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Authors: Clifford D. Simak

BOOK: Enchanted Pilgrimage
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“I suppose you're right. I had thought of leaving in any case.”

“I hope the information in the manuscript is worth all the trouble it will cause you. But even if it isn't …”

“I think perhaps it is,” said Cornwall.

The goblin slid off the bench and headed for the door.

“Wait a second,” said Cornwall. “You've not told me your name. Will I be seeing you again?”

“My name is Oliver—or at least in the world of men that's what I call myself. And it is unlikely we will ever meet again. Although, wait—how long will it take you to make the forgery?”

“Not too long,” said Cornwall.

“Then I'll wait. My powers are not extensive, but I can be of certain aid. I have a small enchantment that can fade the ink and give the parchment, once it is correctly folded, a deceptive look of age.”

“I'll get at it right away,” said Cornwall. “You have not asked me what this is all about. I owe you that much.”

“You can tell me,” said the goblin, “as you work.”

3

Lawrence Beckett and his men sat late at drink. They had eaten earlier, and still remaining on the great scarred tavern table were a platter with a ham bone, toward the end of which some meat remained, and half a loaf of bread. The townspeople who had been there earlier were gone, and mine host, having sent the servants off to bed, still kept his post behind the bar. He was sleepy, yawning occasionally, but well content to stay, for it was not often that the Boar's Head had guests so free with their money. The students, who came seldom, were more troublesome than profitable, and the townspeople who dropped in of an evening had long since become extremely expert in the coddling of their drinks. The Boar's Head was not on the direct road into town, but off on one of the many side streets, and it was not often that traders the like of Lawrence Beckett found their way there.

The door opened and a monk came in. He stood for a moment, staring about in the tavern's murky gloom. Behind the bar mine host stiffened to alertness. Some tingling sense in his brain told him that this visit boded little good. From one year's end to the next, men of the saintly persuasion never trod this common room.

After a moment's hesitation the monk pulled his robes about him, in a gesture that seemed to indicate a shrinking from contamination by the place, and made his way down the room to the corner where Lawrence Beckett and his men sat at their table. He stopped behind one of the chairs, facing Beckett.

Beckett looked at him with a question in his eyes. The monk did not respond.

“Albert,” said Beckett, “pour this night bird a drink of wine. It is seldom we can join in cups with a man who wears the cloth.”

Albert poured the drink, turning in his chair to hand it to the monk.

“Master Beckett,” said the monk, “I heard you were in town. I would have a word with you alone.”

“Certainly,” said Beckett, heartily. “A word by all means. But not with me alone. These men are one with me. Whatever I may hear is fit for their ears as well. Albert, get Sir Monk a chair, so he may be seated with us.”

“It must be alone,” said the monk.

“All right, then,” said Beckett. “Why don't the rest of you move down to another table. Take one of the candles, if you will.”

“You have the air,” said the monk, “of humoring me.”

“I am humoring you.” said Beckett. “I cannot imagine what you have to say is of any great importance.”

The monk took the chair next to Beckett, putting the mug of wine carefully on the table in front of him, and waiting until the others left.

“Now what,” asked Beckett, “is this so secret matter that you have to tell me?”

“First of all,” said the monk, “that I know who you really are. No mere trader, as you would have us think.”

Beckett said nothing, merely stared at him. But now some of the good humor had gone out of him.

“I know,” said the monk, “that you have access to the church. For the favor that I do you, I would expect advancement. No great matter for one such as you. Only a word or two.”

Beckett rumbled, “And this favor you are about to do me?”

“It has to do with a manuscript stolen from the university library just an hour or so ago.”

“That would seem a small thing.”

“Perhaps. But the manuscript was hidden in an ancient and almost unknown book.”

“You knew of this manuscript? You know what it is?”

“I did not know of it until the thief found it. I do not know what it is.”

“And this ancient book?”

“One written long ago by an adventurer named Taylor, who traveled in the Wastelands.”

Beckett frowned. “I know of Taylor. Rumors of what he found. I did not know he had written a book.”

“Almost no one knew of it. It was copied only once. The copy that we have.”

“Have you read it, Sir Monk?”

The monk shrugged. “Until now it had no interest for me. There are many books to read. And traveler's tales are not to be taken entirely at face value.”

“You think the manuscript might be?”

“To have been hidden so cleverly as it was, within the binding of the book, it would have to have some value. Why else bother to hide it?”

“Interesting,” said Beckett softly. “Very interesting. But no value proved.”

“If it has no value, then you owe me nothing. I am wagering that it does have.”

“A gentleman's agreement, then?”

“Yes,” said the monk, “a gentleman's agreement. The manuscript was found by a scholar, Mark Cornwall. He lodges in the topmost garret of the boardinghouse at the northwest corner of King and Broad.”

Beckett frowned. “This Cornwall?”

“An obnoxious man who comes from somewhere in the West. A good student, but a sullen one. He has no friends. He lives from hand to mouth. He stayed on after all his old classmates had left, satisfied with the education they had gotten. Principally he stays on, I think, because he is interested in the Old Ones.”

“How interested in the Old Ones?”

“He thinks they still exist. He has studied their language or what purports to be their language. There are some books on it. He has studied them.”

“Why has he an interest in the Old Ones?”

The monk shook his head. “I do not know. I do not know the man. I've talked to him only once or twice. Intellectual curiosity, perhaps. Perhaps something else.”

“Perhaps he thought Taylor might have written of the Old Ones.”

“He could have. Taylor could have. I have not read the book.”

“Cornwall has the manuscript. By now he would have hidden it.”

“I doubt it has been hidden. Not too securely, anyhow. He has no reason to believe that his theft of it is known. Watching him, I saw him do it. I let him leave. I did not try to stop him. He could not have known I was there.”

“Would it seem to you, Sir Monk, that this studious, light-fingered friend of ours may have placed himself in peril of heresy?”

“That, Master Beckett, is for you to judge. All about us are signs of heresy, but it takes a clever man to tread the intricacies of definition.”

“You are not saying, are you, that heresy is political?”

“It never crossed my mind.”

“That is good,” said Beckett, “for under certain, well-defined conditions, the university itself, or more particularly the library, might fall under suspicion because of the material that can be found on its shelves.”

“The books, I can assure you, are used with no evil intent. Only for instruction against the perils of heresy.”

“With your assurance,” said Beckett, “we can let it rest at that. As for this other matter, I would assume that you are not prepared to regain the manuscript and deliver it to us.”

The monk shuddered. “I have no stomach,” he said, “for such an operation. I have informed you; that should be enough.”

“You think that I am better equipped and would have a better stomach.”

“That had been my thought. That's why I came to you.”

“How come you knew us to be in town?”

“This town has ears. There is little happening that goes unknown.”

“And I take it you listen very carefully.”

Said the monk, “I've made it a habit.”

“Very well,” said Beckett. “So it is agreed. If the missing item can be found and proves to have some value, I'll speak a word for you. That was your proposal?”

The monk nodded, saying nothing.

“To speak for you, I must know your name.”

“I am Brother Oswald,” said the monk.

“I shall mark it well,” said Beckett. “Finish off your wine and we shall get to work. King and Broad, you said?”

The monk nodded and reached for the wine. Beckett rose and walked forward to his men, then came back again.

“You will not regret,” he said, “that you came to me.”

“I had that hope,” said Brother Oswald.

He finished off the wine and set the cup back on the table. “Shall I see you again?” he asked.

“Not unless you seek me out.”

The monk wrapped his habit close about himself and went out the door. Outside the moon had sunk beneath the roof trees of the buildings that hemmed in the narrow alley, and the place was dark. He went carefully, feeling his way along the rough, slick cobblestones.

A shadow stepped out of a doorway as he passed. A knife gleamed briefly in the dark. The monk dropped, gurgling, hands clawing at the stones, a sudden rush of blood bubbling in his throat. Then he grew quiet. His body was not found until morning light.

4

Gib of the Marshes was up before the sun. He was always up before the sun, but on this day there was much to do. This was the day the gnomes had named when the new ax would be ready. He needed the new ax, for the blade of the old one, worn down and blunted, would no longer take a proper edge, no matter how much whetstone might be used.

Ordinarily at this season of the year the marsh would have been wrapped in low-hanging fog early of a morning, but this morning it was clear. A few wisps of layered fog hung above the island where the wood was gotten, but otherwise there was no sign of it. To the east and south, the marsh lay flat and far, brown and silver, with its reeds and grasses. Ducks gabbled in nearby ponds and a muskrat swam through a channel, creating a neat V of an aftermath as he moved along. Somewhere far off a heron croaked. West and north, the forested hills rose against the sky—oaks, maples, hickories, some of them already touched with the first colors of the autumn.

Gib stood and looked toward the hills. Up there, somewhere in that tangled woodland, was the home of his good friend, Hal of the Hollow Tree. Almost every morning, when there was no fog and the hills stood in view, he stood and tried to pick out the home tree, but he never had been able to, for from this distance no one tree could be told from any of the others. He would not, he knew, have time to visit Hal today, for once he had picked up the ax, he must pay his respects to the lonely old hermit who lived in the cave of the limestone capping of one of the distant hills. It had been a month or more since he'd gone calling on the hermit.

He rolled up the goose-down pad and the woolen blanket he had used for sleeping and stored them away in the hut in the center of the raft. Except when the weather was cold or it happened to be raining, he always slept outdoors. On the iron plate on the forward part of the raft he kindled a fire, using dry grass and punk from a rotting log, which he kept in one corner of the woodbox, as kindling, and flint and steel to produce the spark.

When the fire was going, he reached a hand into the live-box sunk beside the raft and brought out a flapping fish. He killed it with a blow of his belt knife and quickly cleaned it, putting the fillets into a pan, which he set on the grill above the fire, squatting to superintend the cooking.

Except for the soft talking of the ducks and the occasional plop of a jumping fish, the marsh was quiet. But, then, he thought, at this time of day it was always quiet. Later in the day there would be blackbirds quarreling in the reeds, the whistling wings of water fowl passing overhead, the harsh cries of shore birds and of gulls.

The east brightened and the marsh, earlier an indistinctness of brown and silver, began to take on new definition. Far off stood the line of willows that edged the narrow height of ground that stood between the distant river and the marsh. The patch of cattails closer to the wooded hill shore could now be seen, waving their full brown clubs in the vagrant wind.

The craft bobbed gently as he ate from the pan, not bothering with a plate. He wondered what life might be like on solid ground, without the bobbing of the raft. He had lived all his years on a bobbing raft, which was only stilled when cold weather froze it in.

Thinking of cold weather, he ran through his mind all that remained to do to get ready for the winter. He would need to smoke more fish, must gather roots and seeds, try to pick up a few muskrats for a winter robe. And get in wood. But the wood gathering would go faster once he had the new ax from the gnomes.

He washed out the pan in which he'd fried the fish, then put into the boat, tied alongside the raft, the bundles that he had gotten together before he went to sleep. In them were dried fish and packets of wild rice, gifts for the gnomes and the hermit. At the last moment he put his old ax in the craft; the gnomes could make use of the metal to fashion something else.

He paddled quietly down the channel, unwilling to break the morning hush. The sun came up into the east and on the opposite hills, the first autumn colors flamed with brilliance.

He was nearing the shore when he rounded a bend and saw the raft, the forepart of it thrust into the grass, the rest of it projecting out into the channel. An old marshman was sitting at the stern of the raft, mending a net. As soon as Gib came into view, the old man looked up and raised a solemn hand in greeting. It was Old Drood and Gib wondered what he was doing here. The last time he had heard of Drood, he had his raft over near the willow bank close to the river.

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