The Bard silenced him with a wave. “Observe and learn. You may need to do this one day on your own. Now cast your mind out to the life in this woodland. There are paths unseen to the daytime eye.”
This was so comfortable, Jack lingered. He could almost feel tiny paws twitching, a tiny mouth open in a yawn.
“Do not allow yourself to enter an animal’s body,” the Bard’s voice came from far away. “It’s a dangerous trick and one for which you are not ready.”
Jack backed off. So
Jack sensed a hedgehog snuffling among the roots of a tree. All at once it shrieked and rolled into a ball.
“Did you hear that?” the Bard said softly. “The animals know something dangerous has come into their forest.”
Jack found the mother hare again. She was cowering in a clump of grass in a meadow. She wanted to flee, but even more strongly she wanted to return to her young. She looked up and saw a pair of big, glowing, blue eyes.
“Ha!” shouted Jack, pulling himself out of the hare’s body. He was standing next to the Bard with the bell clutched so tightly to his chest, it was certain to leave a bruise.
“Remind me to leave you at home when I want to creep up on something,” the Bard said.
“I—I saw eyes,” stammered Jack. “They w-were glowing.” Then he remembered Brother Aiden’s story. “Oh, crumbs, it was only a sheep.”
“Aiden told you that tale, did he?” the Bard said. “It happens that you did see a sheep in the meadow, but what frightened the hare lay
“I’d l-like your permission, sir, to put down the bell and d-draw my knife,” said Jack, unable to stop the trembling in his voice.
“In a moment. Your knife will make no impression on the
“Wh-What?” said Jack.
“A path has opened and some extremely interesting visitors have stepped through. We can’t have
“Do it quickly. We need to draw the
Jack almost dropped the bell as he fumbled it out of its wrappings. He knew he had to obey before he thought about the consequences. He swung Fair Lamenting. The clapper struck the sides and a golden chime rolled out through the hazel wood, driving all fear before it and filling the boy with rapture. No music had ever been so sublime.
It was like all the best moments of his life happening at once, like the time he watched Father build their house and when Mother sang to the bees. It was when the Bard asked him to be an apprentice and when Thorgil, Pega, and he hugged one another under the grim walls of Din Guardi. But it was also a memory of his grandfather sitting by Jack’s bed when he had a fever and of John the Fletcher’s sister making him an apple tart after he fell into a pond. Those people were dead. Now, in the glory of this music, they rose up before him.
Jack dropped the bell to the ground. He found, to his amazement, that his face was wet with tears.
“That’s why they call it Fair Lamenting,” the Bard said quietly. “Hark, now. You must be alert.
They heard weeping. It sounded like a woman sobbing as though her heart would break. It drew nearer and the air became chill. A mist swirled along the ground, and the smell of unnameable rotting things surrounded them. Jack drew his knife.
The Bard raised his staff in the moonlight at the edge of the wood. “I command you by root, by stone, by sea!” he cried.
A darkness solidified under the trees.
“I am the heir of Amergin,” said the Bard. Jack looked up, amazed. “I am here to listen to your plea for justice.”