

The long, low attic smelled of dust and book leather; to Max it resembled a book graveyard more than a working library. Near the entrance, a slender spiral staircase disappeared up into a dark room housing the building’s clockworks and chimes. Max moved quickly past it; Old Tom had always seemed to him a living thing, and something about the dark space above made him uneasy.
Max settled himself into a rickety wooden
chair at a long table. Flicking on a table lamp, he sneezed and
brushed a layer of dust off the table. There was little doubt in
Max’s mind that Ronin had caused the distraction at the patisserie
to slip him the message. Ronin’s note had been brief but was
relatively clear; “RCOKE” clearly stood for
Max’s Rowan Compendium of Known Enemies. He
opened his bag with uneasy anticipation, pulling out the heavy book
and spying another folded letter between its pages. Max opened the
letter and scanned its jittery script.
He crumpled the letter in his fist and reduced it to ashes with a blue flame.
As Max’s eyes followed a drifting flake of ash, the room suddenly shook with the deafening sound of Old Tom’s chimes. Max clamped his hands over his ears and pitched forward in his chair, eyes screwed shut. His eardrums rattled and vibrated for what seemed an eternity until the bells finished striking eight o’clock.
Opening his eyes, Max yelped as he realized he wasn’t alone in the old library. Miss Boon was standing some ten feet away.
“I’m sorry to surprise you,” she said. “I gather this is your first visit to Rattlerafters?” She took a deep breath and looked around. “I used to come here, too, when I wanted to be alone.”
Max nodded as the ringing subsided in his head.
“Some students said they’d seen you come this way,” she explained, gesturing toward the stairwell. “I hope I’m not disturbing you.”
Flustered, Max zipped his backpack and started to get up from the table.
“No, but I already said I’m sorry,” he said quietly.
The corners of her mouth stiffened a moment before relaxing into an amused smile.
“I’m not here to discuss your behavior this afternoon. Please have a seat—I’d like to talk to you.”
Max casually swept the letter’s ashes off the table while Miss Boon took the chair opposite him. She reached into her bag and produced a thick book bound in worn green leather. Interlacing Celtic designs in faded gold ran along its borders. IRISH HEROES AND FOLKLORE was stamped on the front cover.
“What’s this?” asked Max.
“Interesting question,” mused Miss Boon. “I happen to think it may be you.”
Max looked across the table. Miss Boon leaned forward, her mismatched eyes locking on his as she raised her hands and murmured a word of command. Instantly the book sprang open, its pages flipping past until they stopped at an illustration of a fierce-looking warrior standing in a chariot. His black hair was plaited and he clutched a barbed spear in his hands. Max read the chapter title aloud: “Cúchulain—The Hound of Ulster.” The name sent a tingle up his spine.
“Not ‘koo-choo-lane,’” Miss Boon corrected, “koo-hull-in. Yes, Max, this is the very person I’d been hoping you’d research in an effort to better understand your vision. You have thus far refused to look for him, so he has come looking for you.”
Max balked at her tone and eyed his watch.
“Is everyone else doing research on their visions?” Max asked, trying to stall. “Because I’m having a hard enough time with classes as it is. I don’t think I should be taking on any more work.”
Miss Boon glanced quickly at the stairwell and gave Max a guilty smile.
“Fair enough. You see, Max, I’m really asking you for a favor. I want to understand more about your vision. I know it had something to do with the Cattle Raid of Cooley. But I need to know more—I need to know precisely what you saw.”
Max’s stomach tightened up. There was something in her eagerness that reminded him of Mrs. Millen.
“I’m not sure,” Max lied. “It’s kind of hard to remember. Why’s it so important?”
“Most of the time, a vision is something pretty and without much meaning behind it,” she said. Max fidgeted uncomfortably; Mrs. Millen had wanted to know if his tapestry had been pretty. “But yours is a bit different. Your tapestry was of a very definite person. From what little Nigel told me, your vision illustrated a very particular scene. If it’s true, that’s very rare. Almost unique, in fact. I’ve been doing a lot of independent research on visions, and I don’t know of one like that in over four hundred years. Since before Rowan was founded.”
Max took a quivering breath; he already knew the answer to his next question.
“Who had the last one?”
“Elias Bram,” she said.
Max thought of the last Ascendant’s apple floating in the Course’s trophy room.
“You think he had the same vision I did?” Max asked.
“No. His was very different. But, unlike all the others—and similar to yours—his was tied to history and myth. According to Bram’s letters, it was of the Norse god Tyr placing his hand in the mouth of the Fenris Wolf. Do you know the tale?”
Miss Boon smiled at him; she always seemed pleased when she knew something that someone else did not.
“The Fenris Wolf was a monstrosity,” she explained. “It was capable of wreaking unimaginable havoc unless it could be controlled. No chain could bind it, and so the gods, in secret, procured a cord wound with spells so as to be unbreakable. When they challenged the monster to test his strength against the cord, the wolf laughed but was suspicious of such a feeble-looking fetter. It agreed to be bound only if one of the gods would place a hand in its mouth as a gesture of good faith. Only Tyr stepped forward.”
Max winced. “What happened?” he asked.
“The Fenris Wolf could not break the magic binding,” she continued. “When it realized it had been caught, it bit off Tyr’s hand and swallowed it. Tyr had made a mighty sacrifice, but the monster was rendered harmless until Ragnarok—the End of Days—when it would burst its bonds.”
“Didn’t Elias Bram sacrifice himself at Solas?” Max asked. “So others could flee?”
“He did,” said Miss Boon, looking closely at Max. “I take it you can now imagine why I want to help you understand your vision.”
Max was not so certain.
“It’s like I told you,” he said. “It’s hard for me to remember. Maybe we should talk about it with the Director.”
Her eyes widened momentarily and she shook her head.
“No, no! This is just between us.” For a moment, she looked sheepish. “Ms. Richter doesn’t know I’m doing this research. She might think it’s taking time away from my…teaching duties. You understand, don’t you?”
Max glanced from her face to the book several times before finally nodding.
“Good. I thought you would.” She smiled and pushed up from the table. “I’ll leave this with you in the hope that you’ll read it. Perhaps it will jog something in your memory. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
Max hesitated, before blurting out a final question.
“What’s Brigit’s Vigil?”
Miss Boon turned around.
“Where did you hear that term?” she asked, her nose wrinkled up in curiosity.
Max panicked; he had obviously made a terrible mistake.
“I heard Mr. Morrow say it,” he lied. “It just made me curious. I’d never heard it before.”
Miss Boon smiled and walked back over.
“Byron would like that term—he’s a romantic,” she said. “Come here and I’ll show you. This is one of the few spots on campus where you can get a good view of it. I think there’s enough moonlight tonight.”
She guided Max toward several small windows at the far end of the library. It was dark outside, and the sea was a calm sheet of black glass. Miss Boon pointed at a large rock jutting out from the water some fifty yards from shore.
“That is Brigit’s Vigil,” she sighed. “It’s an old legend here at Rowan, but fading fast, I’m afraid. It dates back to the founding of this school. It’s a bit sad or romantic, I suppose, based upon how you look at it. You see, among the survivors that fled here aboard the Kestrel was Elias Bram’s wife. Her name was Brigit. It’s said that before Elias ran to meet Astaroth during the great siege, he begged his wife to flee with the others. She refused to leave his side until he swore an oath to come for her, to follow over the sea and rejoin her in this new land.
“As you know, Bram was never seen again after Solas fell. After the survivors reached these shores and this school was built, Brigit spent her days wading in the surf, looking east in hope of her husband’s return. He never came. The legend says that one day Brigit disappeared and that rock emerged offshore in her stead. Some people—like Mr. Morrow, I’d imagine—insist the rock resembles a woman, dressed in a nightgown and staring out to sea.”
Max pressed his nose against the window and squinted. It was too dark to see the rock in any detail.
“Try as I might, I don’t see it—not even by daylight.” Miss Boon sighed. “Tell me later if you can. I think you’ll get very familiar with Brigit’s Vigil while you and Alex are scrubbing the Kestrel. Good night, Max.”
Max watched her go in a series of brisk, efficient steps across the room and down the stairs. He checked his security watch. He still had forty-five minutes before the chimes would sound again.
As Max smoothed down the book’s pages, his
fingers seemed to crackle with electricity. The Hound of Ulster
stared back at him from the book, his handsome face brimming with
youth and purpose. Max leaned back to read, setting his watch to
beep several minutes before the chimes.
While the images were clear to Max, the interpretation of the story was not. After all, Cúchulain had failed—the queen was able to get the bull despite his acts of heroism. Was Max somehow destined to fight the good fight but fail? Was his life to be short? Max turned the page and poked gingerly at the bump on his head. His eyes fell upon a discolored illustration of a wounded warrior tied to a stone pillar. The heading read “The Death of Cúchulain.”
Max quietly closed the book.
His head ached and his mind raced with too many questions to count. With a sigh, he slipped the book into his bag and walked once more to the windows. The campus was quiet; just a few lanterns bobbed along the paths. Max turned to go when a small flash of green light danced on the window. It disappeared suddenly. Squinting, Max hooded his eyes against the window’s glare and peered deep into the night. Another pinpoint of green light shot from the black mass of Brigit’s Vigil. It bobbed and hovered in front of Max’s eyes before disappearing a moment later. He stayed at the window another ten minutes, but the light did not return.