Once Upon a Summer Day (14 page)

Read Once Upon a Summer Day Online

Authors: Dennis L. Mckiernan

“Are you telling me that I am at this moment asleep?”
“Yes, Chelle. We both are.”
Of a sudden, the room began to waver, and in spite of trying to hold on to the moment, the chamber vanished, and Borel awakened.
Yet sore, he painfully lurched to his feet and stumped away from the camp and relieved himself. Then he stepped to the mere and jerked to a halt, arrested by anxiety, for upon the mirrorlike surface floated the moon, now some three days past full.
16
Gnome
“S
he called me her ‘love.’ ”
“Mayhap you merely wished it to be so, Lord Borel. After all, it was a dream.”
The prince fished the rock from the heated water in his hat and dropped in a stone fresh from the fire. “No, Flic, I do not dictate what she says, nor does she control my words. Instead, she named me her love, and yet I know not why.”
“Well, you did say she followed you about when you were on Roulan’s estate.”
“Indeed, she did. Even so, she was but a child.”
“Nevertheless, Lord Borel, that could have been when she forged this link with you as well as the ardor she expressed for you.”
“Ah, Flic, at that age it would have been puppy love at best.”
“If you say so, my prince. Still, dreams are strange and unpredictable things—some are omens, others are true, and some are simply flights of fancy. Yet you say she is now a lovely demoiselle, and so I think more able to forge bonds of love. Would that I could be so fortunate as to have someone I love and someone who loves me.”
“You have never been in love?”
“No, my lord; only liaisons.”
Borel sighed. “ ’Tis the same with me.”
Borel removed the last rock from the now-bubbling water. Flic dropped blossoms in, and Borel stirred with his forked stick. Shortly, after Flic’s approval, he drank the tisane all in one gulp. It did not seem as distasteful as it had yestermorn. Even so, a frisson ran the length of his spine. Setting aside the tricorn, Borel next turned to his makeshift mortar and pestle and began crushing moss. As he did so, he glanced at the nearby twilight border. “I wonder what lies beyond?”
“More flowers, I imagine,” said Flic, smiling at Buzzer.
“I hope the going will be easier today,” said Borel.
“Less painful, you mean?” asked Flic.
Borel shrugged.
“It should be,” said Flic, “for you are healing quite well.”
Borel peered at his exposed skin. “ ’Tis true my bruises have turned from black to yellow. Even so, I am yet tender, and I ache now and again. And I am hungry. The snare caught nothing in the night.”
Flic grinned. “Perhaps we’ll come upon a meal beyond the marge.”
“One can only hope,” said Borel. He looked at the result of his handiwork. The moss had turned to slime. “Is it ready?”
Lightly touching it, the Sprite tested the sludge between thumb and forefinger and said, “Oui, Prince.”
They smeared a thin film upon each of the bruises. When that was done, Borel began crushing herbs for the juice, and a short while later his scrapes had been treated.
He donned his clothes and after quenching the fire he took up his goods and strung his bow and readied an arrow. “Let us hope something lies beyond I can fell and eat.”
Buzzer took to wing and sighted on the sun and then flew in a straight line into the twilight margin, Borel following, Flic again riding upon the prow of the tricorn.
Through the twilight they went, the day growing dimmer as they pressed on, and then lightening again as they came to the far side, where Borel groaned, for they had come into a high mountain valley with towering peaks all ’round. If Buzzer flew up and across a mountain, then this day would not be easier after all.
 
As Buzzer circled ’round and took a bearing, Borel gazed about at the place they had come into, seeking to see if ought was familiar. Whin grew on the land, and aspen groves dotted the hillsides. Streams tumbled down from high mountain snows, with groves of silver birch clustered along the flow. A long vale stretched out before them, sloping up toward a distant pass.
Borel sighed and said, “I’ve not been here before, and so I still do not know where Lord Roulan’s estates lie.”
“Fear not, Prince,” said Flic. “Buzzer knows the way.”
Even as the Sprite said that, along the rising length of the valley arrowed the bee toward the col.
Panting in the thin air, Borel trudged up the long slope, wending this way and that among the thick hells of gorse, doing his best to avoid the thorny evergreen shrubs, with their sharply pointed leaves and solitary deep yellow cup-like flowers.
“See, I told you that there would be blossoms on this side of the marge,” said Flic.
Borel growled, but said nought.
“And you say the chamber just vanished?” asked Flic.
“What?” said Borel.
“Your dream, the chamber, it vanished?”
“Yes,” said Borel, pressing through a place where the furze spread too widely for him to go around. “When I told her we were both asleep and dreaming, that’s when it went away. I tried to hold on to the chamber, but it faded and then was gone, and I woke.”
“You could not control it, eh?”
“No.”
Flic pondered a bit as Borel trudged on upward.
Far ahead, Buzzer passed through the col and disappeared downward beyond.
Finally, the Sprite said, “I think it is because it is her chamber and not yours, hence it is hers to control. Perhaps when you told her you were both in a dream, the reality came as a shock and she withdrew, and that’s why the chamber vanished. You will have to gently dance ’round her predicament to perhaps discover how she came to be where she finds herself.”
Forgetting that Flic was on the prow of his tricorn, Borel sighed and shook his head. “Hoy!” called the Sprite as he was nearly pitched off.
“Sorry,” said Borel. “I was just thinking if it upsets her that much to know we are dreaming, mayhap I should not try to ask her any more about her predicament.”
“Hmm . . . Perhaps you are right, Prince,” said Flic. He rode in silence for a while but then said, “There is this to consider, my lord: you must remember that if you are aware you are dreaming, you control aspects of the vision. Perhaps you can change the setting. Take her somewhere she can forget her troubles, and then seek answers.”
“How would I do this?” asked Borel. “I cannot take her out through the windows, and she refuses to go down the steps.”
“I do not know,” replied Flic. “I just know that as long as you and she remain in that chamber, you do not control the setting.”
Again Borel sighed and shook his head, but Flic was holding on to the upturned brim of the tricorn and remained well seated.
On up the slope Borel went and passed through the col, and then strode down the far slant, the way easier, for the whin mustered less thickly upon the land on this side of the notch.
Of a sudden Borel paused and said, “I hear the sound of an axe, I think . . . or perhaps that of a hammer.”
Faintly upon the air came a distant thwack, and after a moment, another . . . and another. . . . And in the distance among a stand of evergreens—
“Look, a thin tendril of smoke,” said Borel, pointing at the grove.
“I see it as well,” said Flic, taking to wing. “I’ll scout ahead.”
“Take care, my friend,” said Borel. “It could be more Goblins and Trolls.”
“Or something worse,” said Flic. “I will be wary of nets and such.”
With that the Sprite flew down the slope and toward the distant copse.
On downward strode Borel, his steps not as faltering as they were yester, for Flic’s flowery potion and mossy salve and juice of herbs seemed to have alleviated much of Borel’s woe, his soreness but a dull aching rather than a collection of sharp pains. Even so, he was not yet up to running, not yet capable of the Wolftrot he could maintain throughout a full day. And so, gaining the benefit of two applications of Flic’s medications, Borel strode on the edge of discomfort, rather than hobbling along in acute hurt.
Buzzer came flying back, apparently to make certain that this walking two-legs followed. Not finding Flic in Borel’s company, the bee agitatedly flew ’round and about Borel’s head, then alighted on the brim of the hat, then flew again, and landed again and flew and landed and flew.
“He’s gone on a scouting mission,” said Borel, and he pointed at the grove. And still smoke drifted into the air from the center of the trees, and still there came a periodic thwacking.
Buzzer flew down before Borel’s face and hovered somewhat menacingly.
In spite of the bee, Borel continued to stride forward, and Buzzer turned and flew a short distance, then hovered again directly in Borel’s path. “I tell you, Flic’s gone on ahead,” said the prince, once more pointing.
When he reached Buzzer, Borel stopped and held out a hand, palm down, and then slowly raised it up underneath the bee, until she had no choice but to land on his hand or fly away.
She landed.
Borel moved his hand to his tricorn, and Buzzer walked off and onto the hat. Then Borel strode on toward the grove.
Some moments later, Flic came flying back; he was giggling. Buzzer flew up and about the Sprite, seemingly overjoyed at the wee one’s return. But then the bee buzzed angrily, as if admonishing Flic for worrying her so.
They both landed on Borel’s tricorn, and as Flic stroked the bee, Borel said, “Well?”
“You must go into the grove, my lord prince.” Again the Sprite broke into giggles.
“And what will I find?” asked Borel.
“Oh, I would not wish to spoil the surprise,” said Flic.
“Flic, I would rather enter the coppice knowing what is there than be surprised by a danger dire.”
“My prince, I was gone as long as I was because I flew throughout the entire grove, seeking peril, and I assure you there is no danger lurking within.”
With that the Sprite would say no more, and Borel strode on to the stand of evergreens and, nocking an arrow, he cautiously walked within, following the sound of the rapping and the fragrance of woodsmoke, and then he heard cursing.
He came upon what looked to be a very small, one-room log cabin, perhaps no more than four foot high, its wee, leather-hinged door standing ajar. The rapping and cursing came from beyond the tiny dwelling.
Not wishing to leave danger lurking behind, Borel stooped down and took a quick look within the small dwelling. No one was inside. Cautiously, he worked his way about the lodge and toward the oaths, the Sprite on the tricorn with his hand pressed to his mouth to keep from laughing aloud, though now and again a giggle did escape.
Borel came to the back corner, and he drew his arrow to the full and stepped ’round. There behind the cabin knelt a small Gnomelike man, two foot tall at the most, a tiny axe in one hand, a small, blunt wedge of wood in another; using the flat of the blade, he was trying to pound the poorly tapered block into an entirely too-narrow, lengthwise crack in a large log in which his long white beard was trapped nearly all the way up to his chin.
Flic broke out laughing in glee.
At this sound—“Are you girls back again? Are you girls back again?” snarled the little man, unable to turn about to see for himself. “Go away! Go away!”
“Nay, Sieur,” said Borel, smiling and relaxing his draw. “We are no girls.—Or rather, only one of us is female.”
Upon hearing Borel’s deep voice, the little man jerked and tried to—“Ow!”—swing ’round to see, but his beard was caught, and a goodly number of strands tore free as he tried to look behind. “Now see what you made me do,” he cried. “Oh, my beautiful beard.”
Laughing gaily, Flic flew up and across and lit on one end of the log, and the Gnomish man’s undersized eyes widened at the sight of the Sprite. Then Buzzer lit nearby.
“Oh, oh,” cried the little man, “kill the bee, kill the bee, else I am certain it will sting me.”
Flic gasped in horror. “Kill my friend? Why you ugly little man. You deserve to remain stuck.”
“Now, Flic,” said Borel, even as the Gnome began to cry, “I am certain that he is merely frightened, and had he known Buzzer is a friend, he wouldn’t have said such a thing.”
“Oh, oh, are you going to leave me trapped here forever?” asked the small man.
“No, no,” said Borel, “I will help you, Sieur.” The prince slid the arrow back into his quiver and stepped to the opposite side of the log, where he unstrung his bow and slung it across his back.
Before him, Borel saw a rather homely Gnome, with a nose much too large for his face, and eyes much too small, and a very wide mouth running nearly from one overlarge ear to the other.
At the sight of the prince, again the wee man’s eyes widened. “You’re not going to cut my beard, are you?
That’s what the girls did. Cut my beard. It took years to grow out to its now magnificent length.”

Other books

This Glamorous Evil by Michele Hauf
Death of a Dyer by Eleanor Kuhns
Murder in Clichy by Cara Black
The Receptionist by Janet Groth
The Ordways by William Humphrey
The Last Minute by Jeff Abbott