The Language of Stones. Robert Goldthwaite Carter

The Language of Stones - Robert Goldthwaite Carter


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‘You see? I’m not going to throw you down – even though I could.’

      ‘Says who?’

      ‘Says me.’

      ‘Try it, then. If you think you can.’

      ‘Oh, this is baby talk,’ he said turning away. ‘And on the Midsummer of all days.’

      She seemed taken aback. ‘Do you respect the solstice, then?’

      ‘Doesn’t everyone?’

      ‘The Hogshead doesn’t. Lords don’t. You should know that.’

      ‘Lady Strange thinks it’d ruin her dignity to have any fun. She says only churlish folk go out on Midsummer’s Eve. I can’t see her standing under elder trees or dancing at fae rings.’

      ‘We do all kinds of things. We sing songs mainly.’

      ‘What do you sing?’

      ‘Mostly the old songs. My favourite’s the one about the prince who plants three apple trees that bear him gifts of silver, gold and diamonds. You must know it.’

      ‘Maybe. Sing it for me.’

      She hesitated, embarrassed, but then she relented. ‘All right. Just one verse.’

      But she sang all four, and when she had finished, he clapped his hands. ‘That was pretty. You have a sweet voice, you know.’ Then he backed away a pace.

      ‘Where are you going?’

      ‘Nowhere. But I’ll have to go back soon. I’m in trouble with the Hogshead for backchatting him.’ He glanced in the direction of the tower. ‘But first, I’d like to know your name.’

      She laughed. ‘I bet you would.’

      ‘No, really. I would.’

      ‘We live down by the river, so folk call me…Willow.’ She looked down at her feet. ‘I know it’s a stupid name.’

      ‘Don’t be embarrassed. It’s a lovely name. It’s beautiful, just like the tree. And it suits you.’

      They walked slowly back to the place where they had met, and sat down. She told him she lived in the village of Leigh. Her father, Stenn, was one of the verderers, men whose job it was to tend the forest. He was one of the men who were going to be made to fell the trees.

      ‘But that kind of work isn’t at all to his liking,’ she said. They crouched down together behind a fallen trunk and looked at the mill and the smouldering heaps nearby. ‘A man can’t look after a forest all his life as my father has and then be expected to lead a tree massacre. He says the law may say the forest belongs to the king, but there’s more to forests than just owning them.’

      ‘And more to trees than just the using of them for timber.’

      She looked at him and smiled. ‘You do understand, after all. Those big oaks are my father’s friends. He grew up with them and delights in each and every one of them. He says there’s been an oak grove here since long before the Slavers came. He doesn’t like what’s happening of late. He says it all stinks!’

      ‘There’s certainly something nasty in the air around here.’ He looked down at the wreaths of smoke that laced the air around the mill and gave it an acrid tang.

      ‘That’s the charcoal burners, stinking the place up with their heaps. They need charcoal to heat the iron and melt it. They cut down all of Grendon copse where that mill pond is now. My dad says there are three blacksmith’s hearths down there. Going all the time, they are, with big bellows and everything. And that thumping you can hear all over the forest – that’s what you call trip-hammers.’

      He looked at her. ‘What are they doing?’

      ‘I don’t know. Making things. We aren’t supposed to go near Grendon Mill, but I know it’s where they work iron into shapes. Waggons come up from the Old Road most days and take stuff away.’

      ‘What kind of stuff?’

      She shrugged. ‘I don’t know. Whenever I go down there they chase me off. I don’t care. I don’t want to be down there anyway. It’s a dirty, stinky, smoky place now. Not at all the sort of place I like.’

      ‘That’s not what I meant about there being something in the air. It’s what that man said – the times are changing.’

      She nodded. ‘And far too quickly, I’d say.’

      ‘It all seems to fit in with what Master Gwydion told me.’

      She sat up and looked at him with sudden interest. ‘Who’s Master Gwydion?’

      Straight away Will regretted mentioning the wizard’s name. So much was important and secretive about Gwydion that it seemed almost like a betrayal. And yet when he looked at Willow he felt he could have done nothing very wrong. ‘He’s the one who brought me into Wychwoode. Can you keep a secret?’

      She shrugged. ‘I don’t know, I’ve never tried.’

      He looked at her and remembered the look on her face as she hauled him out of the ditch, then decided he could trust her. ‘If you swear to keep it to yourself, I’ll tell you about Master Gwydion.’

      ‘I swear.’

      ‘Hand on heart?’

      ‘Hand on heart.’

      He took a deep breath. ‘Master Gwydion is a wizard.’

      Her mouth opened wide and then her nose wrinkled. ‘No!’

      ‘It’s true. And I’m his apprentice.’

      ‘And do they all tell such whopping lies where you come from?’

      ‘I’m not telling lies! It’s true. I’ll swear to it if you like.’

      ‘Hand on heart?’

      ‘Hand on heart.’

      She looked at him sidelong, and Will could not be sure but he thought she had decided to believe him.

      ‘It must be very exciting being a wizard’s apprentice.’

      ‘It’s a little scary sometimes. You’d be amazed at the things I’ve seen.’

      She smiled a doubting smile. ‘Like what?’

      ‘Oh, all kinds of things. He makes owls fly so slowly that you can count their wingbeats. He makes falling rain stop, right in mid-air. He can whistle up a storm just like that—’ He clicked his fingers and leaned towards her confidentially. ‘And he even summons giants out of the earth. Giants as big as barns. They’re terrifying.’

      ‘Go on, then,’ she said, her eyes sparkling now. ‘Do a bit of magic for me.’

      That stopped him dead, and he wondered what his boasting had led him to, but then he put on his most serious expression. ‘I’d like to, but…’

      ‘But what?’

      He shook his head and sucked in a breath. ‘You must know that magic is dangerous?’

      ‘Surely not if you know what you’re doing.’

      He drew himself up. ‘Oh, no. It’s always dangerous. All magic is dangerous because, you see, it affects the harmony, the balance, the…the way things touch one another, and so on.’

      ‘Is that right?’

      She watched him, waiting for more, while he desperately tried to remember all the things the Wise Woman had told him.

      ‘It’s quite hard to give magical knowledge to someone who hasn’t had the proper grounding.’

      ‘So I see. But I don’t want you to give me any magical knowledge. I just want you to do some for me.’

      ‘I’ll…I’ll think on that.’


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