and dreamless, but he was awake before sunrise and thinking of what he must do next in his efforts to combat the threat of the Warlock Lord when Kinson appeared out of the shadows on catâs feet and knelt next to him.
âThere is a girl here to see you,â he said.
Bremen nodded wordlessly and rose to a sitting position. The night was fading into paler shades of gray, and the sky east was faintly silver along the edge of the horizon. The forest about them felt empty and abandoned, a vast dark labyrinth of shaggy boughs and canopied limbs that enclosed and sealed like a tomb.
âWho is she?â the old man asked.
Kinson shook his head. âShe didnât give her name. She appears to be one of the Druids. She wears their robe and insignia.â
âWell, well,â Bremen mused, rising now to his feet. His muscles ached and his joints felt stiff and unwieldy.
âShe offered to wait, but I knew you would be awake already.â
Bremen yawned. âI grow too predictable for my own good. A girl, you say? Not many women, let alone girls, serve with the Druids.â
âI didnât think they did either. In any case, she seems to offer no threat, and she is quite intent on speaking with you.â
Kinson sounded indifferent to the outcome of the matter, meaning that he thought it was probably a waste of time. Bremen straightened his rumpled robes. They could do with a washing. For that matter, so could he. âDid you see anything of the winged hunters on your watch?â
Kinson shook his head. âBut I felt their presence. They prowl these forests, make no mistake. Will you speak with her?â
Bremen looked at him. âThe girl? Of course. Where is she?â
Kinson led him from the shelter of the spruce to a small clearing less than fifty feet away. The girl stood there, a dark and silent presence. She wasnât very big, rather short and slightly built, wrapped in her robes, the hood pulled up to conceal her face. She didnât move as he came into view, but stood there waiting for him to approach first.
Bremen slowed. It interested him that she had found them so easily. They had deliberately camped well back in the trees to make it difficult for anyone to discover them while they slept. Yet this girl had done soâat night and without the benefit of any light but that of stars and moon where it penetrated the heavy canopy of limbs. She was either a very good Tracker or she had the use of magic.
âLet me speak with her alone,â he told Kinson.
He crossed the clearing to where she stood, limping slightly as his joints attempted to unlimber. She lowered the hood now so that he could see her. She was very young, but not a girl as Kinson had thought. She had close-cut black hair and enormous dark eyes. Her features were delicate and her face smooth and guileless. She was indeed dressed in Druid robes, and she wore the raised hand and burning torch of the Eilt Druin sewn on her breast.
âMy name is Mareth,â she told him as he came up to her, and she held out her hand.
Bremen took it in his own. Her hand was small, but her grip was strong and the skin of her palm hardened by work. âMareth,â he greeted.
She took back her hand. Her gaze was steady and held his own, her voice low and compelling. âI am a Druid apprentice, not yet accepted into the order, but allowed to study in the Keep. I came here ten months ago as a Healer. I came from several years of study in the Silver River country, then two years in Storlock. I began my study of healing when I was thirteen. My family lives in the Southland, below Leah.â
Bremen nodded. If she had been allowed to study healing at Storlock, she must have talent. âWhat do you wish of me, Mareth?â he asked her gently.
The dark eyes blinked. âI want to come with you.â
He smiled faintly. âYou donât even know where Iâm going.â
She nodded. âIt doesnât
Gina Whitney, Leddy Harper