trails of bubbles that marked the water.
“So,” she said to them. “You have learned your lesson well. Passed on from your sister bees in the south, to the fish, to you. Go, then!”
And the bees were off, a humming black arrow, carrying the message on.
Jinks emerged from the Resistance stronghold of the west and shivered in the cold wind. The sky was clear except for a flock of blackbirds, dark specks against the blue. Jinks shaded his eyes and peered at them.
Birds? Or Ols? Ols did not usually fly so high. But, on the other hand, the flock was heading for Dread Mountain. And what real bird would go there?
Suddenly Jinks saw a tiny flash in the center of the flock — as if the sun had struck something made of bright metal. But what would an Ol — or a bird, for that matter — be doing carrying such a thing?
My eyes are deceiving me. I must be tired, Jinks thought. Yawning, he returned to the cavern.
Tom the shopkeeper was serving ale to Grey Guards in the little tavern he kept beside his shop.
“There are many of you about at present,” he said lightly. “Some of your fellows were here only yesterday.”
One of the Guards grunted, reaching for a brimming mug. “They are ordered to the west,” he said. “And many others, too. We are to stay in the north-east, worse luck. We will miss the real fighting.”
“Fighting?” Tom’s lean face creased into a broad smile as he passed the other mugs around.
“You talk too much, Teep 4,” grunted a second guard.
Tom raised his eyebrows. “Old Tom is no threat!” he exclaimed. “What is he but a poor shopkeeper?”
“A poor innkeeper, too!” snarled Teep 4. “This ale tastes like muddlet droppings.”
Amid loud guffaws, the shop bell sounded. Tom excused himself and went through a door, closing it behind him. Waiting in the shop were a man and a woman, well muffled against the cold.
“Greetings! How can I serve you?” Tom asked.
Without a word, the woman made a mark on the dust of the counter.
Tom casually swept the mark away as he pulled a package from under the counter. “This is your order, I believe,” he said. He gave the package to the woman, then glanced quickly at the tavern door.
“I have news,” he murmured. The customers bent towards him, and he began speaking rapidly.
High on Dread Mountain, Gla-Thon saw a flock of blackbirds approaching and fitted an arrow to her bow.
The gnomes still placed filled glass bottles at the base of the mountain for the Grey Guards to take to the Shadowlands. The fact that the liquid in the bottles was now water and Boolong sap instead of deadly poison was something the Guards would discover only when they tried to use the blisters made from it.
Perhaps, at last, that time had come. Perhaps the blackbirds were the first sign that the Shadow Lord had discovered the Dread Gnomes’ treachery.
If so, we are ready, thought Gla-Thon grimly. She heard rustling behind her and spun around. But it was only Prin, the youngest of the Kin.
“Birds!” Prin gasped. “Blackbirds —”
“I have seen them,” grunted Gla-Thon.
The flock was wheeling close, now. Gla-Thon’s arrow strained against her bowstring. Then one of the birds separated from the rest and plunged towards her. In its beak was something that flashed golden in the sun.
And even before the bird had landed, Gla-Thon was shouting. Shouting that the sign had come.
Manus lifted his head from his work in the vegetable beds of Raladin to swat the flies that were swarming around him. Then he stared.
The flies were not flies at all, but bees. The air seemed full of them. As Manus watched, easing his aching back, he frowned.
The bees were acting strangely. They were not hovering around the flowers, but buzzing in the sky. They were clustering together, making patterns. And the patterns …
Manus’s jaw dropped. The spade fell from his hand. With his long, blue-grey finger he began tracing in the soil the patterns the bees were making,
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington