Authors: Nancy Springer
Then, turning away, he descended the stairs, crossed the courtyard and walked out the gate, leaving his dead and his fortress behind him.
Xanthea's lover came back to her canopied bed under the light of a waxing moon, and she embraced him gladly, even more so than ever, for he had been gone from her a night and a day and half a night.
“Come with me,” he told her when their more urgent needs were satisfied, “and I will show you what I have brought back with me.”
So Xanthea put on her silk robe with the collar furred in miniver, and in bare feet she padded the palace ways to the room where Wirral led her. And there, under the soft glow of moonlight and fine wax candles, on a couch of green velvet, she saw her mother lying, so thin and pale that at first she thought Halimeda was dead, until she saw the rise and fall of her steady breathing.
Xanthea gasped and reached toward her mother as if to touch or wake her, but Wirral stopped her with a gentle hand.
“Let her sleep until something wakens her,” he said. “She is much in need of slumber.”
“Why have you brought her here?” Xanthea whispered, glad enough to let Halimeda lie, for in truth there was not much of which she wished to speak with her mother.
“Because of the one who will follow her.” Wirral took Xanthea's hand. “Come, you are restless? Let us go out. The forest is beautiful at night.”
They went out, and walked hand in hand under the huge butts of trees older than the fortress of Wirralmark, beneath the waxing moon, until they saw before them the stirring of small folk on the ground. Then they stopped, and Xanthea's lips parted in astonishment. For seldom were Denizens to be seen so openly except at their revels, and never had she seen any stand as grave as did these. Among all of them she saw not a smile or a sparkling eye.
They were the young prince and his mate, the fair-skinned beauty Xanthea had noticed at the revels. And a few others, and in their midst the elder who led them all, his skin like the gray bark of a beech, his beard like moss. He stood very straight, very still, on the loamy earth between fern frond and the heart-shaped leaves of celandine, and when he saw Xanthea he bespoke her, but his voice came out of him low and halting, as if with effort.
“The moon waxes,” he said. “The violets bloom, and I have grown old and slow. It is the time for planting.”
Then the young prince embraced him, though the elder Denizen did not move to return the embrace. He closed his eyes. And in a moment Xanthea exclaimed aloud, utterly startled, and felt Wirral's hand tighten on hers to support or silence her, for she saw the graybarkâtaking root. His limbs cleaved together and became part of his trunk. His face smoothed into gnarls, and branches sprang from his head, and he was growing, growing, and she stepped back, for already he loomed over her headâand within a few more heartbeats there stood a mighty beech where none had been moments before, its smooth bark silver-gray in the moonlight, and the Denizens stood small and grave at its base.
“You are now our king and leader,” said one of them at last to the young prince who stood with his lifelove by his side.
He did not answer, but stood looking at pearl-gray bark, and in a moment he whirled and cried at Xanthea, passionately, as if it were somehow her fault, “Every year, less of us! Less of us to dance at the revels, less to make merry, less to make love for the forest's sake. Yet, though we take root like trees we need not die and rotâbut that your father sends men to hew at us! Our curse on Chance. Our curse on him and all his kindred!”
Xanthea's mouth had gone dry. When she spoke, her voice came out as a harsh whisper. “Yet me-seems I am blessed among my kindred, not accursed.”
Her hand held tightly in Wirral's hand, she said that. But the Denizen smiled darkly and quipped, “Herseems, she deems! The lady sleeps and quaintly dreams.” Like a squirrel he whisked away up the tree that stood where no tree had been before; his companions did likewise, and within the moment all had disappeared into the branches that spread above Xanthea like mighty, thick-muscled arms. The sound of trilling laughter floated down to her. “Farewell, Lady Fate!” a voice sang, and then the night stood silent.
Halimeda and her escort had left a plain trail, and Chance followed it, afoot, to Wirral. On the way he stopped at the lodge and took from the Wirral warden food for a few days, cheese and cold meat and rounds of hard bread, and a leather pouch to carry it in. For Chance had been warden himself, and survived Wirral for many years, and though Lord Chauncey had been half mad, as befits a lord of Wirralmark, Chance was canny.
He followed the moon-shaped marks of Halimeda's horse into Wirral, and all his fear and hatred of the place seemed laid aside with his finery. He felt, instead, only the thoughtful wariness of one who knows well the dangers he faces. Darkness came while he had not yet ventured far into Wirral, and he lay down where he was and slept.
The next day, and the next, he followed the trail into the penetralia of Wirral, places where even in his time as warden he had never ventured. Past the dense copse where outlaws denned in their caves. Past the fen where the corpse-white, single-eyed monster nodded. Past the deep, snake-infested dingle that might have been the navel of the forest. Past the chasms that steamed. The trail grew old, but horses' hooves make a plain mark; he followed. Then within a stride the trail disappeared, as if the horses had turned to air.
Chance looked around him. Many trees stood nearby, but among them he singled out a huge old oak, full of holes and hollows, the very likely abode of Denizens. He had seen none of the small folk on his way there, and only occasionally heard them snickering, a sound like that of nesting birds. But when he saw the oak he sat down facing it, laid his cudgel across his knees and watched.
He sat thus all night and into the next day. At dawn of that day he heard the stirrings of the Denizens in the branches of the oak.
Squirrels, he would once have told himself. Squirrels scampering. And perhaps indeed there were squirrels. But he heard a birdlike warble of laughter, and watched and listened more intently, though he did not move, and in a moment he saw the small face peeping at him.
It was the face of his son.
Chance shot to his feet, though he did not cry out, and the Denizens shook the small twigs of the oak with the force of their laughter. Justin laughed as well, and vanished.
“It's Chance again!” a piping voice sang out.
“Once more a man!” cried another.
“Back again where he began!”
Chance paid no attention to the mockery. He scarcely heard it. “My son,” he breathed.
Justin did not know him, he could tell. If the lad had recognized him, the look in those merry eyes would have been one of fear. The thought wrenched at Chance's heart.
“What savage fate have you doomed on me?” he demanded of the Denizens.
They laughed, and as was their wont they did not answer directly. Instead, they sang,
“Gift of manhead, gift of Xanthea,
Gift of Wirral, gift of doom.
Wirral lay with Xanthea
In her mother's womb.”
Chance scarcely heard what they were chanting, for he saw a movement in the black shadow of the largest fissure of the oak, the movement of something more than a Denizen. And in a moment he could discern the figure of a man. And in a moment more the stranger who had carried off his daughter from the Masque of Misrule stepped forth.
He knew it was the same one, for no two men could have bodies so beautiful. And the face, as beautiful as the body, so comely that for a moment it stopped the shout surging to Chance's mouth. Skin fair and fresh as the new leaves of spring, eyes feral as a wolf's farseeking eyes, yet soft as dew on wildflowers. Browed like a hawk, yet with a mouth fit to make a maiden weep with desire. No maiden had ever wept thus for Chance. The shout hardened in him again, but he knew not what name to call the stranger.
“You!” he roared.
It was not necessary. Wirral had seen him and faced him from the moment of coming forth. He had come forth solely for this, to front Chance.
“You have stolen my daughter!” Chance thundered at him. “Where is your weapon?”
But before the other could reply, Chance turned startled eyes. Halimeda stepped forth from the oak.
When had her long, dark hair started to silver? He had not noted it before, but now he saw the bright hairs lying among the others like threads of moonlight. Her face, nearly as pale as moonlight, but placid, smooth, every jot as beautiful as the face of the girl he had once so hopelessly loved. And the look in her eyes when she saw him, that sunrise shine, warmed his heart.
“Chance!” she cried, and she hurried toward him, hands outstretched. He laid down his cudgel, scorning the enemy before him, took her hands in both his own and kissed them.
“Hali,” he greeted her, “well met.”
He tried to say a thousand things in those simple words. He tried to say them, also, with his brown eyes that met hers of dreaming sea-green. Perhaps she saw. Perhaps there was no need, already she knew, for she let the moment last only a heartbeat. Hastily, earnestly she spoke on.
“Chance, our daughter is within, well and whole and happy.”
Wirral spoke for the first time. “The challenge is given,” he averred. The low burr deep in his voice growled darkly, like a wolf hunting, hungry, in the night.
Chance straightened where he stood, his eyes keen. Halimeda saw, and clutched at his withdrawing hands with her own.
“What need is there to fight him?” she protested. “You are no longer a lord, with a lord's overweening honor.”
“I am yet a man,” said Chance.
“I need no weapon, commoner,” declared Wirral.
Chance stepped away from Halimeda, caught up his cudgel and leveled a blow at the insolent fellow's head. Wirral eluded it easily. Combat was joined.
Halimeda retreated to the oak and stood by it, watching, her clenched hands held to her mouth. She had not said to Chance, though she had seen it to be true, that Wirral was Xanthea's lover. It had not occurred to her to do so, or to say that Xanthea's heart would be broken if Wirral were harmed, for all her fear was for Chance. Wirral looked far younger, stronger, more lithe, more fearsome in every way; how could he fail to defeat the older man? And the one who came out of the oak and stood by Halimeda's side, serenely watching, seemed to deem likewise.
And after only a few moments, Chance began to think the same.
The uncanny stranger came at Chance with his bare hands, and they were as hard as oak, his grip strong as a hawk's. After tearing loose from the first grasp of those handsâthe fingers left deep, bloody gouges on his shouldersâChance knew that his only hope was to evade that deadly touch. But blows of the cudgel seemed to stagger the other only for a moment, not to stop him. Many heavy blows Chance landed on him, to no effect.
Truly, no effect. Chance saw with a shock and a sickness of dread that he had not raised a bruise on that fair face, or drawn so much as a single drop of blood. Sweating, he found himself scrambling backwards, floundering against trees and around them, striking outâbut no blows could hold off those terrible strong hands for long. Running backward, Chance knew that if he stumbled over a root and fell, he would be finished.
“Who are you,” he yelled out in a sort of furious despair, “that you do not bleed?”
Without missing stride or breath the other said, “I am Wirral.”
Then Chance felt the chill of foreboding, but also a hot, unreasoning rage. It was his old enemy. “By God, we hew at you!” he shouted, and he stood his ground beneath the oak, dropped his cudgel and snatched out his knife, slashing. The blade gashed Wirral's forearm and bounded off it like an axe striking strong, green wood. The wound did not bleed. Before Chance could strike again, the feral-eyed man caught his wrist with a grip fit to break bone, but Chance would not drop the knife.
“You killed my daughters!” Chance screamed, laying Chloe and Anastasia to Wirral's account, which might not have been untrue. “You took my son!”
“Blame yourself for Justin,” Wirral said. “You sent him hither.”
One of his powerful hands held off Chance's hand that wielded the knife. The other sought Chance's throat, and with all the force of his arm Chance could not prevent it. Nor would he writhe away; he had done with running. In a moment he would be finishedâ
A heavy, dead bough fell from the oak directly onto Wirral's head.
It jarred the strong youth only for an eyeblink. But that moment was all Chance needed. The hawklike grip on his wrist faltered; he tore loose, leaving shreds of his skin behind; and his knife hand shot with redoubled force toward his enemy's chest. Before the oak bough had glanced off Wirral's shoulders and fallen to the ground, Chance's blade had sheathed itself in his heart.
Though, seeing what he had seen, Chance felt no certainty that it would kill him.
Wirral fell to the forest floor along with the bough that had been his undoing. Blood, bright red blood, spurted from his mortal wound. Somewhere close at hand a woman screamed; the soft, fierce eyes sought hers. But the beautiful face showed no pain. Nor did it speak. Instead, it simply disappeared.
There, on the loamy ground, lay a scrap of fox pelt, an outlaw's skull, and the bones of a deer, long since weathered white. And strong boughs of green oak, and leaves, and blue windflowers, strewn and wilted and bright with blood. And a few gray hairs from a wolf. Nothing more.
From overhead, from the place whence the oak bough had fallen, came the shrill sound of Denizen laughter.
“We made him, Xanthea!” a birdlike voice cried. Chance looked up and saw the young prince he well remembered. The fellow seemed scarcely to have changed at all. Chance stood panting with his knife in his hand, its point sending slow red drops onto the Wirral loam.
“We made him just for you, Xanthea!” the Denizen cried. “For you, golden lady, we made him fair!”