CHAPTER 16
LAURA had always been so petrified by the
dangers of horseback riding that its discomforts had not occurred
to her. By the time they stopped for lunch she was extremely stiff;
by the time they stopped for the night, she hurt all over.
The Enchanted Forest did not act enchanted. It did
not even keep off the rain. Laura realized that both its appearance
before the Unicorn Hunt, when it had been wild and tangled, and its
appearance afterward, when it had been park-like, were forms of
holiday attire. Now they were seeing it in its everyday dress. It
had enormous beech and oak and rowan trees; clear paths; a
plenitude of yellow, white, or orange flowers like stunted
chrysanthemums; a dearth of undergrowth, aside from the little
bushes that look as if they ought to be growing seventy feet tall
in a prehistoric forest, and turn bright red in the early fall; and
convenient logs and rocks in clearings perfectly suited for
building a fire and spending the night.
Laura stood under a beech tree and watched Celia
and Fence build a fire. They had erected a little awning of oiled
leather over it, to keep off the rain the trees let through. Fence
thought this precaution unnecessary, but had given in, smiling,
when Celia insisted. Ellen had gone to get water, and Patrick to
find more wood. Matthew was unburdening the horses and covering
them up with blankets.
Ellen trudged into the clearing, lugging a skin of
water. “There’s more unicorn footprints by the stream,” she
said.
Laura was grateful that Patrick was absent.
Unicorns left flowering plants and trees behind them the way cats
leave hair; Ellen had decided this morning to call these
manifestations unicorn footprints, and Patrick, being Patrick,
promptly began calling them fewmets. Laura suspected that he would
have called them something considerably more vulgar if Celia had
not had her eye on him. Laura hadn’t figured out why Patrick
respected Celia when he scorned everybody else in High Castle, but
it was a great blessing.
“What kinds of flowers?” Laura asked, rather
tardily. Ellen had dumped her water into their camp kettle and was
rummaging in the heap of saddlebags.
“White violets,” said Ellen, pulling out six little
yellow apples and lining them up on a flat stone. “Forget-me-nots.
Crocuses. And just in case you might think it’s spring, a huge
great clump of Michaelmas daisies.”
“What’s a Michaelmas daisy?”
Ellen blinked up at her. “That’s weird,” she said.
“They’re asters; kind of a dusty blue. But Princess Ellen calls
them Michaelmas daisies. Michael-mass,” she added. “Not
micklemus , which is how we say it.”
“What’s Michaelmas?”
“The feast of the archangel Michael,” said
Ellen.
“Do they have archangels here?”
Celia came over to fetch the kettle, and Ellen said
to her, “What’s Michaelmas?”
“September twenty-ninth,” said Celia, “is
Michaelmas’s Day. ’Tis a feast of Heathwill Library; something to
do with the end of the wizards’ wars.”
“Who’s Michaelmas, then?” said Laura.
“Prospero’s apprentice,” said Celia, simply.
“I can’t stand it,” said Ellen. “Michaelmas is a
person?”
Celia smiled. “Some might dispute,” she said. “A
walketh very like one. Of your courtesy, find me the jars of stew
i’th’other pack.” She carried the kettle away to the fire.
Laura followed her. “What does Michaelmas’s name
mean?”
“That Michael who hath been dismissed,” said Celia,
straightening. “There were three named Michael on the Council of
Nine when Heathwill Library was planned, wherefore they found other
names for two of them.”
“Who dismissed the Michael who was
dismissed?”
“Prospero. Ellen, the stew?”
Ellen leapt up with a start and began searching
through the other bag. Laura, with several questions begging for
resolution, chose at random, and said, “Who was Prospero?”
“Say not was,” said Celia. “He’s of the Council of
nine that found Heathwill Library; a most formidable sorcerer once,
and now the most terrifying of scholars.”
“Why’d he stop being a sorcerer?”
“A was of the Red School,” said Celia, accepting
the earthenware pot Ellen handed her and beginning to pry off its
wax seal. “And their tenets did lead him on to most dreadful acts;
which, when he saw their issue, he did regret.”
“What acts?”
“A was Melanie’s eldest brother,” said Celia,
rather shortly.
“Oh!” said Laura. He was one of the family that had
killed a unicorn by treachery. Which was, of course, why he was
alive still; the blood of a unicorn killed by treachery conferred
immortality. Laura had always thought this a supremely stupid
setup; it was one of the remnants of earlier games that Ted and
Ruth had played before the rest of them were old enough, and they
had insisted on retaining it. She wasn’t at all sure that she
wanted to meet Prospero, no matter how regretful he was.
People having finished their various tasks, they
sat around the fire and ate their stew. Laura recognized it from
dinner at High Castle the night before. She also knew, having
helped Celia unpack for lunch, that there was not much of it in
their baggage. She had seen quantities of dried fruit, little
square cakes with oatmeal and raisins in them, dried meat, and a
few long-keeping vegetables like onions and potatoes. They would
not eat this well for most of the trip, unless somebody shot a
rabbit or something. Laura didn’t care for this notion.
And shot it with what, anyway? Nobody had a bow.
Archery did not seem to be much practiced at High Castle. But there
were arrow slits all over the castle. Laura looked sideways at
Patrick, planning to ask him to read this riddle for her, and then
she figured it out herself. The arrow slits must have been put in
before the Border Magic, when it was still possible that an enemy
army might besiege High Castle.
Laura came out of her reverie with a jerk as Ellen
passed her a squashed apple tart. There wouldn’t be more of those,
either. Laura savored it while she could, and listened to the
others.
“How long do you think it’s likely to rain?” said
Patrick.
“I’d thought it had cleared sooner,” said
Matthew.
“Claudia?” said Patrick.
Celia said, “’Twould be a petty persecution.”
“Maybe it’s just a warm-up act,” said
Patrick.
Nobody chose to take up this remark. Celia made tea
out of half the hot water and passed the mugs around. In the wider
spaces of the woods, the rain fell steadily, a background murmur
very like the fire’s. In their clump of beech trees, an occasional
huge drop hit somebody on the head.
Celia prepared to wash the mugs and the knives and
spoons in the remaining hot water, and sent Laura and Ellen to the
stream to wash the plates, exhorting them to be certain to scrub
them well with sand.
“There’s sand by the unicorn footprints,” said
Ellen, when they were safely out of Patrick’s hearing.
She led the way along a narrow path. On their left
a vast, tumbled slope of round rocks and vivid green moss fell,
nastily steep, into a misty valley of young trees. Laura was glad
the plates were tin and wouldn’t break. She could hear water
running at the bottom of the valley. She followed Ellen, and the
path turned and dragged them slipping and stumbling down the rocky
slope and disgorged them suddenly onto a flat grassy place
overflowing with flowers. The stream hissed whitely over a little
falls and widened into a pool whose glossy surface was perfectly
still and unmoving. It had stopped raining. Or, thought
Laura—picking her way among dusty blue and purple and dark red
daisy-like flowers the size of the plates she carried; and clumps
of white violets whose leaves were the size of her hand and their
flowers as big as an ordinary daisy; and forget-me-nots of the
proper size but of a blue almost luminous; and crocuses, gold and
purple and white, the size of tulips—it just wasn’t raining
here.
They knelt at the stream’s edge, and scrubbed the
plates. The remnants of the stew were remarkably clingy; Laura
supposed they shouldn’t all have sat there brooding and let it get
cold.
“I’d like to call a unicorn,” said Ellen, stacking
her last plate with the others and rinsing her hands in the
water.
Laura, who had two plates left, scrubbed harder.
The water was cold but very silky to the touch. “Do you think we
could have a drink?” she said.
“That won’t call a unicorn. What did you do to make
the one you saw show up?”
“I didn’t make it show up,” said Laura. “I whistled
‘The Minstrel Boy.’ Then I whistled like a cardinal; and a cardinal
came. I said to it, ‘Please, I’m looking for a unicorn.’ And it
flew away, and made a fuss when I tried to follow it. So I waited,
and it came back with Claudia. Claudia and I had a stupid
conversation, and she told me that the unicorns had gone south for
the winter, and she left. And I looked down and there was a unicorn
standing in the water.”
Ellen stood up and shook water off her hands. She
wore an expression unnervingly like Patrick’s when he was clicking
through in his mind the possibilities of a given situation. “It was
the cardinal,” she said. “I bet it was. Let’s whistle.”
“No!” said Laura, standing up in a hurry and
dropping all her plates. “We don’t want them to know we’re
here.”
“No; we don’t want them to know where we’re
going.”
“Well, once they know we’re here they could follow
us.”
“They could have been following us all along,” said
Ellen.
Laura knew the sinking feeling of somebody who is
going to lose an argument, because it isn’t really an argument at
all. She said, “There’s no point in asking for trouble.”
“We don’t know it will be trouble,” said Ellen. She
tipped her head back, and a little breeze stirred her crazy black
hair. She whistled, clearly and accurately, the song of the
cardinal. And a red bird dropped from the empty spaces of the
forest and landed on her shoulder. It was the biggest cardinal
Laura had ever seen. It was as large as a crow.
“Please,” said Ellen, standing very still, “we’re
trying to find a unicorn.”
The cardinal rose off her shoulder and flew
downstream. Before it had disappeared, they heard a regular
sloshing, and a unicorn came wading through the water,
unconcernedly, as if it were walking in a field of grass. Laura
wondered if they really liked water so much, or just liked getting
other people wet. Both the unicorns she had talked to had appeared
in the water.
This one strode into the middle of the little pool
and wheeled to face them. Laura looked at it carefully; its eyes
were not gold, but violet. It was not Chryse, the one she had just
told Ellen about. It might be the one she had talked to in the
lake. She wondered if she and Ellen looked alike to the unicorns.
Somehow she doubted it. She wished Ellen would say something; she
had summoned the unicorn, after all.
The unicorn stood there with its head cocked as if
it heard something in the distance. Laura became aware of stirrings
and rustlings in the woods around them, as every animal that could
tell a unicorn was here came out of its burrow or down from the
sky. At least in this forest, the unicorn was the king of
beasts.
It was extremely beautiful without seeming in the
least unreal. Laura could feel its warmth from three feet away; it
had whiskers on the sides of its nose; its eye, however purple, was
properly liquid. The tuft of hair on the end of its tail was wet
and draggled. But it looked so clean. No white animal looked
truly white; white cows or horses had dingy yellow or gray casts to
their coats, and sheep were just hopeless. Laura had seen white
cats that were almost as clean as the unicorn. She wondered if
unicorns groomed themselves like cats. She doubted that they would
have the tongue for it. She watched the orange fish flash around
the unicorn’s legs in the shallow water of the little pool, and
thought of cats, dozens of cats, washing the unicorn until its coat
gleamed. They would get hairballs you wouldn’t believe.
“The hair is not so coarse as that,” said the
unicorn, in the clear and piercing voice of its kind. “Thou thinkst
of horses.”
“No,” said Laura, startled into the truth;
“goats.”
“What?” said Ellen.
“I should rather ask thee that, youngling,” said
the unicorn. “Wherefore stoppest thou me?”
Laura distinctly heard Ellen gulp. “I hope we
didn’t disturb you,” said Ellen.
The unicorn said, “Hoping not to disturb, wherefore
didst thou send my messenger?”
“Because,” said Ellen, more boldly, “we weren’t
sure he was your messenger. Can you tell us about the
cardinals?”
The unicorn said, “ ‘I can’ must wait upon ‘I
will.’ ”
“Do you know who we are?” said Ellen.
“I know who you do seem.” The unicorn took two
steps toward them in the water and nuzzled the top of Laura’s head.
The unicorn smelled like very clean, dry, crispy autumn leaves;
which was to say, it smelled like Fence. Laura shivered just the
same. The unicorn blew vigorously into Ellen’s hair, altering it
very little, and backed up again. “You carry your seemings within,”
it said, “but you are other. Read me your riddle and I will read
you mine.”
“Don’t you mean that the other way around?” said
Ellen.
The unicorn made a very odd noise, like somebody
unpracticed trying to play a trumpet. “As courtesy to the visitor,
no doubt,” it said. “No matter that the visitor be uninvited and a
most pert intruder. Well. The cardinals serve whom they will and
also whom they must. They must serve Belaparthalion; they do serve
the Outside Powers, none knoweth by choice or upon compulsion; and
they will serve us. Now, what of thy oddness?”
“That’s a very long story,” said Ellen.
Laura gave her a reproachful look. It was
nevertheless true that the gray light was heavier than it had been,
that it was getting very chilly, and that from every part of the
stream except the pool in which the unicorn stood, wisps of mist
were rising off the water. It was also true that telling their
story to a unicorn might not be the wisest thing to do. Unicorns
were odd; they could be malicious. The only one Laura knew to be
well disposed toward the Secret Country was Chryse, and this was
not she.
“I think we’re out of our depth,” she said.
“Thou standest not in the water,” said the unicorn,
in a tone of mild pleasure.
“Contrariwise,” said Laura, startling herself, “I
and my kinsmen stand in water so deep that every seventh wave doth
choke us. An thou shouldst be that seventh wave, what then?” Whew,
she thought, where’d that come from?
“I?” said the unicorn, rather sharply. “I made not
this bargain.”
Both the unicorn and Laura looked at Ellen, who
cleared her throat and said, “I’ll keep it; but may I ask counsel
of those wiser than I am?”
“Ask,” said the unicorn, with a great deal of
humor.
Ellen stared at it, and then stared at Laura. Laura
looked back at her, shrugged helplessly, and then grinned. “Ask
what harm will be done,” she suggested. Maybe the unicorns liked
ironic situations even when the irony was against them.
Ellen said slowly, “We know thee not. How if to
tell us our tale does us harm, or harm to those we love?”
“Bring on thy counselors,” said the unicorn; “this
counsel is beyond my ken.”
“I’ll be right back,” said Ellen, and before Laura
could move she had scrambled up the slope and disappeared, leaving
Laura on the stream’s edge with a unicorn and a motley collection
of birds, squirrels, fish, foxes, and badgers. On the other side of
the water they lined the bank like a shelf of stuffed animals, they
held so still. On her side, Laura could hear them rustling up on
the hill, but the only creatures she could see were well up in the
trees.
Laura decided that she might as well sit down. She
did so very carefully, both because of her horse-battered muscles
and because of the animals. As soon as she was quiet again, three
squirrels ran down the nearest tree and sat a foot away from her on
the sand. She hoped the badgers and the foxes would stay farther
back. But keep the wolf far thence, that’s foe to men, said
a distant voice in her mind. It wasn’t Princess Laura. She wondered
if it were the unicorn. She didn’t want to ask. It would only end
in another awkward bargain that nobody could see the consequences
of. Ellen was brave, but sometimes she seemed to have no
sense.
Ellen sprinted up the rocky path at a reckless
pace, panting, and scattering before her dozens of startled small
animals. The squirrels swarmed up the trees and scolded her, and
farther overhead than that she heard the harsh, laughing voice of a
crow. She could also hear her traveling companions before she was
halfway back to the camp. They were singing rounds.
Ellen burst into the clearing. “Come
quickly!”
Celia and Patrick stood up, and Patrick said,
“Where’s Laura?”
He was taking his commission from Ted seriously.
Ellen felt a twinge of doubt; but in what safer company could she
have left Laura? The unicorns might confuse her, but they would
never hurt her. Patrick was starting to look murderous, and Celia’s
and Fence’s expressions to change from exasperation to concern.
Ellen squashed the temptation to make them all squirm, in
compensation for not trusting her, and said, “She’s fine. There’s a
unicorn, and it wants us to tell it everything!”
“I doubt that,” said Fence, dryly.
“I’m afraid I made a mess of things,” said Ellen,
“but you can tell me about it later. Just come on.”
While the grown-ups were exchanging a variety of
glances and mutterings, Patrick came over and said, “What’s going
on, Ellie?”
“It’s your fault,” said Ellen. “I was testing a
hypothesis. But it was right, and then I had a unicorn to deal
with. You can’t just say, ‘Thank you so much, go away now’ to a
unicorn, the way you can with atomic particles.”
“You can’t say that to them, either,” said Patrick.
“The trouble with you is that you are treating a problem in
sociology, or diplomacy, as if it were an exercise in physics. Have
a little sense. Atomic particles aren’t sentient.”
“I think magic is like that,” said Ellen.
“It seems to have personalities in it.” She explained what she had
done, and Patrick snorted.
“That wasn’t magic,” he said. “You weren’t testing
a magical hypothesis. You were just—”
“Ellen,” said Celia. “Fence and I had best bear
thee company. Patrick, speak not so sharp to thy sister, but help
Matthew in the rigging of the tents.”
“Ha!” said Ellen.
“Gloat not,” said Celia. “What’s this but the very
thing Patrick is forbidden to do?”
Ellen didn’t know if she meant speaking sharp, or
experimenting with the Secret Country. It was not the time to ask.
She led Fence and Celia down the steep path to the stream. Laura
had sat down; otherwise everything was as it had been. Laura looked
around when she heard them, and her face was relieved.
“Give you good even,” said Fence to the
unicorn.
“My sister speaketh well of thee,” said the
unicorn. Ellen wondered if it meant Chryse.
“I joy to hear it,” said Fence, very gravely.
“Lady Celia,” said the unicorn, “when thou
returnst, do thou sing more merry.”
“As you will,” said Celia.
“So, then,” said the unicorn, “these are thy
counselors?”
“They are,” said Ellen.
“Ask their counsel, then,” said the unicorn.
“Should we tell the unicorn who we are?” said
Ellen.
“Mercy, child,” said Celia, swiping a loosened
strand of yellow hair off her scarred forehead and sitting down on
a rock. A pigeon and two mice scuttered off behind her. The unicorn
made a little whistling noise at them, and the mice came out of the
clump of asters they had hidden in and sat by Celia’s right boot.
Celia didn’t look at them. “How should I know?” she said to Ellen.
“Thy story’s odd, but not o’er-merry. How like the unicorns but
half a loaf?”
“Fence,” said Ellen, feeling impatient.
“How madest thou this tangle?” said Fence to
Ellen.
“Out of curiosity and thoughtlessness,” said the
unicorn.
“Is such advantage to thy credit?” demanded
Fence.
The unicorn considered him with a large, purple,
dubious eye; but when it spoke, it sounded on the verge of
laughter. “We’ll take the cash,” it said, “and let the credit
go.”
Nor heed the rumble of a distant drum, said
some other voice, dimly. Ellen saw that Laura jumped and Celia
rolled her eyes, and surmised that they had heard it too.
Fence said, “These two are strangers; they know
thee not.”
“They shall,” said the unicorn. “Wherefore, first
must I know them. Tell thy tale, black maiden; thy fair cousin’s
cold.”
Tom’s a-cold, came the distant voice, that
was neither inside your head nor outside it. Do poor Tom some
charity, whom the foul fiend vexes.
Ellen felt rather cold herself. “Couldn’t Fence
tell it?” she said. “He’ll take less time than I would.”
Love’s not Time’s fool, remarked the
voice.
“Hold your tongues,” said the unicorn,
mildly.
Everybody was quiet, including the voice. The
unicorn said, “Very well, then Fence shall tell’t.”
Celia sat down by Laura; Ellen, feeling disgraced
without knowing what she would have wanted to do differently,
stayed lurking in the background with the bolder squirrels; and
Fence came to what would have been front stage, center, if the
unicorn had been a theatre audience, and began to speak.
He did in fact deliver an admirably abbreviated
account of their story; its flaw was that it stated as facts a
number of things Ellen thought were just conjecture. He described
their game briefly, and said that the power of their thoughts had
been so great that Claudia had become aware of them, and knitted
them unawares into her schemes. He said that she had killed the
real royal children in order to allow the five who had played them
into the Secret Country. Everything else he told
scrupulously.
The unicorn stood perfectly still during this
recitation, with its eye bent on Fence in a way Ellen thought
should unnerve him. It looked skeptical, but as if it were willing
to put up with much for the sake of a good story. When Fence had
finished, it said, “This is none of our doing. What name did the
red man give himself?”
Fence looked at Laura, who said,
“Apsinthion.”
“Wormwood,” said the unicorn. “My lord Fence,
knowest thou not that name?”
Fence stood very still, in the way he had; then he
smacked his hand into his forehead. “The Judge of the Dead,” he
said. “Oh, this likes me not. Wormwood indeed! That’s the
unchanciest power I know.”
Let the galled jade wince. The worm is your only
emperor for diet, said the distant voice. Others joined it.
Men have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but
not for love. Then worms shall try this—
“Hold your tongues!” said the unicorn in the water,
in a way that chilled Ellen’s skin like an ice cube going down her
back. “Be of good cheer, thou wizard. Anyone may put on a name, as
one may put on a red robe and an aspect somewhat like thine and
somewhat like thy student’s. Where’s he?”
It asked this question reflectively, but Ellen saw
Fence jump. “He goeth south, with an embassy to the Dragon King,
whom lately we bested in battle.”
“Bid him have a care,” said the unicorn.
There was a long pause; Ellen saw that Fence was
quite simply frozen where he stood, and that Celia was appalled. It
meant something, then, if a unicorn told someone to have a care.
Whom were they talking about? Fence’s student; was that Ted, or
Randolph? Probably Randolph. Fence gave himself a little shake, and
bent his knee. “More thanks than I can say,” he said.
“Thou shalt say it in time,” said the
unicorn.
Ellen didn’t like the sound of this. She said,
“Excuse me. Was your answer about the cardinals or your reading of
our riddle, or can you tell us more? I mean,” she amended hastily,
“will you?”
“Ask,” said the unicorn, pleasantly enough.
“Several cardinals have done mysterious
things,” said Ellen, and we’d like to know on whose orders they did
them.”
“Say on.”
“First of all,” said Ellen, “in our world, a
cardinal showed Ted and Laura the Secret House.”
“Spare those stories,” said the unicorn. “All
events in your own world you must lay on the doorstep of the
Outside Powers. We have no kingdom there.”
“Drat!” said Ellen. “Sorry. Okay. The first day we
came here, Benjamin cross-examined Ted about why he was acting so
oddly. And a cardinal whistled, and Benjamin stopped.”
“Nay,” said the unicorn. “None of ours.”
“Were any of the ones that rescued us from
betraying ourselves yours?”
“How so, when we knew naught you might
betray?”
The unicorn’s words were impatient, but its tone
was not. It sounded like somebody musing over his letters in a
friendly game of Scrabble. Ellen decided that she could go on. “All
right, then. The strange place, where the air is like a sheet of
glass and the sky is the wrong color and you feel too small, the
place Lady Ruth stood in to bargain with the Guardian of the River
of King Edward’s life. She was there another time—”
“Playing the fool with Shan’s Ring. We know.”
“There was a cardinal singing in the yard.”
“The burden of that song,” said the unicorn, rather
grimly, “was ‘get thee gone.’”
“Thank you,” said Ellen. “She did.” She fought down
the desire to question the unicorn in detail about the strange
place Ruth had visited. That wasn’t in the bargain. She would have
to consider carefully just how much any information was worth to
her, before she asked the unicorns for more of it. She had known
what they were like; she had made much of it up. But, perhaps
because she still felt them to be her own creations, even though
she knew better, she had not really taken them seriously until now.
She hoped her frivolity would not cost somebody else dear. “Just a
few more,” she said. “What about the cardinal that brought Claudia
to Laura, after the Unicorn Hunt?”
“That cardinal did bring Chryse,” said the unicorn.
“Did Claudia choose to come, blame not the cardinal.”
“I’ll tell you something, then,” said Laura. Ellen
had almost forgotten she was there. “Either Claudia or the cardinal
wanted to make me think the cardinal brought her.”
“The cardinal deceiveth not,” said the unicorn.
“But Claudia is a tale-weaver.”
It sounded definitely, thoroughly, unmistakably
amused. Ellen was seized with irritation. “It’s nothing to snort
at,” she said. “We are all tale-weavers too, and look what we’ve
done. And we didn’t even know. Claudia knows. What if she weaves a
tale about you?”
“She hath,” said the unicorn, with a sort of
rippling chuckle like somebody running a hand along the keys of an
out-of-tune piano. “She did tell thy fair cousin that all our kind
run south for the winter, as if we were the robin or the cuckoo.
Yet here am I to jest with thee.”
“No, no!” said Ellen, exasperated beyond bearing.
“She only said that, off the top of her head. What if she
wove a real tale about you, with all her mirrors and her little
diamond windows, nudging you around the way she nudged Lord
Randolph?”
There was a very long silence. The forest about
them was dark. Their clearing had still a thin gray light like that
of a rainy afternoon. It was not coming from the unicorn precisely;
if you looked at the shadows, it appeared to be coming from
directly overhead; but up there were only the dark branches of the
shadowy trees. Ellen could see Celia’s intent, somber profile, and
the back of Fence’s untidy head, and Laura’s hunched figure with
the braids unraveling down her back. Finally Fence stirred.
“Forgive us,” he said, “but I fear me you must
think on this.”
“No,” said the unicorn. “Thou thinkst we must
fear’t.”
“’Twould serve,” said Celia, in the brisk tone of
somebody telling you to take out the garbage, “if thou didst but
answer the question.”
“What if?” said the unicorn. “What then? Why, then
we should see infinite jest and most excellent fancy.” It looked
from one to the other of them, Celia, Fence, Laura, then Ellen,
with its great purple eyes; and then back, very thoughtfully, at
Fence. It bowed its head so low that the fringe of its mane trailed
in the water. “Fare you well,” it said. “This meeting shall cost
some dear.” It flung its head back and plunged down the stream,
showering Fence and Laura with water, sprinkling Celia, and hitting
Ellen with exactly three drops, one in each eye and the third smack
on top of her head.
“Smart-ass!” she muttered, and walked forward to
join the others. The unicorn’s last statement was profoundly
upsetting. “Fence? What did that mean?”
“I know not,” said Fence, shaking water out of his
hood.
The gray light lingered behind the unicorn,
enclosing them in a cheerless sphere of illumination that made
everybody look unhealthy, as fluorescent lights do. Fence’s round
face was hollow with sheer worry. Ellen didn’t like to see him
looking that way. She put her hand on his shoulder, which she could
do easily, she had grown so much this summer. Fence patted the hand
and said, “I’m yet revolving on an earlier wheel: if the man in red
that sent you back in truth is the Judge of the Dead, wherefore
should he send you but to ensure Randolph’s death? This Judge did
give up Ted, for which Randolph is his payment; maybe he groweth
impatient.”
Ellen asked a question she had learned to ask.
“Have I caused a lot of trouble?”
“That’s the question,” said Celia. “Didst thou
cause it, or didst thou but discover it?”
Laura said, “It was a trap? I made Ted go;
he didn’t want to follow the cardinal.”
“Remember what the unicorn said,” said Fence,
smiling at her. “Anyone may put on a name. But we shall warn
Randolph, and walk warily.”
“And tell Matthew,” said Celia.
Go and tell Lord Grenville, said the distant
voice, that the tide is on the turn.
“Hold your tongue!” said Ellen; and for a wonder,
it did.