“This is where we part ways then,” Adahy broke the silence, unable to hide the tremor in his voice.
“My Lord,” Maedoc stammered, “perhaps I should-”
“Mind our bags,” the prince interrupted, not giving the whipping boy time to make a suggestion his heart would not wish to follow through with, “I shall be back soon.”
Adahy marched towards the house, not wanting to give Maedoc time to respond, but also not wanting to give himself the opportunity to change his own mind. As he moved into the clearing, the featureless pale face that had hung in the left window withdrew, disappearing. He arrived at the door and gave it a knock. He was rewarded by a breathy voice speaking to him from beyond the portal.
“Shall your young friend not be joining us?”
Adahy’s eyes grew wide. Whatever he had been steeling himself for, it was not such a mundane conversation as this. “Um, no. He, uh, he’s going to stay over there.”
“But he has come so far to see me. It would be a shame for him to have to wait while we chat.”
“He’s, uh, he’s fine. I have come for the Magpie King’s flower. It is a task I have to perform by myself.”
A child-like tutting rang out from behind the door. “Oh dear. You have not performed this task alone though, have you? He has travelled across half the forest with you and you think these last few feet shall make any difference? Oh dear.”
A shiver ran up Adahy’s spine, but he persisted. “He is much happier over there. I will be entering by myself, if I am permitted.”
“Oh, by all means, do come in,” whispered the Pale Lady, the door opening at the sound of her invitation. Adahy caught a glimpse of a white robe drifting through a doorway at the back of the hall, and then stepped inside to follow her. The room was plain, the woodwork well finished, but left undecorated. A thin layer of dust coated the floor, enough to grey the strong oak brown. A glance upwards opened Adahy’s eyes to a dense collection of cobwebs, in which the owners were particularly active, travelling along the slender threads to the struggling prey they had stored there.
Adahy walked down the hall and entered what was evidently the main chamber of the building. It maintained a similar finish and cleanliness as the hallway, with the exception of the back wall of the room, which appeared to be made of the exposed trunk of the dead tree that stood behind the Lonely House. He also noted an empty fireplace with a small potted black plant sitting on the mantelpiece. Adahy would have ran and grabbed the artifact there and then, if not for the figure that hung in the air beside his prize.
The Pale Lady was small, and from the features Adahy was able to discern he could swear that she was no more than a child, yet this fact did nothing to assuage his fear of her. She wore a long night gown, finely embroidered, that fell beyond her feet. Her oil-black hair hung across her face, hiding her features from the young prince. The skin on her bare arms matched the brilliant white of her simple garment. Most unsettling of all to Adahy was the fact that no feet emerged from the gown to touch the ground. Instead a mess of tree roots curled under that white gown, trailing across the floor of the room back to the exposed tree trunk wall. When travelling here, Adahy and Maedoc had been unable to determine what her mood might have been. The half-whispered stories they remembered about her suggested that her mood would have something to do with the phases of the moon, but that brilliant orb was currently halfway to waxing full - that meant nothing, surely? Or ambivalence at best. Adahy had to be careful.
“My name is Adahy of the Corvae. My father was the Magpie King. I have come to claim my birthright and avenge his death.”
The creature hung in the air for a moment and then responded with, “And why should I give you what you seek?” As the apparition in front of him spoke, she cocked her head slightly and gave an open gesture with her arms. Adahy’s eyes widened as he realised the tree roots below her body were moving. He also noticed an uncanny rippling beneath her white skin, as if a family of snakes were writhing together just below the surface every time her body moved.
“It is my birthright,” the prince repeated. “My father was the Magpie King, and his father before him. Our line goes back beyond our history, and I am next to shoulder this responsibility. You hold the power I require to protect the forest.”
“I care nothing for little kings and their history. You say you shall protect the forest. Why should I believe you? Magpie King upon Magpie King has uttered this promise in the past, and still there is fighting, fear and death. No, I think my gift shall remain with me.”
Adahy was at a loss. He had not expected claiming the flower to be easy, but similarly he had not been expecting such a wall of resistance. A task, a riddle, a challenge, maybe, but not a flat out refusal. “Is there anything I can offer you to change your mind?”
“An offer? A trade, perhaps? I do so like trades. But what have you got to offer me?”
Adahy searched his mind. He had come here without anything of value, not expecting to need it. He had nothing except the cloak on his back. Perhaps... “I offer you this cloak, sown from the gathered feathers of Magpies throughout our great forest. Such a garment takes years-”
“Pah.” At this exclamation the voice in his ear turned more guttural, and his paranoia told him that there was more anger in the Pale Lady’s words than there had been before. “What would I want with a bird man’s cloak? Will it let me fly like a bird? Do not tell me it shall keep me warm. No clothing in the forest exists that could perform such a task. Do not tell me how fetching I shall look draped in it. I above all others know of where that path ultimately leads. Pah to your cloak.”
Adahy searched his mind. The stories of the Pale Lady were so sparse, he could not gleam any details from them that could aid him now. Tales such as hers normally involved unusual prices such as a first-born child, a traveller’s Knack or one’s very soul. He was unsure about which of those prices he would be willing to pay.
“Great Lady, I struggle to think of anything I have with me that would match the value of this flower. Please, aid our negotiations by telling me the currency that would interest you.”
“Why, young Adahy, the only currency that is worth trading in. Blood.”
As if she had uttered the final lines of a spell, at the close of that sentence the window exploded, shattering inwards in a hail of glass and fur. Adahy was too late. The Wolves had found him.
The prince made a desperate leap for the source of his father’s power. Unfortunately, one-on-one, he was no match for the beast in speed or size. The lone Wolf easily intercepted the boy mid-air, sending him spiralling back across the room, sending cracks up the wooden wall where Adahy impacted upon it. Despite the death that was moving towards him, Adahy’s look of fear was saved for the Pale Lady, terrified of her reaction to the violation of her home. She simply hung in the air beside the fireplace, watching events unfold before her.
“Will you not help me?” Adahy pleaded. As if in response, the Wolf darted forward to rake a claw across Adahy’s chest, leaving a deliberately shallow wound, but one still deep enough to cause the prince to cry out in pain and fall to his knees. His assailant gave him a backhanded blow that sent him to the floor. Only when his cheek was lying flat on the wood did he see a new figure silently skulking in through the now-exposed wall. It was Maedoc, his trembling showing how absolutely terrified he was. Like Adahy, his remaining eye was fixed on the Pale Lady, completely ignoring the Wolf when faced with her presence.
Then Maedoc nodded his head, gaze still fixed on the floating apparition.
Is he communicating with her somehow?
Almost against his own will, Maedoc painfully made his way up to the fireplace, extended his hand to the flower, and picked a single black petal from it. He faced the Wolf, which by now had one of its hind paws placed firmly on Adahy’s head, beginning to push it into the floor. Maedoc placed the petal on his tongue. Adahy stared at the whipping boy as the boy with the mauled face chewed, and then charged at the Wolf.
> The creature went careening off through the wall into the hallway, with Maedoc soaring after it, screaming while he pounded his enemy with his bare fists. Adahy picked himself up, wincing through the pain. His heart fell when he looked at the gap in the house where the window used to be. Three pairs of eyes stared back at him. His head turned again to the flower sitting atop the mantelpiece. The Pale Lady moved aside, raising her hand in a welcoming gesture. He sprinted across the room to grab the bloom. As one, the Wolves leapt through the gap in the wall towards their prey. In the hallway, Maedoc’s tortured screams were accompanied by wet impacts as his punches broke his enemy’s bones and jellied its flesh. Adahy opened his mouth and tasted the sweet tang of the black flower’s nectar. The three Wolves arrived at their target, their necks already broken as they sailed past him and fell in a heap to the floor. It took seconds for Adahy to realise he was the one who had, by instinct, committed their murder. Already, the power of the Magpie King flowed through his veins.
Maedoc stumbled through the opening he had created mere moments earlier, giving a soft moan as he stepped. He raised his hands to hold his head, blood mixed with torn flesh and hair dripping down his face. Adahy ran to his friend to help him stand.
“Ah, the mayfly hero and the Magpie King. My Lords.” The Pale Lady bowed to the pair and then left the room.
“Did you see me?” Maedoc gasped, wheezing as he breathed. “I killed it. Took it apart with my bare hands.” The whipping boy’s breathing was getting rougher now, and his pupil was a tiny pinprick inside of his deep brown eye. The flower’s poison was already working on him.
“Yes,” was Adahy’s reply. “Now we have a chance.”
He slung his friend’s arm over his back and helped him move outside, through the window. The night remained as black as ever but Adahy could not help but be assaulted by a sense of discovery as he looked upon it with new eyes. He could hear a family of thrushes sheltering in a nearby oak. Across the clearing, he could spot the broken leaves and twigs that signified the path the attacking Wolves had taken to reach the Lonely House.
“What’s the plan now, then?” Maedoc gasped.
Adahy’s feet were picking up vibrations in the ground, caused by heavy animals pounding in the dirt several miles away. More Wolves heading towards them.
“Revenge,” was the simple answer the Magpie King gave as he leapt into the night towards his prey.
An extract from the teachings of the High Corvae.
This is a tale of the early days of the forest, before the outsiders came. The Magpie King had already performed many of his great acts, such as raising the Eyrie with his bare hands over twelve nights, ridding the forest of the last bear in revenge for their insistent singing, and freeing the river from the red otters. He had made many friends and enemies in his short reign. The Leone, the lion people, had proven to be strong allies against the Serpents to the south. The Muridae were inquisitive, if not yet helpful. And the Wolves were already beginning to infect the dark heart of the forest. But what weighed most on the Magpie king’s mind at this time was the presence of the Tytonidae, the owl people, in the hills to the north.
It was King Reoric of the Leone that had first brought their existence to the attention of the Magpie King, making them more than just the bedtime cautionary tales the Corvae gave their young.
“Eerie is what they are,” the gruff warrior had said. “Only ever seen ‘em alone, just one at a time. Always at night too.” The large man had taken a swig of ale at this point, to calm his nerves. “But the Owls shine in the moon, so you can see ‘em from miles off. Never let you get close enough though. Just a jump and then they’re gone, poof.” The last part had been meant to startle the Magpie King, but the wise ruler had sensed the rise in the Lion’s heart rate before the attempt, and had merely smiled in response.
He met one of the Owls not long after this conversation, during another of his great adventures. She did not spot him, at least not at first. It was night, as King Reoric had forewarned, and she was invading his forest. The Magpie King was perched high in the trees, scouring the land before him for food when a ghostly white shape floated through the bare winter branches to a lake, and there cupped her hands to drink. As strong as it was, the Magpie King’s heart laboured heavily at this sight. He thought at first that this emotion was fear, stoked by the Lion’s tale and the rumours of his own people. His eyes took in her mane of thick white hair, expecting a pruned hag’s face when she turned her head. Instead, he was treated with smooth skin, radiant in the moonlight, and purple eyes opened wide as she scanned the treetops. Their eyes locked for a brief moment, she leapt, and then was gone.
The Magpie King had more pressing matters to attend to and did not pursue on that night, despite a most urgent curiosity to do so. In a time when peace returned to his land, his mind turned again to the white-haired maiden that haunted his waking thoughts. Wise as the Magpie King was, it took him many turns of the moon before he would finally admit why this figure remained close to his mind’s surface. When he realised that this was the woman he wanted for his wife, he resolved to do all in his power to claim her.
The Owls were figures of great superstition for the Corvae. The Magpie King’s people believed that the Great Magpie comes at the moment of their deaths to carry their souls to their final reward. However, the White Owl was another figure of death, one with many unknowns attached to it. Legend had it that if an owl arrived to claim one’s soul instead of a magpie, the soul of that departed person shall never join those of his ancestors. Because of this fear, and despite the fierce loyalty of his people, the Magpie King could find no volunteers from his warriors to accompany him to the hills to the north, not even from his personal guard. He was, however, visited by an old peddler woman with some sage advice for him.
“We are frightened of them, m’lord, but they fear us too, else why run off? Do not let her know who you are. Disguise yourself as one of their own.”
The Magpie King, never one to dismiss the wisdom of his elders, pondered her words deeply. Not able to find any further companions or any more advice for his quest, the Magpie King headed north to find his bride.
After many months of searching he finally happened upon one of the palaces of the Tytonidae, a tall stone building built around an ancient oak that stood alone on the hilltops. Climbing to the top of the structure, his heart skipped a beat when he peered inside to see the white-haired woman that haunted his dreams sitting at a banquet table, breaking bread with a large company. Obsessed, the Magpie King spent many hours listening to the conversation. It transpired that it was the princess of the Tytonidae that his heart had chosen, and that her father was sick to death of her constant rejection of fine suitors.
The Magpie King heard the old man exclaim, “Finding a husband for my daughter is impossible. Let he who can complete an impossible task take her hand. Listen well - any man who can spit upon the fire of my hearth and ignite it may have my daughter as his wife.”
At this proclamation, the banquet hall doors burst open and a tall man walked in. He was dressed in the white fabrics of the Tytonidae, but whereas most owls were fair of face and hair, this man was dark and mysterious. Silently, the dark man strode to the hearth of the owl king and spat into the dying embers there. Immediately the fireplace burst into life with tall flames spouting to the high ceiling. The owl princess gasped, but could not refuse a promise made by her father to the court. The couple were quickly wed in a ceremony involving a silver cord joining their forearms together, and the princess retired to her bedchamber with her new husband.
The dark man was, of course, the Magpie King. Upon hearing this opportunity, he had quickly clothed himself in a disguise he had fashioned and had filled his mouth with a poison that was deadly if consumed, but ignited with anger at a naked flame. He was a gentle and courteous lover to his new wife, but as he slept, his disguise slipped away and the princess could see that this man who had bedded her was not of her people. Her scream woke the Mag
pie King and the rest of the castle, and in a panic, he fled from the building.
Despite his victory that night, the Magpie King was not yet satisfied for he wanted the princess’s heart, not just her bed.
Some months later, word reached the palace of a newcomer to the area, a rich man from one of the furthest Tytonidae settlements who had established a new lodge close by and had invited all in the palace to a great feast. All chose to attend, servants, nobles, king and princess. The hunting lodge was vast, and on this night all manner of game and greens were served to the welcome guests. Their host, a man of fair complexion but unusual mannerisms, was gracious to all, but paid especial attention to the young princess.
As night began to turn into morning, their host called for stories, beginning the round with a tale about a black squirrel eating the sun like a nut. Guests took it in turn, until only the princess was left. She smiled, and then said in her honeyed voice, “I have a tale, but this one must be whispered. Come close, my wonderful host, so I may whisper into your ear.”
With great excitement, the host, who was of course the Magpie King in disguise, pushed his way to the princess’s side. She leaned forward as if to speak softly to him, but then grabbed his disguise and tugged it off to the great shock and disgust of all onlookers. The Magpie King shot the princess a look of fury, and she responded with, “You shall not fool me twice, crow.”
Consumed with frustration, the Magpie King fled back to the borders of his forest, and there fell into an uncomfortable sleep. In his dreams, he was visited by a great white owl who demanded of him, “Why do you continue to pursue me?”
Knowing this was only a dream, and that here he could speak his true mind without betraying his weakness to anyone, the Magpie King responded in a whisper choked with sadness, “Because I am overcome with you. You are in every thought that invades my mind. Even if you forced me to chase you until the ends of my days, growing to hate me as I hate death itself, I would still continue to pursue you.”
The Yarnsworld Collection: A fantasy boxset Page 10