like serpents and tore viciously at his hands and face. Wherever he sought a foothold the thorns turned against him as with a will of their own. Just below, he heard Gurgi panting, as the sharp points struck through the creature's matted hair. Taran paused to catch his breath while Gurgi clambered up beside him. The top of the wall was almost within reach.

With a sudden lashing and rattling among the thorns, a slipnoose tightened around Taran's upraised arm. He shouted in alarm and in that instant glimpsed the terrified face of Gurgi as loops of finely knotted cords whipped over the creature's body. A bent sapling sprang upright, pulling the ropes with it. Taran felt himself ripped from the brambles and, dangling on the end of the strong cord, flung upward and over the barrier. Now he understood the words Doli had striven to gasp out: traps and snares. He fell, and darkness swallowed him.

A BONY HAND GRIPPED his throat. In his ears rasped a voice like a dagger drawn across a stone. 'Who are you?' it repeated. 'Who are you?'

Taran struggled to pull away, then realized his hands were bound behind him. Gurgi whimpered miserably. Taran's head spun. The guttering light of a candle stabbed his eyes. As his sight cleared, he saw a gaunt face the color of dry clay, eyes glittering like cold crystals deep set in a jutting brow as though at the bottom of a well. The skull was hairless; the mouth a livid scar stitched with wrinkles.

'How have you come here?' demanded Morda. 'What do you seek of me?'

In the dimness Taran could make out little more than a low-ceilinged chamber and a fireless hearth filled with dead ashes. He himself had been propped in the angle of a low wall. Gurgi lay sprawled on the flagstones beside him. He glimpsed Kaw pinioned in a wicker basket set on a heavy oaken table, and he cried out to the bird.

'What then,' snapped the wizard, 'is this crow yours? He found one of my snares, as you did. None enters here without my knowledge. This much have you already learned. Now it is I who shall learn more of you.'

'Yes, the bird is mine,' Taran answered in a bold voice, deciding his only hope lay in telling as much of the truth as he dared. 'He flew beyond the thicket and did not return to us. We feared some mishap and went in search of him. We journey to the Llawgadarn Mountains. You have no cause to hinder us.'

'You have hindered yourselves,' replied Morda, 'foolish creatures without the wits of a fly. To the Llawgadarn Mountains, you say? Perhaps. Perhaps not. In the race of men is much greed and envy; but of truth, little. Your face speaks for you and calls you liar. What do you hope to hide? No matter. Your paltry store of days you call life is spun out. You shall not leave here. And yet? now you are in my hands, it may be that you shall serve me. I must ponder that. Your lives indeed may have some small use? to me, if not to yourselves.'

More than the wizard's words filled Taran with horror. As he watched, unable to take his own eyes away, Taran saw that Morda's gaze was unblinking. Even in the candle flame the shriveled eyelids never closed; Morda's cold stare never wavered.

The wizard straightened and drew the grimy, threadbare robe closer about his wasted body. Taran gasped, for from Morda's withered neck hung a silver chain and crescent moon. Only one other he knew wore such an ornament: Princess Eilonwy Daughter of Angharad. Unlike Eilonwy's, the horns of this crescent held a strangely carved gem, clear as water, whose facets sparkled as though lit by an inner fire.

'The emblem of the House of Llyr!' Taran cried.

Morda started and drew back. With fingers lean as spider's legs he clutched at the gem. 'Fool,' he hissed, 'did you think to gain this from me? Is that why you were sent? Yes, yes,' he muttered, 'so it must be.' His bloodless lips twitched faintly as he fixed Taran with his unlidded eyes. 'Too late. The Princess Angharad is long dead, and all its secrets are mine.'

Taran stared at him, bewildered to hear the name. 'Angharad Daughter of Regat?' he whispered. 'Eilonwy never knew her mother's fate. But it was you? at your hands,' he burst out, 'at your hands she met her death!'

Morda said nothing for a time, seeming as one gripped by a black dream. When he spoke, his voice was heavy with hatred. 'Think you the life or death of one of you feeble creatures should concern me? I have seen enough of the human kind and have judged them for what they are: lower than beasts, blind and witless, quarrelsome, caught up in their own small cares. They are eaten by pride and senseless striving; they lie, cheat, and betray one another. Yes, I was born among the race of men. A human!' He spat the word scornfully. 'But long have I known it is not my destiny to be one with them, and long have I dwelt apart from their bickerings and jealousies, their little losses and their little gains.'

Deep in their shrunken sockets the wizard's eyes glittered. 'As I would not debase myself to share their lives, neither would I share their deaths. Alone, I studied the arts of enchantment. From the ancient lore I learned the Fair Folk held certain gems hidden in their secret troves; he who possessed one gained life far longer than any mortal's mayfly span of days. None had found these treasure troves, and few had even dared to search. Yet I knew that I would learn the means to find them.

'As for her who called herself Angharad of Llyr,' the wizard continued, 'of a winter's night she begged refuge in my dwelling, claiming her infant         daughter had been stolen, that she had journeyed long in search of her.' The wizard's lips twisted. 'As if her fate or the fate of a girl child mattered to me. For food and shelter she offered me the trinket she wore at her throat. I had no need to bargain; it was already mine, for too weak was she, too fevered to keep it from me if I chose to take it. She did not live out the night.'

In loathing Taran turned his face away. 'You took her life, as surely as if you put a dagger in her heart.'

Morda's sharp, bitter laugh was like dry sticks breaking. 'I did not ask her to come here. Her life was worth no more to me than the book of empty pages I found among her possessions. Though in its way the book proved to be not without some small value. In time a whining weakling found his way to me. Glew was his name, and he sought to make an enchanter of himself. Little fool! He beseeched me to sell him a magic spell, an amulet, a secret word of power. Sniveling upstart! It pleased me to teach him a lesson. I sold him the empty book and warned him not to open it or look upon it until he had traveled far from here lest the spells vanish.'

'Glew!' Taran murmured. 'So it was you who cheated him.'

'Like all your kind,' answered Morda, 'his own greed and ambition cheated him, not I. His fate I know not, nor do I care to know. This much he surely learned: The arts of enchantment are not bought with gold.'

'Nor stolen through heartlessness and evil, as you robbed the Princess Angharad,' Taran flung back.

'Heartlessness? Evil?' said Morda. 'These words are toys for creatures such as you. To me they mean nothing; my powers have borne me beyond them. The book served to make a fool taste his folly. But the jewel, the jewel served me, as all things will do at the end. The woman Angharad had told me the gem would lighten burdens and ease harsh tasks. And so it did, though years I spent in probing its secrets until I gained mastery of its use. At my command it dwindled the heaviest faggots to no more than twigs. With the gem's help I raised a wall of thorns. As my skill grew, I found the waters of a hidden spring.'

The wizard's unblinking eyes glittered triumphantly. 'At last,' he whispered, 'at last the gem led me to what I had ever sought: a Fair Folk treasure trove.

'This trove held none of the life-giving stones,' Morda went on. 'But what matter! If not here, then would I find them elsewhere. Now all Fair Folk treasure, mines, hidden pathways? all lay open to me.

'One of the Fair Folk watchers came upon me then. I dared not let him raise an alarm. Though none had ever stood against any of them, I did so!' cried Morda. 'My jewel was more than a trinket to lighten a scullery maid's toil. I had grasped the heart of its power. At my command this Fair Folk spy turned to a sightless, creeping mole! Yes,' Morda hissed, 'I had gained power even beyond what I sought. Who now would disobey me when I held the means to make men into the weak, groveling creatures they truly are! Did I seek only a gem? The whole kingdom of the Fair Folk was within my grasp. And all of Prydain! It was then I understood my true destiny. The race of men at last had found its master.'

'Its master?' Taran cried, aghast at Morda's words. 'You are viler than those you scorn. Dare you speak of greed and envy? The power of Angharad's gem was meant to serve, not enslave. Late or soon, your life will be forfeit to your evil.'

The glint in Morda's lidless eyes flickered like a serpent's tongue. 'Think you so?' he answered softly.

From beyond the chamber came a shout, a sudden crashing amid the wall of thorns. Morda nodded curtly. 'Another fly finds my web.'

'Fflewddur!' Taran gasped as Morda strode from the chamber. He flung himself closer to Gurgi and the two tore at each other's bonds; in vain, for within a few moments the wizard returned, half-dragging a figure he trussed securely and threw to the ground beside the companions. It was, as Taran feared, the luckless bard.

'Great Belin, what's happened to you? What's happened to me?' groaned Fflewddur, stunned. 'You didn't come

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