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Authors: Robert Carter

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Gwydion sighed. ‘The rest, Willand, you already know. For we rode many a league that night before we parted. Then Morann took one of the children off to Little Slaughter and I took the other down into the Vale.'

Will's heart beat like a drum. He swallowed drily. What he had heard needed much thought. It still did not explain
everything he wanted to know, but Mother Brig's words had already begun to make more sense.

Will the dark,

Will the light,

Will his brother left or right?

Will take cover,

Will take fright,

Will his brother stand and fight?

He met Gwydion's eye. ‘You could have told me a lot sooner.'

‘Could I? When every weft thread in the great tapestry of fate touches every warp? Should I without huge reason adjust the destiny of a Willand – or an Arthur – when I am yet unsure? But…were I in your place, I have no doubt that I would see things differently. My question to you is this: has what I have just told you made you care for me any the less?'

Will drew a deep breath and looked up with a tear in his eye. ‘I've said I'll stick with you, Master Gwydion, and I will.'

‘That goes for both of us,' Willow said.

Gwydion stood up, his face still grave. ‘Your choices please me more than I can say. From now on, we must be venturesome without being foolhardy. My staff is broken and there is now a greater enemy that threatens to overbear us, for I have lately learned of a dark arithmetic concerning the operation of the battlestones, and this more than anything has afflicted me with woes. It may be that the loss of your leaping salmon came only just in the nick of time, for I now know that even the harm that we send up into the middle airs has grim consequences for the world, no matter how or when it is done. We have seen what happens when a battlestone delivers forth its harm unhampered, but
our plight is worse than ever we thought, for that harm which we have succeeded in drawing out gradually and dispersing continues in the air like a poisonous smoke, settling harm on everyone in tiny quantities,
but also bringing down the very future that Maskull so desires.
The path to his future, it seems, is paved just as easily by countless tiny acts of ill grace as it is by one grand calamity. Therefore, we must find a new solution. Those who have died so far in the battles of this war have died for us, my friends. Our chance of a future has cost them their lives. Let us not betray their memory.'

Willow burst into tears. Will hugged her to him and thought of Bethe. Then he clasped the wizard's hand in his own. ‘I pledge you this much, Master Gwydion, that together we shall bring this great fight to its final conclusion very soon. And we shall not fail!'

When they stepped outside they found that the sun had set. Stars spangled the great, misty dome of the sky, and the butterflies that had covered the black tent were gone.

AUTHOR'S NOTE

Nowhere in
The Giants' Dance
is mention made of Britain or Ireland or any other familiar country, for these are places in our world. But the world in which Will lived is not wholly imaginary and a correspondence does exist between places and events in Will's world and those in our own.

‘The Tews' in Oxfordshire would be the right place to go to find traces of the Vale. The Cotswolds, hills not far to the east, have a couple of villages with ‘Slaughter' in their name, and by them runs the Roman road that has become in part the A429, but was once the mighty Foss Way.

Visitors to Moreton-in-Marsh will be able to find a ‘Four-shire Stone' nearby. And where the upper parts of the River Cherwell run there are villages called Eydon and Adstone, and between them at Canons Ashby there was once a priory.

Modern-day stone hunters have three villages with Tysoe in their name to choose from. If they were to set out from Stratford-upon-Avon and travel a dozen miles due west, then trend north of east through the wilds of Worcestershire (where there are villages that bear such curious names as Flyford Flavell, North Piddle and Upton Snodsbury), they would eventually arrive at the Worcester and Birmingham
Canal and, not far from Junction 6 of the M5 motorway, they would find Oddingley.

The meandering cart ride that Will and Gwydion take with the Aston Oddingley stone goes north, in our terms, through modern Droitwich. There is a River Saltwarpe there, and the elms mentioned were perhaps those that gave the name to Elmbridge before they vanished.

There are hills near Clent, a Hagley Wood, and near it, Wychbury Hill. Fiveways is a junction on the A451 north of Kidderminster. From Stourbridge, modern road travellers might skirt the great West Midlands conurbation going north along the A491, A449 and finally peeling off northwesterly along the A41. Across Shropshire our travellers would go – Gwydion's aim was ‘the city of Caistre on the Gut of Dee' – but before they could reach Cheshire their car engine would likely overheat at a place called Loggerheads, not far to the east of Market Drayton…In our world a famous battle was fought there, at a place forever after remembered as Blore Heath.

From there to Wenlock Edge is a journey south of thirty miles, and thence to the favourite town of Ludlow perhaps a dozen more.

The next stage of Will's story takes him to where ‘three waters join', the Findon Brook, the Sow and the Afon, names perhaps half familiar to the students of Warwick University, whose campus is sited only a mile or two from a similar confluence.

There was once a famous tree, in what is now Coventry's Broadgate, which gave its name to that fine city. And although it has long since been torn down, there was once a Coventry Castle too. Later, that city became justly famous for its big cats, but they were never pards of the kind that Will would have recognized.

When Will and Willow flee from Castle Corben they pass by the Towers of Time at a place called Rucke, which
was situated along the valley of the River Afon. It may be left to the reader to make whatever connections they want here, but if there was a Mulart lign in our world it would pass a mile or so to the east of Yelvertoft, a mile or so to the west of Ravensthorpe, and directly through a Northamptonshire village called Harelstone, close by the estate of Althorpe, where Princess Diana now lies buried.

Where the Mulart lign crosses with Indonen, the lign of the ash tree, we find in our world the Abbey of Delapre which has survived into our era in a much altered form as the Northamptonshire Record Office. It was around this spot that the Wars of the Roses were brought to a new pitch of fury in July, 1459 when Cardinal Coppini, an inept papal legate, excommunicated Henry VI and a battle royal ensued. The Hardingstones of Will's world (which were also mentioned in
The Language of Stones
) are commemorated in our world by a Northampton suburb.

APPENDIX I
THE OGDOAD

The Ogdoad came together during the first Age, the Age of Trees. There were nine guardians, but as magic left the world, so the Ages declined. Thus, at the ending of each Age, the Phantarch and the foremost of his deputies departed into the Far North, leaving the lesser deputy to become the new Phantarch.

Age of Trees
CELENOST (Phantarch) Brynach (his deputy)
Age of Giants
MAGLIN Urias
Age of Iron
ESRAS Morfesa
Age of Slavery and War
SEMIAS
Age of Dispute
Gwydion and Maskull
APPENDIX II
THE LORC

There were nine ligns spoken of in the Black Book, but they are unequal. The weakest flow is in Heligan, whereas Eburos, the strongest, has almost twice its flow. This list shows the ligns in order of their power and shows the trees with which they are associated.

1. Eburos
Yew
2. Mulart
Elder
3. Bethe
Birch
4. Indonen
Ash
5. Caorthan
Rowan
6. Tanne
Oak
7. Celin
Holly
8. Collen
Hazel
9. Heligan
Willow

All battlestones stand on at least one lign. The ligns, which are always straight, cross at 24 points around the Realm. There is always a stone where the ligns cross, but not all stones standing on the lorc are battlestones.

APPENDIX III
THE LORC IN OUR WORLD

The places in Will's world where the stones of the lorc are sited all have, of course, equivalent places in our world. Those who want to find these places and perhaps plot them on a map should start by looking for the places where the main battles of the Wars of the Roses were fought.

A further clue to how the ligns of the lorc connect these places is given by the device that appears on the side of Will's fish talisman – three triangles drawn within one another.

Readers with access to the Internet (or perhaps a GPS receiver) and Ordnance Survey maps might like to have slightly more detailed information. The approximate OS grid references given below show to within half a mile where the stones of the lorc would stand if we were in Will's world.

Of these grid references, the first points to the Giant's Ring, the next eighteen point to all the major battlestones, and the final eighteen to the lesser guidestones.

SP3030

TQ2693, SO4364, TL1307, SO9444, SP7261, SE3418, SK3803, SP5755, SE4840, SO5074,
SP9672, SP4951, SP4192, SK9813, SP6669, S09156, NU0423, NY9562, SP1635, SJ9755, TQ1698, SP5522, SJ6793, SS9280, SE5448, SK2194, TL0576, SP2941, ST3198, ND1546, NJ2658, TL2402, SP5332, NU0207, NY9241, S04675

If you type these map references into an Internet OS grid map webpage, such as the ones found at:

www.streetmap.co.uk

or

www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/oswebsite/getamap you will see the approximate location. Try it, you might find you're living on top of a battlestone.

THE STORY CONTINUES IN

WHITEMANTLE

due for publication in May 2006

About the Author
The Giants' Dance

Robert Carter was born exactly five hundred years after the first battle of the Wars of the Roses. He was brought up in the Midlands and later on the shores of the Irish Sea where his forebears hail from. He was variously educated in Britain, Australia and the United States, then worked for some years in the Middle East and remote parts of Africa. He travelled widely in the East before joining the BBC in London in 1982. His interests have included astronomy, pole-arm fighting, canals, collecting armour, steam engines, composing music and enjoying the English countryside, and he has always maintained a keen interest in history. Today he lives in a ‘village' that only sounds rural – Shepherd's Bush.

Visit Robert Carter's website at: www.languageofstones.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

By Robert Carter

The Language of Stones

The Giants' Dance

Copyright

This novel is entirely a work of fiction.

The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

HarperCollins
Publishers

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Hammersmith, London W6 8JB

www.harpercollins.co.uk

First published in Great Britain by HarperCollins
Publishers
2005

Copyright © Robert Carter 2005

Robert Carter asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

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EPub Edition © JULY 2010 ISBN: 978-0-007-39823-2

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

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BOOK: The Giants' Dance
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