rose and turned to the bard.

'What evil deed is this?' The old enchanter spoke hardly above a whisper, yet his voice rang through the cottage and his eyes blazed in anger. 'Whose hand dared strike him?'

'The Huntsmen of Annuvin,' replied Fflewddur. 'Two lives they almost claimed. How did you fare?' he urgently asked Taran. 'How did you outride them so quickly? Be thankful it went no worse for you.'

Taran, puzzled, glanced up at the distraught bard. 'Your words have no meaning, Fflewddur.'

'Meaning?' answered the bard. 'They mean what they say. Gwydion would have traded his life for yours when the Huntsmen set upon you not an hour ago.'

'Set upon me?' Taran's perplexity grew. 'How can that be? Gurgi and I saw no Huntsmen. And we have been at Caer Dallben this hour past.'

'Great Belin, a Fflam sees what he sees!' cried Fflewddur.

'A fever is working in you,' Taran said. 'You, too, may be wounded more grievously than you know. Rest easy. We shall give you all the help we can.' He turned again to Gwydion, opened the packet of herbs which Gurgi had brought, and set them to steep in the basin.

Dallben's face was clouded. 'Let the bard speak,' he said. 'There is much in his words that troubles me.'

'Lord Gwydion and I rode together from the northern lands,' Fflewddur began. 'We'd crossed Avren and were well on our way here. A little distance ahead of us, in a clearing…' The bard paused and looked directly at Taran. 'I saw you with my own eyes! You were hard pressed. You shouted to us for help and waved us onward.

'Gwydion outdistanced me,' Fflewddur went on. 'You'd already galloped beyond the clearing. Gwydion rode after you like the wind. Llyan carried me swiftly, but by the time I caught up there was no sign of you at all, yet Huntsmen a-plenty. They had dragged Gwydion from his saddle. They would have paid with their own lives had they stood against me,' cried Fflewddur. 'But they fled when I rode up. Gwydion was close to death and I dared not leave him.'

Fflewddur bowed his head. 'His hurt was beyond my skill to treat. I could do no more than bring him here as you see him.

'You saved his life, my friend,' Taran said.

'And lost what Gwydion would have given his life to keep!' cried the bard. 'The Huntsmen failed to slay him, but a greater evil has befallen him. They've stripped him of his sword? blade and scabbard'

Taran caught his breath. Concerned only for his companion's wounds, he had not seen that Dyrnwyn, the black sword, hung no longer at Gwydion's side. Terror filled him. Dyrnwyn, the enchanted blade, the flaming weapon of ancient power, was in the Huntsmen's hands. They would bear it to their master: to Arawn Death-Lord, in the dark realm of Annuvin.

Fflewddur sank to the ground and put his head in his hands. 'And my own wits are lost, since you tell me it was not yourself who called out to us.'

'What you saw I cannot judge,' Taran said. 'Gwydion's life is our first care. We will talk of these things when your memory is clearer.'

'The harper's memory is clear enough.' A black-robed woman moved from the dark corner where she had been silently listening, and stepped slowly into the midst of the company. Her long, unbound hair glittered like pale silver; the deadly beauty of her face had not altogether vanished, though now it seemed shadowy, worn away, lingering as a dream only half-recalled.

'Ill fortune mars our meeting, Assistant Pig-Keeper,' Achren said. 'But welcome, nonetheless. What, then, do you still fear me?' she added, seeing Taran's uneasy glance. She smiled. Her teeth were sharp. 'Neither has Eilonwy Daughter of Angharad forgotten my powers, though it was she who destroyed them at the Castle of Llyr. Yet, since I have dwelt here, have I not served Dallben as well as any of you?'

Achren strode to the outstretched form of Gwydion. Taran saw a look almost of pity in her cold eyes. 'Lord Gwydion will live,' she said. 'But he may find life a crueler fate than death.' She bent and with her fingertips lightly touched the warrior's brow, then drew her hand away and faced the bard.

'Your eyes did not play you false, harper,' Achren said. 'You saw what was meant fo you to see. A pig-keeper? Why not, if thus he chose to appear? Only one wields such a power: Arawn himself, Lord of Annuvin, Land of the Dead.'

Chapter 2

The Letter Sticks

TARAN COULD NOT STIFLE a gasp of fear. The black robed woman glanced at him coldly.

'Arawn dares not pass the borders of Annuvin in his true form,' Achren said. 'To do so would mean his death. But he commands all shapes, and they are both shield and mask. To the harper and Lord Gwydion, he showed himself as a pig-keeper. He could as well have appeared as a fox in the forest, an eagle, even a blind worm if he deemed that would best serve his ends. Yes, Pig-Keeper, with no less ease could he have chosen the form and features of any creature living. For Lord Gwydion, what better lure than the sight of a companion in danger? one who had fought often at his side, known to him, and trusted. Gwydion is too shrewd a warrior to be taken in a weaker snare.'

'Then all of us are lost,' Taran said, dis­mayed. 'The Lord of Annuvin can move among us as he pleases, and we are without defense against him.'

'You have reason to fear, Pig-Keeper,' replied Achren. 'Now you glimpse one of Arawn's subtlest powers. But it is a power used only when none other will serve him. Never will he leave his stronghold, save in the press of mortal danger; or, as today, when what he sought to gain far outweighed the risk.' Achren's voice lowered. 'Arawn has many secrets, but this one is most deeply guarded. Once he assumes a shape, his strength and skill are no greater than that of the guise he wears. Then can he be slain, like any mortal thing.'

'Oh, Fflewddur, if I'd only been with you!' Eilonwy cried in despair. 'Arawn wouldn't have deceived me, no matter how much he looked like Taran. Don't tell me I couldn't have told the differ­ence between a real Assistant Pig-Keeper and a false one!'

'Foolish pride, Daughter of Angharad,' Achren answered scornfully. 'No eyes can see behind the mask of Arawn Death-Lord. No eyes,' she added, 'but mine. Do you doubt me?' Achren went on quickly, seeing Eilonwy's surprise.

The woman's ravaged features held shreds of an old pride, and her voice sharpened with haughtiness and anger.

'Long before the Sons of Don came to dwell in Prydain, long before the lords of the cantrevs swore allegiance to Math, High King, and Gwydion, his war leader, it was I who commanded obedience to my rule, I who wore the Iron Crown of Annuvin.

'Arawn was my consort, who served me and did my bidding,' Achren said. 'And he betrayed me.' Her voice was low and harsh, and rage glittered in her eyes. 'He robbed me of my throne and cast me aside. Yet his powers are no secret to me, for it was I who taught them to him. Let him cloud your sight with whatever guise he chooses. From me, never can the face of Arawn be hidden.'

Gwydion stirred and groaned faintly. Taran turned again to the basin of healing herbs, while Eilonwy raised the warrior's head.

'Bear Prince Gwydion to my chamber,' Dallben ordered. The enchanter's careworn face was drawn, and the lines had deepened in his withered cheeks. 'Your skill has helped keep him from death,' he said to Taran. 'Now I must see if mine may help him to life.'

Coll lifted Gwydion in his burly arms.

Achren made to follow after him. 'I have little need of sleep and can best keep a vigil,' Achren said. 'I shall watch the night over Lord Gwydion.'

'I shall watch over him,' Eilonwy said, stepping to the side of Coll.

'Fear me not, Daughter of angharad,' Achren said. 'I bear no ill will against Lord Gwydion.' She bowed deeply, half-humble and half-mocking. 'The stable is my castle and the scullery my realm. I seek no other.'

'Come,' Dallben said, 'both of you shall help me. Wait? the others. Be patient and hopeful.'

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