"Tiny is no wicked dog," said Conrad. "He has no badness in him. Otherwise you would be without an arm or leg."
The woman put her hands on the ground and tried to lift herself. "Here," said Conrad, putting out a hand. She grasped it and he hauled her to her feet. She shook herself to make the rags fall back in place.
"In truth," she said, "you two are gentlemen. The one does not run a blade through me and the other helps me to my feet. Old Meg thanks you."
She switched her gaze to Andrew.
"This one I do not know about," she said. "He is a sour character at the best."
"Pay no attention to him," Duncan said. "He is a sour old hermit and the day's not gone well for him."
"Witches I have no love for," said Andrew. "I will tell you plain. Nor goblins nor gnomes nor wizards nor any of their ilk. There are too many such in this world we live in. We'd be better off without them."
"You said something about food," said Meg, the witch.
"We have another hour or two of travel before the day is done," said Duncan. "If you could wait that long."
"I have in my pocket," said Andrew, "a small bit of cheese, carrying it in case I should feel faint. If she wants it, she is welcome to it."
"But Andrew, I thought…"
"For a woman," said Andrew, "not a witch. Anyone who hungers…"
He held out the piece of cheese and she accepted it demurely, if a creature such as she could be demure.
"Bless you," she said.
"I do not accept your blessing," Andrew told her stiffly.
11
Well before the sun had set, they camped, gathering wood, building a fire, bringing water.
"There's no reason to go without a fire," said Duncan. "If there's anyone around, they'll know that we are here."
Meg had ridden Daniel, who had been inclined to prance when she'd first been boosted to the saddle, but later quieted down, going at a deliberate pace to accommodate the rack of bones that rode upon his back.
Conrad, squatting before the fire, raked hot coals off to one side and cooked oaten cakes and rashers of bacon.
Their camp was situated at the edge of a small grove, with the stream in front of them and a sandy stretch of ground running from the water to the grove.
They ate as darkness was creeping over the land. A short time later Ghost came floating in.
"So there you are," said Andrew. "We had been wondering what had happened to you."
"Much afraid," said Ghost, "still I travel very widely. In the open daylight, which is unpleasant for me, I spied out the land."
"How far have you gone?" asked Duncan.
"To where the fen begins. I do not go beyond. Very spooky place."
"And you a spook," said Conrad.
"A ghost," Ghost told him primly. "Not a spook. There is a difference."
"You saw nothing, of course," said Conrad. "Tiny has been out all day as well."
"There are those you call the hairless ones," said Ghost. "A very few of them. To the east, some miles to the east. Several small bands of them. Keeping pace with you. Traveling in the same direction."
"How came Tiny not to see them?"
"I flit much faster than the hound," said Ghost. "Over hill and dale. But frightened. Very frightened. It is not given a ghost should be out in open country. His proper sphere is within a structure, shielded from the sky."
"Maybe they don't even know we are here," said Andrew.
Duncan shook his head. "I'm afraid they do. If not they'd be traveling this same easy route, instead of out there, clambering up and down the hills. It sounds to me as if we're being herded, somewhat less obviously than Tiny herded in the witch. They know, because of the fen, that we cannot go west. They're making sure we don't make a break toward the east."
Meg, the witch, tugged at Duncan's sleeve. "Sire," she said, "those others."
"What is it, grandmother? What others?"
"The ones other than the hairless ones. They are nearby. They squat in outer darkness. They are the ones who laugh gruesomely even as they proceed with your undoing."
"If anyone was here," Conrad objected, "if anyone was near, Tiny would know of them and warn us."
Tiny lay beside the fire, his nose resting on his outstretched paws. He gave no sign that he knew of anything.
"The dog might not know," said Meg. "You are dealing here with something that is more subtle and with a greater capacity for evil and deception than the evil things you encounter in the ordinary run of events. They are…"
"But the Reaver spoke of demons and of imps," said Conrad. "He would know. He fought them."
"He used the only names he knew," said Meg. "He had no names for these other ones, which are not seen as often as the demon or the imp. And there may, perchance, have been imp and demon, for the Horde would attract a large gathering of camp followers, all the evil of ordinary kind joining in with them as great gatherings of common people will follow a human army."
"But you did not join with them," said Duncan. "And you said that you were evil. A little evil, you said. That you'd have to be a little evil to be a witch at all."
"Thus you find me out," said Meg. "I only try to be evil. I would be evil if I could, for then my powers would be the greater. But I only try. At times I thought myself of greater evil than I was and I felt no fear when the Horde came sweeping in, for I said to myself most surely they will recognize me and leave me alone or teach me, perhaps, a greater evil. But this they did not do. They stole all my amulets and they burned my hut and they kicked me in the butt, a most uncourteous way in which to treat someone who is doing her poor best to be even as they are."
"And you feel no shame in this quest of evil? You feel it is appropriate that you make yourself an evil one?"
"Only the better to practice my work," said Meg without a trace of shame. "Once a person lays hands upon her life work, then it must make sense that she do the best she can, no matter where her proficiency may lead her."
"I'm not sure I follow you entirely," Duncan said.
"I knew you for no evil one," said Conrad, "when first I laid eyes upon you. There was no evil in your eye. No more evil than one finds in a goblin or a gnome."
"There are those who believe," said Andrew primly, "that a goblin and a gnome have some taint of evil in them."
"But they're not," insisted Conrad. "They are Little People, different from us, having little magics while we have almost no magic at all."
"I could get along quite comfortably," said Andrew, "without their little magics. Using those small magics they've pestered me almost to the death."
Duncan said to Meg, "You say that there are members of this greater Evil about, even now, outside the camp? That the dog may not be able to detect them?"
"I do not know about the dog," said Meg. "He may detect them and be only slightly puzzled. Not enough to pay much attention to them, not knowing what they are. But Old Meg detects them, ever so faintly, and she knows what they are."
"You are sure about that?"
"I am sure," she said.
"In that case," said Duncan, "we cannot depend on Tiny alone to stand guard against them, as we might have otherwise. We'll have to stand watch throughout the night. I'll take the first watch, Conrad the second."
"You're leaving me out," said Andrew, somewhat wrathfully. "I claim my right to stand my share of the watch. I am, after all, a soldier of the Lord. I share the dangers with you."
"You get your rest," said Duncan. "The day ahead will be a hard one."
"No harder than it will be for you and Conrad."
"You still will get your rest," said Duncan. "We can't hold up the march for you. And your mind must be clear and sharp to point out the way if there should be question."