The Book of Three

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by Lloyd Alexander


  “It is only Gurgi,” Gwydion said. “He is always lurking about one place or another. He is not half as ferocious as he looks, nor a quarter as fierce as he should like to be, and more a nuisance than anything else. Somehow, he manages to see most of what happens, and he might be able to help us.”

  Taran had just begun to catch his breath. He was covered with Gurgi’s shedding hair, in addition to the distressing odor of a wet wolfhound.

  “O mighty prince,” the creature wailed, “Gurgi is sorry; and now he will be smacked on his poor, tender head by the strong hands of this great lord, with fearsome smackings. Yes, yes, that is always the way of it with poor Gurgi. But what honor to be smacked by the greatest of warriors!”

  “I have no intention of smacking your poor, tender head,” said Gwydion. “But I may change my mind if you do not leave off that whining and sniveling.”

  “Yes, powerful lord!” Gurgi cried. “See how he obeys rapidly and instantly!” He began crawling about on hands and knees with great agility. Had Gurgi owned a tail, Taran was sure he would have wagged it frantically.

  “Then,” Gurgi pleaded, “the two strengthful heroes will give Gurgi something to eat? Oh, joyous crunchings and munchings!”

  “Afterward,” said Gwydion. “When you have answered our questions.”

  “Oh, afterward!” cried Gurgi. “Poor Gurgi can wait, long, long for his crunchings and munchings. Many years from now, when the great princes revel in their halls—what feastings—they will remember hungry, wretched Gurgi waiting for them.”

  “How long you wait for your crunchings and munchings,” Gwydion said, “depends on how quickly you tell us what we want to know. Have you seen a white pig this morning?”

  A crafty look gleamed in Gurgi’s close-set little eyes. “For the seeking of a piggy, there are many great lords in the forest, riding with frightening shouts. They would not be cruel to starving Gurgi—oh, no—they would feed him …”

  “They would have your head off your shoulders before you could think twice about it,” Gwydion said. “Did one of them wear an antlered mask?”

  “Yes, yes!” Gurgi cried. “The great horns! You will save miserable Gurgi from hurtful choppings!” He set up a long and dreadful howling.

  “I am losing patience with you,” warned Gwydion. “Where is the pig?”

  “Gurgi hears these mighty riders,” the creature went on. “Oh, yes, with careful listenings from the trees. Gurgi is so quiet and clever, and no one cares about him. But he listens! These great warriors say they have gone to a certain place, but great fire turns them away. They are not pleased, and they still seek a piggy with outcries and horses.”

  “Gurgi,” said Gwydion firmly, “where is the pig?”

  “The piggy? Oh, terrible hunger pinches! Gurgi cannot remember. Was there a piggy? Gurgi is fainting and falling into the bushes, his poor, tender head is full of air from his empty belly.”

  Taran could no longer control his impatience. “Where is Hen Wen, you silly, hairy thing?” he burst out. “Tell us straight off! After the way you jumped on me, you deserve to have your head smacked.”

  With a moan, Gurgi rolled over on his back and covered his face with his arms.

  Gwydion turned severely to Taran. “Had you followed my orders, you would not have been jumped on. Leave him to me. Do not make him any more frightened than he is.” Gwydion looked down at Gurgi. “Very well,” he asked calmly, “where is she?”

  “Oh, fearful wrath!” Gurgi snuffled, “a piggy has gone across the water with swimmings and splashings.” He sat upright and waved a woolly arm toward Great Avren.

  “If you are lying to me,” said Gwydion, “I shall soon find out. Then I will surely come back with wrath.”

  “Crunchings and munchings now, mighty prince?” asked Gurgi in a high, tiny whimper.

  “As I promised you,” said Gwydion.

  “Gurgi wants the smaller one for munchings,” said the creature, with a beady glance at Taran.

  “No, you do not,” Gwydion said. “He is an Assistant Pig-Keeper and he would disagree with you violently.” He unbuckled a saddlebag and pulled out a few strips of dried meat, which he tossed to Gurgi. “Be off now. Remember, I want no mischief from you.”

  Gurgi snatched the food, thrust it between his teeth, and scuttled up a tree trunk, leaping from tree to tree until he was out of sight.

  “What a disgusting beast,” said Taran. “What a nasty, vicious …”

  “Oh, he is not bad at heart,” Gwydion answered. “He would love to be wicked and terrifying, though he cannot quite manage it. He feels so sorry for himself that it is hard not to be angry with him. But there is no use in doing so.”

  “Was he telling the truth about Hen Wen?” asked Taran.

  “I think he was,” Gwydion said. “It is as I feared. The Horned King has ridden to Caer Dallben.”

  “He burned it!” Taran cried. Until now, he had paid little mind to his home. The thought of the white cottage in flames, his memory of Dallben’s beard, and the heroic Coll’s bald head touched him all at once. “Dallben and Coll are in peril!”

  “Surely not,” said Gwydion. “Dallben is an old fox. A beetle could not creep into Caer Dallben without his knowledge. No, I am certain the fire was something Dallben arranged for unexpected visitors.

  “Hen Wen is the one in greatest peril. Our quest grows ever more urgent,” Gwydion hastily continued. “The Horned King knows she is missing. He will pursue her.”

  “Then,” Taran cried, “we must find her before he does!”

  “Assistant Pig-Keeper,” said Gwydion, “that has been, so far, your only sensible suggestion.”

  CHAPTER FOUR

  The Gwythaints

  Melyngar bore them swiftly through the fringe of trees lining Great Avren’s sloping banks. They dismounted and hurried on foot in the direction Gurgi had indicated. Near a jagged rock, Gwydion halted and gave a cry of triumph. In a patch of clay, Hen Wen’s tracks showed as plainly as if they had been carved.

  “Good for Gurgi!” exclaimed Gwydion. “I hope he enjoys his crunchings and munchings! Had I known he would guide us so well, I would have given him an extra share.

  “Yes, she crossed here,” he went on, “and we shall do the same.”

  Gwydion led Melyngar forward. The air had suddenly grown cold and heavy. The restless Avren ran gray, slashed with white streaks. Clutching Melyngar’s saddle horn, Taran stepped gingerly from the bank.

  Gwydion strode directly into the water. Taran, thinking it easier to get wet a little at a time, hung back as much as he could—until Melyngar lunged ahead, carrying him with her. His feet sought the river bottom, he stumbled and splashed, while icy waves swirled up to his neck. The current grew stronger, coiling like a gray serpent about Taran’s legs. The bottom dropped away sharply; Taran lost his footing and found himself wildly dancing over nothing, as the river seized him greedily.

  Melyngar began to swim, her strong legs keeping her afloat and in motion, but the current swung her around; she collided with Taran and forced him under the water.

  “Let go the saddle!” Gwydion shouted above the torrent. “Swim clear of her!”

  Water flooded Taran’s ears and nostrils. With every gasp, the river poured into his lungs. Gwydion struck out after him, soon overtook him, seized him by the hair, and drew him toward the shallows. He heaved the dripping, coughing Taran onto the bank. Melyngar, reaching shore a little farther upstream, trotted down to join them.

  Gwydion looked sharply at Taran. “I told you to swim clear. Are all Assistant Pig-Keepers deaf as well as stubborn?”

  “I don’t know how to swim!” Taran cried, his teeth chattering violently.

  “Then why did you not say so before we started across?” Gwydion asked angrily.

  “I was sure I could learn,” Taran protested, “as soon as I came to do it. If Melyngar hadn’t sat on me …”

  “You must learn to answer for your own folly,” said Gwydion. “As for M
elyngar, she is wiser now than you can ever hope to become, even should you live to be a man—which seems more and more unlikely.”

  Gwydion swung into the saddle and pulled up the soaked, bedraggled Taran. Melyngar’s hoofs clicked over the stones. Taran, snuffling and shivering, looked toward the waiting hills. High against the blue, three winged shapes wheeled and glided.

  Gwydion, whose eyes were everywhere at once, caught sight of them instantly.

  “Gwythaints!” he cried, and turned Melyngar sharply to the right. The abrupt change of direction and Melyngar’s heaving burst of speed threw Taran off balance. His legs flew up and he landed flat on the pebble-strewn bank.

  Gwydion reined in Melyngar immediately. While Taran struggled to his feet, Gwydion seized him like a sack of meal and hauled him to Melyngar’s back. The gwythaints, which, at a distance, had seemed no more than dry leaves in the wind, grew larger and larger, as they plunged toward horse and riders. Downward they swooped, their great black wings driving them ever faster. Melyngar clattered up the riverbank. The gwythaints screamed above. At the line of trees, Gwydion thrust Taran from the saddle and leaped down. Dragging him along, Gwydion dropped to the earth under an oak tree’s spreading branches.

  The glittering wings beat against the foliage. Taran glimpsed curving beaks and talons merciless as daggers. He cried out in terror and hid his face, as the gwythaints veered off and swooped again. The leaves rattled in their wake. The creatures swung upward, hung poised against the sky for an instant, then climbed swiftly and sped westward.

  White-faced and trembling, Taran ventured to raise his head. Gwydion strode to the riverbank and stood watching the gwythaints’ flight. Taran made his way to his companion’s side.

  “I had hoped this would not happen,” Gwydion said. His face was dark and grave. “Thus far, I have been able to avoid them.”

  Taran said nothing. He had clumsily fallen off Melyngar at the moment when speed counted most; at the oak, he had behaved like a child. He waited for Gwydion’s reprimand, but the warrior’s green eyes followed the dark specks.

  “Sooner or later they would have found us,” Gwydion said. “They are Arawn’s spies and messengers, the Eyes of Annuvin, they are called. No one stays long hidden from them. We are lucky they were only scouting and not on a blood hunt.” He turned away as the gwythaints at last disappeared. “Now they fly to their iron cages in Annuvin,” he said. “Arawn himself will have news of us before this day ends. He will not be idle.”

  “If only they hadn’t seen us,” Taran moaned.

  “There is no use regretting what has happened,” said Gwydion, as they set out again. “One way or another, Arawn would have learned of us. I have no doubt he knew the moment I rode from Caer Dathyl. The gwythaints are not his only servants.”

  “I think they must be the worst,” said Taran, quickening his pace to keep up with Gwydion.

  “Far from it,” Gwydion said. “The errand of the gwythaints is less to kill than to bring information. For generations they have been trained in this. Arawn understands their language and they are in his power from the moment they leave the egg. Nevertheless, they are creatures of flesh and blood and a sword can answer them.

  “There are others to whom a sword means nothing,” Gwydion said. “Among them, the Cauldron-Born, who serve Arawn as warriors.”

  “Are they not men?” Taran asked.

  “They were, once,” replied Gwydion. “They are the dead whose bodies Arawn steals from their resting places in the long barrows. It is said he steeps them in a cauldron to give them life again—if it can be called life. Like death, they are forever silent; and their only thought is to bring others to the same bondage.

  “Arawn keeps them as his guards in Annuvin, for their power wanes the longer and farther they be from their master. Yet from time to time Arawn sends certain of them outside Annuvin to perform his most ruthless tasks.

  “These Cauldron-Born are utterly without mercy or pity,” Gwydion continued, “for Arawn has worked still greater evil upon them. He has destroyed their remembrance of themselves as living men. They have no memory of tears or laughter, of sorrow or loving kindness. Among all Arawn’s deeds, this is one of the cruelest.”

  After much searching, Gwydion discovered Hen Wen’s tracks once more. They led over a barren field, then to a shallow ravine.

  “Here they stop,” he said, frowning. “Even on stony ground there should be some trace, but I can see nothing.”

  Slowly and painstakingly he quartered the land on either side of the ravine. The weary and discouraged Taran could barely force himself to put one foot in front of the other, and was glad the dusk obliged Gwydion to halt.

  Gwydion tethered Melyngar in a thicket. Taran sank to the ground and rested his head in his hands.

  “She has disappeared too completely,” said Gwydion, bringing provisions from the saddlebags. “Many things could have happened. Time is too short to ponder each one.”

  “What can we do, then?” Taran asked fearfully. “Is there no way to find her?”

  “The surest search is not always the shortest,” said Gwydion, “and we may need the help of other hands before it is done. There is an ancient dweller in the foothills of Eagle Mountains. His name is Medwyn, and it is said he understands the hearts and ways of every creature in Prydain. He, if anyone, should know where Hen Wen may be hiding.”

  “If we could find him,” Taran began.

  “You are right in saying ‘if,’” Gwydion answered. “I have never seen him. Others have sought him and failed. We should have only faint hope. But that is better than none at all.”

  A wind had risen, whispering among the black clusters of trees. From a distance came the lonely baying of hounds. Gwydion sat upright, tense as a bowstring.

  “Is it the Horned King?” cried Taran. “Has he followed us this closely?”

  Gwydion shook his head. “No hounds bell like those, save the pack of Gwyn the Hunter. And so,” he mused, “Gwyn, too, rides abroad.”

  “Another of Arawn’s servants?” asked Taran, his voice betraying his anxiety.

  “Gwyn owes allegiance to a lord unknown even to me,” Gwydion answered, “and one perhaps greater than Arawn. Gwyn the Hunter rides alone with his dogs, and where he rides, slaughter follows. He has foreknowledge of death and battle, and watches from afar, marking the fall of warriors.”

  Above the cry of the pack rose the long, clear notes of a hunting horn. Flung across the sky, the sound pierced Taran’s breast like a cold blade of terror. Yet, unlike the music itself, the echoes from the hills sang less of fear than of grief. Fading, they sighed that sunlight and birds, bright mornings, warm fires, food and drink, friendship, and all good things had been lost beyond recovery. Gwydion laid a firm hand on Taran’s brow.

  “Gwyn’s music is a warning,” Gwydion said. “Take it as a warning, for whatever profit that knowledge may be. But do not listen overmuch to the echoes. Others have done so, and have wandered hopeless ever since.”

  A whinny from Melyngar broke Taran’s sleep. As Gwydion rose and went to her, Taran glimpsed a shadow dart behind a bush. He sat up quickly. Gwydion’s back was turned. In the bright moonlight the shadow moved again. Choking back his fear, Taran leaped to his feet and plunged into the undergrowth. Thorns tore at him. He landed on something that grappled frantically. He lashed out, seized what felt like someone’s head, and an unmistakable odor of wet wolfhound assailed his nose.

  “Gurgi!” Taran cried furiously. “You sneaking …” The creature curled into an awkward ball as Taran began shaking him.

  “Enough, enough!” Gwydion called. “Do not frighten the wits out of the poor thing!”

  “Save your own life next time!” Taran retorted angrily to Gwydion, while Gurgi began howling at the top of his voice. “I should have known a great war-leader needs no help from an Assistant Pig-Keeper!”

  “Unlike Assistant Pig-Keepers,” Gwydion said gently, “I scorn the help of no man. And you should know
better than to jump into thornbushes without first making sure what you will find. Save your anger for a better purpose … .” He hesitated and looked carefully at Taran. “Why, I believe you did think my life was in danger.”

  “If I had known it was only that stupid, silly Gurgi …”

  “The fact is, you did not,” Gwydion said. “So I shall take the intention for the deed. You may be many other things, Taran of Caer Dallben, but I see you are no coward. I offer you my thanks,” he added, bowing deeply.

  “And what of poor Gurgi?” howled the creature. “No thanks for him—oh, no—only smackings by great lords! Not even a small munching for helping find a piggy!”

  “We didn’t find any piggy,” Taran replied angrily. “And if you ask me, you know too much about the Horned King. I wouldn’t be surprised if you’d gone and told him …”

  “No, no! The lord of the great horns pursues wise, miserable Gurgi with leaping and galloping. Gurgi fears terrible smackings and whackings. He follows kindly and mighty protectors. Faithful Gurgi will not leave them, never!”

  “And what of the Horned King?” Gwydion asked quickly.

  “Oh, very angry,” whined Gurgi. “Wicked lords ride with mumblings and grumblings because they cannot find a piggy.”

  “Where are they now?” asked Gwydion.

  “Not far. They cross water, but only clever, unthanked Gurgi knows where. And they light fires with fearsome blazings.”

  “Can you lead us to them?” Gwydion asked. “I would learn their plans.”

  Gurgi whimpered questioningly. “Crunchings and munchings?”

  “I knew he would get around to that,” said Taran.

  Gwydion saddled Melyngar and, clinging to the shadows, they set out across the moonlit hills. Gurgi led the way, loping ahead, bent forward, his long arms dangling. They crossed one deep valley, then another, before Gurgi halted on a ridge. Below, the wide plain blazed with torches and Taran saw a great ring of flames.

  “Crunchings and munchings now?” Gurgi suggested.

 

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