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tyger’s bib had been, turned into a beard that sparkled in the cold and windy sunshine. It sparkled because it was full of rubies, emeralds,<br />

sapphires, and diamonds.<br />

Then the tyger was gone, and Maerlyn of the Eld stood revealed be<strong>for</strong>e the wondering boy.<br />

He was not smiling, as he had been in Tim’s vision of him . . . but of course that had never been his vision at all. It had been the Covenant Man’s<br />

glammer, meant to lead him on to destruction. The real Maerlyn looked at Tim with kindness, but also with gravity. The wind blew his robe of white<br />

silk around a body so thin it could have been little more than a skeleton.<br />

Tim got on one knee, bowed his head, and raised a trembling fist to his brow. He tried to say Hile, Maerlyn, but his voice had deserted him, and<br />

he could manage nothing but a dusty croak.<br />

“Rise, Tim, son of Jack,” the mage said. “But be<strong>for</strong>e <strong>you</strong> do, put the cap back on the bottle. There’s a few drops left, I wot, and <strong>you</strong>’ll want them.”<br />

Tim raised his head and looked questioningly at the tall figure standing beside the cage that had held him.<br />

“For thy mother,” said Maerlyn. “For thy mother’s eyes.”<br />

“Say true?” Tim whispered.<br />

“True as the Turtle that holds up the world. You’ve come a goodly way, <strong>you</strong>’ve shown great bravery—and not a little foolishness, but we’ll pass<br />

that, since they often go together, especially in the <strong>you</strong>ng—and <strong>you</strong>’ve freed me from a shape I’ve been caught in <strong>for</strong> many and many-a. For that <strong>you</strong><br />

must be rewarded. Now cap the bottle and get on <strong>you</strong>r feet.”<br />

“<strong>Thank</strong>ee,” Tim said. His hands were trembling and his eyes were blurred with tears, but he managed to get the cap on the bottle without spilling<br />

what was left. “I thought <strong>you</strong> were a Guardian of the Beam, so I did, but Daria told me different.”<br />

“And who is Daria?”<br />

“A prisoner, like <strong>you</strong>. Locked in a little machine the people of the Fagonard gave me. I think she’s dead.”<br />

“Sorry <strong>for</strong> <strong>you</strong>r loss, son.”<br />

“She was my friend,” Tim said simply.<br />

Maerlyn nodded. “It’s a sad world, Tim Ross. As <strong>for</strong> me, since <strong>this</strong> is the Beam of the Lion, ’twas his little joke to put me in the shape of a great<br />

cat. Although not in the shape of Aslan, <strong>for</strong> that’s magic not even he can do . . . although he’d like to, aye. Or slay Aslan and all the other Guardians,<br />

so the Beams collapse.”<br />

“The Covenant Man,” Tim whispered.<br />

Maerlyn threw back his head and laughed. His conical cap stayed on, which Tim thought magical in itself. “Nay, nay, not he. Little magic and long<br />

life’s all he’s capable of. No, Tim, there’s one far greater than he of the broad cloak. When the Great One points his finger from where he bides, the<br />

Broad Cloak scurries. But sending <strong>you</strong> was none of the Red King’s bidding, and the one <strong>you</strong> call the Covenant Man will pay <strong>for</strong> his foolery, I’m sure.<br />

He’s too valuable to kill, but to hurt? To punish? Aye, I think so.”<br />

“What will he do to him? This Red King?”<br />

“Best not to know, but of one thing <strong>you</strong> can be sure: no one in Tree will ever see him again. His tax-collecting days are finally over.”<br />

“And will my mother . . . will she really be able to see again?”<br />

“Aye, <strong>for</strong> <strong>you</strong> have done me fine. Nor will I be the last <strong>you</strong>’ll serve in <strong>you</strong>r life.” He pointed at Tim’s belt. “That’s only the first gun <strong>you</strong>’ll wear, and the<br />

lightest.”<br />

Tim looked at the four-shot, but it was his father’s ax he took from his belt. “Guns are not <strong>for</strong> such as me, sai. I’m just a village boy. I’ll be a<br />

woodcutter, like my father. Tree’s my place, and I’ll stay there.”<br />

The old mage looked at him shrewdly. “You say so with the ax in <strong>you</strong>r hand, but would <strong>you</strong> say so if ’twas the gun? Would <strong>you</strong>r heart say so? Don’t<br />

answer, <strong>for</strong> I see the truth in <strong>you</strong>r eyes. Ka will take <strong>you</strong> far from Tree Village.”<br />

“But I love it,” Tim whispered.<br />

“Thee’ll bide there yet awhile, so be not fashed. But hear me well, and obey.”<br />

He put his hands on his knees and leaned his tall, scrawny body toward Tim. His beard lashed in the dying wind, and the jewels caught in it<br />

flickered like fire. His face was gaunt, like the Covenant Man’s, but illuminated by gravity instead of malicious humor, and by kindness rather than<br />

cruelty.<br />

“When <strong>you</strong> return to <strong>you</strong>r cottage—a trip that will be much faster than the one <strong>you</strong> made to get here, and far less risky—<strong>you</strong> will go to <strong>you</strong>r mother<br />

and put the last drops from the bottle in her eyes. Then <strong>you</strong> must give thy father’s ax to her. Do <strong>you</strong> understand me? His coin <strong>you</strong>’ll wear all <strong>you</strong>r life<br />

—<strong>you</strong>’ll be buried with it yet around <strong>you</strong>r neck—but give the ax to thy mother. Do it at once.”<br />

“W-Why?”<br />

The wild tangle of Maerlyn’s brows drew together; his mouth turned down at the corners; suddenly the kindness was gone, replaced by a<br />

frightening obduracy. “Not <strong>you</strong>rs to ask, boy. When ka comes, it comes like the wind—like the starkblast. Will <strong>you</strong> obey?”<br />

“Yes,” Tim said, frightened. “I’ll give it to her as <strong>you</strong> say.”<br />

“Good.”<br />

The mage turned to the sheet beneath which they had slept and raised his hands over it. The end near the cage flipped up with a brisk ruffling<br />

sound, folded over, and was suddenly half the size it had been. It flipped up again and became the size of a tablecloth. Tim thought the women of<br />

Tree would much like to have magic like that when beds needed to be made, and wondered if such an idea were blasphemy.<br />

“No, no, I’m sure <strong>you</strong>’re right,” Maerlyn said absently. “But ’twould go wrong and cause hijinks. Magic’s full of tricks, even <strong>for</strong> an old fellow like me.”<br />

“Sai . . . is it true <strong>you</strong> live backwards in time?”<br />

Maerlyn raised his hands in amused irritation; the sleeves of his robe slipped back, revealing arms as thin and white as birch branches.<br />

“Everyone thinks so, and if I said different, they’d still think it, wouldn’t they? I live as I live, Tim, and the truth is, I’m mostly retired these days. Have<br />

<strong>you</strong> also heard of my magical house in the woods?”<br />

“Aye!”<br />

“And if I told <strong>you</strong> I lived in a cave with nothing but a single table and a pallet on the floor, and if <strong>you</strong> told others that, would they believe <strong>you</strong>?”<br />

Tim considered <strong>this</strong>, and shook his head. “No. They wouldn’t. I doubt folk will believe I met <strong>you</strong> at all.”<br />

“That’s their business. As <strong>for</strong> <strong>you</strong>rs . . . are <strong>you</strong> ready to go back?”<br />

“May I ask one more question?”<br />

The mage raised a single finger. “Only one. For I’ve been here many long years in yon cage—which <strong>you</strong> see keeps its place to the very inch, in<br />

spite of how hard the wind blew—and I’m tired of shitting in that hole. Living monk-simple is all very fine, but there’s a limit. Ask <strong>you</strong>r question.”<br />

“How did the Red King catch thee?”<br />

“He can’t catch anyone, Tim—he’s himself caught, pent at the top of the Dark Tower. But he has his powers, and he has his emissaries. The one

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