'Are you of the dream-time or of the world-time?*' the old man asked at last.
'-'Of the world-time.'
* 'Come along with me men.f' The old man got up promptly and led Selver up the wandering path out of the willow grove into dryer, darker regions of oak and thorn. 'Itookyouforagod,'hesaid, going a pace ahead. 'And it seemed to me I had seen you before, perhaps in dream.'
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'Not in the world-time. I come from Sornol, I have never been here before.'
'This town is Cadast. I am Coro Mena. Of the Whitethorn.'
'Selver is my name. Of the Ash.'
'There are Ash people among us, both men and women. Also your marriage-clans, Birch and Holly; we have no women of the Apple. But you don't come looking for a wife, do you?'
'My wife is dead,' Selver said.
They came to the Men's Lodge, on high ground in a stand of young oaks. They stooped and crawled through the tunnel-entrance. Inside, in
•the firelight, the old man stood up, but Selver stayed crouching on hands and knees, unable to rise. Now that help and comfort was at hand his body, which he had forced too far, would not go farther. It lay down and the eyes closed; and Selver slipped, with relief and gratitude, into the great darkness.
The men of the Lodge of Cadast looked after him, and their healer came to tend the wound in his right arm. In the night Coro Mena and the healer Torber sat by the fire. Most of the other men were with their wives that night; there were only a couple of young prentice-dreamers over on the benches, and they had both gone fast asleep.
* *I don't know what would give a man such scars as he has on his face, 'said the healer, 'and much less, such a wound as that in his arm. A very queer wound.'
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'It's a queer engine he wore on his belt/* said Coro Mena.
'I saw it and didn't see it.'
'I put it under his bench. It looks like polished iron, but not like the handiwork of men.'
'He comes from Somol, he said to you/*
They were both silent a while. Coro Mena felt unreasoning fear press upon him, and slipped into dream to find the reason for the fear; for he was an old man, and long adept. In the dream the giants walked, heavy and dire. Their dry scaly limbs were swathed in cloths; their eyes were little and light, like tin beads. Behind them crawled huge moving things made of polished iron.
The trees fell down in front of them.
Out from among the falling trees a man ran, crying aloud, with blood on his mouth. The path he ran on was the doorpath of the Lodge of Cadast.
'Well, mere's little doubt of it,' Coro Mena said, sliding out of the dream. 'He came oversea straight from Sornol, or else came afoot from the coast of Kelme Deva on our own land. Hie giants are in both those places, travellers say.'
'Will they follow him,' said Torber; neither answered the question, which was no question but a statement of possibility.
'You saw the giants once, Coro?'
'Once,' the old man said.
He dreamed; sometimes, being very old and not so strong as he had been, he slipped off to sleep for a while. Day broke, noon passed. Out-
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side the Lodge a hunting-party went out, children chirped, women talked in voices like running water. A dryer voice called Coro Mena from the door. He crawled out into the evening sunlight. His sister stood outside, sniffing the aromatic wind with pleasure, but looking stem all the same.
'Has the stranger waked up, Coro?'
'Not yet. Torber's looking after him.'
'We must hear his story.'*
'No doubt he'll wake soon.*'
Ebor Dendep frowned. Head woman of Cadast, she was anxious for her people; but she did not want to ask that a hurt man be disturbed, nor to offend the Dreamers by insisting on her right to enter their Lodge. 'Can'tyouwakehim,Coro?' she asked at last. 'What if he is . . . being pursued?'
He could not run his sister's emotions on the same rein with his own, yet he felt them; her anxiety bit him. 'If Torber permits, I will,' he said.
* 'Try to learn his news, quickly. I wish he was a woman and would talk sense. . . .'
The stranger had roused himself, and lay feverish in the half dark of the Lodge. The unreined dreams of illness moved in his eyes. He sat up, however, and spoke with control. As he listened Coro Mena's bones seemed to shrink within him trying to hide from this terrible story, this new thing.
'I was Selver Thele, when I lived in Eshreth in Soruol. My city was destroyed by the yumens
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when they cut down the trees in that region. I was one of those made to serve them, with my wife Thele. She was raped by one of them and died. I attacked the yumen that killed her. He would have killed me then, but another of them saved me and set me free. I left Sornol, where no town is safe from the yumens now, and came here to the North Isle, and lived on the coast of Kelme Deva in the Red Groves. TTiere presently the yumens came and began to cut down the world. They destroyed a city there, Penle. They caught a hundred of the men and women and made them serve them, and live hi the pen. I was not caught. I lived with others who had escaped from Penle, in the bog-land north of Kelme Deva. Sometimes at night I went among the people in the yumen's pens. They told me that one was there. That one whom I had tried to kill. I thought at first to try again; or else to set the people in the pen free. But all the time I watched the trees fall and saw the world cut open and left to rot. The men might have escaped, but the women were locked in more safely and could not, and they were beginning to die. I talked with the people hiding there in the boglands. We were all very frightened and very angry, and had no way to let our fear and anger free. So at last after long talking, and long dreaming, and the making of a plan, we went in daylight, and killed the yumens of Kelme Deva with arrows and hunting-lances, and burned their city and their engines. We left nothing. But that one had gone away. He
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came back alone. I sang over him, and let him go.'
Selver fell silent.
'Then,' Coro Mena whispered.
'Then a flying ship came from Somol, and hunted us in the forest, but found nobody. So they set fire to the forest; but it rained, and they did little harm. Most of the people freed from the pens and the others have gone farther norm and east, towards the Holle Hills, for we were afraid many yumens might come hunting us. I went alone. The yumens know me, you see, they know my face; and this frightens me, and those I stay with.' • 'What is your wound?'* Torber asked.
'That one, he shot me with their kind of weapon; but I sang him down and let him go.'
'Alone you downed a giant?' said Torber with a fierce grin, wishing to believe.
'Not alone. With three hunters, and with his weapon in my hand—this.'
Torber drew back from the thing.
None of them spoke for a while. At last Coro Mena said, 'What you tell us is very black, and the road goes down. Are you a Dreamer of your Lodge?'
'I was. There's no Lodge of Eshreth any more.'
'That's all one; we speak the Old Tongue together. Among the willows of Asta you first spoke to me calling me Lord Dreamer. So I am. Do you dream, Selver?'
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'Not well.'
'Do you hold the dream in your hands?'
'Yes. '