Dusk in the
Arsendale Forest washed silvery and cool through
the snow-laden branches, which held back the high fire of the falling sun. Early moonglow drifted unhindered through the
needles, gently bathing the cheeks of four travelers.
“You do realize
we’re rather dependent on you not losing your way, Dameon.” The Lone Knight stepped carefully around an
area he had just noticed was directly under a rather heavy-laden branch. The steel sheen of his mail was darkened
greatly in the thick shadows of evening evergreen, but the silver pommel of the
sword at his side glinted unusually bright.
“I never
lose my way,” replied Dameon Starwind.
“I never lose anything.”
There was a
sudden loud snap as an iced log caved in beneath his booted feet, but the rogue
leapt nimbly forward and landed gracefully on a nearby stone. His black cape swung breezily about his legs
as he whirled on his heels and bowed deeply, sweeping his wide-brimmed hat from
his head, one hand on his slender sword’s pommel. “See, not a thing to worry about.”
Ceril
laughed, her dark eyes dancing. “Not
even your balance. Most impressive, Master Starwind!”
“Why thank
you, Lady Wanderer.” Though no one could
see it, he chose to wink the eye that hid behind a black eye patch.
Emerin
Windrider stopped to gaze up at the towering pines and firs, her storm-gray
cape billowing lightly in the soft winter wind.
“We’re lucky to — ”
“Oh! Holly berries!” Ceril’s staff clattered to the ground as she
shuffled under some thick icy-teared branches to get at a squat holly bush,
bedecked with berries the color of red wine.
The Lone
Knight cleared his throat and gazed sympathetically at the Windrider. “You were saying?”
“Well…oh
drat, I forgot.”
“Pity,”
said Dameon, making sure his hat sat properly cocked at a roguish angle on his
head. “I tend to like the things you
say.”
“It was
something about the stars, that I know.”
Starwind
sighed sorrowfully. “Of course it would
be.”
“Sorry,
darling!” Ceril smiled, looking apologetically at Emerin. She gingerly closed her bag of holly and
stood up. “It’s just I’ve been looking
for some of these to go around the collar of my cloak. ‘Tis muchly fun to dress for Christmas.”
Emerin glanced down at her own
attire: a slate blue high-collared vest, grey breeches, and high grey
boots. “I don’t think red and green
would go so nice with my wardrobe. It’s wintry
enough as it is, though.”
“It’s
perfect,” nodded the Lone Knight.
Another
chilled breeze drifted through the icy air from the direction they were
headed. Dameon leapt to a larger stone
and peered through the thick layers of evergreen trunks, crouching. He sniffed the air, and his brow creased.
Ceril put a
hand on her hip and looked squarely at the black-clad swordsman. “But you,
sir, could stand a dash of color at least somewhere.”
“What? Heresy!” exclaimed the Lone Knight.
“Nonsense!”
declared Emerin. “He has plenty of
dash.”
“Why can’t
you all accept that we’re all dressed
perfectly?” cried the Knight.
“Of course
we all are,” said Ceril, adjusting her brown cloak more comfortably about her
shoulders. “But I think even a rogue can
stand to have a Christmas look. And a
knight as well.”
“Sh!” Dameon motioned for their silence. He stood up straight on the stone, waiting in
absolute stillness as the off-and-on wind caused the hem of his cape to whisper
with his boot tops. “Can you smell something,
in the air? Something…sharp. I can’t quite place it. City scents are more my game.”
Stillness
washed in as the four travelers each tasted the crisp dark air. Their breath puffed out in white wisps that
rolled vigorously before dissipating.
The Christmas sky was a dark crystal mere of infinite sparkling fish,
and pearl ribbons of moonlight unfurled their glory down through the mighty
sentinels of oak, holly, pine, fir, and rowan tree. Night had settled on the Arsendale with the
giddiness of a long-awaited secret.
“Mmm…smells
good,” Emerin sighed. She closed her eyes
and smiled.
Ceril
sniffed the air delicately once, twice, thrice.
Her eyes brightened. “It’s
minty…yes, minty. And…there are some
awfully sweet spices too…”
The Lone
Knight raised an eyebrow. “Someone
preparing a Christmas tea party in the middle of the wild Arsendale Forest?”
Dameon
grinned. “Wouldn’t you?”
“I think
Ceril’s been planning one, actually,” said Emerin. “She wanted it to be a surprise, but I could
smell the tea spices from her pack as I tried to sleep last night.”
The
brown-cloaked Wanderer had started to stroll slowly in the direction of the
scent. “…there’s a touch of apple cider,
I think, and…something dark, and warm, like…like warm tree sap. Oh that’s weird, but I don’t know how else to
describe it! I start thinking of fuzzy
lambs and friendly fires, and then my mind jumps to something joyously
majestic, and – the smell gets stronger this way, friends – and, images of
these clear, cool voices on the wind sweep through my mind. Beautiful, angelic voices, so happy and
clear…gosh, it’s making me giddy with joy.
Only it’s not my joy, it’s someone else’s…like someone’s inviting me to
a beautiful, reverent…oh, I don’t even know.
To a thought, I guess. It’s like
the sudden rolling back of a darkness that had once seemed too heavy to bear.”
Beneath the
rogue’s wide black brim, a sly smile spread under his sparkling good eye as he
gazed in the direction Ceril was watching.
Only white shafts of moonlight now illuminated the trees. None of the four travelers had ever been in
the Arsendale before, but Dameon Starwind had heard tales of its lore. He pulled a wing-shaped leaf from a branch
above his head and examined it in the moonlight: ‘twas a teal color richer than
the finest velvets of Trufanic royalty, and the jagged edges were rimmed in
glimmering silver.
“Fairies,”
he said. His friends turned to look at
him, surprise glinting from their faces in the shadows. He laughed from the stone where he was still
perched and held out the teal leaf for Emerin to take and examine. “With no aid whatsoever from my forestry
skills, at last we have reached the heartwoods of the Arsendale Forest. They are still vast, but I am told that
somewhere here the elves have their strongholds, and the fairy folk their
dances.”
“Perhaps
we’re being invited in?” mused the Lone Knight.
He pointed a gloved hand towards a spot between the trees far past
Ceril, where it seemed a shimmering gold light was peeking through, fleeting,
flirting, like a child anxious to show you the way to a secret hideout but still
trying to get there first.
Together
they all passed deeper into the heartland of silver and teal-leaved trees,
following the shapeless gold light which moved purposefully, but always
remained just behind the trees, shining between them. Dameon strode out ahead, his black boots
crunching lightly in the snow. A large
wooded hill arose, but the light seemed to lead them around it. Gradually it became fainter, paler, and then
it faded into the moonlight.
“Did you
lose it?” called the Lone Knight to the rogue, a few yards ahead of them.
Dameon
turned slowly around, meeting his friend’s eyes with his own, burning out from
beneath the wide brim of his black hat.
“Oh,
heh…sorry.”
A reluctant
smile appeared below the eye patch. “It
seems there’s some sort of clearing up ahead.
I’m sure we’d do very well to — ”
“Look!” Ceril pointed to the trees off to her right.
Emerin
gasped, and her hand flew to her mouth.
“How beautiful!”
A sparkling
ribbon of purple flitted through the white moonrays, or so it seemed, dancing
and skating through the branches while millions of tiny stars fell from the
fast-beating wings of the fairy, who in her arms carried a long blue
feather. She seemed to take no notice of
them, but fluttered right through their midst, her tiny face glowing with
anxiety, as if she was late for something.
The most pungent and sweet scent of fresh berries followed her, causing
Emerin to sigh and hold Ceril’s shoulder as the Wanderer bit her lip excitedly. The fairy whizzed up past Dameon’s shoulder,
where she suddenly stopped and turned in the air, as if only then realizing the
black-clad rogue was standing a breath away.
She pursed her lips, looked him up and down a bit, as he smiled
bemusedly back. Then, with a puff of
raspberry scent and a wild, minxish grin, she flew up and stuck the blue
feather in the band of his hat, and dashed off doing cartwheels through the
trees until she disappeared behind the hill where the supposed clearing was.
Ignoring
the laughter of his friends, Starwind hurried after her, stopping at the edge
of the clearing. “Ah. Here we go.”
He peered through the trees, and his voice dropped into reverence. “So this
is what Old Man Marli meant by ‘a glitzy gamboling of giggling fluttery
fools.’”
The Lone
Knight stopped in his tracks. “Hold on,
are you saying you consulted Marli
for this trip? Our lives are dependent
on instructions he gave?”
“Oh,
Marli!” laughed Ceril as they all joined the rogue. “He’s such a dear old man, I love him!”
“Dear, yes,
but stable?”
“Most
certainly not.” Dameon turned around,
tipping his newly-feathered hat. “That’s
why I trusted him.”
“Well
that’s just brilliant.” The Lone Knight
rubbed his forehead and glanced heavenward.
“I’ll say,”
whispered Emerin. She was peering with
Dameon from the trees.
A clear
frozen lake stretched out before them, wide and smooth like a mirror, and over
the ice a swirling host of fairies danced, skated, and cartwheeled through the
air, drawing behind them bright dusty sprinkles of every imaginable color. Each fairy left a streak of its particular
hue in the air which was reflected below, so it was as if a painter had soaked
parts of a needled evergreen branch in every color of his palette and gleefully
bounced it across the ice. In the center
of the lake was an island of snow and rock, from which rose as stately an
authority as ever a tree was, and its glory seemed to be the greater because it
pointed straight to heaven. Its strong,
richly brown branches bore the great silver-tipped teal leaves, which groaned
under the weight of mounds of pure white snow.
Garlands
of silver and gold hung about it, and the fairies bustled industriously about
with decorations of the most inventive and delightful kind. Some were wood, others were of gemstone and
precious metals, and some…some glowed with unearthly glory. At the highest point of the Tree, a veritable
peak, hovered a simple star, burning with an inward light and bathing the
entire lake with a gentle, musical pulse.
The four
friends stepped out from the trees and stood for awhile on the snow bank,
gazing at the celebration before them. A
kaleidoscope of colors reflected off their smiles.
“Well done,
old boy,” whispered the Lone Knight.
“You do us
proud, Windbrother,” whispered Emerin.
“So,” said
Ceril softly to the rogue, “I take it this
is your Merry Christmas to us?”
“Well,”
said Dameon, “I’ve never been much with words.”