As they rounded the first curve, the lights of the Waymeet began to glimmer through the screening of trees. As they rounded the second, the Waymeet lay spread out before them.
Right on the lane at the entrance, surrounded by lanterns on posts, was the building housing the laundry, bathhouse, store, and proprietor's quarters. A tall, handsome young Gypsy was already waiting for them beside the lane as Harperus pulled up. He wore a cape of oiled canvas against the rain, but he had pulled the hood back, and mist-beads glistened in the lantern light as they collected on his midnight-black hair.
'Not full, are you?' Harperus asked anxiously, as the young man strolled over to the driver's box after appraising the horses with an admiring eye.
'Fullish, Old Owl, but not full-up,' the young man replied. 'It's about the last chance of the season for traders, an' we got folk comin' home from Harvest Faires. Ye don't recognize me, I reckon, but I'm Jackdaw,
'You're the lad with the knack with penny-whistles!' Harperus exclaimed, to the young man's delighted smile that the Deliambren had remembered him. 'Dear heavens, has it been
'Sister went
He peered through the gloom, and Robin spoke up to save his eyes. 'Robin of
'Nay, nay, nothin' he can't put aside, anyway, since he's a cousin.' Jackdaw looked the pair of wagons over with an expert eye. 'Kin come afore
Robin had already pulled out her purse and passed the ten coppers over to Jackdaw before Harperus had a chance to protest or pay the lad himself. 'You pulled us out and towed us here, so let me discharge the debt and cover your fee,' she said firmly. Harperus had known Gypsies more than long enough to understand the intricate dance of 'discharging debt,' so he did not argue; he simply followed Jackdaw's instructions and drove the horses to the next-to-last path on the left, then all the way down to the end. The lanes were also marked clearly with lantern poles, with another set of poles halfway down, and large white stones marking the place to pull into each site.
Parking the wagons was as simple as Jackdaw had stated, which was a relief; Robin had known far too many Gypsies who would try to wedge a wagon into a space meant for a one-man tent-shelter. The camping sites were on firm, level grass, with trees and bushes between each adjoining site, and a rock-rimmed, sand-lined fire pit for each site as well. Robin didn't get a chance to see much of the Waymeet, however, for by the time they were parked and the horses unhitched, night had fallen, and a thick darkness made more impenetrable by the mist had taken over the area.
Kestrel took all six horses to the common corral and stable area; shelter was provided, and water, but food must either be bought or supplied from their own stores. Just as he left, the mist thickened, and then the rain resumed, pouring down just as hard as it had during the day.
Robin cursed under her breath, and Harperus looked annoyed. 'T'fyrr, you stay in the wagon,' he ordered. 'There is nothing worse than the smell of wet feathers, and I don't want to chance you catching something in this cold. Robin and I can deal with unhitching her caravan and pushing it back.'
He did
But the 'flames' were just a little too regular in their 'flickering;' there was certainly a pattern there. And besides, oil lamps required someone or something to light them, they simply didn't light themselves.
Then she shrugged, mentally. If Harperus wanted to make things look as if he was driving a perfectly normal_if rather large_wagon, that was his privilege. If he wanted to pretend that he had no Deliambren secrets in there, that was his problem. No one who had ever seen Deliambren 'magic' was going to be fooled for a second. The glass in the windows was enough to show this was no ordinary wagon, and the smooth metal sides were too unlike a wooden caravan to ever deceive anyone.
Together they cranked the winched-up caravan down; it was no problem for only two to handle, even in the downpour, since it was always easier to get something
'That axle will hold your weight, I think,' he said, as Robin's nose turned cold and she shivered in the light breeze. 'I wouldn't worry about sleeping or moving around in the wagon. I wouldn't trust it to take the abuse of the