already said. A favor.”
   “I traded you the riddle for a favor,”
   Bast said easily. “But now you’re asking
   for the answer …”
   Wilk looked confused for half a
   moment, then his face went red and
   angry. He drew a deep breath as if he
   were going to shout. Then seemed to
   think better of it and stormed down the
   hill, stomping his feet.
   His sister watched him go, then turned
   back to Bast. “Your shirt is ripped,” she
   said disapprovingly. “And you’ve got
   grass stains on your pants. Your mam is
   going to give you a hiding.”
   “No she won’t,” Bast said smugly.
   “Because I’m all grown, and I can do
   whatever I want with my pants. I could
   light them on fire and I wouldn’t get in
   any trouble at all.”
   The little girl stared at him with
   smoldering envy.
   Wilk stomped back up the hill. “Fine,”
   he said sullenly.
   “My favor first,” Bast said. He handed
   the boy a small bottle with a cork in the
   top. “I need you to fill this up with water
   that’s been caught midair.”
   “What?” Wilk said.
   “Naturally falling water,” Bast said.
   “You can’t dip it out of a barrel or a
   stream. You have to catch it while it’s
   still in the air.”
   “Water falls out of a pump when yo 
					     					 			u
   pump it …” Wilk said without any real
   hope in his voice.
   “Naturally falling water,” Bast said
   again, stressing the first word. “It’s no
   good if someone just stands on a chair
   and pours it out of a bucket.”
   “What do you need it for?” Pem asked
   in her little piping voice.
   “What will you trade me for the answer
   to that question?” Bast said.
   The little girl went pale and slapped
   one hand across her mouth.
   “It might not rain for days, ” Wilk said.
   Pem gave a gusty sigh. “It doesn’t have
   to be rain,” his sister said, her voice
   dripping with condescension. “You
   could just go to the waterfall by
   Littlecliff and fill the bottle there.”
   Wilk blinked.
   Bast grinned at her. “You’re a clever
   girl.”
   She rolled her eyes, “Everybody says
   that …”
   Bast brought out something from his
   pocket and held it. It was a green
   cornhusk wrapped around a daub of
   sticky honeycomb. The little girl’s eyes
   lit up when she saw it.
   “I also need twenty-one perfect
   acorns,” he said. “No holes, with all
   their little hats intact. If you gather them
   for me over by the waterfall, I’ll give
   you this.”
   She nodded eagerly. Then both she and
   her brother hurried down the hill.
   Bast went back down to the pool by the
   spreading willow and took another bath.
   It wasn’t his usual bathing time, so there
   were no birds waiting, and as a result the
   bath was much more matter-of-fact than
   before.
   He quickly rinsed himself clean of
   sweat and honey and he daubed a bit at
   his clothes too, scrubbing to get rid of the
   grass stains and the smell of whiskey.
   The cold water stung the cuts on his
   knuckles a bit, but they were nothing
   serious and would mend well enough on
   their own.
   Naked and dripping, he pulled himself
   from the pool and found a dark rock, hot
   from the long day of sun. He draped his
   clothes over it and let them bake dry
   while he shook his hair dry and stripped
   the water from his arms and chest with
   his hands.
   Then he made his way back to the
   lightning tree, picked a long piece of
   grass
   to
   chew
   on,
   and
   almost
   immediately fell asleep in the golden
   afternoon sunlight.
   Evening: Lessons
   Hours later, the evening shadows
   stretched to cover Bast, and he shivered
   himself awake.
   He sat up, rubbing his face and looking
   around blearily. The sun was just
   beginning to brush the tops of the western
   trees. Wilk and Pem hadn’t returned, but
   that was hardly a surprise. He ate the
   piece of honeycomb he’d promised Pem,
   licking his fingers slowly. Then he
   chewed the wax idly and watched a pair
   of hawks turn lazy circles in the sky.
   Eventually he heard a whistle from the
   trees. He got to his feet and stretched, his
   body bending like a bow. Then he
   sprinted down the hill … except, in the
   fading light it didn’t quite look like a
   sprint.
   If he were a boy of ten, it would have
   looked like skipping. But he was no boy.
   If he were a goat, it would have looked like he were prancing. But he was no
   goat. A man headed down the hill that
   quickly, it would have looked like he
   were running.
   But there was something odd about
   Bast’s motion in the fading light.
   Something hard to describe. He almost
   looked
   like
   he
   were
   …
   what?
   Frolicking? Dancing?
   Small matter. Suffice to say that he
   quickly made his way to the edge of the
   clearing where Rike stood in the growing
   dark beneath the trees.
   “I’ve got it,” the boy said triumphantly,
   he held up his hand, but the needle was
   invisible in the dark.
   “You borrowed it?” Bast asked. “Not
   traded or bargained for it?”
   Rike nodded.
   “Okay,” Bast said. “Follow me.”
   The two of them walked over to the
   greystone, Rike following wordlessly
   when Bast climbed up one side of the
   half-fallen stone. The sunlight was still
   strong there, and both of them had plenty
   of space to stand on the broad back of the
   tilted greystone. Rike looked around
   anxiously, as if worried someone might
   see him.
   “Let’s see the stone,” Bast said.
   Rike dug into his pocket and held it out
   to Bast.
   Bast pulled his hand back suddenly, as
   if the boy had tried to hand him a
   glowing coal. “Don’t be stupid,” he
   snapped. “It’s not for me. The charm is
   only going to work for one person. Do
   you want that to be me?”
   The boy brought his hand back and eyed
   the stone. “What do you mean one
   person?”
   “It’s the way of charms,” Bast said.
   “They only work for one person at a
   time.” Seeing the boy’s confusion written
   plainly on his face, Bast sighed. “You
   know how some girls make come-hither
   charms, hoping to catch a boy’s eye?”
   Rike nodded, blushing a little.
   “This is the opposite,” Bast said. “It’s a
   go-thither charm. You’re going to prick
   your finger, get a drop of your blood on
   it, and that will seal it. It will make
   things go away.”
   Rike looked down at the stone. “What
   sort of things?” he said.
   “Anything that wants to hurt you,” Bast
   said easily. “You can just keep it in your
   pocket, or you can get a piece of cord—”
   “It will make my da leave?” Rike
   interrupted.
   Bast frowned. “That’s what I said.
   You’re his blood. So it will push him
   away more strongly than anything else.
   You’ll probably want to hang it around
   your neck so—”
   “What about a bear?” Rike asked,
   looking at the stone thoughtfully. “Would
   it make a bear leave me alone?”
   Bast made a back-and-forth motion
   with his hand. “Wild things are
   different,” he said. “They’re possessed
   of pure desire. They don’t want to hurt
   you. They usually want food, or safety. A
   bear would—”
   “Can I give it to my mum?” Rike
   interrupted again, looking up at Bast. His
   dark eyes serious.
   “… want to protect its terr … What?”
   Bast stumbled to a halt.
   “My mum should have it,” Rike said.
					     					 			>
   “What if I was off away with the charm
   and my da came back?”
   “He’s going farther away than that,”
   Bast said, his voice thick with certainty.
   “It’s not like he’ll be hiding around the
   corner at the smithy …”
   Rike’s face was set now, his pug nose
   making him seem all the more stubborn.
   He shook his head. “She should have it.
   She’s important. She has to take care of
   Tess and little Bip.”
   “It will work just fine—”
   “It’s got to be for HER!” Rike shouted,
   his hand making a fist around the stone.
   “You said it could be for one person, so
   you make it be for her!”
   Bast scowled at the boy darkly. “I don’t
   like your tone,” he said grimly. “You
   asked me to make your da go away. And
   that’s what I’m doing …”
   “But what if it’s not enough?” Rike’s
   face was red.
   “It will be,” Bast said, absentmindedly
   rubbing his thumb across the knuckles of
   his hand. “He’ll go far away. You have
   my word—”
   “NO!” Rike said, his face going red and
   angry. “What if sending him isn’t
   enough? What if I grow up like my da? I
   get so …” His voice choked off, and his
   eyes started to leak tears. “I’m not good.
   I know it. I know better than anyone. Like
   you said. I got his blood in me. She needs
   to be safe from me. If I grow up twisted
   up and bad, she needs the charm to …
   she needs something to make me go a—”
   Rike clenched his teeth, unable to
   continue.
   Bast reached out and took hold of the
   boy’s shoulder. He was stiff and rigid as
   a plank of wood, but Bast gathered him
   in and put his arms around his shoulders.
   Gently, because he had seen the boy’s
   back. They stood there for a long
   moment, Rike stiff and tight as a
   bowstring, trembling like a sail tight
   against the wind.
   “Rike,” Bast said softly. “You’re a
   good boy. Do you know that?”
   The boy bent then, sagged against Bast
   and seemed like he would break himself
   apart with sobbing. His face was pressed
   into Bast’s stomach and he said
   something, but it was muffled and
   disjointed. Bast made a soft crooning
   sound of the sort you’d use to calm a
   horse or soothe a hive of restless bees.
   The storm passed, and Rike stepped
   quickly away and scrubbed at his face
   roughly with his sleeve. The sky was just
   starting to tinge red with sunset.
   “Right,” Bast said. “It’s time. We’ll
   make it for your mother. You’ll have to