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Chapter Three
The Shadow Across The Water
"No...no..."
Jack sat up abruptly. The wind was howling outside. The house held the deep
chill that seeped into it before dawn.
"No...I won't do it...it's evil..."
Jack threw back the covers and stumbled to the other end of the house. The
Bard's bed was shaking. He saw the old man thrust up his hand as though
warding something off. "Sir! Sir! Wake up! Everything's all right."
He caught the Bard's hand.
"You won't bend me to your will! I defy you, foul troll!"
Something -- some terrible force -- flung the boy back. His head banged
against the stone, and his ears rang as though a blacksmith were pounding on
an anvil. He tasted blood.
"Oh, my stars, child! I didn't know it was you."
Jack tried to speak, choked on blood, and coughed instead.
"You're alive, thank Freya! Stay here. I'll build up the fire and make
you a healing drink."
The ringing in Jack's ears died down, but he felt violently sick to his
stomach. He heard the Bard move around, and presently, the hearth burst into
light. In a very short time he was handed a cup of hot liquid. It hurt his
mouth and he recoiled.
"You bit through your lip, child. It isn't as bad as it looks. The
drink will make it better."
Jack managed to swallow, and the sickness went away. He found himself
trembling. Perhaps he'd been trembling all along. He couldn't remember.
"Is that -- is that how -- you destroy your enemies?" he stammered.
The Bard sat back. "One of the ways," he said.
"So that was...magic."
"Some call it so," said the Bard.
"Will you teach me how to do it?"
"By Thor's bushy beard! I almost killed you, and the first thing you
want to know is how to do it."
"W-Well, sir, I am your a-apprentice."
"And a right cheeky one too. Most boys would have run home to their
mothers after what you just experienced. Still, curiosity is a great thing. We
two might just get along."
Jack felt a kind of warm sleepiness pass over him. The pain was still
there, but it seemed unimportant. "What happened to you, sir?"
"That was a Nightmare, lad. Pray you never meet one."
"You mean, a bad dream?"
"I mean a Nightmare. It's far worse."
Jack wanted to ask more, but he was too comfortable. He yawned broadly,
stretched out on the floor, and fell asleep.
When he awoke, he was lying outside on a bed of heather. He struggled to
get up. "Rest a while, lad," said the Bard. He was sitting on a
stool next to the door. His white beard and cloak shone against the weathered
house. "Ah, sunlight," the old man said with a contented sigh.
"It heals the terrors of the night."
"The Nightmare?" Jack said. His mouth hurt, and his speech was
oddly slurred.
"Among other things," said the Bard. Jack felt his lip and found,
to his horror, that it was as swollen as a mushroom after rain. "You
wouldn't make a bad-looking troll at the moment," the old man remarked.
Jack remembered the words the Bard had cried out in his sleep. "Have
you truly seen one, sir?"
"Oh, yes. Dozens. Most are quite pleasant, although they take getting
used to. The ones you have to watch out for are the half-trolls. There's no
describing how nasty they can be. Or deceitful. They're shape-shifters, and
when they appear human, they're so beautiful that you can't think of a single
sensible thing around them."
"Did one of them send the Nightmare?" said Jack.
"One of them rode it. Look, my boy, I was trying to protect you
from certain things until you were older. But I may not have the time. Lately,
I've felt a darkness over the sea. She's searching for me, you see. I
can hide from her in the daytime. At night my guard is down, and she knows
it."
Copyright © 2004 by Nancy Farmer
People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
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