"I'm coming here tonight.”
She physically jerked her head back, lips curling. "Won't Ogma miss you?"
"Nope. She's coming too."
"No. Not in my house-" his mother began to respond sharply, but Lonan cut her off by grabbing at her blouse and pulling her close to his face.
"Listen to me now, you will need me tonight. It’s going to be bad. You heard my screaming this morning? It is going to be bad." He let go off her, sending a shocked woman staggering back into the cottage. "Get Aileen downstairs and take any weapons and as much oil as you can, understand?"
Without waiting for any kind of response Lonan took off again, this time to Mother Ogma's. It took a short amount of time for him to convince her to take part in his scheme, mostly achieved by Lonan picking Harlow up and dragging him to the doorway by himself. When the three of them made their way back to Lonan's mother's house, it was empty.
"Aileen?" Lonan's shout echoed down into the vacant cellar. "Aileen?"
"What’s going on, dearie?"
The sunset bell began to chime outside. Lonan ran out onto the village green and shouted at the top of his lungs, "Aileen. Aileen. Where is my sister, her home is empty? Aileen."
No heads popped out at this time of night, as darkness threatened to fall. His only responses were shouts of abuse from nearby buildings, or the thuds of cellars being sealed shut.
"I’ll stand here shouting until I have my sister, and dammit if I won't lead the Wolves right to one of your doors if you leave me outside."
"She's with me, Anvil. Get to bed." Lonan's heart sank as he turned to see Quarry in his doorway. Was his sister's life really going to be in the hands of this idiot tonight?
Lonan ran to Quarry’s cottage door and shouted past the blacksmith, "Mother, come to me. It’s going to be bad tonight. I can protect you."
"Like you looked after daddy?" Jarleth jibed spitefully. "Or Branwen?"
"Go hang yourself," Lonan spat back. Tears were running down his face by this point, and only then did he catch the glowing embers from the forge that Jarleth had stolen from him. Lonan’s gut curdled at that sight, and at what it meant for tonight. "He's even left the damned forge fires going again. The smoke'll lead them straight to you."
Jarleth rolled his eyes, shrugged and closed his cottage door. A thick thud moments later signified Lonan's family being taken away from him.
"Lonan. Quickly, into the cellar.” The sound came from Mother Ogma, leaning nervously from Lonan’s mother’s doorway. “I have never been out this late in all my years."
"The Magpie King is dead.” Lonan stood with his arms outstretched, shouting across the silent village, tears running freely down his face. “Dammit all, he's dead, they got him. There’s nobody out there looking out for us now. They will come for us tonight."
"Lonan. The sun has gone. I'm shutting the door now."
Sobbing, Lonan followed Mother Ogma's voice, tripping down the steps and collapsing into the bedsit as the cellar door slammed shut.
"Now then, dearie, what's this all about?" she murmured comfortingly, moving over to stroke Lonan's head. "What is this about the Magpie King?"
Lonan let everything spill forth, about the Magpie King, Adahy and the fall of the Eyrie.
Afterwards, Mother Ogma regarded him silently. "That is some story you have there, dearie. You might almost be able to convince me it was true."
"You don't believe that it is?"
"Do you?"
Lonan thought again about this. There are too many coincidences for me not to believe it, now. Mother Ogma's description of the totem pole, the scratch marks on Branwen's cottage. And then there’s Adahy. I’ve been inside his mind twice now, and it felt too… real. This isn’t a little offset of my own mind that feels sorry for itself and needs a hug. I’ve been feeling the emotions and hearing the thoughts of a real person. Lonan simply nodded his head.
"If it's true, if the Magpie King has been watching us for all of this time and he's now dead, then there are dark times ahead."
Lonan looked up and gave a desperate little grin. "But things were going so well."
She chuckled at that. Moving to Harlow's side to ensure he was tucked in, she changed the conversation topic. "So, it seems that young mister Quarry has a bit of a talent for making people do what he wants."
Lonan raised his eyebrows at this. "You noticed?"
"I've had my suspicions for a while, but this morning confirmed it."
"Took you long enough." Lonan sniffed and rubbed his nose. "Thought I'd always be the only one. That maybe that was my Knack or something…"
"No, your Knack should have been your father's. The village sorely needs a proper smith. That young fool certainly doesn't have the Knack for it, despite what he's convinced us all for so long. How long has he been able to do that, exactly?"
Lonan looked her in the eyes. "Since the night my father died."
That was when Aileen started to scream.
There was no mistaking it was Lonan's sister as she was screaming for her brother at the top of her voice. It pierced the night like a knife.
"No," was all that Mother Ogma could manage.
Panic welled within Lonan. His first reaction was to shout and scream for his sister, but he fought himself and brought those instincts under control. They had not served him well in the past. More voices joined Aileen's now. Lonan was fairly certain they were those of his mother and Branwen. He scanned the cellar madly, hungry for a way to move forward. His eyes landed on the oil lamp. He leapt up the cellar stairs and put his ear to the door.
"Can't you hear them well enough already?" Mother Ogma fretted, but Lonan waved her silent. After a few moments he jumped down, grabbed the oil lamp and jumped back up the steps again.
He turned to the old woman. "I'm pretty sure there's nothing upstairs. As soon as I'm out, close the door again, quietly."
Mother Ogma, eyes wide, looked confused for brief moments before she realised what Lonan was proposing. "No. You can't do this. What exactly do you think you are going to do up there?"
Lonan shrugged. "Save my sister? Kill a few Wolves? At the very least, offer them an easier target? It's not as if I was looking to amount to much anyway." With that, he pushed open the heavy cellar door, shuttered the oil lamp and slipped out into the dark cottage.
He blinked hard, forcing his eyes to adjust to the moonlight as quickly as possible. Every muscle was screaming for him to scramble back to the trapdoor in the floor and beat his hands bloody on it until he was safe underground. The only thing goading him forward was the continued wailing of the women in his life.
He scanned his mother's cottage, his breathing coming sharply, his eyes frantically searching for anything out of the ordinary. He had left the front door of his mother’s cottage slightly ajar, and now inched himself towards it, his fear of the night forcing him to scuttle along the floor like a wounded spider.
Upon reaching the open portal, he peered outside and gasped at the white light of the night. Lonan had always pictured night time as blackness, with the moon painting a blue hue across the landscape. But the light from the moon was a brilliant white, perfectly illuminating the white washed walls of the village cottages. Other than the unnaturalness of this time of day, Lonan's eyes could not spot anything unusual in the village.
Going out of the front door seemed like madness, so Lonan turned himself around and pushed himself through one of the side windows. Laying low to the grass, one arm cradling the shuttered lamp, Lonan urged himself across the green towards the Dripper cottage, still a few buildings away from where all the screaming was coming from. Reaching the cottage he huddled into the corner between the wall and the ground, fully expecting to hear the noise of pursuit after his panicked dash. Lonan moved from cottage to cottage like this, at every advancement counting his blessings that he was undiscovered and steeling himself for the next small stage in his journey. As he moved closer to the Quarry household, other noises began to mix with th
e screaming. The sound of wood being chipped away at. Growling. What Lonan was sure was snarling.
Finally he was there, outside of Quarry's house. Lonan had not actually expected to get this far, and now found himself slightly unsure of how to proceed. The noises from the animals inside were overpowering, inhuman groans that Lonan was convinced could not actually be a form of even basic communication.
He edged himself along the wall towards a window and urged his body to look inside. It refused. Lonan, panting, was dumbfounded. He had never before found it so hard to perform such a basic function, to have his own body fight against him. He forced himself again, pushing his head inch by inch towards the glass. The thatched roof came into view, then the rafters, the whitewashed walls and then the monsters. He caught a glimpse of black, a single knotted limb lifted high in the air before descending on the cellar door with a thunk and a howl. Lonan's body took over and pulled him back from the window.
"Lonan!"
His sister's cry was the catalyst he needed. He took a breath, uncapped the flask of oil that he had clasped to his belt, ran to the front door and threw it into the blackness inside, closely followed by the naked flame of the lamp. The interior of the cottage erupted into a blaze of fire and inhuman howls. Lonan, however, had not stuck around to witness this. He had already made it most of the way to the forest bordering the village, his effortless sprint powered by the fear that he now allowed to overcome him.
He stumbled through the vegetation, the greenery taking on a completely different character in the moonlight. Not having time to appreciate the change, Lonan kept running. When he felt his legs and lungs were close to giving out, he cast his gaze upwards to the gnarled branches he so often climbed in search of fruit and seeds for Ogma’s pharmacy. Bloodying his knuckles as he did so, Lonan pulled himself upwards until he was in the canopy. He found a nook to rest himself in, and studied the ground below intently. Any small movement, swaying of leaves or nocturnal animal wanderings caught Lonan's eye.
It was not long, however, before his pursuers made their appearance. He could make out the movement of two black masses on the ground below him, glimpses of darkness glaring at him through the autumn leaves. The sense of inevitability about his fate actually made it easier to bear, and he marvelled at the gliding motion of the evil below him, moving smoothly over the forest ground which Lonan had tripped and stumbled his way through. He was suddenly reminded of Adahy's similar reaction to impending death and a thin, begrudging smile played on his features.
Where was that boy now? Had he survived for much longer without his father? The shapes below moved directly towards him, and quickly disappeared from his line of vision because of the thick tree branches. They would be at the foot of the tree now and soon would have him. Lonan could not decide whether he would rather hear their approach, hear the crunching of claw embedding into wood whilst the Wolves made their climb, or would rather that they appeared at an unexpected moment, stealing away his life like rats in the night.
As the seconds turned into minutes, Lonan decided he would much rather hear them approaching. The length of this wait and the lack of information was agonising. He expected that they were toying with him now, the way that he had seen wild cats tease shrews moments before snapping their necks. He stared at the white moon that hung low over the forest, waiting for the snarl that would precede his end. His first moment of shock was when a large bird pierced the skyline that he was focussing on, breaking his tense meditation by hanging before the moon, its silhouette perfectly centred within the white orb, before disappearing back into the canopy.
His second moment of shock was when the sun rose.
When the horizon first started to turn blue, Lonan just assumed the end was about to come. The monsters had been playing him up until this point, letting him think he had survived the night, and then they would kill him just before the first rays of sunlight peeked out. When he actually saw the sun break the skyline, he gasped and looked around wildly. There was nothing there except for the branches of the oak he had sheltered in. Shaking, he clamoured down the tree, dropping the last few feet when his quivering arms gave out on him. Teeth chattering, Lonan stumbled back through the woodland. He had spent enough time with Mother Ogma to realise he was going into shock - a natural reaction to his body releasing all of the tension he had built up over the night - but all he wanted to know was what had happened at the village.
He could see from a distance that the green was busy, and a dark plume of smoke was still rising steadily from Quarry's house. Lonan rolled his eyes at the thought of the spin that Jarleth would put on that one. If only someone had actually seen what I’d done. Lonan shook his head. As long as it worked, as long as they’re all safe, I don’t care what they think.
"Aileen." Lonan croaked as he came within earshot of the crowd. He had not realised how dry his throat had been, and the shouting hurt.
People turned to look at the approaching figure and the crowd parted as he ran toward them. They eventually revealed an angry Jarleth Quarry, face blackened with ash.
"Lonan." The blessed figure of his sister pushed past the blacksmith, running into the arms of her brother.
Lonan fell to his knees, cradled the little girl, and wept in relief.
"You bastard," came the inevitable outburst from Quarry. "You destroyed my house."
Lonan raised his face from his sister's curls to regard the smoke-topped cottage. Indeed, the thatched roof had all but disappeared from it now. Without anyone in Smithsdown with a Knack for weaving new roofs, it would be some time before the home would be habitable again.
"You don't think it's an improvement?" Lonan responded weakly. "I thought it was getting a bit stuffy."
Jarleth moved with aggression towards Lonan, but Old Man Tumulty interceded with a firm hand on his shoulder. "Seems to me a straw roof is a fine price to pay for your family's lives."
"What, you don't actually believe that drivel, do you?" Lonan could see the tell-tale sparks of the Knack in Jarleth's eyes and prepared himself for the sweetness of the moment turning bitter. "It was Anvil at our door all the time. He-"
Jarleth was interrupted by a loud clap.
"That's enough of that, thank you, dearie," Mother Ogma stated sharply, breaking Jarleth's spell and earning a sneer from him. "You lot were all screaming well before he left the cellar, and I would love you to explain how he could have made those claw marks by himself or those screaming sounds everyone heard."
Other villagers nodded. There was no chance that Quarry, Knack or no, could sway them now.
"You couldn't have come up with something that didn't involve burning my home down? Are you all telling me he shouldn't be held responsible for that?"
"I guess I'm just not that good at thinking on my feet," Lonan responded, standing, heady with the positive attention he was receiving from the villagers. "Why, what had you planned to do?"
Jarleth opened his mouth to speak but struggled to respond. This was all the space that the crowd needed to interject with some chuckles.
"Come on now, everyone," Old Tumulty bellowed, waving his arms to disperse the crowd, "we've got some work to do to be ready for tonight. Reinforce your cellars. Quarry, get that forge going."
The anxious onlookers trotted back to their cottages. Aileen gave her brother another hug and ran to her mother. Lonan's mother turned and left without looking her son in the eye. Other than Mother Ogma, only Branwen Quarry remained, clutching her sleeping baby to her chest. The young woman was staring right at Lonan, lip trembling.
"Branwen?" Lonan questioned.
She turned and trotted back home to her husband, wiping her face with her free hand as she walked.
Mother Ogma took Lonan's arm. "I think someone has done you a great wrong there, dearie."
"Huh," he replied. For the majority of Lonan's life, Branwen's ruined face had been a reminder of how hated he was in the village. It had been a long time since she had looked on him with anything other than
disgust. For the second time in as many days, the thought of Branwen threatened to bring a smile to Lonan’s face.
"Have you slept yet?" the old lady queried.
Lonan laughed. "Artemis' beard, no. I don't think anyone could have."
"Let's head back, dearie. I can tell you've got a story that I need to hear."
Lonan allowed himself to be led back to the healer's cottage, now feeling safe enough to let his exhaustion show. He mumbled his story to the old lady, certain that half of it did not make sense. Harlow was waiting for them in his sitting chair, staring glass-eyed at the cottage wall. Mother Ogma led Lonan down the cellar steps and tucked him into bed.
She stroked his forehead. "Dream of happier times, of a young girl running with you through the woods."
As Lonan slipped off into unconsciousness, his last thought was: I hope not - there's someone else I want to dream about.
The wind blew cold across the young prince's cheeks. Adahy was crouching in the bushes in front of the shrine. The building looked completely different in the midday greyness, the once-foreboding tall doors now pathetic as they hung from their hinges. Congealed pools and wet collections of tattered fabrics and bones signified where guardsmen had fallen and had been eaten. Adahy stared at those piles soullessly.
What do my father's remains look like now?
A figure emerged from the temple and waved. Adahy stood up, wrapped himself in his grey cloak and trotted forward.
"No sign of them, sire," Maedoc addressed him in a low tone.
"Don't call me that," Adahy replied as he walked past the whipping boy. "The king is dead."
Adahy had found Maedoc the morning after his father's murder. The prince had remained curled in a ball on the roof for the rest of the night, and it had been a miracle no other Wolves had ventured up there. At daybreak, he had spent the morning making his own way down the castle walls, unheeded by the invaders who avoided the daylight. Maedoc had spotted him during his descent. The whipping boy had been just outside of the castle, wandering in the forest, lamenting the loss of his face. As soon as the sound of battle had reached his ears, he had made for the nearby river, using it to hide his scent and hid far from the combat. Adahy should have chided him for abandoning the rest of the palace, but instead had hugged the boy and sobbed his heart out to him. The pair had fled upstream and had spent all of last night huddled in a cave, fully expecting to be found and gutted. It was Adahy who had had the idea of returning to the temple the next day. Action needed to be taken - they would not remain undiscovered forever.
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