Darkhenge
The woman who looked like Clare sat with her knees drawn up. She had cleaned her face with her sleeve; now she tied up her hair. But how could it even be her? Because she was wearing a green dress that looked like velvet, and a necklace of berries and seeds.
He said, “How did you get here? Did you follow us down?”
She laughed shortly. “I told you I’d wait at the foot of the tree.”
Rob looked at Vetch. The poet was watching the woman warily; his face side-lit with flames and shadows. Now he said, “She is and is not Clare. Here her name is Ceridwen. The vengeful muse, the queen who haunts me. Centuries ago, when I was barely more than a boy, I stole wisdom from her, and inspiration. A crime that made me a poet. A crime all poets commit.”
“You stole more than that!” Her voice was fierce. “You stole belief. You stole trust.”
He nodded, looking down. “And you won’t forgive me. But that’s no reason to hurt the boy. The boy is looking for his sister.” Sadly, he held a long hand out over the flames. “Can’t we forget the past, Goddess? Here, where there is no time? You could help us. With us, you needn’t be alone.”
She gave him a bold blue glare. “Poets think they know how to persuade. But here, as you say, I have power too. ‘I have fled in the shape of a raven,’ you boast in your poems, ‘a roebuck, a bristling boar, a grain of wheat. I have been in the dark bag for nine months, rocking on the waters.’ All these abilities you have, Vetch, because you drank them from my Cauldron.”
The owl above them flew away, almost silent.
She turned to Rob quickly. “But he’s right, none of this is your fault, so I’ll tell you what I know. Your sister is in the forest. They passed this way hours ago; by now they will have reached Caer Pedryfan, the Turning Castle.”
“They?” he said, his chest tight.
“The King of Annwn has her prisoner. He’s always masked; no one sees his face, but he’s young and strong.”
Rob looked at her through the flames. “Who is he?”
She shrugged. “Only Chloe could tell you.”
“Can you take us to this castle?”
“Yes.” She spat on her fingers, wiped green lichen from a tree trunk and rubbed it in coils and circles down her face. “I can. I will. But things aren’t that simple. You’ll need more than me. The trees are involved.”
Vetch looked up sharply. “Already?”
“Oak and hazel, birch and thorn. The forest is Annwn, and in it lies death, and hidden meaning. It doesn’t stir easily, but it’s stirring now, and that must be because of Chloe.” She stood lightly. “If you want to find the third caer we should hurry.”
Vetch looked at Rob. “Are you tired?”
He shook his head. He felt he should be, because it was twilight, and it felt like years since he had climbed down the endless tree, but though he yawned as he stood, that was just a reaction. He had no feeling of wanting to sleep. Or eat.
Vetch stamped the fire out, scuffing the ashes; the red glow died on the tree trunks around him. Even in the short time of warmth they seemed to have moved closer, Rob thought. “If you don’t mind going first,” Vetch said mildly. “I’d feel safer.”
Clare looked at him with scorn. “We get the boy to the caer,” she said. “Then, believe me, Vetch, my time will come. Here I don’t need a chain saw to hurt you. Here I am more than Clare, more than a woman you can beguile and desert. Here you fear me. Here I can destroy you, Poet.”
She turned and strode away.
Rob glanced at Vetch. His face was white.
The room was a small one but it would do. There was nothing to stop him climbing out the window, but it was very high up; propping herself on the sill with her hands, Chloe looked down at the crowding branches outside. He wouldn’t risk it out there. The trees terrified him.
Dusting her palms together, she turned back and went into the corridor. She had taken a long time choosing the mirror; there were several in the Turning Castle, but this was full length, and she had prized it out of its ornate frame using a knife he’d left by the fruit.
She picked it up and, struggling with the weight, carried it into the room. Opposite the door was the obvious place, at an angle.
She stood back, looking at her reflection, the doorway, then moved it again, slightly sideways. Perfect.
Now to find out where he was.
She walked silently along the corridor, the long shawl dragging in the dust. There were clothes in all the castles, food, chess games that played themselves, everything she wanted, though it all had a musty, unused feel. Here the dust was thick; she could see his footprints in it, striding toward the stair to the battlements. That’s where he would be, up there watching the trees’ unstoppable growth. She allowed herself a tight smile.
The plan was a good one and Mac would have liked it. It was always Mac who had read her the stories when he’d come over to babysit. Even now the smell of his cigarettes brought back the picture of the girl lying asleep in the brambled castle. “For God’s sake, Mac, you’ll suffocate the child,” her father used to say, opening the door on the fug.
Of course, Mac was really Rob’s godfather, not hers. Hers was her mother’s cousin, far off in Ireland, who seemed to have forgotten she even existed. He never sent presents, or rang up to check why she’d missed mass. Mac did. But mostly the presents were for Rob.
She frowned, her hands on the stone wall.
Rob.
She had been trying not to think of him. Now he came surging into her mind, his face, his tallness, the way the girls at school looked at him and giggled if he spoke to them, the way the teachers said Rob’s sister. Rob’s little sister.
Rob the golden boy. Rob, who never got the blame for anything, whom they treated like an adult, whose talent always had to come first.
Above all, his wretched paintings.
They were all around the house, seascapes from holidays, the one of Callie looking over the horsebox, one of the stones at Avebury that had won that stupid competition. She hated them all. He’d never done one of her. But then, to be fair, she wouldn’t sit still for him.
Resentment made her breathless. No good getting herself worked up.
Get out of here, and then find her way back.
That was the plan.
At the top of the stairs she creaked the small outer door open and put her eye to the crack. The King had his back to her, standing with his hands spread flat on the battlements, looking out. There was a breeze, very slight. It moved his hair. Above him the stars turned jerkily.
He wore the dark clothes he always wore, a green so dark it was almost black. Rob would know the name for it.
She shivered, almost scared. This had to work. And yet he would be furious. He’d bang and slam against the door, screaming at her, anguished, as he had when she’d pulled the first mask off.
She stepped back, her lips in a tight line. So what? Was she starting to feel sorry for him? That was stupid. Turning, not letting herself think anymore, she ran lightly down to the dark corridor and into the room, lighting the candle she’d left next to the mirror. Leaf shadows moved in dim corners.
She slid the key in the outside of the lock, opening the door wide. Then she squeezed into the dusty niche in the corridor. She took a deep breath. Opened her mouth. And screamed.
Carefully, Clare pushed the branches aside. “There,” she breathed.
Rob felt Vetch move up beside him.
The castle was four cornered, built of timber inside two circular ramparts of timber. It was oddly difficult to focus on; it blurred, as if someone had painted it with a wobbly brush full of watercolor, someone not skilled at painting.
“It’s moving,” he whispered.
Vetch said, “The third caer.” He glanced at Clare. “Unbroken.”
“You mean the trees haven’t broken in?” Rob said quickly. “Chloe’s in there?”
“Yes.” She nodded, her lips tight. “But look.”
Halfway up the palisades, u
ndergrowth was climbing. Ivy and elder, and bushes of gorse and broom. Their spiny yellow branches showed black against the ancient wood; if he watched carefully Rob could almost see them growing.
“Right,” Vetch said, “I’ll—”
“No.” Rob turned. “I’m going in to get her. Not you.”
Clare smiled, cool. “That’s the way, Rob.”
Vetch glared at her. “Rob, this is a dangerous place. You have no idea—”
Before he could finish, a scream rang out from the castle, a high, agonizing scream of terror.
“God!” Rob leaped up. “That’s Chloe! What’s he doing to her?” Before they could grab him he was running, crashing and ducking through the forest, racing for the gate, slamming up against the roughly shaven palisades, racing around the perimeter furiously. Where was the door? There had to be a door! There had to be a door.
The King had his back to her. Breathless, he hurtled into the dim room, stared at her wide-eyed dark reflection. “Chloe! What is it! What—”
Her face moved, vanished. With a gasp he turned, but already she had shoved him back with all her strength, and he stumbled against the mirror and it gave, and as she slammed the door she heard the crash and tumble of furniture.
The little key turned with a snick, just before the whole door shuddered. She leaped back. Her throat felt tight and dry; her heart raced.
“Chloe! Let me out!”
“No!” she screamed.
“You can’t do this!” He kicked the door, banged at it, threw himself against it. Fascinated, she watched, seeing the ancient wood hold fast, its blackened, warped seams still strong.
Suddenly, he went quiet. His voice, when he spoke again, was tight. “Are you still there?”
To tease him she stayed silent.
“I know you’re still there.” The whisper was close, as if his lips were against a crack. “Don’t go, Chloe. Don’t leave the caer. Please. It’s not safe out there.”
“You would say that.”
She almost felt his relief. “I knew you wouldn’t leave me.”
“I’m going. I’m going right now.”
“Wait! They’re outside. All around. The trees are dangerous, Chloe. They want to drag me back to their terrible darkness, dissolve me back to the leaves and branches I was made from.”
“You, maybe. Not me.”
“Are you sure?” His whisper came from the keyhole now. “Why do you think you’re here, Chloe? Do you think I abducted you, that I snatched you from the world? They always think that, but you don’t know what it’s like, to be so alone. I wait and listen, for someone’s voice, someone to call me. It was you who did, on that day when you were riding your horse. You wanted me to come and I did, and now I’m protecting you, Chloe. Without me you’re alone in the forest, not knowing which way to go, small and frightened. Trust me, Chloe. Please. Open the door.”
She was cold. Clutching the shawl tight, she took one step away. His words confused and terrified her. A floorboard creaked; he must have heard it.
“Don’t leave me alone again, Chloe!”
She turned her back and ran, racing down the dusty stairs into the hall, grabbing the bag she’d left ready, wrenching the door open to the room where the winch was, to lower the drawbridge. It was huge and ancient, but he’d cleaned it and it worked easily, the chain rattling through by its own weight with a terrible roar that made her jump around in terror. She spun the wooden handle rapidly.
The bridge thudded down. Climbing up into the arrow slit, she looked down.
Then she froze.
Someone was moving out there.
Too vague to see, he flickered out of the wood, a man maybe, in a dark coat.
She leaped back instantly. Were these the enemies he was so terrified of? Was it men he hid from after all, not trees?
She fought for calm. This was the only way out; that was certain, because she’d explored every room of the small caer. The best thing would be to hide. And after they’d searched this room, try to slip out.
The fireplace was immense; they’d certainly look up inside it. There was a brass chest under the window; she ran to it and tugged the lid open and found it was empty.
There was nowhere else. She climbed in, tipped the bag of clothes over her head and lay still, breathless, curled in an agony of fear.
Then she heard footsteps.
Someone was crossing the drawbridge.
R. RUIS: ELDER
They’ve shunted me out into the corridor while the specialist is with her. “Come on now, Father. Get yourself a cup of coffee.”
The sister’s a good woman. She keeps looking at the cigarettes, but she says nothing.
I should have been here more often.
That night last month, when I came late and read Chloe one of those old fairy-tale stories. It was so quiet, with just the monitors humming, the words all around her, the branches tapping on the window. An old book I gave her when she was five. She probably hasn’t looked at it for years. The briared castle, the sleeping beauty, the beast. Are those stories where she is? Vetch would no doubt say so.
I’m beginning to think our dark druid has gone home.
And taken Rob with him.
Dry your eyes, Prince Elphin.
Too much sorrow will not help you.
THE BOOK OF TALIESIN
When the drawbridge slammed down, Rob had barely leaped out of its way in time; he fell into the overgrown moat in astonishment. Then Clare grabbed his arm and hauled him into the gorse. “Fool! Keep down. Someone might be coming out!”
Cold with sweat, they stared.
The dark gateway remained empty.
Finally, Vetch’s whisper came from nearby. “I’m going across.”
The poet rustled his way through the undergrowth to the end of the drawbridge and stepped out. In the twilight he was a shadow, tall and dark. He paused, listening, then walked softly across the bridge, his footsteps echoing on the hollow boards.
He ducked under the gateway and vanished.
There was a long silence.
Rob fidgeted. “It may be a trap.”
Clare sounded coolly amused. “If it is, it saves me work. But I’m afraid Vetch is only too experienced in surviving.”
Rob looked at her sidelong. “You really hate him that much? I think he likes you.”
Her blue eyes met his. “Both can happen at once. You love your sister?”
“Of course I do....”
“Just as she loves you.”
He was silent. When he answered, his voice was a whisper. “She will when I rescue her. I thought…”
Clare smiled sadly. “No, you never thought, Rob. You never noticed. Why should you? She was just little Chloe, doing what she should do. Looking up to you. In awe of you.” She moved, rustling the elder flowers. “Until one day something changed.”
A whistle.
Vetch had come back out, and was beckoning. Silent, Rob followed Clare across.
“No one in the hall,” the poet whispered. “I think they may be up in the west tower. I heard some sort of thud from up there.”
Clare nodded. “We need light.”
There was a candlestick on the table with seven candles in it. With Vetch’s tinderbox they managed to light it; then he took it in his hand and walked quickly up the stairs, throwing long mingled shadows behind him. Clare followed. Rob came last.
Halfway up he heard a sliver of sound behind him; a draft gusted the flames. He stopped and looked back.
The room beside the gate had its door ajar.
Clare had heard it too. “Go on,” she said. “I’ll check it.”
Vetch’s voice was low. “I looked in there. It’s empty.”
Then Rob heard it, a muffled shout and thump, as if someone was banging on a door above.
“It’s her! He’s got her locked up.”
“Stay here.” Vetch turned to Clare. “Go halfway down and watch the stairs. The King may come up behind us.”
“And what do you expect me to do if he does?” she said acidly.
“I’m sure you’ll deal with him.”
“What makes you think I won’t join him? Draw him into my revenge?”
Vetch looked at her ruefully. “Goddess, I never know what you might do.” He nudged Rob; quietly, they went forward.
The corridor swirled with dust; a dark niche opened opposite a nail-studded door, and a window looked out onto the forest’s dark branches, pressed tight against the glass.
Under Rob’s feet drips of candle wax had lumped greasily on the floor. “Someone’s been standing here.” Leaning his head to the wooden planks, he said softly, “Chloe! It’s okay. It’s me, Rob!”
Silence.
“Can you hear? It’s really me.”
After a second he looked at Vetch. “She may be gagged,” the poet said. Then his face changed, a glimmer of surprise turning into wariness. “Well, well. Look at this.”
The key was in the lock, tiny and silver. Vetch glanced back; at the stairs Clare was watching them, her face pale in the candle blaze. He reached out and turned the key.
The lock snicked.
Carefully, holding Rob back, he let the door swing wide.
Chloe raised the lid of the chest an inch and peered through the slit. Whoever had looked into the room had gone; in the hall echoes of voices whispered in the dusty shadows. It sounded as if they were going up the stairs of the west tower. Where he was.
She slid out, bundled the clothes back in the bag and slung it over her shoulder. At the door she peered around carefully.
The hall was empty. Quietly, she pattered over the black and white tiles to the shadows of the open gateway.
The drawbridge was smooth and wide; beyond it the forest rustled, the rich smell of its loam and leaves pungent after the mustiness of the empty rooms.
She slid around onto the drawbridge.
It was colder out here. A wind whipped at her long skirt and the shawl, so she tied it tight around her chest and glanced up at the stars. A shiver of sound behind made her turn, alarmed.