Chapter 12–To the north (5454)
They walked
north for two hours, until it got dark, then walked on for one more hour to
where Ghene had found a cave. The druid’s expanded it somewhat, making a dog
leg at the back as they had before to offer protection from possible dragon
attack.
Wood was
gathered and a fire was lit. There was plenty of food once more, the druids
gathered and hunted it as they went. There was no conversation until after the
evening meal, everyone being lost in thought except for Meggelaine who was
muttering to herself.
Eventually
Broddor threw his last bone into the fire and said, ‘Has it been twenty days
now? Since the shipwreck?’
‘Something
like that,’ confirmed Roztov.
‘So what’s
the plan?’
The druids
all looked at each other, then Roztov spoke again. ‘I’m toying with the idea of
another madcap flight. Due north this time.’
‘Oh no!’
cried Meggelaine.
‘It’s just
an idea,’ he said, trying to sooth his friend. ‘Probably not a good one.’
‘Definitely
not a good one, oh please!’ she groaned. ‘How we survived that flight through
the chasm I have no idea. At any time we could have met one of the big ones
coming the other direction.’
‘I have to
agree, Roz,’ said Ghene. ‘We had scouted the chasm for days, so we knew where
it went. We have little idea of what is to the north. We also had the Spire
hunting grounds to hide in once we were clear of the chasm. We don’t know
what’s up there. We wouldn’t have a place of safety to flee back to.’
‘Unless we
came all the way back here.’
‘Not a
chance,’ pleaded Meggelaine. ‘I’d never survive it.’
‘No, no, I
see that,’ replied Roztov. ‘I’m just talking. It’s just, if we flew north and
didn’t stop, then saw a boat and took it by force... No, you’re right, that
would never work, we’d have a hundred dragons on top of us... or, maybe someone
scouts first, then we know where to take everyone. It’s just we could do it in
a day or two. I’ve a feeling if we stay on the ground we’ll be another twenty
days on the island.’
‘What’s the
big rush?’ Meggelaine said as she pulled herself in closer to the fire. ‘If it
takes twenty days then it takes twenty days.’
‘Better to
scout first, whatever we do,’ said Ghene. ‘I’ve no idea what is north of us. We
should probably just edge forward for a bit. See how it goes. Scout and move,
then scout and move. In truth, I’m surprised we’ve made it this far.’
The next
morning, Ghene was up before all the others and scouting ahead. Roztov took the
front of the line as the group moved out and Meggelaine bringing up the rear.
With no Ophess to keep quiet Meggelaine was more at liberty to help out, so it
was now her job to make sure they left no trail that could be followed by the
manhunters. There was little talking, and what little was done was in a
whisper. The lands around the Spire were so still that talking felt like an
intrusion into the silence. The loss of Ophess also sat heavily on them too,
but as the party spread out along the trail, some quiet conversations
eventually started.
‘She’s the
first we’ve lost since the wreck,’ Broddor remarked to Floran as they walked
together.
‘Yes.’
‘I can see
the sailors have heavy hearts,’ mused the dwarf. ‘She was far from popular with
them, but she was one of theirs.’
Floran
looked up ahead. The sailors were well out of earshot.
‘They will
be wondering which of them will be next.’
‘Tup, you
can sometimes say rather harsh things, and that’s coming from me,’ said the
dwarf. He sighed then went on.‘You are right enough though. Lucky for them they
travel with us, I suppose. Oh, we’re stopping...’
They were
still in the forest, following a snow covered trail as it wound its way up
through the lower slopes of a mountain. Through gaps in the trees and when the
slope was at the right angle they could see down to the sea.
The group
came together and as Roztov approached, Broddor said, ‘Wherever are you leading
us? I’m no expert lad, as you know, but it feels like we are going round in
circles.’
‘Ah, yes, I
expect it does,’ admitted his friend, ‘Let’s eat lunch here. We need to get
around the edge of the northern spur of the chasm. Ghene is going to find the
way.’
‘Righto.’
‘Let’s go down
here. It will be nice to look over the coast.’
He led them
a few hundred yards to where a tight stand of trees stood at the top of a tall
cliff. From here they could look down on the mile of forest that almost seem to
be falling down the side if the steep slopes that lead down to the beach. The
sea was dark and storm-tossed, what they could see of it, which was a thin
strip of dark grey between the white of the sandy beach and the white of the wall
of fog.
Roztov and Meggelaine
made a hide that sheltered them from the wind and from view. No fire was lit
and they all ate the leftover food from the evening meal. Roztov lay with his
back to a rock, at the front of the hide, looking out across the shore as he
chewed on a portion of smoked meat.
‘When you
look at it, it’s incredible. A wall of fog, as far as the eye can see in either
direction. It must shroud the entire island.’
‘Aye,’
agreed Broddor, who was resting against the wall of the hide. ‘I dare say.’
‘It’s hard
to see how far back it goes. You know, I was below deck when we wrecked. What
made the captain think it was a good idea to go into a fog bank with full
sail?’
‘If the
captain was alive we could ask him,’ replied Broddor dryly.
‘He was being
guided by Dreggen, remember?’ put in Meggelaine as she sat down beside them.
‘He must have been aiming for the island.’
‘Well yes,’
said Roztov. ‘We know for sure Dreggen wanted to come here. I suppose he must
have told the captain he knew there was nothing dangerous in the fog or
something.’
Broddor
shrugged and everyone was lost in thought for a while. The dwarf could see that
Meggelaine was dwelling on the wreck again so he said, ‘How long will Ghene
be?’
‘Maybe
another hour or so,’ replied Roztov. ‘He said he’d have a bit of a flap about.
See if he could find the most sheltered trail around the side of the mountain.’
‘Well, tell
us all a tale then lad.’
‘Oh, I’m not
really in the...’
‘Somebody
mentioned something about the Council outhouse a while back. I’ve not heard
that one in years. Go on lad.’
Broddor
smiled and nodded his head to the others in the hide to get their attention.
‘Very well,’
said Roztov. ‘This story, well, it’s got bigger over the years, that’s safe to
say. It has become a sort of cautionary tale I tell to anyone who ever expects
the Great Forest Council to do anything in a hurry. Or to go at any pace faster
than glacial, really. Firstly you have to realise that the Great Forest is huge
and the biggest population is goblins. There are elven kingdoms hidden away in
its depths though, also druidic enclaves and such like.’
He addressed
himself to the sailors, who with nothing better to do were now also listening.
‘Elves don’t
really do towns. A family makes a house somewhere and as the family grows this
might turn into an estate. Each estate is usually a mile or so away from any
other estate, so elven settlements spread over tens of miles. For a council
though, that’s impractical, so right in the middle of the forest is the nearest
thing they have to a town. And in that town there is a big building where the
druids of the GFC meet. The town, the settlements, the forest, it’s all part of
an elven kingdom called Gressy. Well, calling it a kingdom is a bit much maybe
for a collection of estates that spread over the entire Great Forest. Not very
important to know that I suppose, as the town and the council building is run
by a very powerful elven druid called Lilly.’
‘Etruna
bless her,’ put in Meggelaine.
‘Yes, bless
her cotton socks. Elven toilet habits, well I’ve never been able to work out
what they do. I suppose they must go to the toilet, but it’s a mystery to me
how they go about it. You’ll never hear an elf fart either. Ever. But it is a
druid council, not an elven one, and there are a lot of human and fressle
druids in the world. Other races too. We all poop they way everyone poops, you
know? Fressles do it the same way humans do, just in smaller quantities.’
‘Most of
them anyway,’ interrupted Meggelaine again.
‘Some
exceptions spring to mind. Anyway, we needed a place to go do it. The first
time I was there, I was much younger, I need to, you know... go. I was too
embarrassed to ask one of the elves, so I turned into a hawk and flew out deep
into the forest and did it there. I was only there for two weeks, so that’s
what I did for the entire length of my visit. I wasn’t back again for about two
years, and by then Meggelaine was permanently installed there. Since we are
such old friends I asked her if she had worked out where the facilities were.
It turned out she was doing the exact same thing I had done the last time I was
there!’
Broddor
snorted with laughter, which set some of the others to chuckling.
‘Well, something
had to be done,’ continued Roztov.‘At that time there were about a hundred
permanent members of the council and about a third of them were not elves. So
that’s thirty-odd people that were having to wander off, deep into the forest,
whenever they needed to go do their business. You really had to plan your day
around it, it was absurd. So, someone braver than me eventually put it on the council
agenda to discuss the building of an outhouse.’
‘Here we
go,’ laughed Broddor.
‘It’s simple
enough right? I put one up at my own house in the forest in a day, bish-bosh
job done. For a druid it’s the work of a moment. You would have thought it
would be simple. Dig a hole. Construct a hide over the top of it. Have it a few
dozen yards away from the council building. Well, what a fuss the elves made.
Lilly’s reaction was like, well I don’t know, it was like we were proposing to
all go poop in her bed.’
Meggelaine
gave him a look.
‘Oh she
really was that bad, Meg. Meeting after meeting they had about planning
permission for that infernal outhouse. The elves pushed it right back out into
the forest so that it was completely impractical, but then there would be some
horse trading over other things and a non-elf would manage to bring it in a
bit. I remember I managed to move it in by about twenty yards by agreeing to
deliver a letter to the King of Styke. Something regarding elven rights in
Tanglewood I think. Well, that year, I remember, I was back and forth running
various errands and after that year the outhouse still wasn’t bloody built. To
this day I’ve never used an outhouse at the GFC. Did you ever get it built
Meg?’
‘Sort of.’
‘What do you
mean, sort of?’
And so the
conversation continued into the trials and tribulations of planning bathroom
facilities in elven lands. They were in
a more relaxed mood when Ghene returned. Only Meggelaine remained anxious and
withdrawn.
‘What are
you all laughing about?’ Ghene asked as he sat down to admire the view.
‘Come on
then. How do elves poop?’ asked Broddor with a grin.
‘What?’
‘Talking
about the GFC outhouse again.’
Ghene
sighed, ‘I see, well. Perhaps one day when you’re old enough I’ll tell you.’
Broddor
grunted and gave a brief dismissive wave. Ghene smiled, ignored the dwarf and
told them of what he’d done while scouting. Ten minutes later they went on
their way again.
Ghene had
found them a good campsite some miles further north and with the aid of magical
lights provided by Floran to guide them they travelled through the night to get
to it. It was deemed worth the risk of being seen to leave the territory of the
Spire Dragons well behind them.
There were
fewer trees on this part of the coast, but Ghene had found them a ruined
cottage that the druids pulled roots over to make a roof. It was sheltered from
the wind and warm enough for them to take their coats off.
As they ate
their evening meal the druids talked of politics.
‘So which is
worse?’ asked Roztov. ‘Dreggen bringing his message to this King Primus fellow
and the creation of some kind of portal that links Stovologard to Old Bones –
or not?’
‘Sorry,
explain this to a daft old dwarf will you,’ said Broddor. ‘Why would the
opening of this portal be a good thing?’
‘Well. King
Primus seems to think that he can negotiate with Old Bones. He’s wrong. You
can’t negotiate with death, not even a dragon can do that. Primus may as well
try and negotiate with a disease, or I don’t know, a tidal wave. The dragons on
this island are immensely powerful, but they are of the living. Old Bones is
undead.’
‘Right,’
said Broddor sceptically.
‘Don’t you
see? This portal, or whatever, opens and Old Bones will send his armies through
it. Tanud doesn’t have an ally, it has an invasion on its hands. Two threats to
Nillamandor become neutralised.’
‘Oh but
Roz,’ put in Meggelaine. ‘Think of the people that live here, not just the
dragons. They’d be slaughtered.’
‘I know,’
admitted Roztov. ‘Or look at it this way, perhaps the three factions of Tanud,
the Chasm dragons, the Spire dragons and the northern dragons would stop their
own feud and unite against a common enemy. It may end up better for them.’
‘Whatever
happened, it would keep them all busy,’ agreed Ghene. ‘We would certainly be
glad of Garumuda being distracted from his schemes back on Nillamandor.’
‘Or,’
blurted out Meggelaine, ever the contrarian. ‘We end up with a massive undead
dragon army not just in the east, but in the west as well?’
‘Yes,’ said
Roztov, pulling on his beard as he thought. ‘We have no idea of knowing. I’ve
no idea what’s best. Whether to keep them apart, or let them have at it.’
‘You
druids,’ grunted Broddor. ‘You won’t be able to help yourselves. You’ll
interfere somehow. You should have stuck a knife in Dreggen when you had the
chance Ghene.’
‘It would
have made no difference, the Spire dragons know the message now. King Primus
probably knows already from them.’
‘Knows what
though?’ mused Roztov. ‘A note that says “Dear Kingy, getting together is a
lovely idea, let’s set up a portal. Love and Kisses, OB”?’
‘Right. A
portal. What do we know about portals?’ said Meggelaine.
‘Well not a
druid’s ring, that’s for sure,’ put in Ghene.‘They function through the glory
of Etruna. Dragons could move the stones I suppose, but the magic required is
closed to them.’
‘Well, you
are the expert on druid rings, sweetie,’ said Roztov as he tried to reach over
to tussle her hair.
‘You shut
your face,’ she said as she ducked out of reach.‘Tup, you have magic teleporty
thingies in Hyadna don’t you?’
Floran had
been paying little attention to their conversation.
‘Eh? Sorry,
what?’
Meggelaine
scowled at him. ‘Those strange pyramids of yours. Magical travel etcetera.’
‘Oh yes,’
smiled Floran as he bowed his head in apology. ‘There is a network of twenty-three
pyramids throughout the Al Hamdalla region. Only the Vizards of Heshmatiye know
how to use them. You couldn’t get a dragon through one, a horse maybe. They use
a great deal of magical power to send even just a man.’
There was a
pause for a moment or two then Ghene spoke. ‘I’ve heard stories, I expect we
all have, of how Old Bones moves his undead about. If you look at how overrun
Gnarlwold is, there are some that hypothesis that he has some magical means of
moving his armies around. Nobody knows, but one theory is these things called
Dead Gates. No one has even seen any evidence of them, but he must have some
method of moving thousands of undead around Nillamandor without them being
seen. He can’t be marching them through Eask and Lodz and he’s definitely not
taking them by sea.’
‘Straight up
teleportation, without rings or pyramids then?’ asked Roztov.
‘Not even
the Dynar could do that. They considered it impossible, other than by the use
of the druidic rings and the grace of Etruna.’
‘And yet the
Vizards can do it.’
‘We don’t
know!’ snapped Meggelaine. ‘Perhaps if we had more druids helping out at the
GFC we would know, but we don’t.’
Roztov and
Ghene remained silent after their friend’s outburst. She scowled and busied
herself with the few cups and pots they had retained since fleeing Moletown.
Roztov got up from his place by the fire, grunting as his knees popped and went
over to where he had arranged his bed and lay down to sleep.
The next day
their journey led them down out of the mountains and away from the coast, into
a more relatively flat forested area. There
was a narrow strip of land, no more than a few miles wide, between the eastern
end of thechasm and the sea. Although it was well covered by trees the druids
kept careful watch and Ghene scouted ahead of the main group.
Once they
were clear of the chasm they entered an area of rugged hills that didn't seemto
be inhabited or hunted by anyone. It was a desolate land, with short fat alder
trees growingonly in the shallow valleys.
The terrain
remained the same for the next four days they travelled through it. Always
going north, they camped each night in a secluded hollow or glade, usually
lighting a fire and eating whatever food the druids had gathered from their
trek through the valleys. There was little game to be had, but the druids found
all sorts of things that were edible, although not necessarily pleasant to eat.
The druids
led the group slowly, keeping their eyes open for threats. The few dragons that
did fly overheadwere easily avoided andon the fifth day they reached the sea
again. Spring was well on its way now, but the strong winds that came off the
half frozen white tipped waves was flecked with ice.
Between the
alder scattered hills and valleys and the sea was a strip of sand dunes covered
in hardy grass. The hollows of the dunes were filled with snow, blown in by
strong winds coursing along the coastline. The druids stopped for a while, taking
in the view, reading the weather and the lie of the land. Eventually they led
the group west along the beach, into the wind. There was little cover in this
region, none at all on the beach and only a little shelter to be had behind the
taller dunes further in land.
There wasn’t
much the druids could do about the harsh wind. Everyone pulled their cloak
hood’s down over their faces and did their best to shield their eyes from the
sand and ice being blown at them. Roztov was watching the sky though and after
about an hour of slogging west into the wind he shouted out when he saw a
dragon high overhead.
‘Everyone
lie down!’ he yelled over the howling wind. 'Put your hands over your noses and
mouths.'
Then with a
sweeping motion of his right hand he magically covered everyone in a few inches
of sand. Roztov himself was covered, except for his eyes, and he watched as the
dragon flew over. It was following the coast, from east to west, a dark
silhouette against the pale grey sky. As it flew off into the distance he
raised his head up out of the sand, then gradually his body. When it had completely
gone he called out to the others that the coast was clear. They all then rose
out of the sand, brushed off their cloaks and clothes, then continued on their
way, battling against the wind with every step.
On the
second day heading south-west along the beach they could see mountains looming
out of the mist, dark smudges against the slate grey sky.
'I think we
need to attune to this area,' said Ghene when they stopped for a short rest, 'and
learn what lies on the other sideof those mountains. I only have the vaguest of
notions of where Stovologard could be in relation to where we are.'
‘We’ll need
to find a decent place to camp,’ replied Roztov, holding his cloak’s hood down
with one hand to stop it being blown back. ‘It’s impossible to fly in this
wind. I’ll scout ahead for a bit.’ He then crouched down and turned into a fox.
He sniffed the air then cantered off down the beach.
He found
them a place to shelter from the wind although it was dark by the time they got
there. It was a cramped little cave, formed from the space between a pile of
large rocks. The druids shaped it a little to keep out the draughts and a fire
was lit. The cave soon grew warm, a happy respite from the wind howling
outside.There was barely enough room for everyone to lie down, so Roztov used
his magic to carve an additional space out of one of the rocks at the rear. The
others brought in bundles of course dune grass to make beds from.
‘I’m
exhausted. Every step against that wind is a struggle,’ said Meggelaine as she
threw a stick on the fire then flopped onto her bed of grass.
‘This is a
harsh land,’ said Broddor. ‘This is our third night on this coast and the wind
hasn’t stopped for a second. I’ve got sand everywhere. And I mean everywhere.’
Roztov was
closest to the low entrance of the cave. ‘It’s started snowing again.’
‘That’s all
we need,’ grumbled Meggelaine. ‘I’ve never seen the sea iced over before.’
‘You have.’
‘Eh? When?’
‘That winter
after we came down from the Moon Marshes. The harbour of that town, I can’t
remember its name. It was frozen over. We had to wait until spring to get
passage on a ship.’
‘The town’s
name was Shellbe,’ said Ghene. ‘I’m going to the back of the cave to start the
attuning process.’
‘Do you want
anything to eat?’ offered Meggelaine, although she was too tired to think of
cooking anything.
‘Later
perhaps, thank you.’
They stayed
in the cave all the next day and night. It was warm though, and there was enough
to eat, so everyone was content just to be in out of the weather. Ghene spent
the rest of the evening attuning. In the morning he turned into a bird and flew
north.
By the next
day though, most of them were bored of life inside the cave so they went
fishing in the rock pools nearby. They had crabs for their dinner.
Late on the
second night Ghene returned and as he warmed himself by the fire with a cup of
tea he gave his report.
'There is a
narrow isthmus between this area and the rest of the island
to the north. Virtuallyimpassable on foot. Beyond it is a wall of tall
mountains, then a ridge that leads down into theforest. Beyond that I did not
see.'
He put his
cup down and stretched out his legs before continuing. ‘Just north of here is
an inlet, it’s about a mile wide. There are jagged cliffs on either side, like
the fjords of Vegas. All of it looks impassable, I saw no animal
trails, let alone paths. I don’t think anyone ever travels this region. People
going between the two halves of the island must go by boat.’
‘Perhaps we should do some mountain hoping then,’ said Roztov. ‘Scout
for a good camp, fly everyone up, then do it again.’
‘In these winds?’
‘If we are not flying right into the teeth of it we should be ok. What
other choice do we have?’
So it was
decided that they would begin their cautious hoping flights north in the
morning. By the light of the fire they sharpened the blades of their weapons
and cleaned their armour. Meggelaine washed out the cups and pots with melted
snow.
As Roztov
washed some of the dirt off his dented helmet, Ghene smiled and asked him, ‘Why
have you never replaced that old thing?’
‘Oh, I don’t
know. It brings me luck maybe.’
‘You are too
tight to buy a new one, more like,’ put in Meggelaine.
‘Was it
dented in some might battle?’ asked Arin. ‘Fighting against a foe like
Doomshade?’
Roztov liked
that the sailors were joining in with his and his friend’s conversations more
recently.
‘Actually
no,’ he admitted. ‘Strangely, one day when I was on the road to Timu, I was hit
on the head by a falling turtle.’
‘Really?’
said Arin in confusion, ‘Where had it come from?’
‘To this day
I do not know, I can only assume it was dropped by an eagle.’
Broddor was
laughing. ‘Don’t listen to him lad. He tells a different story about that dent
each time he is asked.’
‘Oh, I see,’
said Arin leaning back as he realised it was a joke.
‘When Roz
first came to our fortress, he was wearing that helmet and it had a dent in it
then. Did it have a dent in it when your father gave it to you?’
‘Why
actually yes, and he told me he got the dent when an ogre hit him on the head
with a roast ox leg. You see, he was in a cave...’
Roztov
paused when he saw Meggelaine was scowling at him, she was still grieving over
the death of Ophess and found their mirth annoying.
‘Just buy a
new one, for Etruna’s sake,’ she snapped.
‘Where?’
said Roztov looking around in an exaggerated fashion and then shrugging.
‘You know
what I mean.’
‘They say
you are wealthy, is that true?’ asked Salveri curiously.
‘Oh Roz is
richer than a king,’ replied Broddor.
‘Not true.’
‘Oh it is.
He’s a hoarder. Like a dragon. He never spends a single penny unless he
absolutely has to. Typical Stykian.’
‘Well, I
invested my share from Volek’s horde. Unlike other people I know that drank it
all away.’
‘Hah! Playing
into the stereotypes of dwarves!’ accused Broddor although he had just done the
same to Roztov. ‘I didn't drink it, well not all of it. Most of it went to the
temple.’
‘Well, you
can both donate something to Ophess’s family when we get back then,’ said
Meggelaine.
‘Sorry,
Meg,’ said Broddor. ‘Insensitive of us.’
Roztov rolled
his eyes, then turned back to watch the snow being whipped about by the wind
outside the door of the cave.
In the
morning they put their plan to push north into motion. Roztov carried Salveri
and Arrin, Ghene carried Broddor, while Floran summoned a giant bee to carry
both himself and Tankle. Meggelaine carried no one and turned into a kestrel.
They dropped
down twice, once on each side of the fjord and finally made their camp at the
end of the day high in the mountains in a deep cave that Ghene had found. There
was no fuel for a fire, so Floran created a magical one to keep them warm.
‘What a
desolate region this is,’ remarked Meggelaine as she rubbed her hands and
heated herself by the fire. ‘I’m never going to be able to sleep on this rock.
I need pine branches, or reeds, or earth at least. Who has the food?’
Roztov
handed her the bag with their supplies. She opened it and began to sort out the
rations.
‘Not a bird,
not a dragon, not a living soul did I see the whole flight today,’ Roztov said
later as he ate his meal of baked potatoes and smoked rotrok meat. Tonight they
were finishing the last of the food from the forests around the Spire.
Meggelaine
was still apparently in a foul mood, as from nowhere she said, ‘You are of an
age, you should be in the council.’
‘Now then,
Meg,’ he said softly.
‘You and all
your money. Sat on your big pile of wealth in your estate in Angor. You should
be helping out at the GFC.’
‘What do you
think I’m doing now?’
‘You should
join the Council when we get back then.’
‘Sure sure,
when we get back. Anyway, there are plenty of druids older than me all over the
place that have nothing to do with the GFC.’
‘Yes, but
they are hermits and mendicants. You have incredible power in you. Lilly talks
of you daily.’
‘Does she?’
‘You are a
great disappointment to her. She says you have squandered all your potential.’
‘Hey!’
scolded Roztov. ‘I’m trying to raise a family.’
‘Oh please.
Your poor wife waits on you hand and foot in that mansion of yours.’
‘Firstly,
it’s not a mansion, which you would know if you had ever seen it, and secondly
Jeb doesn’t wait on me hand of foot, which you would know if you had ever met
her!’
‘The reason
I’ve never been to visit,’ said Meggelaine with tears forming in her eyes, ‘is
because we are so busy trying to do everything
back at the council because of all the bloody druids that don’t pull their
weight!’
Roztov held
up his hand defensively, ‘Listen. How can this be the time to brow beat me into
joining the GFC?’
‘It’s not,’
agreed Ghene. ‘But what Meg says is true. You would do a lot of good there.’
‘Build me a
bloody proper toilet and I might consider it,’ said Roztov, getting to his feet
angrily.‘I know you are still upset about Ophess, but that’s all done now Meg.
I’m going to sleep now. Goodnight!’
Roztov
turned into a large grizzly bear, snarled, then curled up into a huge furry
ball at the back of the cave.
‘That’s
never good,’ remarked Broddor. ‘When he goes to sleep as a bear.’
‘I know
that,’ snapped Meggelaine.
There was
silence for a while. The strange magical fire made no sound, there was no
crackle from the wood, just the feint roaring sound of the flames. Meggelaine
sat and watched it for a while, as the others began to bed down on the hard
rock, spreading their cloaks and using their packs and bags as pillows.
‘I’ll never
sleep like that,’ she muttered then went over to where the bear was gently
snoring and pulled herself up onto its back. It didn’t notice as she lay down
on top of it. Meggelaine snuggled in and from her warm spot in the bear’s fur
watched the fire for another hour before finally falling asleep.
When she
woke in the morning the bear was gone and she was wrapped up snugly in Roztov’s
cloak. Light filtered in from the cave mouth where she could see Ghene, Broddor
and Floran talking. She sat up, yawned and stretched.
‘Where did
he go?’ she asked as she approached the others.
‘North,’
answered Ghene. ‘He’s gone to scout out Stovologard. He said we should wait
here until he returns.’
Meggelaine
sighed, feeling responsible for her friend’s sudden departure.
‘He better
not get himself killed. How long? He didn’t go as a dragon did he?’
‘Two or
three days I should think, he should just be looking for the next safe spot to
camp. And no, he was a sparrowhawk,’ replied Ghene.
‘Although knowing
him he might have a look around for boats worth nicking,’ said Broddor.
‘Right
fine,’ said Meggelaine, then sighed again, ‘I’ll get breakfast ready for
everyone.’
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