accompany you through the Winterwood so that what happened there shall not occur again.”
Camille hid her disappointment that he would not be with her and said, “Very well, my lord.”
A handful of days later, after a night of passion and a tender and tearful adieu just ere dawn, in midmorn Camille set forth with the Bear from Summerwood Manor, she riding once more, he again laden with bundles, a cottage just beyond the far edge of Faery their goal.
As they came to the oakwood lane, Camille turned and waved au revoir to those who had gathered on the portico to see her off-Blanche, Lanval, Jules, Andre, Renaud, the seamstresses, and others of the household staff-all of whom Camille had come to love dearly. “I shall return in a moon or so!” she called, though whether they could make out her words, she did not know. And she faced front once again, tears streaming down her cheeks.
Across the Summerwood they went, as the sun traced an arc through the sky, and late in the day they came to the pool where the Waterfolk-otters had played, but they seemed wholly absent this eve, for none whatsoever were in sight. Even so, remembering, Camille did not shed her clothes to swim or bathe. At this place, as well, a camp awaited them, pheasant on the spit above the fire. Once more she and the Bear shared a pleasant repast, and then the bear waddled up to the dewberry briars on the hillside above and again sat among them and feasted.
The following day just after sundown, they came to the twilight border where the Summerwood ended and the Autumnwood began. Here another firelit camp awaited, with another meal on the spit above: several trout, altogether enough for Camille, though the Bear afterward rooted about ’neath fallen logs for whatever under there it was he ate.
The next morn they entered the Autumnwood, where the Bear’s fur became grizzled reddish brown, and they passed back along the way they had come months agone, and they took sustenance from the plentiful harvest. As evening fell, no campsite awaited, for, in this realm, game acook above a fire was not needed, or so did Camille reason.
On the second day in the Autumnwood, as the Bear topped a hill, on another knoll in the near distance stood a white Unicorn. “Oh, Bear, look there’s a Uni-”
With a toss of its tail, the Unicorn snorted and spun and trotted away, disappearing down the far side of the knoll. Tears welled in Camille’s eyes, for now she truly knew what Fra Galanni had meant about being unsullied, and what Agnes meant about being pure; no longer having her virgin’s blood, Camille was dismayed by the Unicorn’s rejection, and it seemed somehow unfair.
On this day as well, at the top of a vale above a field of grain, they again had passed the huge man sitting with his back to a tree, a scythe across his knees; and, as before, he had gotten to his feet and bowed low as the Bear and Camille had passed.
In midafternoon of the third day within that demesne, they once again reached a twilit border, this one leading into the Winterwood.
The Bear stopped at the bound, and he whuff ed when Camille asked if they would make camp at this place. She spent the dregs of the day finding a suitable stream to fill the waterskins she had insisted on bringing, for, as she had told the Bear, she would not abide again the brimstone-foul water of the ice-clad pools within the realm to come.
The next dawning Camille awakened to the cold nose of an animal nudging her cheek. “Bear!” she shrieked as she bolted upright, only to find a Wolf shying back. Laughter rang across the daybreak, for Borel and his pack had come. Yet chuckling, Borel said, “Best put on your cold-weather gear, Sister mine, for where we go ’tis quite chill.”
Into the Winterwood they fared, into that tangle of twisted and broken trees, the skies above dismal, the light dim, ice and snow and shattered rock and crags looming alongside. The Wolves ranged fore and aft and on the flanks as well. Occasionally the Bear, his fur now white, paused and sniffed the air and grunted, but what he may have scented, if aught, Camille did not know. Even so, with a Bear and a Wolf pack and Borel-he armed with a long-knife strapped to his thigh and his bow in hand, arrows in a quiver at his hip-Camille felt quite safe.
“Still,” she asked, “why do we come this way?”
“It is the most direct,” replied Borel.
“And you say that other places in the Winterwood are quite beautiful?”
“Aye, Camille. Only in this region is the land cursed.”
“Cursed?”
“Indeed. Cursed long past, but by whom, I know not. ’Twas all part of some enmity against my sire, I deem, mayhap by those responsible for his and my dam’s disappearance.”
“Oh,” said Camille, as onward they went, the dim day growing old.
Just ere sundown they stopped to camp, and Borel set his Wolves on guard, then made a fire. Camille discovered that the water in her waterskins had frozen solid through, all but the one she had been using, and that nearly empty. But in a pan from one of the bundles Borel melted snow, and the water, although not sweet, was not brimstone-tinged either.
Beyond the stark mountains the sun fell, and night came over the icy realm. Something, some glimmer, plucked at the edges of Camille’s mind, yet she couldn’t quite capture the elusive thought, and it slid away un- snared.
She sat awhile talking to Borel, and ghostly tendrils of a spectral ice-fog coiled in among the broken trees to encircle the campsite… the icy wisps barely held at bay by the fire.
Of a sudden there came a thin wail, and Camille looked about, trying to locate the source. And then “What’s that?” she cried, leaping to her feet and pointing.
Rising up from the snow-laden ground came creeping a nearly transparent hand, claw-fingered and grasping, followed by an equally lucent arm.
Borel snatched his bronze long-knife out from its scabbard and slashed through the emerging limb, but the knife slid right through with no effect whatsoever, and still upward came whatever it was, the transparent top of a head now showing, wearing a cap faintly tinged with red. And then its face broke through and a terrible cry wailed forth from its snag-toothed mouth.
“Oh, sweet Mithras!” cried Camille. “ ’Tis a Goblin come out of the ground!”
The Bear roared and clawed at the being, with absolutely no consequence as it continued to emerge. Dodging the Bear’s slashing swipes, Wolves, too, darted in and back, fangs gnashing through with no result.
“Borel, another!” cried Camille.
And behind them a second transparent Goblin came forth from the frozen soil. And another and another and another, all oozing up, all unkillable, all wailing, all “Mithras, oh Mithras,” cried Camille, now knowing what had eluded her mind, “we’ve camped on the killing ground of months past; these are Redcap ghosts!”
Borel snatched up a burning branch from the fire and lashed it through the spectres crowding ’round, yet it, too, had no effect.
In spite of the fire, the long-knife, the roaring, clawing Bear, and the leaping, slashing Wolves, still the wailing wraiths crowded closer, for nought seemed to affect them at all.
And a wave of weakness whelmed over Camille, and she staggered back against a twisted tree, clutching it merely to remain upright; it was all she could do to not faint. And still the ghosts ghoulishly crowded ’round her, and she felt as if her very life was being sucked away on the shrill and ghastly keening. “We’ve got to flee,” she called out, her voice feeble, but her legs would not obey. “Flee,” she repeated, now mumbling.
But then a bitch Wolf stopped her leaping and slashing, and she looked at the spectres and cocked her head this way and that and listened to their ghostly wails; and then she raised her muzzle into the air and began to sing, her mournful howl cutting across the frigid night. And the nearest wraiths flinched away. Another Wolf began to sing, his voice joining hers. Ghosts reeled back. A third Wolf took up the refrain, and one more and another, and soon all nine Wolves, the entire pack, were singing in the night. And the spectres mewled in agony and clutched at their heads, slapping their hands over their ears, their own ghastly wails dwindling, dwindling; and even as Camille lost her grip on the tree and swayed and fell to her knees in the snow and then collapsed onto her side, ghosts about her began sinking back into the frozen earth, unable to withstand the mournful dirge of the Wolves driving them down and away. The last thing she saw was the Bear standing over her as blackness took her mind.
Camille became aware of a gentle jouncing, and she came to on a travois being drawn by the Bear. At her side walked Borel, his face haggard and wan. Dismal daylight seeped down from the gray sky above.
She tried to raise up but fell back, and feebly whispered. “Where, what-?”