I watched silently. I couldn’t have spoken if I had to. Magic doorways might be future or alien science, something I just didn’t know about. This snake dance had to be Magic with a capital M. Maybe I still wasn’t the King of Siam (I certainly wasn’t going to shave my head!), but heir designate to the crown of Varay was almost as outré. Good old Uncle Parker, always handy with a dirty joke when we happened to be alone together—once I got into my teens. This wasn’t
that
Uncle Parker. This was Parthet the Wizard of Varay—somebody entirely different.
He had to bend over in the saddle to get under the hanging branches of the weeping willows, and the rest of us had trouble clearing them even lying flat against our horses’ necks. Parthet kept going, kept whooshing, until the rest of us got out of the brambles into the clear ground right under the trees. When he stopped swaying and making noises, the brambles also quit swaying. I dismounted and looked back the way we had come. There was no hint that anyone had
ever
ridden through that mess.
“You see,” Parthet said, grinning at me, “there is a bit of magic left in me yet.”
I nodded, not up to a wisecrack for a change. I looked at Parthet differently than I ever had before, I think. What choice did I have? “The king said there was.”
“He did?” That seemed to please him more than the deed.
“As long as we could keep you from losing your glasses again.”
“Ah, yes, there is that,” Parthet said. It didn’t seem to bother him. “I told you I need to see to do most of my magics.”
“Well, if you’ve got any more to spring, you’d better get cracking. It’s going to be dark in another half hour.”
“Yes. To work, to work, not a time to shirk.”
A wizard maybe, but not much of a poet.
6
Thyme
Parthet’s only other contribution was a shield that was supposed to keep out bugs and small animals that might otherwise disturb our comfort. It may have worked. There was nothing visible about this magic, but I wasn’t nibbled by mosquitos and nobody woke up with a snake or skunk in his bedding. Parthet offered to whip up a campfire, but we decided that we would be better off without it.
Under the willows, night followed posthaste upon sunset. The dark was complete. We arranged our bedrolls and settled in. There was a little soft talk at first, but the conversation languished quickly and all that remained was the murmur of the creek that flowed past the edge of our camp.
Occasionally a horse moved around or drank. The animals were tied to a picket line, more to keep them from stumbling over us than to keep them from wandering off. They had no place to wander, not even along the creek. Brambles had overgrown it, making it impassable. Only right under the willows were the brambles missing.
I slept poorly. During the day I had managed to keep from wasting a lot of energy worrying. With the night, though, the worries pecked at the edges of my mind until I paid attention. The soft breathing of the others couldn’t hold off thoughts of what the morrow might bring. Castle Thyme was drawing members of the family like a magnet. Dad had gone first, to try to take the castle back from the soldiers of the Etevar of Dorthin almost single-handedly. He had a couple of soldiers, men like Lesh, and his squire. No more. Then Mom took off to see what was taking him so long, and she
had
gone alone. To rescue Dad. We hadn’t met along the road, so she too was overdue and likely in trouble. If she happened by in the dark, while we were camped, we might or might not hear her. Parthet said he would know. I had a feeling he was right, but it was still something extra to worry about.
Now Uncle Parthet and I were going to Castle Thyme too. That would damn near complete the reunion. I knew less about the situation, about the whole damn world, than either of my parents. Everybody treated me like a big shot, son of the Hero, great-grandson and heir of the King of Varay. But I really didn’t know what was going on, and that may have bothered me more than the rest. I still thought that there was at least an even chance that my brain had jumped the rails. Maybe the pressures of trying to finish my last year of college
had
snapped my sanity, shattered it into little bitty bits. I had seen cases of sheepskin syndrome. The pressure got to be too much and they went crackers. Or maybe I would wake up and find that it was all a dream, like
Dallas
.
Wake up? I couldn’t even get to sleep.
I was toting around a bunch of weapons that I had practiced with for most of my life but had never used in a real fight, or even in serious competition. “It’s not a game,” Dad told me while he taught me how to kill and maim in every conceivable way. “It’s survival. If you ever need the skills, you have to know that:
it’s not a game.”
Sometimes he screamed it. “You can’t play by anybody’s rules, can’t wait for a referee to call a foul on the other guy or worry that he might call a foul on you. If you get into a situation where your life’s on the line, the only rule is that the winner walks away and the loser doesn’t.” When I wasn’t practicing those fighting skills, Dad had me studying military tactics on every level from squad to full army. In high school, I could map out and re-create nearly every landmark battle from Marathon and Thermopylae to Tarawa, Arnhem, and the Israelis’ Six-Day War. Dad had dozens of army field manuals, technical manuals, and other military reference books. By the time I was seventeen, I had gone through most of the practical curriculum of the Army War College. And although Dad disapproved, that training made me a wicked competitor in simulation games at school.
“It’s not a game,” I whispered a couple of times that night in Precarra. “It’s not a game.” I started to get scared, so maybe I was really starting to believe the whole scam. I was going to rescue my parents if I could, if they needed rescuing—and they probably did. I might have to capture a castle to do it, a fortress whose defenders had already faced or were facing similar puny attacks. Surprise wasn’t likely, and I didn’t have any other advantages—unless Parthet could come up with something even fancier than his Red Sea trick, and I wasn’t counting on that. Okay, Castle Thyme was a small castle surrounded by a low wall and a dry ditch. Given a dark enough night and a lot of luck, we might scale the wall and sneak inside. If Lesh had a long rope and a quiet grapple in one of the saddlebags.
It’s not a game
. One more full day on the road, maybe a few hours the following morning before we reached Castle Thyme and a kill-or-be-killed situation. I had never been in that kind of position before. I had never been in any spot that looked so dangerous going in.
Eventually, I dozed off. I don’t know how long I slept; not long enough, by half. The soft hooting of an owl in the distance woke me. Sometime later, I heard thrashing noises in the underbrush, frenzied sounds of some small animal crying in its final agony. The owl apparently found dinner. I strained to hear any other sounds, but there were none around our camp. Inside, soft snoring, the horses shifting position. When my watch reached seven-fifteen, I woke the others even though it was still dark.
“Let’s do what we have to do and leave as soon as there’s enough light to get back to the road,” I said.
“A good idea,” Lesh said after a noisy routine of stretches and yawns.
“Let’s start a fire,” I said, an impulsive decision. “I’ve got instant coffee. We can heat water and have that much to get us moving. That and whatever kind of breakfast we can put together.” I needed something. I felt more tired than I had been when we made camp. I got out my flashlight and Lesh assembled enough dry wood for a decent little cooking fire.
“I’ve never tried to conjure by flashlight,” Parthet warned while Lesh was assembling the wood.
“Never mind, I’ve got a lighter.” The disposable Mom had packed was still in its cardboard-and-plastic package. I set the flashlight on the ground next to the twigs and branches and got the lighter right down in the shavings Lesh provided with his dagger. I spun the wheel of the lighter, but nothing happened. There was a spark from the flint but no fire. I tried again with the same lack of result. I kept flicking the lighter. There was butane in it. I could hear it hissing when I held the lighter next to my ear and held the lever down. But it wouldn’t light.
“It looks like magic
is
needed,” Parthet said.
“I’ve got matches.
They
should work,” I said. They did. I started to toss the lighter away but ended up sticking it back in my pack. There was no call to start littering.
Hot instant coffee, day-old bread, salted beef jerky—eating was exercise enough for anyone’s morning. By the time we finished, there was light in the east. Saddling up and getting loaded gave dawn time to sneak across the sky. I made one change in my attire. I put the chain mail under my fatigue shirt. That made it easier to get at the pistol holstered at my waist. None of the others noticed the gun during the instant it was visible.
“There’s light enough now,” Parthet said. He hoisted himself aboard Glory. “Remember, stay close to me.”
The magic was just as impressive the second time. The brambles swayed and parted in front and closed behind us. When we reached the road, we stopped and looked back across the brambles. There was no trace of our passage.
I took the lead and we started off single-file for Castle Thyme. Not long after we started, the road widened enough for us to ride two abreast again. The road turned a little more toward the north too. We were able to move faster on the better track. I was edgy after my uneasy night, so I picked up the pace to the fastest the horses were comfortable with.
“We’re getting closes to the marches,” Lesh said near noon. “We’re maybe ten or twelve miles from the border now, due east of here. A little farther on, we’ll hit a spot where the road forks coming down from the north. The other branch runs south past my home village on to the other two marcher castles.”
“Three castles to guard the entire border?” I asked.
“Four if you include Coriander in Battle Forest,” Parthet said. “There aren’t many decent routes between the two kingdoms, certainly not fit to take a sizable force across. There’s no use building castles to guard passages no enemy can make.”
It still sounded like scanty protection for a border that stretched 250 or 300 miles.
“From the fork, it’s five hours to Castle Thyme, maybe six,” Lesh said ignoring the interruption.
That morning, I had arbitrarily set my watch to six o’clock when I caught my first glimpse of the sun—very roughly, since the forest didn’t allow for close accuracy. It still wasn’t the right time, but it had to be closer than before. Minutes and hours seemed to mean less in Varay than they did in Louisville or Evanston, but I still thought in those terms and I liked the comfort of being able to look at my wrist and knowing the time.
Thirty minutes later, a shadow blocked the sun—too abruptly for a cloud. We all looked up. The horses got skittish.
“There’s a dragon for you,” Parthet said tightly. I didn’t get much of a look. The creature moved past the sun, and the sudden glare put spots in front of my eyes. I couldn’t see anything for a few seconds. “This time of day, he’s probably already eaten and is on his way home to nest for a long sleep. Even so, it’s better to hope that he doesn’t see us, and best to make sure that he can’t. Don’t bother me for a bit.”
Parthet started mumbling and humming, a different kind of sound from the one he used to part the brambles. He turned in his saddle and leaned back to keep the dragon in sight as much as possible while he conjured. When my eyes cleared, I could see the huge form in the sky, but it was too high for me to see any real detail. The body looked bulky, fat in the middle, tapering off quickly in front and back to serpentine neck and tail. The wings were massive and moved stiffly. They didn’t look like bat wings, but more like the wings of some large bird of prey. The legs had to be tucked up close to the body. I didn’t see any trace of them.
The sky started to shimmer like heat mirages on the highway, and the dragon became even more indistinct.
“He won’t see us through that,” Parthet said. I couldn’t be positive that this was magic, but neither could I be positive that it wasn’t. After seeing the deMille act, I was inclined to accept Parthet at his word. We kept riding and the shimmering sky stayed between us and the dragon.
“If he does see us, will that stop him?” I asked.
“If he saw us, castle walls might not stop him,” Parthet said, “but he won’t see us.”
I got a stiff neck looking over my shoulder though. The dragon disappeared to the south within a couple of minutes, but I kept looking that way, wondering if he might decide to come back. Parthet’s shimmering sky calmed down gradually. Not long after it cleared completely, we reached the fork in the road and stopped for a rest. I dismounted and walked fifty yards along the road to the south. It didn’t seem any different from the road we had been on. I saw no sign of recent traffic.
“Not many folks live in these parts,” Lesh said when I came back from my short walk. “Too much war. Those who do live along the marches stay close to their villages and farms, where they have some little feeling of safety. Maybe months go by without anyone but a royal messenger or tax collector coming to visit. Maybe a peddler now and then. Not often.” Stay-at-homes with a vengeance. It gave me an empty feeling.
“I suppose we should start figuring out what we’re going to do when we reach this castle,” I said.
“We don’t know yet what we’re going to face,” Parthet pointed out.
“Can’t you find out?” I asked. “You’ve shown a couple of nifty magics. Haven’t you got some way to get in touch with my parents or to look over the scene before we get there?” I hadn’t noticed a crystal ball, but I guess that’s what I was hoping for.
“Not from this distance. Not for a long while yet,” Parthet said. “When the castle is in sight I might be able to penetrate its more superficial secrets.
Might
. Now”—he paused for a moment—”by bending my thoughts her way, I can just barely perceive something of Avedell’s presence. Nothing more.”