Dark Angels. Katherine Langrish
it.
He thanked every saint he could think of for his narrow escape from — well, from what? A demon? He wasn’t sure. It didn’t look like the ones he’d seen in pictures, the ochre and vermilion demons gleefully gambolling on the Doomsday wall of the abbey church. The strange child-thing wasn’t hairy or horned.
But no earthly child would roam the hillside naked in this haunted twilight. No mortal child would take refuge in such a dark and frightening cave.
Then it must be an elf. And that was almost worse. Elves were uncanny, like ghosts. Pale, malicious creatures, which lived in the dark places under hills and mounds, just like that cave, tempting mortals away to waste their lives in false enchantments.
Wolf remembered the creature’s fleeting expression as it looked out — narrow-eyed with terror like a hunted fox. Perhaps it hadn’t meant him any harm. Perhaps it had only been running from the hounds — caught, like him, between the hunters and their prey. And what if it wasn’t an elf? Suppose — just suppose — he had left a frightened child in a cold, dripping cave in the middle of a dark wood?
“Of course it was an elf!” he told himself furiously. He thought of its weird face, its glittering eyes. No need to feel sorry for an elf, no reason to go back.
The distant fire winked behind a black scribble of branches. He had himself to look after. He’d take this valuable hunting dog back to its master, claim his reward and never think about the elf again. He set off through the clutching wood. Twigs tugged his hair, wet grass snaked about his ankles. Cursing, he tore free from another bramble — and blundered nearly into the arms of a giant figure straddling the way.
Wolf recoiled, bursting with terror, and tugged the greyhound in front of him. “Keep off!” he snarled. “Keep right away from me! Or I’ll set my dog on you!”
“Your dog?” The voice was deep, human and angry. “That’s my dog, you thief! Take your dirty fingers off his collar! What are you doing with him? Are you the boy who got in my way on the hill?”
“Yes — no!” Wolf’s heart was bumping about like a rabbit in a sack. This was the lord of the hunt, the reckless rider who had leaped his horse into the dingle. “Nothing — I wasn’t stealing him, sir!”
“Let go of him, I said!” the man roared.
Wolf’s fingers slipped from the collar, and the dog leaped happily forwards. “Believe me; I was bringing him back—”
“Yes, after you stole him in the first place. Don’t lie to me! D’you think I’m a fool? Who are you? What’s your name?”
“Wolf Osmundson.” They were talking English. He tried to make himself sound more important — more French. “Wolf fitz Osmund. My father was—”
“Wolf, is it?” The man gave a hard laugh. “Ho! The second wolf I’ve caught today.” He stabbed a finger into Wolf’s chest. “We’ve already skinned the first. You’ll be next. Or perhaps I’ll slice your ears off. Who’s your master?”
“I’m not a peasant!” Wolf went stiff with scared rage. The man wasn’t joking. The laws were savage: a thief could lose a foot, a hand, his eyes. “I’m from St Ethelbert’s at Wenford — I’m a clerk, a scholar! My father held a manor. Let’s speak French if it’s easier for you, lord. Or Latin — I know them both. And I can read and write.” Too late, he heard his own voice ringing with insolent defiance. He clenched his teeth. But instead of hitting him the man said merely, “If you can do all that, why are you here?”
Wolf looked away, unable to think of a good lie, sullenly aware that silence would be taken for more insolence. He curled numb toes in his wet boots. His back ached. His face and arms stung with the slashes of countless twigs. Bitterly he remembered his ambition to become a squire. Well, that dream was over.
“You’ve run away, haven’t you?” The man’s voice was gentler.
Wolf cleared his throat. “I didn’t — I don’t want to be a monk.”
It sounded weak — feeble.
“I suppose they beat you,” said the man with tolerant scorn.
Wolf burned. He remembered the bold and powerful shapes of horse and rider tearing into the trees. How could someone like that ever understand? He burst out, “Maybe they did! But that’s not why! I’m not fit for that life. It’s like being shut up in a box. A stone box. And outside, everything’s going on — without me.”
“A stone box!” the man muttered. “Now that I can understand. Where are you running to? Home?”
“I have no home. My father’s dead.”
There was a moment of silence. They were standing in shadows as black as well water, and Wolf couldn’t see the man’s face. “Who are you, lord?” he asked, shivering.
“My name is Hugo fitz Warin.”
“Lord Hugo?” Wolf stammered slightly “Hugo of the Red M-mound?”
The man stretched his arms wide. “Hugo of the Red Mound — Hugo of La Motte Rouge — Huw of Domen Goch. See? I too can speak in tongues. Lord of everything that creeps or runs or flies between Crow Moor and Devil’s Edge. Anything else you want to know, my young wolf in shepherd’s clothing?”
Every single person at the abbey had heard of Hugo fitz Warin, troubadour and knight crusader, as famous for his love songs as for his courage. “Lord Hugo?” Wolf drew a reverent breath. “You took the Cross. You went to the Holy Land with the king and the archbishop. You fought at the siege of Acre!” And that song that had got him into so much trouble with Brother Thomas had been one of Lord Hugo’s.
“I did all those things,” the man agreed grimly, “and I’m still waiting to hear why you ran off with Argos — my dog.”
“Oh!” Wolf came out of a dream of beautiful ladies, battles, broken lances, blood-red pennants and dying Saracens. “That was because of the elf—”
The blow took him by surprise, cracking him across the side of the head. Lord Hugo seemed to grow, like a great bear bristling with black fur. “Are you making fun of me, boy?”
“No, sir!” Wolf couldn’t understand this sudden fury. He backed, rubbing his stinging ear. “The elf,” he gabbled, “the one you were hunting.”
“What elf?”
“But,” Wolf squeaked. He swallowed and began again. “I thought you’d seen it, running down the hill. Didn’t you? It was following me. And it got caught up in the hunt, like me, between the dogs and the wolves.” The recollection of his awful journey over the mountain overcame him, and he blurted everything out: “I heard the horns blowing, and I thought the Devil was coming, like the stories say. And there was this thing, bobbing about in the heather — I thought it was a demon coming after me because I’d run away from the abbey. And afterwards it must have been creeping around your fire: your dog saw it and went after it — and I went with him.”
“You snivelling little clerk,” Hugo said after a pause. “Trying to make yourself interesting by telling lies.”
“I’m not lying!” Wolf’s voice rose again.
“So where is this elf now?”
“Back there.” Wolf twisted, pointing. “In a cave under the cliff.”
“Show me.”
“But—”
“I want you to show me!”
“All right! I will!” Wolf tried to clap the lid back on his temper. It was madness to shout at this lord, who could have him hanged. He added more moderately, “Do you want to call your men, sir? They could bring torches…”
“So you can claim they scared it away? If anything’s there at all? No,” said Hugo. A