“Remember all that I told you today. Do any of the things I said not to do and I will find out. Trust me, I will know.” He walked over and caught Sally as she was running to help her husband. She struggled against him till he turned her to face him.
“Splint the hand so that he cannot move it for three weeks. If he does that he may regain the use of it again. You know what to do if he ever mistreats anyone again.” He let her go and went inside to gather his pack. He came back out with his pack and Anouk's. He handed her pack to her and walked toward George. He stopped and looked down at the man writhing in pain. George looked up with pure hatred in his eyes.
“Thank your wife tonight. She saved my life and yours today. Always remember that.” As Duncan walked past him, Anouk watched as George reached for his belt with his left hand. He pulled out a long knife and stood up ready to rush Duncan from behind. Before she could shout a warning, Duncan struck out at a nearby tree. His arm was so fast it looked like a blur. Duncan took two steps and the tree began to crack where he had hit it. Cracks ran all the way up the trunk. George stopped and just stared. The tree quivered and as Duncan took his third step, it exploded outward from the direction he had hit it. It turned into nothing but splinters. The splinters shot through the trees behind, some of them sticking into the trunk four fingers deep. The knife fell to the ground from George's limp hand. He followed the knife and lay crying. Sally held and rocked him like a small child as she whispered in his ear. As Anouk went to follow Duncan, she saw George reach around and hold onto Sally in what she hoped was a loving embrace. She nodded. Maybe things would go back to the way he used to treat her before the Eremian soldiers had gotten to him. She trotted to catch up to Duncan. The sun was just setting and they had a long way to walk.
XXXI
Homecoming
They traveled throughout most of the night. When they came to the nearby village, they went wide around it. Anouk could see a few lights in windows but the village was silent with sleep. A few more hours of walking brought them to the outlying fields of wheat. The breeze that had grown through the night made the fields bend in waves the way she thought the ocean must look. Duncan had remained quiet through the whole trip and she had respected that by not trying to make conversation. She was quickly growing tired. It had been a long day and they had traveled a good distance. Soon they would be past the areas she had seen before. She grew a bit nervous about that. She didn't know how Duncan could see so well in the dark night. The moon was waxing but it wouldn't be full for a week yet. She stumbled many times but he was always sure footed. She was thinking of her small bed back in her home when her foot caught in a root. She couldn't catch herself in time and she crashed to the ground. Duncan turned and helped her stand. Her mouth had struck a rock in her fall and she knew from how it stung that it would begin bleeding soon.
“Are you alright?” His deep voice finally broke the silence.
“Yes I just need to rest a bit.” She found she was shaking from the fall.
“Here.” He picked her up before she could protest and started walking again. She fought him a bit at first but he hushed her. Slowly she relaxed in his arms. He carried her easily and she rested her head against his large shoulder. She opened her eyes after what had felt like a moment and noticed it was almost dawn. She sat up a bit and Duncan looked down as she moved. He smiled down at her.
“Could you walk for a while? My arms are starting to cramp up.” She blushed as he sat her back on her feet and she walked beside him.
“I didn't mean to fall asleep,” she apologized.
“You needed the rest,” he said in dismissal.
“You need rest too.” She gave him a stern look that he ignored.
“I rested too long at Sally's.” He smiled down at her. “We're almost there.” His smile grew bigger and he picked up his pace a bit. She had to double step to catch up to his long strides. She looked around but didn't recognize any of the woods around her. A short time later they broke out of the woods and all around her were fields of grass broken here and there by patches of wheat. A small log-house sat on top of a hill in the distance. He pointed to the house.
“That's it!” he said excitedly. She found that she was smiling too. They walked on till they were near the house. A small well stood halfway up the hill and Duncan stopped there. He pulled off his shirt and pulled up a full bucket of water. He used the water to wash the dust from his hair. He filled the bucket again and offered her a drink. The water was cold and refreshing and she found herself wake up fully. He pulled his shirt back on and started to walk on toward the house. He stopped suddenly and grabbed her arm. She turned to look at him and he frowned.
“When did you cut your lip?” he asked.
“Oh it's nothing. It must have happened when I fell earlier.” She could feel the blood start to run down from her lip. It must have split back open when she drank the well water.
“Come here.” He pulled her close and before she knew what was happening he leaned toward her and kissed her gently and quickly upon her lips. He pulled away before she could return the kiss and she saw that he blushed slightly. She started to ask him why he had done that when she felt that her lips were still warm where he had kissed them, just as her head had when he had kissed it before. She reached up and found that the wound was closed. She looked up at him to ask what he had done but he put a finger to her lips and winked. Then he held her hand and walked on toward the house.
Anouk heard a rooster crow from behind the house as they arrived at the door. Duncan reached out with a large fist and knocked lightly upon the door. They heard movement inside and the door opened to reveal an elderly man dressed in tattered wool pants. He still had muscles and Anouk thought he looked as though he had worked hard his whole life. The man had the confused look of one just woken up. He looked up and then up some more to look at Duncan's face. The farmer opened his mouth to speak but recognition suddenly lit his eyes and he ran out and threw his arms around Duncan. Duncan returned the hug and they stood for a time, tears running down both their cheeks. Duncan finally pulled away.
“Can we come inside? I'm a bit hungry.”
“Of course! Come in, come in!” The farmer rushed inside and Anouk could hear him saying something in the back room. She walked into a humble kitchen and noticed that Duncan had to bend his head down slightly so he didn't bump the ceiling. The door to the bedroom flew open and an elderly woman wearing a tan sleeping gown flew through it and into Duncan's arms.
“Mama!” Duncan said through fresh tears. Anouk saw that Duncan's father stood in the doorway with a proud look on his face. Duncan pulled his mother away and kissed her cheeks. Duncan turned to face Anouk.
“Mama, Papa, this is Anouk. Anouk, this is my Mama and Papa.” Duncan finished the introductions then turned and picked up two buckets that sat by the door. “I'll go fetch the water.” Before anyone could protest, he was out the door and away. Anouk stood awkwardly and didn't know what to say.
“Come have a seat. I'll start breakfast,” Duncan's mother said kindly.
Anouk took the seat nearest the door and looked around. The kitchen was smaller by far than hers had been when she had lived with her father. A wood-stove stood at the outside wall. The table was well built but she could tell from the many dents and scratches that it was old. Duncan's father took the seat opposite of her and smiled at her warmly. Duncan must have gotten his smile from him she thought. Duncan's mother put a few logs in the stove and soon the room heated up well. She was putting butter in a pan on the stove when the door opened again and Duncan brought in one of the buckets. He set it on a cabinet by his mother then sat beside Anouk at the table. The chair he sat in creaked alarmingly but didn't break. Anouk noticed that his chair was built twice as heavy as the rest of them. They must have gone through a few chairs before, she thought. Duncan's mother began cooking some eggs.
“It's good to see you again, Son,” his father said as he lit the lamp in the center of the table from a taper he had lit in the stove. As the light from the lamp spread through the room, Anouk heard the sound of an egg crashing to the floor.
“Oh my boy! What have you done to yourself?” Duncan's mother rushed over and looked down at her son. She reached out and touched one of the tattoos that covered his arms. Duncan blushed. He looked up to his mother.
“I don't pass out anymore, Mama.” He said with a childlike smile.
“Oh my baby!” She hugged him again and Anouk could see fresh tears run down her cheeks. Duncan's father stood and went to finish cooking the eggs. Duncan finally pulled her away and she sat where her husband had just been. “You were gone for so long. We had thought we had lost you forever.”
“I'm back now. I know it was a long time. I had to go far away to find help.” His eyes grew distant. “I wish you and Papa could have come with me. The beautiful things I've seen!” He smiled his warm smile and reached out to hold his mother's wrinkled hand in his own large one.
“Looks like we'll have to make you a new chair, M'boy.” Papa said with a chuckle. “I had thought that you were done growing! Looks like I was wrong.”
“Hopefully I'm done now!” Duncan laughed. “I'll have to build a new house for you and Mama so I'll fit!”
“Tell us about your lovely companion here. Where did you meet?” Mama asked looking at last to Anouk.
“I met her yesterday.” Duncan said simply. “She had nowhere else to go, so she came with me.” He smiled to her.
“You are welcome here anytime, hun.” Mama said lovingly. “Any friend of Duncan's is a friend of ours.” Her smile was warm.
“Thank you,” Anouk replied. She didn't know what else to say and sat awkwardly for a moment before Duncan spoke again.
“The fields look well. Did you plant them all yourself?” Duncan asked his father as his mother set out plates for the four of them. The plates quickly filled with scrambled eggs and Duncan ate like a starving man. Anouk ate hers quickly as well and found they tasted rather good. Duncan picked up the empty plates and took them over to wash while his father fixed a pot of tea.
“Those tattoos will take some getting used to,” his father said when Duncan sat back down at the table.
“Did they hurt?” his mother asked.
“Not much, Mama.” Duncan smiled again.
“Tell us about your travels,” Papa said.
“Not right now.” Duncan's expression grew dark and his eyes held remembered pain. “Maybe later.”
“Whenever you are ready.” Gwen placed a hand on his shoulder.
“Come on, Boy. Let's go chop some wood. I could use your strong body and weak mind,” his father teased. Duncan smiled and led the way out the door. He squeezed Anouk's shoulder as he passed and she patted his hand.
“So you met my boy yesterday?” Gwen asked.
“Yes'm.”
“Call me Gwen, Dear.” Gwen smiled her warm smile.
“Would you like some help, Gwen?” Anouk asked.
“In a bit. Let's talk first.” Gwen poured them both a mug of strong smelling tea. “Honey?”
“Yes please,” Anouk answered. Gwen handed her a mug of tea and they both sat sipping at the strong brew. It helped to wake her up. The sun had risen higher in the sky so Gwen blew out the lamp and opened the two small windows in the kitchen.
“Tell me about yourself,” Gwen said as she busied herself cleaning up the already tidy kitchen.
“I grew up not far from here. A couple days north of here. Past the village.”
“Oh you lived in the woods then?”
“Yes. Nearby the river. My father owned a lumber mill there.”
“Owned?”
“He was killed a few years ago.”
“Oh I'm so sorry, Dear.” Gwen walked over and hugged her. Anouk held back the tears.
“It's okay. I've come to terms with it.”
“Would you like to help me gather some eggs?” Gwen asked as she brushed her hand over Anouk's short brown hair. “I love your hair, Dear! How do you keep it so soft?”
“It's just always been soft.” She smiled. She liked Duncan's family. She hoped they would stay here a long time. She looked out the window. She wondered what Duncan and his father were talking about.
“Go fetch the saw and the axe, Boy,” Paul called to the child he had raised. Duncan flinched at the word axe and Paul looked to him a bit confused.
“We won't need them Papa. Just bring the pack horse and the wagon.” Paul looked at him with an eyebrow raised but he didn't argue. He wasn't about to make his boy mad after he had just come home. He busied himself with the horse and soon had everything ready. Duncan climbed up beside his father and Paul clicked at the horses till they started toward the woods. They rode in silence. Paul didn't know what to say. He had years ago come to believe that his wife and he would never see the child they had raised again. Duncan finally broke the silence.
“Where did you buy that axe that you gave me back then?” The question threw Paul off guard. He sat back and thought for a time.
“I bought it at the weapon smith there in the village. He was a traveling smith I didn't recognize. He said the axe was dwarven and that he had picked it up as he traveled through the mountains. He made me a bargain on it. Did it serve you well son?”