He sat up in bed, gently moving her head aside. The familiar cramps in his muscles were gone. He stood up easily, no stiff ness in his legs. The bone didn’t click in his hip. It had been a long time since that had happened.
Then he caught sight of himself in the mirror.
He was younger. His beard was dark with the vigour of youth, absent yet of any silver or white. His hair was characteristically dishevelled, but long ago he had given up trying to impose any control on it.
Tall, lean, with a face that rejoiced in the small happinesses of life. A face that had been made to laugh. That was what Eloise had said when they first met. He studied himself in the mirror with approval mingled with growing despair, for he knew all this would be gone when he awoke. He realised Eloise was speaking.
“…will be Gar’rth,” she concluded.
He turned in his bed. This time the cramps in his muscles were there, returning to remind him that they were still very real, and that Ebenezer was indeed old.
It might have been minutes or hours or days later, he did not know. His head ached and he was aware of a dim light that he couldn’t escape. Voices filtered through to him-kind voices, and he was content to sleep for a while longer in the knowledge that he was safe.
But then it came to him.
Gar’rth, covered in blood, vicious, violent. He felt a sudden pressure around his neck as the werewolf squeezed and his old bones cracked under the force of that inhuman grasp.
Somewhere far away he heard Kara scream, and the triumphant howl of a werewolf.
Then it faded, and quickly, as if he had heard it muffled through a closed door and had decided to move on, rather than open it and face what was inside.
Instead, he opened his eyes.
The face of an elderly woman stared back. A familiar face, so like Eloise.
“Ebenezer?”
“Sally?” he said. “What happened?” The last thing he remembered was the Midsummer Festival. He had argued with Gar’rth and then the youth had run off to chase the Wyrd.
“You were injured by the Wyrd,” Sally confirmed. “You have been asleep now for nearly a week, on and off. You have woken twice before, and talked coherently. Do you remember that?”
Ebenezer shook his head.
“No. No, I don’t.”
“Well, try and stay awake now,” she responded. “Father Lawrence said head injuries are nasty things and can have strange effects. He has helped tend you, along with Ellamaria and Lucretia, Lady Caroline’s maid. The King has even been to see you, although I think it was also because of his deSire to see Ellamaria.”
The words meant little to Ebenezer. His head ached and he struggled to sit upright.
“Where is Gar’rth?” he asked. “I remember now… he changed.” He went cold and turned sharply to Sally. “They
“Calm yourself, old friend,” she said gently. “I have told you this before, when you woke the first time. We talked for an hour then, and you seemed quite lucid. Evidently you have forgotten.” Sally sighed. “I do not know what you mean about Gar’rth, but he is no longer in Varrock. Nor are the rest of your friends. They have gone to Morytania as part-”
Ebenezer made a high-pitched wheezing sound. Her look kept him from speaking, though, and she continued.
“As part of an embassy, Ebenezer. To seek peace-not to fight. They will be there by now. They left the day after your injury, and Albertus went with them. They even left messages for you, which you read the first time you woke.
“They are on the floor by your bedside. Do you wish to read them again?”
He shook his head.
“No,” he replied, struggling to remain calm. “Not yet. I have no recollection of waking before. Perhaps my mind is damaged.”
“I do not think so, Ebenezer,” she said. “Father Lawrence thinks it is a concussion and that you will recover in due course. Do you feel well enough to stand?”
He summoned his strength and twisted his legs from the bed onto the stone floor.
He thrust himself forward and tottered for a moment. His head ached, and the world about him spun slowly, as if he had had too much ale.
Somehow he held. He straightened his back and winced at the familiar
Then, with an exaggerated flair and a smile that would have made Eloise proud, he raised his arms above his head, as if he were a giant awakening from an age-long slumber.
He gave a wicked chuckle and took a step forward.
His left knee buckled, and he fell forward into Sally’s waiting arms. Gingerly, she pushed him back to his bed, where he sat with a flushed face.
“I shall find you a walking stick,” she said matter-of-factly. “Wait here, you silly old fool.” She smiled as she left him alone to think.
He began to organize his thoughts.
Ebenezer sighed and put a hand to the back of his head. The bandages there were stiff and he was glad he didn’t have a mirror to hand.
The door banged open and Sally returned with a walking stick, her face in shock. Behind her Ebenezer could see Captain Rovin and Father Lawrence, and the blanched face of Lady Caroline.
“What is it?” he asked, a cold dread making him nauseous.
“We have just received word from Paterdomus,” Captain Rovin said. “I am afraid it is bad-several horses of the embassy, including Albertus’s mule and Castimir’s yak, have returned of their own accord, riderless. Drezel sent word by pigeon yesterday, and he thinks we should assume the worse. King Roald has sent command to The Wilderness garrisons to move to the east, for fear that this incident might provoke Morytania into futher action.”