CHAPTER 28
THE unicorn was not made like a horse. The
coat of the unicorn was not like the coat of a horse, or of a goat.
The smell of the unicorn was not like the smell of a horse, or of a
goat. So much for appearances, thought Patrick, his hands clenched
in a mane hardly more substantial than a cobweb, and his knees
trying to grip a body that slid aside from him as a cat does when
it prefers not to be picked up.
Nor did a unicorn proceed, foot placed in front of
foot, as a horse might go over the ground. He could not feel or
hear its hooves hit anything. He felt a great wind in his face; he
saw before him a gray mist and on either side a blurring of colors,
as if somebody had made a chalk drawing of a forest in autumn and
then swept the side of his hand carelessly across it.
The wind stopped; the unicorn stood still. Patrick
had been straining his eyes for just this moment; but he learned no
more from the motion’s cessation than he had from its inception.
One moment he saw blurred colors, and the next everything was
sharp, crisp, and ordinary. They were by the Well of the White
Witch, facing uphill to where the Secret House rose untidily out of
the trees.
Patrick slid to the ground, saying, “What
next?”
“I may not come under a roof,” said Chryse.
Patrick looked at it. He might have known. “What
part of the roof do you want me to come under,” he said, “and what
should I do when I get there?”
“Go up into the smaller tower,” said Chryse, “the
which you may do by keeping always to the left. Consider the globe
that you find there. If it be small, you may bring it out; if it be
too large, you must speak to it, naming Belaparthalion.”
“I always did think,” said Patrick, “that the
heroes in fairy tales must feel extremely stupid. I guess I’ll get
to find out.” He bowed to the unicorn, because being rude to them
got you nowhere, and walked up the hill to the house.
The globe in the tower room was much too large to
bring out. Its unhealthy gray bulge filled the room; Patrick
wondered if it would burst the walls when it grew larger still; or
just expand into some other dimension; or just stop, the way things
happened here. He leaned on the wall, because his legs were tired
from the climb, and said, “Belaparthalion.”
There was no reply. Patrick did not feel stupid. He
felt apprehensive. It was clear to him, through what sense he could
not have said, that there was somebody else in this room. He said
again, “Belaparthalion,” and then, since he appeared to be in a
fairy tale and it was best to use what rules you could, he said it
a third time.
“Who goes there?” said a raspy voice, with a
background like static.
“Patrick Carroll,” said Patrick, “temporary prince
of the Hidden Land.”
The middle point of the globe turned from gray to
red; the point swelled to a circle; the circle turned slowly and
became a sphere; the sphere grew larger, and suddenly reassembled
itself into a curved, red, reptilian shape, whiskered and
tendriled, with a long head like a collie’s, and pointed ears, and
a gaping mouth full of carnivorous teeth. There were too many
incisors, thought Patrick. What did it eat that it had evolved so
many of them; and how did it keep them from shredding its mouth? He
thought of the sabertoothed tiger, and shrugged.
The creature said, “What do you here?”
“I’m just the errand-boy,” said Patrick. “Chryse
waits below, but will not come under a roof. She said that if your
globe were small enough I should carry it out, and that otherwise I
should speak to you. I don’t suppose you could shrink it?”
“I am very well where I am,” said the creature. It
might or might not, he supposed, be a dragon; but it certainly
thought it was called Belaparthalion.
“Chryse doesn’t think you are,” he said.
“What wisheth Chryse?”
“She wants you to come and help her seal a bargain
for the good of the Hidden Land.”
“What bargain?”
“That in return for the swords of Shan and Melanie,
you two prevent the Dragon King from bothering the Hidden Land.
They’re tired of scurrying around to their borders to repel
invaders.”
“Oho,” said Belaparthalion, in an altered voice.
“Sits the wind in that quarter? The swords of Shan and Melanie?
Both?”
“I wouldn’t know, myself,” said Patrick, “but Fence
and Randolph think so, and Chryse seemed satisfied.”
“I pray you,” said Belaparthalion, “break me this
crystal.” Patrick’s stomach lurched. The last time he had broken a
crystal had been very unpleasant. Besides, Chryse had not told him
to break it, only to speak to its occupant. Between Chryse and
Belaparthalion, Patrick did not know where he would put his money.
Three things might destroy the Secret Country: the Border Magic,
the Crystal of Earth, the Whim of the Dragon. This was probably a
dragon; and with a dragon, how did you know what was whim and what
was reasonable? If you did destroy the Secret Country, exactly what
were you risking, whom were you hurting? How did you judge such a
deed? Decision without data, thought Patrick. That’s the curse of
this place.
“With what should I break it, my lord?” he
said.
“Your hand sufficeth, an you have no sword,” said
Belaparthalion.
Patrick looked doubtfully at his medium-sized,
square-knuckled hand, with the writing-bump on the second finger,
and the grime under the nails. “If my hand will suffice from the
outside,” he said, “why won’t your teeth suffice from
inside?”
“Because,” said Belaparthalion, in a tone of
enormous amusement, “the crystal was made to keep dragons in, and
not the children of men out.”
“Didn’t the people who made it think that the
children of men might come along at an inopportune moment?”
“Inopportune for whom?” said Belaparthalion. “Look
you, the breaking of this crystal, from within or from without,
doth destroy the image you see within it. How should the maker of
the crystal think that any trapped within might choose such
destruction?”
Oh, brother, thought Patrick. “Is this a whim of
yours?” he said.
“No,” said Belaparthalion. “A sacrifice, an you
will, but not a whim.”
Patrick chewed over this for a while, and gave up.
“Well, look,” he said. “If I destroy the image of you I see, what
is going to be left?”
“Break the crystal,” said Belaparthalion, in the
precise tone of somebody initiating a knock-knock joke, “and find
out.”
Chryse had told him to talk to it. This was what
happened when you talked to it.
Patrick lifted his hand and smashed it down hard
into the gray light. It gave before him like cloth, not glass, but
with a tremendous shattering sound. A crystalline wheel of bright
spray spun through the air. There was a crack of thunder, a blast
of hot air, and a tremendous flash of colorless light against which
Patrick shut his eyes. When he opened them, every surface in the
room sparkled with splinters. On the wooden table where the globe
had rested sat a man. He was not very tall; he had black hair and
green eyes; he looked like Fence and Randolph. He wore a red robe
and red boots. There were no shards of glass on him.
“Greetings,” said Patrick, brushing cautiously at
his hair. The splinters, that looked so sharp, felt like threads
and scraps of cloth, and drifted easily down from his combing
hands. “Are you called Apsinthion?”
“Sometimes,” said the man in red. His voice held
still the faint echo of laughter, but his face was grim.
When they came out of the house and walked down the
hill to where Chryse was placidly cropping the wildflowers around
the Well, Patrick found out why. Chryse suddenly flung up her head,
laid her ears back, and like a string quartet badly out of tune,
said, “What judgment would step from that to this? Could you on
that fair mountain leave to feed, and batten on this moor?”
This did not make a great deal of sense to Patrick,
but the scorn and horror in Chryse’s voice were plain to
anybody.
“That fair mountain was a prison,” said
Belaparthalion, “wherefrom this moor, howsoever damp and
displeasing to thee, hath been a refuge.”
“A refuge,” said Chryse, “that will come down on
your head at the first breath of wind. Is this your duty? Is this
the manner you preserve this fair small kingdom from the hawks of
song?” It lowered its head, and the early sunlight flashed off that
horn as if it had been a mirror.
“This fair small kingdom shall do well enough,”
said Belaparthalion, “when Shan’s and Melanie’s swords are raised
in its defense.” Patrick noticed that he did not come close to
Chryse.
“Those swords,” said Chryse, “are for safekeeping,
not for use.”
“Those swords, dear cousin,” said Belaparthalion,
“are for translation, not for battle. I am old in craft, Chryse,
and what I have lost in the dragon-form will return to me a
thousandfold in these two swords.”
“Excuse me,” said Patrick, keeping between him and
them what would have been a safe distance if the only threat they
could offer had been physical. “Shouldn’t we be getting
back?”
Chryse turned on him, its head still dangerously
lowered. “Thou,” it said, “hast much to answer for.”
“I did,” said Patrick, “what you told me.”
“When did the children of men ever so?” said
Chryse; but it lifted its head again. There was a long pause. The
wind blew softly in the long grass. Patrick shook the rest of the
shards of Belaparthalion’s crystal from his clothing.
“Well,” said Chryse; and that same note of laughter
was in its voice now also. “Cousin: will you ride on my
back?”
Belaparthalion did not look amused; but he nodded,
and beckoned to Patrick. Patrick came forward, trying not to look
as reluctant as he felt. Those two were still angry at each other;
what Chryse thought was funny he didn’t know, but he doubted that
it boded well. Belaparthalion gave him a lift up onto Chryse’s
back. Patrick gasped. The man in red’s hands were fever-hot and as
dry as snakeskin. Belaparthalion got up behind him, and the brisk
autumn air in their vicinity became balmy. Patrick wondered if
Belaparthalion were sick. If he were, it seemed unlikely that he
would live long. If he didn’t, Patrick had killed him.
The trip back seemed slower to him, possibly
because he was so hot. They stopped at last, and around them was
the clearing in the pine woods where they had left the others. The
others had built a fire. The air smelled of woodsmoke, and a little
of tea. Matthew and Celia were sitting on the ground on the far
side of the clearing. They had brushed away all the pine needles
from a spot about three feet square, and were drawing diagrams in
the dirt beneath. Fence and Ellen and Laura sat around the fire,
looking glum.
Laura saw them first. Why her face should light up
like that at the sight of the man in red, Patrick couldn’t fathom.
He felt pleased with himself, just the same, until he remembered
how angry Chryse had been. The red man slid to the ground, and
Patrick followed. Laura stood up.
“Well met!” said Belaparthalion to Laura.
“Sir,” said Laura. “Patrick, where’d you find
him?”
“Let me introduce you,” said Patrick, resignedly.
“This is Laura, pro tem princess of the Hidden Land. Laura, this is
Belaparthalion.”
Laura stared. Then she did Belaparthalion a pretty
good courtesy, considering her disarray and her basic clumsiness.
Patrick grinned at her; and his sister Ellen came around the fire,
so he introduced her too, and she provided her overdramatic bow.
Fence was still sitting on the ground, and Patrick could not
discern his thoughts in his round, solemn, deceptive face. Fence,
thought Patrick, should have been his first lesson in appearances,
if he had had the sense to learn it.
“Fence,” said the man in red; and he pushed,
smiling, between Laura and Ellen, and sat on the ground too, rather
closer to the fire than Patrick thought advisable. Even if his
flesh wouldn’t burn, his clothing might.
“We saved you some tea,” said Laura, “but it’s
mostly cold.”
“That’s fine,” said Patrick. “I’m warm enough.” He
took the tin cup they gave him and drank the tea. Then he sat down
and prepared to watch the fireworks.
Laura knew from his face that he expected
something interesting to happen. What Patrick found interesting,
she usually found appalling. She sat down next to him, a safe
distance from Fence and the red man, who were looking at each other
steadily. Chryse folded herself to the ground in a posture that
looked relaxed almost to the point of abandonment, like a cat about
to roll on its back; except that she had her ears flat to her head,
which in either a cat or a horse meant no good. Laura wished
somebody would say something. After a few minutes, she said
something herself.
“Chryse answered your riddles,” she said to
Belaparthalion.
His head came around. He looked startled, and then
amused. “In change for what?” he said.
“A tale thou knowest,” said Chryse, in a precise
plucking of sounds like somebody tinkering with a harp.
“I wonder,” said Belaparthalion.
“Thou wert in’t,” retorted Chryse. Yes, she was
very cross indeed. Laura wondered what about.
“That I was in’t by no means requires that I
know’t.”
“We’ll tell it you also,” said Fence, “do you tell
us how you came in this shape.”
“And how you came to be in a globe in the House by
the Well of the White Witch,” rattled Patrick, for Fence’s
benefit.
“Done,” said Belaparthalion, briskly. “Every dragon
hath a man-shape, but few do employ it; it doth weaken us. Now
Melanie, who is an old enemy of mine, did discover how to fling a
dragon into his man-shape, and she did so to me, and then did
imprison the dragon-shape in that globe wherefrom Patrick did so
graciously rescue me.”
“Why now?” said Fence.
Belaparthalion shrugged.
“How long were you thus?”
“She did so divide me on the eighth day of June
last.”
Fence looked across the fire at Ellen and Laura.
Laura said, “We showed up on the fourteenth.”
“And we showed up a couple of days earlier,” said
Ellen.
“She did desire, then,” said Belaparthalion, “that
we not meet.”
“And now that we have, what of it?” said
Patrick.
“First,” said Fence, “to the business of the Hidden
Land. Lord, will you in exchange for the swords of Shan and Melanie
given to you and Chryse, conspire with Chryse for the good of the
Hidden Land against the devices of the Dragon King?”
“I will so,” said Belaparthalion.
Fence closed his eyes for a moment. Laura thought
suddenly that, to him, this might be the most important of all the
things they were doing. Claudia, anybody could see, was a worry;
the deaths of the royal children were a grief; the connection
between this strangers’ game and Fence’s own reality was a puzzle.
And of course something would have to be done about all of it. But
this one thing he had at least ensured, that the Dragon King would
trouble the Hidden Land no longer.
“Having given this word,” said Chryse, very coldly,
“do you tell us how you will keep it, in so puny a form and with so
dulled a perception.”
“Sweet cousin,” said Belaparthalion, in no very
affectionate voice, “being neither man nor dragon, you do hold too
low the powers of either. Fear me not.”
“I am in this oath also,” said Chryse, “and must
supply your deficiencies, an your own strength be unequal.”
“When thou seest my deficiencies,” said
Belaparthalion, “ask me again.”
“I do see them now,” said Chryse. “Some do
approach, and yet you hear them not.”
Fence, looking resigned, called Celia and Matthew.
They stood up, brushed pine needles off themselves, and came over
to the fire. “Here’s Belaparthalion,” Fence said to them, “and the
Lords of the Dead are coming.”
“Good morning!” said Matthew, with a kind of
good-natured ruefulness, and smiled at the man in red.
“Is that one pro tem also?” said Belaparthalion to
Patrick.
“No, he’s permanent,” said Patrick. “Lord Matthew,
Scribe to the King and King’s Counselor. Matthew, this is your very
own guardian dragon; show some respect. And this, my lord dragon,
is Lady Celia, King’s Counselor and musician.”
Celia did Belaparthalion a courtesy; Matthew said
to Fence, “What’s amiss?”
There was a certain amount of crashing, and a
flurry of unicorns bolted into the clearing, shied briefly at the
clump of people, and converged on Chryse, hooting and
chiming.
“What, they?” said Celia.
“I think that’s just the cavalry,” said Ellen. “So
to speak.”
“How can you tell?” said Patrick.
“Because,” said Ellen, “the Lords of the Dead are
of the sort of shape-shifter that is held to one kind of form only.
They can’t turn themselves into unicorns. Right, Fence?”
“Right,” said Fence, absently. He cast his gaze
around the clearing. Laura, following it, saw suddenly where the
swords of Shan and Melanie still lay as Celia had unwrapped them.
Their glow had dimmed with the rising of the sun, but now they were
blazing in unkind colors that pressed sparks under one’s eyelids
and obscured the plain shapes of the trees.
Oh, come on, thought Laura, not now. But she was
caught. She looked unwillingly upon a cluttered room bright with
lamplight. Claudia sat at a round table, dressed in blue velvet,
her black hair falling down her back, working with tiny tools at a
band of tarnished metal. As Laura watched, she picked up a dull
black stone from off the table and fitted it into the socket of the
band. She had just made Shan’s Ring, or something very like it.
Then she picked up a red-and-blue wooden top that lay on the table,
and pulled toward her a little carved clock. She took blue and
green stones and made a circle around the clock and the top. She
set the pendulum of the clock swinging. She spun the top with an
unthinking expertise behind which Laura saw, with a jolt, hours of
playing; how strange to think that Claudia had ever been a child.
Then she tossed the ring into the air and caught it again,
grinning.
Somebody wiry who smelled like burning leaves took
Laura under the arms and swung her off her feet, and the sight
tattered and vanished. Fence had grabbed her and deposited her with
the rest of the party at one edge of the clearing. The whole of the
empty space was thronged with unicorns. She looked frantically for
the swords. Matthew, a little farther back in the trees, was
holding Shan’s, swinging it casually in one hand as if it were a
skipping-rope. Fence touched the top of Laura’s head and, when she
looked up at him, showed her the green glow of Melanie’s sword,
thrust through his belt under the muddy black cloak.
“Where,” said Ellen, “are the Lords of the Dead
going to stand, when they come?”
“Where’s Belaparthalion?” said Patrick.
“He’s standing with Chryse,” said Fence. “Patrick.
What’s their quarrel?”
Patrick, keeping a wary eye on the unicorns, and
raising his voice from time to time to be heard over a sudden blare
of horn or organ, a trilling as of two hundred piccolos, a
quivering barrage as of somebody dropping a harpsichord down a
cement stairwell, answered this question with more detail than was
usual with him. Laura was seized with equal parts of envy and of
relief that she had not been faced with such a choice.
“ ’Sblood!” said Ellen, when he had finished. “That
was stupid, but it certainly wasn’t cowardly.”
“Why stupid?” said Fence. “If Belaparthalion said
this was not his whim, then ’twas not. I do not know, however, what
this translation meaneth, nor what benefit Belaparthalion hopeth to
gain from Melanie’s sword sufficient to salve him for the loss
o’the dragon-shape.”
“And that’s Chryse’s quarrel,” said Patrick.
“But if that’s our Apsinthion,” said Laura, “and
Apsinthion is the Judge of the Dead, then—”
“He answered to Belaparthalion,” said Patrick,
stubbornly.
“Fence?” said Laura. “Could he be both?”
“I trust not,” said Fence.
Matthew stepped forward, grabbed Fence by the arm,
and pointed southward. “Look there,” he said.
A soberly dressed, harmless-looking crowd of people
was coming through the trees. There were nine of them. They wore
neither cloaks nor swords. A shiver went up Laura’s spine. The
unicorns melted away to the other side of the clearing, and the
nine people walked to where the party from the Hidden Land stood.
The light of the sun seemed flatter; Laura felt oppressed; and in
several quick glances upward, she saw that a yellow flame stood in
all their eyes. They nodded amiably at the party from the Hidden
Land, and then turned their backs.
A lilting voice Laura knew addressed the unicorns,
“Hail, blithe spirits!” it said. “We mean you no ill, but seek one
of our own.”
“None of your own is here,” said Chryse’s voice. A
swelling chorus in the back of the mind added, How shall I your
true love know from another one?
“Lady, he is. Apsinthion!” said the rich voice,
imperatively.
The man in red made his way through the unicorns
like a setter breasting a field of daisies, and halted in the small
space left in the center of the clearing. “You’re far from your
wonted ways,” he said to them.
“No further than thou,” said the austere
voice.
“I have been out before,” said the man in red,
“while you were sleeping. For I did think, how should I judge the
dead who had not seen the living?”
“That’s your affair,” said the rich voice. “But we
do hear that you hold in trust somewhat that we desire.”
“You may not have’t,” said the man in red.
“We do not wish it,” said the lilting voice. “We
wish it silenced. Do you swear never to use it in any wise?”
“Peace, break thee off,” said Chryse’s voice, in
precisely the tone Laura’s father would use to say, “Now just a God
damn minute!” She, too, pushed through the mill of unicorns until
she stood next to the man in red. The inward chorus said
peacefully, Break, break, break, / On thy cold gray stones, O
Sea! Laura saw one or two of the Lords of the Dead rub at their
foreheads, and hoped that the poetry was giving them a
headache.
“Belaparthalion,” said Chryse, and there was very
little music in her voice. “What art thou?” There is no art,
said the chorus, To find the mind’s construction in the
face.
“I am the man-shape of a dragon,” said the man in
red. “I am the Judge of the Dead. And, though thou would it were
not so, I am thy cousin.”
“The Judge of the Dead,” said Chryse, with less
music yet, “is an Outside Power.” The chorus was silent.
The man in red said, “That is so.”
“I do not well understand this,” said Chryse. “But
I do understand well indeed that you and I are sworn to guard the
Hidden Land ’gainst the depredations of the Outside Powers. I’ll do
my duty well, then, to guard it ’gainst thee.”
The unicorns, still silent, foamed backward among
the trees and quivered there, white in the shadows. Chryse backed
away and lowered her silky head, with its golden eyes and its
whiskered nose and its long, sharp, mortal horn.
Fence dragged Melanie’s sword from his belt. “My
lord!”
The man in red reached back a hand, and Fence
slapped the hilt into it. The sword flashed like breaking glass as
he touched it. He took it between his two palms and extended it
toward Chryse. “I cry you mercy,” he said. “This will do naught but
ill.”
Chryse said, with a full complement of melody
ringing behind her words, “All may yet be very well.”
Laura looked wildly at Fence. His fists were
clenched and his eyes were enormous, but he seemed to feel that he
had done all he could when he gave the sword to the red man. But
all that did was even the odds. One of the guardians of the Hidden
Land was going to kill the other. Some guardians. They were
behaving irresponsibly in the extreme. But Laura’s outrage was not
enough to make her tell them so; nor were they likely to listen.
Stealth would have to serve.
“Fence!” she whispered. “Give me Shan’s
Ring.”
Fence had plunged his hand into his belt-pouch
before the surprised look was off his face. He pressed the ring
into her hand. Laura, plucking bad poetry out of her memory,
breathed. “And Shan’s sword.” He wouldn’t do it. A peculiar magical
artifact, sure; but not a weapon. But Fence drifted backward, as if
to give the combatants more room, and pulled Matthew with
him.
Chryse and the man in red had begun to circle each
other. Laura wondered if they would actually have a fencing match,
with the horn serving as a sword, or if Chryse would charge and
stab with that horn and the man in red fend for himself as best he
could. If Chryse wanted to show him his weakness, she might
succeed.
Fence edged up beside Laura and said, “It’s beneath
my cloak. What mean you to do?”
“Blow time awry,” said Laura, “so everybody can
think. Hand me the sword.”
She still thought he would not do it. She could not
explain her reasoning, if he should ask. Patrick would not call it
reasoning at all. Chryse moved suddenly and drove the needle-sharp
icicle of her violet-spiraled horn straight at the red man’s
breast. He skittered to one side; Celia, right in Chryse’s path,
did not move, and Chryse stopped in a shower of pine needles.
“Think, lady,” said Celia, the scar standing out on
her forehead.
Chryse backed without looking at her and lowered
her horn again. And the hilt of Shan’s sword, so perfectly sized
for a ten-year-old’s hand, tingled from Fence’s hand into Laura’s
nervous grip. Laura took three steps forward, dropped Shan’s sword
onto the ground between the combatants, stepped back, hurled Shan’s
Ring into the air, and gabbled, “I am a trinket in the world,
unvalued gold and sullen stone, but Outside Power is unfurled, when
outside power I am hurled, and time awry is blown.”
Chryse and Belaparthalion stood still, Chryse in a
graceful pose that any sculptor would have been proud of, and the
man in red with one foot in the air and the sword arrested between
one useful position and another. Their eyes were alarming; so wide
and empty that neither of them seemed to be there at all. Laura
remembered Claudia, staring on the steps of Fence’s tower with a
knife in her fist.
“Nice work,” said Patrick, a little hoarsely. “But
they’re going to be just as mad when they wake up.”
“I thought,” said Laura, “that if we got the
unicorns to surround Chryse and took the sword away from
Belaparthalion, we could calm them down enough to explain what’s
going on.”
“Excellent,” said Fence; there was congratulation
in his voice, but also a definite irony. “Now we’ve only to find
out that we must explain to them.”
“I thought,” said Laura, coming back to his
comforting vicinity, “that the Lords of the Dead could tell
us.”
“The Lords of the Dead,” said the piercing voice of
a unicorn, from the froth among the trees, “have been
sleeping.”
“The Lords of the Dead,” said the lilting voice,
“wish only to go on sleeping. Give us these raucous swords and
we’ll trouble you no longer.”
“And also that shrieking ring,” said the rich
voice.
The unicorns made a sound like an entire acre full
of wind chimes. It came to Laura that they were laughing. She hoped
the Lords of the Dead would not notice.
“Know you aught of the Judge of the Dead?” said
Fence, to the soberly dressed party generally.
“He is of the Outside Powers,” said the lilting
voice.
“Are dragons also of the Outside Powers?” said
Fence, patiently.
“Dragons,” said the rich voice, “are not so much as
of the immortals. We have seen dragons beneath the earth;
Apsinthion hath judged them; do you ask him.”
“By and by,” said Fence.
“So Chryse’s charges are true,” said Celia.
“How came matters to this pass?” said
Matthew.
“That would we know also,” said the lilting
voice.
“Well, Apsinthion aka Belaparthalion ought to
know,” said Ellen. “He’s the one who’s fish and flesh. So to
speak.”
“Why should he know?” said Patrick. “You might as
well say, when we got into this country we should have known what
was going on, just because it happened to us.”
You might as well say, chorused the
unicorns, that “I sleep when I breathe” is the same thing as “I
breathe when I sleep.” There was a pause, and as the white
horde drifted and nodded just a little in the direction of the
Lords of the Dead, they added, It is the same thing with
you. Laura and Ellen burst out laughing. Patrick, who scorned
Lewis Carroll, rolled his eyes at them.
“Well, we’d better figure out something,” he said.
“We don’t know how long this spell lasts.”
“Come to that,” said Matthew, gently, “we know not
how to remove it. Laura, why not have used ‘From the horns of
Unicorns’?”
“Because that wouldn’t have done Chryse any good,”
said Laura. “He was mad at her by that time.”
“True,” said Fence. “And very well done.”
Laura began to feel foolish just the same. There
was no use in averting a crisis if all you achieved was a limbo.
She looked at the two arrested figures, and at the sword of Shan
where it lay among the dry brown needles. She unclenched her
cramped hand from around Shan’s Ring, and held it out to Fence. And
she remembered something.
“Hey!” she cried. “You unicorns! Didn’t I do it?
Didn’t I change time of my own power?”
“What hast thou seen and not told?” said one of
them.
Laura felt herself turning red. She dropped the
ring into Fence’s palm and sent and stood on the far side of an
immense pine tree. Stupid, stupid, stupid. She thought of Cedric’s
flute. No, this could not be called the end. This was a silly
situation, but it was hardly the end. The stupid tears dazzled her
vision.
She groped inside her cloak to find a piece of
shirt clean enough to wipe her eyes on, and the blur of sun and
saltwater sharpened suddenly into a scene that was not the green
pine woods with their dusty shafts of sunlight. It was the massive
castle she had seen once at night, garlanded with fireworks; and
folded within one corner of its vast stretch of walls, between the
low outer wall with its bristling of towers and the high, thick
inner wall, lay the formal rose garden she had also seen before.
Andrew and Randolph crossed swords; a clump of brightly dressed
people watched. Then Ted flung himself out of the crowd, yelling
something she could not hear, and with his own sword struck to the
ground the crossed blades of Randolph and Andrew. A figure with
flying black hair grabbed Andrew from behind. And Randolph lifted
his sword again and lunged at Ted.
It was what they had come back here to avert. And
she could tell, by the length of Ted’s hair, by the clothes they
wore, festive clothes she had helped Agatha pick out for the
embassy to wear at the court of the Dragon King, that it was
happening soon; or perhaps it was happening now.
“Fence!” shouted Laura, and bolted around the tree.
“Listen. Ted is fighting Randolph in the Dragon King’s rose garden.
We’ve got a magic ring, a magic sword, and a magic flute; can’t we
do something?”
“This is a present vision?” said Fence.
“I don’t know. It’s not very future.”
“Let’s not take the risk, for God’s sake,” said
Patrick.
“You’re a wizard; do something.”
“I can’t fly through the air!” snapped Fence. He
drove both hands into his hair and strode between Chryse and
Belaparthalion, ducking under the vicious horn as if it were a
dangling vine. He plunged in among the unicorns, gesticulating.
Laura could not hear clearly what he was saying in his light voice,
but the replies of the unicorns were clear.
“We can take thee.”
“Aye, we can take you all.”
“But upon one condition; that thou releasest our
sister.”
Fence’s reaction to that was louder. “An I release
thy sister, will you stand surety for the safety of her enemy
there?”
“That is her affair and thine, not ours.”
“Shan’s sweet mercy!” shouted Fence. “I am making
it your affair. I will release her only on that condition.”
“He can’t release her anyway,” said Patrick.
“Shut up,” said Ellen.
“An you release her not, we carry you nowhere,”
said a unicorn.
“I’ll give you Shan’s Ring,” said Fence, in less
furious but carrying tones.
The little knot of the Lords of the Dead stirred.
In very mellow tones, a unicorn said, “The bargain made touching
that ring precludes our having it.”
Something in the voice alerted Laura. It wanted to
be argued with; it wanted to coax some particular statement out of
them, so that it could take the ring. She pushed through the crowd
of unicorns and caught Fence by the hand. His burning-leaf smell
mingled with the spicy scent of the unicorns. “Listen,” said Laura.
“Shan’s Ring was supposed to save the Hidden Land from the
machinations of Melanie. But she made the sword that woke you up;
she made Shan’s Ring too.” Fence’s hand jerked in hers; he had not
known that. “This is all a machination of Melanie,” said
Laura; and stopped. That was not true; and her intuition failed her
suddenly. It had all been so clear in her head.
But the unicorn said, “Well enough. Now what of the
second condition, that that ring become an heirloom of Shan’s
house?”
Once again, you could tell that it hoped for the
point it made to be properly countered. Laura’s invention had dried
up.
“The children of Shan’s house,” said Fence, with a
terrible grim triumph, “are below the earth. That condition’s
forfeit.”
The unicorn was taken aback by this; but the rich
voice of a Lord of the Dead said, “’Twere better you gave it to
us.”
“What will that profit me?” roared Fence, without
turning.
“First, we will deliver all present to the court of
the Dragon King. Second, we will deliver Shan’s Ring to Edward
Fairchild, that both conditions of the bargain be met.”
There was a small silence.
“Well, fair ones?” said Fence. “White ones?
Drinkers of verse? What say you to that?”
“Give it them,” said the unicorns, in overlapping
waves. “We’ll have no peace else.” Even in the midst of her
anxiety, Laura thought how curious it was that magical creatures
wanted sleep and peace more than they wanted anything else.
Fence said, “Stand you witness to this
bargain?”
“We do.”
Fence turned around. “Done,” he said to the Lords
of the Dead.
The Lords of the Dead did not believe in
preliminaries. Being delivered by them was not like riding a
unicorn. It was a great deal more, Laura thought, like being picked
up by a tornado. Darkness stabbed about with red fire, howling
voices, and a vast noise of distant water overtook her. Dwindling
down the distances of her mind, the unicorns remarked, I pray
you pass with your best violence.