Yane pointed. "He drove away yonder, south along knield Way."
"Then he will be stopped at Cambermouth." He looked back to Aillas. "If I used the name Faude Carfilhiot would that bring shape to your memory?"
"It would indeed." Aillas thought back across an age of toil, flight and wandering. "I saw him once at his castle."
"You have verified my worst fears. Boy, can you get me a horse?"
"I can go to the ostler, sir. The better the horse, the more coin he will ask."
Shimrod tossed a gold crown upon the table. "Bring his best, and in haste."
The boy ran off. Shimrod sat upon a bench to wait. Aillas appraised him sidelong. "What, when you catch him at Slange?"
"I will do what must be done."
"You will have your hands full. He is strong and no doubt well armed."
"I have no choice. He has kidnapped two children who are dear to me, and he might well do them harm."
"I would believe anything of Carfilhiot," said Aiilas. He considered his own circumstances and came to a decision. He rose to his feet. "I will ride with you to Slange. My own quest can wait an hour or two." The Never-fail still dangled from his wrist.
He glanced at the index, then again, incredulously. "Look you, at the tooth!"
"Now it points south!"
Aillas turned slowly to Shimrod. "Carfilhiot drove south with two children: what are their names?"
"Glyneth and Dhrun."
The four men rode south in the light of the westering sun, and folk along the road, hearing the pound of hooves, moved to the side to let the riders pass, then turned to wonder why men should ride so hard at sundown along Icnield Way.
Across the heath rode the four and up Riverside Heights where they drew their snorting horses up short. The Cambermouth glared incandescent in the light of the setting sun. The ferry had not waited for full ebb. In order to make full use of daylight it had left Slange at the turn of the tide and already was halfway across the river. Last aboard was the wagon of Dr. Fidelius. A man standing at the side of the wagon might have been Faude Carfilhiot.
The four rode down the hill to Slange, to learn that the ferry would turn north sometime after midnight, when the tide was once more at flood, and would not cross to Cogstone Landing until sunrise.
Aillas asked the dock attendant: "Is there no other way across the water?"
"Not with your horses; no indeed, sir!"
"Then, can we cross afoot, and at once?"
"Nor neither afoot, sir. There's no wind to fill a sail, and no one would row you across with the current at full ebb, neither for silver nor gold. He'd end up on Whanish Isle, or beyond. Come back by sunrise and ride in comfort."
Back on the heights they watched the ferry dock at Cogstone. The wagon rolled ashore, moved up the road and out of sight into the dusk.
"There they go," said Shimrod flatly. "We can't hope to catch them now, the horses will run all night. But,I know his destination."
"Tintzin Fyral?"
"First he will stop at Faroli to visit the magician Tamurello."
"Where is Faroli?"
"In the forest, not too far away. I can communicate with Tamurello from Avallon, through one Triptomologius. At the very least he will see to the safety of Glyneth and Dhrun if Carfilhiot brings them to Faroli."
"Meanwhile they are at his mercy."
"So they are."
Icnield Way, parchment-pale in the moonlight, crossed a land dark and silent, with no glimmer of light to be seen on either hand.
South along the way the two-headed horses pulled the wagon of Dr.
Fidelius, with wild eyes and flaring nostrils, mad with hate for the being who drove them as they had never been driven before.
At midnight Carfilhiot pulled to a halt beside a stream. As the horses drank and cropped grass beside the road, he went to the back of the wagon and opened the door. "How goes it in there?"
After a pause Dhrun spoke from the darkness: "Well enough."
"If you want to drink, or ease yourselves, come down, but try no tricks as I lack patience."
Glyneth and Dhrun whispered together, and agreed that there was no reason to ride in discomfort. Warily they descended from the back of the wagon.
Carfilhiot allowed ten minutes, then ordered them back into the wagon. Dhrun went first, silent and stiff with anger. Glyneth paused with one foot on the bottom step of the ladder. Carfilhiot stood with his back to the moon. She asked: "Why have you kidnapped us?"
"So that Shimrod, whom you know as Dr. Fidelius, works no magic against me."
Glyneth tried to keep her voice from trembling. "Are you planning to set us free?"
"Not immediately. Get in the wagon."
"Where are we going?"
"Into the forest, then away to the west."
"Please let us go!"
Carfilhiot studied her where she stood full in the moonlight. A
pretty creature, thought Carfilhiot, fresh as a wildflower. He said lightly: "If you behave nicely, then nice things will happen to you. For now into the wagon with you."
Glyneth climbed into the wagon, and Carfilhiot closed the door.
Once more the wagon set off along Icnield Way. Glyneth spoke into Dhrun's ear: "This man frightens me. I'm sure that he is Shimrod's enemy."
"If I could see, I'd stab him with my sword," muttered Dhrun.
Glyneth said hesitantly: "I don't know if I could do so—unless he were trying to harm us."
"Then it would be too late. Suppose you stood by the door. When he opened it, could you thrust through his neck?"
"No."
Dhrun sat silently. After a moment he picked up his pipes and began to blow softly: trills and runs, to help himself think. He stopped short and said: "That's rather odd. It's dark in here, is it not?"
"Very dark indeed."
"Perhaps I've never played in the dark before. Or perhaps I've never noticed. But as I play, the golden bees fly in swoops and loops, as if they were annoyed."
"Perhaps you are keeping them from their sleep."
Dhrun blew into his pipes with more fervor. He played a jig and a merridown and then a caper of three parts.
Carfilhiot called back through the window: "Stop that damnable fifing; it puts my teeth on edge!"
Dhrun said to Glyneth: "Amazing! The bees dart and swoop. Like him"—he jerked his thumb forward—"they have no taste for music."
He raised the pipes to his lips, but Glyneth stopped him. "Dhrun, no! He will do us harm!"
All night the horses ran, knowing no fatigue but nevertheless furious at the demon who drove them so mercilessly. An hour after dawn Carfilhiot allowed another ten-minute halt. Neither Dhrun nor Glyneth chose to eat; Carfilhiot found bread and dried fish in the larder at the back of the wagon; he ate a few mouthfuls and once more urged the horses into motion.
All day the wagon rumbled across the pleasant landscapes of south Dahaut: a flat country of endless expanses with a great windy sky overhead.
Late in the day, the wagon crossed the Tam River by a stone bridge of seven arches and so entered Pomperol, without challenge either by the single Daut border official or his corpulent Pomperan counterpart, both preoccupied by their chess game, on a table placed precisely over the boundary at the center of the bridge.
The land altered; forests and isolated muffin-shaped hills, each crowned with a castle, reduced the vast perspectives of Dahaut to ordinary human scale.
At sunset the horses at last began to flag; Carfilhiot knew that he could not drive another long night through. He turned off into the forest and halted beside a brook. While he gingerly unharnessed the horses and tied them where they could drink and graze, Glyneth built a fire, hung the iron pot from its tripod
.and cooked a makeshift soup from materials at hand. She released her cats from their basket and let them run here and there about a strictly circumscribed area. Sitting over their meager supper, Dhrun and Glyneth spoke together in subdued undertones.
Carfilhiot, across the fire, watched them through half-closed eyelids, but said nothing.
Glyneth became increasingly disturbed by the quality of Carfilhiot's attention. At last, as twilight darkened the sky, she called her cats and put them into their baskets. Carfilhiot, seemingly lazy and passive, sat in contemplation of her slight yet unexpectedly rich contours, the easy graces and elegant little flourishes which made Glyneth her unique and endearing self.