"No, the time is not quite right. A day or two."
"We haven"t got much food left. . . ."
"Don"t worry. The food will last."
And that night it seemed he was right. However much we ate-and Growch and I stuffed ourselves silly on a stew that tasted like no other I had ever come across-the pot still seemed full. The Wimperling said he wasn"t hungry, but he did have a nibble of bread.
As we sat round in the firelight, the fire damped down by some turves of peat I had found in the barn, I felt sleepier than I had for ages; not exhausted but happily tired, the sort of tiredness that looks forward to dream. Growch was yawning at my feet, stretching then relaxing, his eyes half-shut already.
"Gawdamighty! I could sleep fer days. . . ."
"Why not?" said the Wimperling.
"He"d die of starvation in his sleep," I said, laughing, and stifled a yawn.
"Not necessarily. What about those animals who sleep all winter?"
"Good idea," I said. "Wake me in March. . . ." And as I wrapped myself tight in my father"s old cloak and lay down on the springy bracken bed, Growch at my feet, I gazed sleepily at the glowing embers of the fire, breaking into abortive little flames every now and again, or creeping like tiny snakes across the peat, till all merged into a pattern that repeated itself, changed a fraction, moved away, came back. Soothing patterns, familiar patterns, patterns in the mind, sleep-making patterns . . .
When I finally came to I found it was already mid-afternoon, and Growch was still snoring. The fire smoldered under a great heap of ash that seemed to have doubled overnight. I broke the bread, stale now, into the stew, and put it on to heat up. Then I went outside to relieve myself and look for the Wimperling, but he was nowhere about. I went down to the spring for a quick, cold wash, for I still felt sleepy, then combed out my tangled hair. Still no sign of the Wimperling. He couldn"t have gone without saying good-bye, surely?
It had obviously rained overnight, for the ground was damp and the heather wetted my ankles as I lifted my skirts free from the moisture. After calling out three or four times I shrugged and went back to dish out the stew, leaving a good half for our companion. I cleaned out the bowls, banked up the fire and went outside again. The wind was still strong, but it seemed to be veering back towards the west and the biting chill had gone.
Something large trotted out of the shadows. "Were you looking for me?"
"Wimperling! Where have you been?"
"Around and about . . . Did you sleep well?"
"Like a babe! Your supper is waiting."
"I"m fine without, thanks." He gazed up at the sky, where the moon seemed to bounce back and forth between the clouds like a blown-up bladder. "Tonight I can sup off the stars and drink the clouds. . . ."
"And what about the moon? I teased, looking up at where she hung, free of cloud at last. "A bite or two of-Oh, my G.o.d!"
I felt as if I had been kicked in the stomach. "I don"t understand!" Suddenly I was afraid. "Last night when I went to sleep the moon was three or four days short of full. And now . . ."
And now the moon was full.
Chapter Thirty.
"Yes," said the Wimperling, following my gaze. "You have slept through four days. "Like a babe" is what I think you said."
Just like that. Like saying I overslept. Or missed Ma.s.s.
There was still a clutch of fear in my stomach. "I don"t understand! Magic?
How? Why?"
"No magic, just a pinch of special herbs in your stew. They slowed down your mind and your body, therefore you needed less breath, less food, less drink.
As to why . . . As you said, there was little food left, and I had some things to do while you slept."
I still felt scared that anyone"s body could be so used without their knowledge and permission; suppose, for instance, the dose had been too strong? And did one age the same while in that sleep? Did one dream? I couldn"t remember any.
As usual, he knew what I was thinking.
"I wouldn"t hurt you for the world, you know that. The dose was carefully measured. All it meant was that you and the dog had a longer rest than usual, that"s all. And saved on food. No, you haven"t gained time and yes, you did dream. One has to. But you don"t always remember."
"What-things-did you do?"
"I will show you. When-when I am gone, if you travel due west for two days, you will come to a road that leads either south or east. You will have enough food to last till you come to another village. As to coinage-Follow me!"
He led us back to the room we had slept in, and there, in a heap on the floor, were twenty gold coins.
"It takes time to make those," he said.
I ran the coins through my fingers. "Are they real?" They felt very cold to the touch.
"As real as I can make them. More solid than faery gold, which can disappear in a breath. But you must be careful how you use them. As long as they are used honestly for trade they will stay as they are, although each time they change hands they will lose a little of their value. A coating of gold, you might say. But if they are stolen or used dishonestly, then the perpetrator will die."
"How are they made?"
"White fire, black blood, green earth, yellow water."
None of which I had ever come across, but I supposed anything was possible with a flying pig-not-a-pig. A large flying pig. Very large. Now he almost reached my shoulder: those four days sleep of mine had made him almost twice as big again.
"You will soon be too big for your skin, you know," I said jokingly.
He looked at me gravely. "I hope so. . . . Come and see what else I have been doing. You"d better make up the fire, while you"re at it."
"I"ve been letting it die down. I can light it again for breakfast. It"s not cold."
"Don"t you remember what your mother taught you? On no account let the house fires go out on the eve of Samhain, lest Evil gain entry. . . ."
"Samhain? All Hallows" Eve?"
He nodded, and I suddenly realized that it had been exactly a year ago that I had made a funeral pyre of our house for my mother and had set out on my adventures.
A year, a whole year . . . Somehow it seemed longer. That other life seemed a hundred years and a million miles away. I couldn"t even clearly recall the girl I had been then: this Summer was a totally different person. For one thing she had a name-two names, in fact. For another, this person would not have been content to sit by the fire and dream, and eat honey cakes till she burst. In fact, I couldn"t now remember when I had the last one. This girl now talked to animals, tramped the roads, thought less of her own bodily comforts and more of others, and had learned a great deal that was not taught in books.
And hadn"t used one single item of her expensive education that she could recall . . .
I threw a couple more logs on the fire and then followed the Wimperling out and across the yard to where the pigsties had once been, an unusually subdued Growch tailing us. The Wimperling stepped over what had once been one of the walls of the sty, and now in the middle, rising some six feet high, was a newly built cairn of stones.
"Did you build this?"
"Takeoff point," he said.
I looked at him. He seemed so different from the little persecuted pig I had stolen from the fair and run off with tucked under my arm. Not just the size, which was phenomenal; he had also grown in confidence over the months I had known him. He was mature, patient, wise, and had saved us more than once with courage and good advice. I had lost my little piglet to an adult one, and wasn"t sure whether to be glad or sorry.
"What are you going to do?"
"You will see. First let me tell you a little of what happened when I was young.
I sat down on part of the old wall and listened, Growch at my feet.
"This is where I was bom. The very spot I hatched." "Hatched" again, as though he truly believed he had come from an egg. "I was raised, as you know, among a litter of innumerable little piglets, although I didn"t grow exactly the same and stayed the runt of the litter. As I told you, I would probably have made a fine dish of suckling pig if the farmer hadn"t discovered my stubs of wings, and sold me. After weeks of torment you found me, and the rest you know."
"But if you were unhappy here, and pretending to be something you were not, why come back?"
"Because this place is a Place of Power. It was arranged that I start my breathing life here, and also meant that I eventually leave from here for the land of my ancestors. The fact that a farmer built a pigsty over my hatching place was an accident that couldn"t have been foreseen. However, once I had been sold, the Stones made sure they left and destroyed what remained of the farm. The Stones are my Guardians, they have watched and waited for a hundred years for my birth and then the Change."
"What?" I couldn"t believe what I was hearing. He was fantasizing. "You waited to be born-for a hundred years?"
"Legends have it as a thousand, but that is an exaggeration. A hundred is the minimum, though, but the warmth of the sty above me accelerated things somewhat and I only had ninety-nine years. This hadn"t given my personality enough charge to resist the nearness of the other piglets, so I adapted their bodily conformation to give myself time to acclimatize before the Change.
Exactly a year, in fact."
I was utterly bewildered. I had lost him somewhere. Hatching, a hundred years, Stones of Power, a "change," guardians . . . I seized on one question.
"You say the stones around us are Stones of Power? What does that mean?"
"Listen. Listen and feel. Where we are now is the centre of it all, like the center of a spider"s web. If you hung like a hawk from the sky you would see the pattern. This is not the only Center of Power, of course: they exist in other countries as well. Because of their special magic they have been used since understanding began for birth, breeding, death, religions, sacrifice, healing. I say again: listen and feel. . . ."
I tried. At first, although the night was still as an empty church, I could hear nothing special. Then there was a growl from Growch and I began to feel something. A low, very faint vibration, as though someone had plucked the lowest string of a ba.s.s viol, waited till the sound died away, then touched the silent string and still found it stirring under their finger. I put both hands flat on the ground and found I could hear it as well, though the sound was not on one note, it came from a hundred, a thousand different strings, all just on the edge of hearing. I felt the sound both through my body and in my ears at the same time, both repelling and attracting, till I felt as if I had been a rat shaken by a terrier. Beside me Growch was whimpering, lifting first one paw then the other from the ground- "Understand now?" asked the Wimperling, and with his voice the noise and vibration faded and was still. "That is why I had to come back. Had my life been as it should, my hatching taken place at the right time, had I not become part pig, I should have needed no one. But you were instrumental in saving my life, you have fed and tended me, and now I need you as the final instrument to cut me from my past. I cannot be rid of this constriction without you," and he flexed and stretched and twisted and strove as though he were indeed bound by bonds he could not loose.
"Anything," I said. "Anything, of course. How soon-how soon before you change?" I wanted to ask into what, but didn"t dare. I didn"t think I wanted to know, not just yet, anyway. In fact, just for a moment I wished I was anywhere but here, then affection and common sense returned: nothing he became could harm us.
He glanced up at the sky. The moon was calm and full and clear and among the stars there ran the Hare and Leveret, the Hunter, his Dog and the Cooking Pan. There were the Twins, the Ram, the Red Star, the Blue, the White. . . . No wind as yet, night a hushed breath, as if it, too, waited as we did.
Around us the ruins of the farm, all hummocks and heaps, farther away the Stones, seeming to catch from the moon and stars a ghostly radiance all their own, casting their shadows like fingers across the heath, so the land was all bars of silver and black like some strange tapestry bearing a pattern just out of reach of comprehension. And yet if one looked long enough . . .
"Five minutes," said the Wimperling. "When the shadow of the cairn touches the nearest Stone. Climb up with me and you will see. . . . That"s right. See, there is room for us both at the top."
Growch yipped beneath us, and scrabbled with his claws at the stone but could get no further.
"This is not for you, dog," said the Wimperling. "Be patient." He turned to me.
"Do you have your sharp little knife with you?"
"Of course." I touched the little pouch at my waist where it always lay, wondering why he wanted to know.
"Then it is farewell to you both, Girl and Dog. My thanks to you, and may you find what you seek soon." He took a deep breath. "I had not thought partings would be so hard. . . . Are you ready, Talitha?"
"Yes," I said, wondering what was to happen next. The shadow was creeping nearer and nearer to the Stone. . . . "At least I think I am."
"Then take out your knife, and when I count to ten, but not before, cut my throat. One . . ."
Chapter Thirty.One.
"Two . . ."
"What are you talking about?"
"Three . . . Four . . ."
"I"m doing no such thing! How could I possibly hurt you?"
"Five-"
"Listen, listen! If I dig this knife into you-"
"Six-"
"-you will die! I thought you said you were going to-"
"Seven!"
"I won"t, I can"t!"
"Eight!"
"Wimperling, Wimperling, I can"t kill you!"
"Nine! Do it! You must!"
"I love you too much to-"
"Do it now, before it"s too late! Ten . . ."
And there was such a look of agonized entreaty on his face that I brought the knife out and drew it across his skin. The tiny gash started to bleed, a necklace of dark drops in the moonlight, and I couldn"t do any more. I had rather cut my own throat.