me. I'll take you where you'll be safe.'

'We're safe enough here,' Mac Ard said.

'Are you?' Seancoim asked. 'Do you think your young woman's sky-magic can protect you here?'

He glanced up with his dead eyes. A strong wind stirred the tops of the trees, and Jenna could hear their limbs groaning and stirring. At the edges of the firelight, branches writhed and stretched like wooden, grasping arms, and the sound of the wind through the trees was like a sobbing voice, mournful. The hair raised on Jenna’s forearms and the light of the fire shuddered, making the shadows move all around them. 'Mam?' Jenna called out.

'Stop!' Mac Ard commanded Seancoim, and he brought his bow back to full draw. The crow stirred, wings fluttering, and at the same moment the arrow snapped in half like a twig even as Mac Ard released the bow-string. The crow settled again on Seancoim’s shoulder; the wind in the trees died to a breeze, the leaves rustling. 'Put out your fire and follow me,' Seancoim repeated. 'The tiarna can keep his sword in his hand, if it makes him feel better. But it won’t do him any good here, and the trees hate the smell of iron.'

With that, the old man turned, shuffling slowly into the darkness, his staff tapping the ground before him.

Chapter 7: Seancoim's Cavern

JENNA wrinkled her nose at the smell: musty earth, and a strange, spicy odor that could only be Seancoim himself. A draft wafted from the entrance of the cavern, the mouth of which was a narrow slit in a rocky, bare rise another stripe's walk deeper into the forest. Yellow light beck-oned beyond, outlining the stone arch, and she smelled burning peat as the wind changed.

'It's warm inside,' Seancoim said, gesturing to them as he ducked into the passage. Denmark cawed and leaped from his shoulder, disappearing into the cave. 'And light. There's food as well, enough for all. Come.' He vanished inside, and Jenna saw her mam glance at Mac Ard. 'We've fol-lowed him this far,' she said.

'I'll go first,' Mac Ard answered. He drew his sword and, turning side-ways, followed the old man. Maeve waited a moment, then went into the opening with Jenna close behind.

Beyond the narrow passage, the cavern widened significantly, the roof rising to follow the slope of the hill, the sides opening up quickly left and right. The passage led slightly downward a dozen strides, and Jenna found herself in a large room. A central fireplace ringed with stones sent smoke curling upward toward the roof, lost in darkness above. The low flames from the peat sent wan light to the stone walls, and Jenna could dimly see another passageway leading deeper into the hill. Along the wall were sev-eral querns, small stone mills used for grinding corn and other grains. Hung everywhere around the cavern were racks with drying herbs and various plants laid over the wooden rods. Some of them Jenna recognized: parsley, thyme, lemon grass, mint; others were entirely unfamiliar. The smell of the herbs was almost overpowering, a barrage of odors.

Denmark had roosted on a rocky shelf nearby. Beyond the drying racks and querns, there was almost no furniture in the room. If it was a home, it was a bare one. Jenna could see a straw pallet laid out near the fire, a bucket of water, and a long wooden box that Seancoim eased him-self down on. He leaned his staff against the box, but it fell to the

stones and the sound echoed harshly.

'It’s not pretty,' he said. He leaned down and placed the staff within reach. 'But it’s dry, and warm enough, and not susceptible to enemies burning it down.' He glanced at Maeve as he said that, and Jenna heard her mam’s intake of breath. Mac Ard scowled, walking around the perime-ter of the cavern, his sword sheathed now but his hand on the hilt.

'This is where you live?' Jenna asked, and Seancoim laughed.

'Here, and other places,' he answered. 'I have a dozen homes in the forest, and a dozen more I’ve forgotten about over the decades.'

Jenna nodded. 'You live alone?'

Seancoim shook his head. 'No. There are others like me here, a few, and I see them from time to time. And there are more of my people, though not many, in the old forests that are left, or in the high mountains, or the deepest bogs. We were the first ones to find Talamh an Ghlas.'

'You’re Bunus Muintir,' Jenna said. The word was like breathing a legend. The oldest poems and songs spoke of the Bunus Muintir, of the battles that had raged between the Bunus and Jenna’s people, the Daoine. In the poems, the Bunus were always evil and horrific, fierce and cruel warriors who had allied with spirits, wights, and demonic creatures.

'Aye, I am the blood of Bunus Muintir, and I know your Daoine songs.' Seancoim said. 'I’ve heard them, and like all history, they’re half true. We were here when your ancestors came into this place, and we fought them and sometimes even bred with them, but Daoine blood and Daoine swords proved stronger, until finally those of the pure lineage sought the hidden places. There were no final battles, no decisive victory or defeat, despite what the songs tell you. True endings come slowly. Sometimes they come not at all, or just fade into the new tales.' Groaning, Seancoim stood again.

'There’s bread there, on the ledge near Denmark, baked two days ago now, I’m afraid. There’s still some of the last blackberries of the season, and smoked meat. That’s all I have to offer and it’s not fancy, but it will fill your bellies. Go on and help yourselves.'

The bread was hard, the berries mushy with age and the meat tough, but Jenna thought it strangely delicious after the day's exertions. She fin-ished her portion quickly, then broke off a hunk of bread and went outside. The clouds had parted, and a crescent moon turned the clouds to silver white. She was above the trees, looking down on their swaying crowns. She could see Knobtop, rising up against the stars to the north, farther away than she'd ever seen it before.

The wind lifted her hair and brushed the forest with an invisible hand. She thought she could hear voices, singing not far away: a low, susurrant chant that rose and fell, the long notes holding words that lingered just on the edge of understanding. Jenna leaned into the night, listening, caught in the chant, wanting to get closer and hear what they were singing. .

. . aye, to get closer. .

. . to hear them, to touch their gnarled trunks. .

. . to be with them. .

Beating wings boomed in her ears: Denmark touched her shoulder with his clawed feet and flew off again, startling her. Jenna blinked, realiz-ing that she stood under the gloom of the trees at the bottom of the slope, a hundred strides or more from the cavern, and she had no idea how she'd come to be there. She whirled around, suddenly frightened at the realization that she hadn't even realized that she was walking away. The last few minutes, now that she tried to recall them, were hazy and indis-tinct in her mind.

Small with distance, Seancoim beckoned at the cavern entrance, and Jenna ran back up the hill toward him, as if a hell hound were at her heels.

'So you do hear them,' he called to her, as the crow swept around her again before settling back on the old man's shoulder. 'Some don't, or think it's only the wind moving the trees. But they sing, the oldest trees, the ones that were planted by the Seed-Daughter after the Mother-Creator breathed life into the bones of the land. They remember, and they still call to the old gods. It's dangerous for those who hear: the enchantment in their old voices can hypnotize, and you'll find yourself lost in the deepest, most dangerous parts of the wood. Most who go to listen don't return.'

Jenna looked over the forest, listening to the eerie, breathy sound. 'Should we leave?' she asked.

The old man shrugged. 'The unwary should be careful, or those whose will isn’t strong enough.

That last, at least, doesn’t describe you, now that I’ve told you the danger.'

'You don’t know me.'

'Oh, I know you well enough,' he chuckled.

Jenna shook her head. The wind shifted and the tree-song came to them louder than before, the chant rising in pitch. 'What is it they’re singing? It sounds so sad and lonely.'

Seancoim leaned heavily on his staff, as if he were peering into the dark. 'Who knows? I certainly don’t. They speak a language older than any of ours, and their concerns aren’t those of humans.' He turned, and his blind eyes stared at her. 'There are other magics than the sky-magic you can capture in a cloch na thintri,' he told her. He extended his hand toward Jenna. 'Let me hold it,' he said to her.

Jenna took a step back, clutching at the stone hidden in her skirt. 'I know you have the stone,' Seancoim said.

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