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As if thought moved slowly through a being who seemed to be made of the mountain itself, again there was a long pause ere the creature answered. “A tiny bit of keystone.” The eyes, grinding, slowly looked upward and then back down at Liaze. “It was the color of the sky.”

Liaze frowned, then brightened and said, “The gem on a chain about his neck?”

“I asked if he was going to open the way, but he did not know what I was… speaking of, and I did not enlighten him.”

“Open what way?” asked Liaze.

After long moments, the creature did not respond, and Liaze decided that he would not speak of it again, not tell her what he meant, just as he had not told Luc.

Finally she said, “I am Princess Liaze of the Autumnwood. Have you a name, Lord Montagne?”

Once more there was a long pause, but finally he responded: “I suppose you could call me… Caillou.”

Liaze laughed, for in the old tongue, caillou meant stone. “Clever, Lord Montagne.”

The gape on the cleft of a mouth widened, to the rattle of pebbles down into the path. As the last of these finally clattered away, “We are not dense, just solid,” replied Caillou.

Again Liaze laughed, but then sobered. “Lord Caillou, I must needs move on, for I am on an urgent mission. Yet you have the way blocked. You speak of ‘your due,’ my lord. What bounty do you require to let me pass freely?”

Slowly the eyes closed and then opened again. “The thoughts of my Kind are weighty… ponderous… deep… and they reach down to the very bottom of the foundation rock itself… We like to assay burdensome problems… or mull over questions of considerable heft… things of sizeable gravity… All I require is one of these… posers… issues… something I have not weighed before… Propound to me one of those, and I will let you go.”

Oh, my. Can I give him a deep enough riddle? An enigma to occupy him? One he has not considered? The riddle of the Sphinx? Surely he knows that one. Some of the riddles posed by the Fates? No, all of those were meant to be answered. Mayhap I can give him an unanswerable problem.

As she puzzled over what to try, she said, “What happened to the valley below?”

Caillou moaned from deep within, and the great stone eyes slowly ground leftward and down. As they came to look upon the plains, he said, “He destroyed it.” A trickle of grit poured from the creature’s eyes, and again he moaned, the sound so low as to be more felt than heard. And then Liaze realized he was weeping.

“Not the one with the metal shirt, surely,” she said.

Now the eyes ground back toward her. “No… It was another one.”

“How did he do it? Was it fire?”

Deeply he rumbled and then said, “Fire?”

“As from a firemountain, where red-hot, molten rock pours forth.”

“Fire… Red tongues… Yes, I remember.”

“Then it was fire.”

The stone eyes slowly peered down at the path near where Liaze stood. “No… Not the red tongues… Instead it was him.”

Liaze frowned and said, “Him?”

Another deep groan sounded, and what was perhaps Caillou’s brow wrinkled, and stones clattered down. “He came with four others… all in black.”

Liaze waited, and finally Caillou continued. “They… marked the path with soft blue stone-five mountains all joined at the roots-and he stood on a marked crest… and the others, each of them stood on separate crests as well… Then he spoke in a language I do not know, and… the sky boiled with gray… and the wind blew and the gray swept down and covered the mountains and the valley… and all was gone… all plants… all animals.. all birds… Only stone and sand and barren dirt were left.. and the wind has never stopped.”

“Oh, my,” said Liaze, horrified.

“The birds,” groaned Caillou, “I miss their singing.” Again grit tumbled from the great stone eyes.

Now tears spilled down Liaze’s own cheeks, and she turned toward the barren plains below-barren but for sparse bushes of scrub here and there. One and four others are responsible for the devastation. And all stood on the scribed peaks of five mountains joined at the base. Five “Lord Caillou,” blurted Liaze, “were four of these beings such as am I?”

Again a frown crossed Caillou’s brow, and again a small shower of pebbles fell. “Such as you?”

“Yes, females like me.”

The frown increased, and a tiny fracture split upward. “Females?”

“My Kind come in two types: male and female- male et femelle; homme et femme. Females have breasts for nursing their young.” Liaze cupped her hands beneath her bosom. “Males do not have breasts, but they sometimes do have beards-hair growing on their faces, their chins.” Liaze used her fingers, as if stroking a beard. “Were there four females who aided in this destruction of life, and was the fifth being a male?”

There came a deep rumble, and finally Caillou said, “Perhaps… Perhaps not… I do not know…”

Liaze sighed and said, “Regardless, I think I know who did this terrible thing: Hradian, Rhensibe, Iniqui, Nefasi, female witches all, and Orbane, a male wizard. Only he would be so wicked, and only they would aid him in this foul deed. They stood here on the points of a pentagram and took away all life from this realm.”

“Um… not all life,” said Caillou, “for I… yet live.”

“Yes, you do, my friend. ’Tis good you’re made of stone.”

Caillou groaned and said, “They… need to be punished.”

Liaze nodded. “Some have been,” she said. “Rhensibe is dead, and Orbane is imprisoned beyond Faery. The others yet live freely, and I think that one of these sisters-Hradian, Iniqui, or Nefasi-is perhaps the witch who stole my Luc away. It is she whom I pursue, and her cote lies somewhere across this range.”

“You… hunt one of the ones who… helped to slay the land?”

“If my suspicion is correct, then I do.”

The ground trembled, and there came a great grinding of stone on stone, as Caillou withdrew his hands. Rocks clattered and rattled down the path to the fore and to the aft. “Then you may… pass, Princess Liaze.”

“Thank you, Lord Montagne,” said Liaze, as she stepped to the horses and settled them down, for they had skitted and shied when the path under their feet quivered a second time. “Even so, I will give you your due.”

The stone above one eye lifted upward, and more rock tumbled down. “No need, Princess,” said Caillou. “The fact that you pursue one of those who did such great harm is… enough.”

“Nevertheless,” said Liaze as she mounted Pied Agile, “here is a problem to ponder: how do you know that you are you? How do you know that you are not me, and I am simply dreaming of me being you and asking myself for a riddle to solve?”

The stone gap of a mouth turned up at the corners, and a rocky chuckle issued forth, sounding rather like a small avalanche. “A substantial puzzle and deep, concerning what is real and what is not, what is solid and what is not… Merci, Liaze, for although my thoughts are… slow and dwelling, in the end I sometimes find gold in the ore… And now you have given me a hefty problem to ponder. Voluminous it is, and I might be… eroded down to bedrock ere I can come to any bottom. ’Tis good, um, good… I hope I can find the core. Now tumble off with you; gather no moss; be on your way; and may you succeed. As for me… thanks to you, I now have something to weigh…”

“And my sincere thanks to you, Lord Montagne, for you have shown me that I am perhaps on the right track.” Liaze grinned and gave Caillou a salute, and she heeled Pied Agile in the flanks, and down the far slope she started, while behind, amid a shower of pebbles, the great stone eyes and the horizontal rift of a mouth slowly ground shut, and, as he had said he would do, Caillou began to ponder.

19

Free Rein

Down the slant of the mountain rode Liaze. And as she did so, she looked about at the stone rises to the right and the steep drops to the fore and left.

Are these ramparts the flanks of Caillou? What kind of creature is he? Is he truly made of stone, as it seems? Surely he cannot be an entire living mountain… or can he? Think, Liaze, did you see where he might have left off and the mountain itself might have begun? No, you did not, and so the entire mass he might be. Liaze shook her head and laughed aloud and called out to the stark and windblown surround, “Ah, Faery, thanks to the gods that be, your wonders never cease.”