He wasn’t listening.
“Then I’ve failed... I gave my Word, and I Failed!” He looked up
and the dark canopy of branches and howled “I AM FORSWORN!” Then,
in a soft, broken voice that was little more than an echo of his former
thunder, “I am forsworn...”
Forsworn,
forsworn... His voice melded into a
creepy chorus of all the murmuring voices of the children trapped in the woods.
As I watched, his body, now just a fading, blurring shadow of what I once took
to be a living man, was sort of pulled into the woods, until he was just one
more part of Hobb’s Wood. And the chorus kept on, forsworn, forsworn,
forsworn...
“NO!” I screamed as
the Judge faded into the woodwork. “You have to tell me what the Lurker’s heart
is! How the hell do you ‘fix’ the Lurker? At least tell me how this stupid
spell works!”
But it didn’t
matter. All that came from the woods was, forsworn, forsworn, forsworn...
And then the wood
rang with that splintering of rotten timber excuse for a laugh. A hundred
and fifty years that fool has been stumbling around these woods! Scaring off
his friends was a job and a half. But I don’t know why it never occurred to me
to let him see his own body. A hundred and fifty years, he’s eluded me, but now
he’s mine. Somehow, I doubt that you’ll last a hundred and fifty minutes...
I couldn’t help it.
I fell to my knees and broke down crying. Sweet Mother, I practically killed
him! He was doing fine, even if he was dead, and I had to come along and screw
it up! And without the Judge, I’ve failed... I can’t keep my Word to
Sarah...I’m foresworn...
Forsworn,
forsworn, forsworn... The wood rang
with it. Forsworn, forsworn, forsworn...
Then I felt a cold
clammy tongue sweep across my cheek. Tears, tears, lovely tears... Fading
traces of Joy are better than nothing...
I gave a scream of
rage and swung the cat's head staff around me in wild arcs. The Lurker pulled
back, but I could still see that snarky grin out there in the wood, among all
the others, pleading with me to help them. Forsworn, forsworn, forsworn...
DAMMIT, I want OUT
of this loony bin! But how do I get out? I don’t even know I got IN!
Wait a minute ---
How DID I get in here?
I mean, I was
nowhere near Hobb’s Wood when I first ran into Sarah. So, how did
she get to the woods that were off the road? And how did we get from that wood
to Hobb’s Wood? I have to talk to Sarah...
Hey, it’s better
than curling up into a ball and sucking my thumb!
I pulled out the
Sorcery threads and tested them, one at a time. Sorcery isn’t my long suit, and
I have to be very careful. But, thank you Wise Ones, all that I have to do is
follow it to Sarah. And Sarah has to be somewhere.
Somewhere.
Is that what the
Judge meant, when he said that he had to ‘fix’ the Lurker? The Lurker can seem
to be everywhere and nowhere, and being a spirit, if it seems to be everywhere
and no where, then it is. But, if the Judge could peg the Lurker in one place, if
he could ‘fix’ it as being there and not anywhere else, then the Lurker could
only be in one place, doing one thing. And that would put a serious crimp in
its style...
What was it that
the Judge said? ‘Because he knows how to slip out of my gaze’s grasp and flow
out of my will’s reach like the last pickle in the barrel.’ The Lurker was
avoiding the Judges gaze. But how?
Mulling all this
over allowed me to follow the Sorcery thread and none of the decoys and
distractions that the Lurker was throwing out. I followed it to one batch of
bushes. “Sarah? Sarah, honey, are you in there?”
I heard sobbing.
“Yes. Yes, I’m sorry!”
“Sorry for what?”
“I- I tricked you!”
“You tricked me?
Why?”
“Because he said
that he’d let me go!”
“Sarah, when we
first met, we were in a woods that I KNOW is nowhere near Hobb’s Wood. Was that
part of the trick?”
“Yes,” she sobbed,
“he told me that if I got you to come here, that he’d let me go.”
“But Sarah, you
told me that you couldn’t get out of the woods, and I know that the Lurker
doesn’t have any power outside Hobb’s Wood. So, how did you get to where we
met?”
“I don’t know! He
just told me to walk that way and come back that way! He said that he could
reach you, even past the edge of the woods! I walked out along his reach and
back the same way, and you followed. I’m Sorry! I’m So SORRY! I just want to go
HOME!”
It could reach me?
Even outside Hobb’s Wood? But HOW? That ONE TIME that it saw me, when I was
here in these woods with Griff, it tried to put its mark on me, and it failed!
The Fools Cap...
The Fool’s Cap.
AGAIN, this damned cap
screwed me over! The Lurker has a connection now to the Fool’s Cap and it used
that to create a bridge of some sort that it let Sarah out of the woods on,
sort of ‘on a leash’.
But why now? Why
not before? Let’s see, before, I was either with friends as Jordan, or I was
alone as Dan-
As a Boy!
It suddenly
occurred to me that all the kids that I’d seen were either tykes, not more than
Five, or they were girls! It chose now, because this was the first time since
then that I’ve been in its range, when I was both alone and a girl!
Why a girl?
The only male of
any kind of rational age was the Judge, who was hunting it-
Who was seeking it.
That’s it! The Male
Paradigm is linear and focused, concentrating on one thing. The Female Paradigm
is radial and enveloping, taking in everything at once. The Female Paradigm
allows the Lurker to be everywhere at once. If the Judge’s Male focus ever hit
on it, then it would be stuck there, ‘fixed’, until the Judge’s attention was
diverted. That’s why it kept skittering outside his field of vision, it didn’t
want to be fixed.
Okay, I’ve got that
figured out, at least. “Sarah, why are you still here? You held up your end of
the bargain,” I said as mildly and uncritically as I could.
“I’m SORRY! I just
wanted to GO HOME!”
“I’m not blaming
you, honey - the Lurker would have just come up with another way of getting at
me, and you were desperate. But why didn’t he let you go?”
“He Promised! He
said that that he’d let me GO, but then when I brought you here, it wasn’t
enough! He said that I had to STAY!”
Promised? I jumped
on it like a hungry dog on bone. “Sarah, this is very important! Did he say
anything like ‘I MIGHT let you go’? Or, did he just say, do this, and I’ll let
you go.”
“He PROMISED!” All
the pain and outrage of an eight-year-old at an Oath-breaker was packed into
those two words.
“Yes, yes, but did
say, ‘Yes, definitely,’ or ‘Maybe’?”
“He said
definitely!” And I could tell from the Sorcery thread that she was telling the
truth. Lurker, you lying greedy bastard, you just screwed the pooch with a
jackhammer.
“Sarah, listen to
me. I can get you out of here. The Lurker Promised. And then he broke that
promise. Now, he OWES you. Sarah, you tricked me. Now, you owe ME. Sarah, you
can repay that debt, right now.”
“How?” she said
like mewling kitten.
“Pass the debt that
the Lurker owes you over to me. Then we’re Even-Steven.”
“Will you still get
me home?”
“I promised you
that I would. The fact that you tricked me doesn’t change that. I’ll have to go
and take care of a few things first, but I WILL come back and take you home. I
promise, by the Lord, the Lady and the Light.” I stuck out my hand. “Deal?”
Slowly, like honey
dripping on a cold morning, a small pale hand came out of the shrubbery and
gripped my hand. “Deal. My debt is now your debt. What the Lurker owes me, he
now owes you. Done deal?”
“Done and Done!” I
shook her hand, and it was a done deal, indeed. I let go of her hand. “Don’t
worry, Sarah. I have to go settle that double-crossing rat first, but I WILL
come back for you!”
“Okay...” She said
it as if she wanted to believe it, but couldn’t quite bring herself to.
I grabbed the
Sorcery thread that I’d latched on the Judge’s body and followed it back. I had
almost all the pieces that I needed, but one thing was still missing - the
Lurker’s Heart. That baby-raping son of a bitch didn’t even HAVE a heart! He
was just an evil spirit-