Lorcan was the sort of lad who kept
his head down—and not just in the sense that Grandpa tended to throw things
when he got too much bourbon in him. No, Lorcan liked to mind his own business.
He did his chores, didn’t ask his elders questions, and whenever possible took
refuge in the solitude offered by the forest surrounding his family home. Life
was simpler in the mountain woods than it was in the crowded, sprawling
homestead that Lorcan’s family dwelt in atop Weyrd Mountain.
Weyrd Mountain had been so named by
Lorcan’s great grandfather, who had been a barely literate bandit on the run
after committing some kind of terrible crime that he had never confessed to,
even on his death bed. Great Grandpa had intended to call the place Weird
Mountain due to all the strange things that tended to happen there, but no one
from the nearby village had had the courage to correct his spelling when he put
up a sign directing the townsfolk to the newly built Weyrd Mountain Still.
Great Grandpa had made a decent living selling the booze he brewed, married the
supposedly evil witch that haunted the mountain, and raised three children, all
of whom turned out to be mostly insane.
Whether madness was something they
picked up over time or just a family trait, there was a good reason most of the
townspeople avoided Lorcan’s family unless they had some sort of business with
them. That was why Lorcan was particularly surprised to come across a young
girl as he wandered through the woods that day.
She looked much younger than
Lorcan, he guessed she was eight or nine at the most, and she was soaked to the
bone from the heavy rain that, as usual, pelted Weyrd Mountain relentlessly.
The girl had reddish-gold hair cascading down her back in a wild tangle the
like of which Lorcan had never seen. She wore a fancy purple dress that was spattered
with mud and not at all suited to an extended venture into the forest during a
rainstorm.
“Are you lost?” Lorcan asked
hesitantly as he pulled off his coat with the intention of offering it to the
girl. She was shivering and appeared to be sobbing softly.
The girl spun around with startling
agility and grabbed from the ground beside her—of all things—a tiny sword
perfectly sized for a small girl! “Stay back!” She warned, her voice cool and
even.
Lorcan looked perplexedly from the
girl’s angelic face to the sword that appeared to be—if the blood stain on the
tip was any indication—deadly sharp. “I…uh…what?”
She lowered her sword slightly and
her green eyes narrowed into a suspicious glare. “Are you stupid or something?
I mean, Anna told me not to call people like you stupid. You’re just a little slow. But it doesn’t really matter what
Anna says now, does it?” She suddenly winced and clutched her side, but kept
her eyes locked on Lorcan and raised her sword back to a more aggressive
position.
Lorcan’s eyes darted immediately to
the now obvious wound to the girl’s side. “You’re bleeding!” He gasped, then
muttered, “And quite a lot, at that. Wonder how she’s still standing—never mind
that now!” Ignoring the girl’s sword for a moment, Lorcan rummaged through the
pockets of his coat, which was still dangling in his left hand from when he had
intended to offer it to the little girl.
“What are you doing? I said stay
back!” She shouted as she edged backwards away from Lorcan.
“Calm down.” Lorcan shushed her
dismissively. “You’re injured. Were you bitten or scratched?”
“Scratched, I guess.” She lowered
her sword somewhat and eyed Lorcan warily.
Once he had found the cleaning
salve and a bandage in his multitude of pockets, Lorcan knelt beside the girl
and gently widened the gash in her expensive dress so he could see the wound.
She lowered her sword entirely, but
kept a close eye on Lorcan as he worked. “Are you some kind of healer’s
apprentice?”
“Something like that,” Lorcan
answered distractedly. The single cut was fairly shallow, but it stretched the
length of her ribcage and was incredibly straight. Too straight, in fact, to be
a scratch from an animal. “What exactly was it that scratched you?”
The girl shifted her feet
nervously. “A sword,” she admitted.
“Who would try to kill a little
girl with a sword?” Lorcan was taken aback.
“None of your business!” She spat
back at him angrily. “And I’m not little, I’m nine!”
Lorcan took a deep, calming breath.
“Of course not. I was just surprised that you had been attacked by a person.
I’m used to treating animal bites and scratches or broken bones from falls.”
Her eyes widened and she looked
nervously down at Lorcan’s hands as he applied the salve and cleaned her wound.
“So you’ve never treated a sword cut before? Are you sure you know what you’re
doing?”
Lorcan chuckled. “I am. I’ve
treated more than a few stabbings. Festivals get pretty rowdy at my house and
all of my uncles—and a few of my aunts, too—get a little violent after they
finish their first jugs of whiskey.”
“People get drunk and stab each
other at festivals in your family? That is so cool!” She exclaimed with
unmitigated glee.
“Cool?” Lorcan asked as he began
applying the bandage.
The girl rolled her eyes as though
she thought he were a simple minded idiot again. “Cool. You know: great, fun,
interesting, not a boring, stuffy
social event to showcase the family’s prestige!”
“Ah, I see. Though, I wouldn’t know
anything about family prestige. Most of my relatives are drunken lunatics.”
Lorcan stood, his hasty bandage would hold until he got the girl back to his
house and Great Grandma could decide whether to take her back to the village
tonight or if they should wait until morning.
“Lucky! I’m Evie, by the way.” She
stuck out her hand. Lorcan shook it and then put his coat around her shoulders.
Evie was utterly enveloped by his long jacket, but at least it would keep her
from getting even wetter and ruining the bandage.
“My name’s Lorcan.” He took off his
wide brimmed hat and set it on her head. It sunk down until it nearly covered
her eyes, but she should still see out from underneath the brim, if only
barely.
“What kind of a name is that?” Evie
asked.
“Mine,” Lorcan said simply. Then he
turned and started heading back to his house.
“Wait! Where are we going?” Evie
yelped.
“To my house. You can’t stay out in
the rain dressed like that all night. It will be dark soon.”
“Oh, that’s okay then. Lead on.”
Evie stuck her sword through the belt loop of his coat and tromped along
happily after Lorcan.
The Moon family dwelling was a squatty,
rambling structure that meandered along the slope of Weyrd Mountain. Over the
years the family had grown and their home had grown right along with it. Each
addition had been painted a different color, completing the haphazard look and
feel of the place. Lorcan’s younger cousins still believed that the house had
simply grown out of the mountainside when Great Grandpa had settled there and
that was why the house grew with the family; it was part of the deal Great Grandpa
had made with the witch he married.
The sun was finishing its descent
behind Weyrd Mountain when Lorcan made a sarcastically grand sweeping gesture
to indicate that they had arrived at his home. “Here it is, in all its
majesty!”
“I love it! Look at all the colors!
Is that a still? Do you live at a still? You are so lucky!” Evie raced as fast
as her wounded side would allow towards the front door, which was painted a
garish purple with an enormous silver crescent moon in the center.
Lorcan refrained from rolling his
eyes as he followed the excited Evie. He was just reaching for the door knob
when out burst Lorcan’s twin cousins Earl and Errol. They both splashed heavily
into a nearby puddle and sent mud flying all over Lorcan’s soaking wet pants.
“I am the Walrus Lord! I will
devour your soul!” Errol shouted as he chased Earl.
“Well I am the Rabbit Knight of
Doom and I can outrun any stupid old Walrus Lord!” Earl countered.
“What’s a Walrus Lord and who is
the Rabbit Knight?” Evie asked.
Lorcan shrugged. “Your guess is as
good as mine. Earl and Errol are…imaginative
to say the least.”
Evie watched them sprint out into
the twilight longingly, but Lorcan put a firm hand on her back and ushered her
into the crowded, but warm, living room.
“What’s this? A little girl?” Great
Uncle Mort asked without looking up from card game he was playing against
Lorcan’s grandfather.
Lorcan nodded. “Yes, she was hurt
when I found her in the woods.”
“And I’m not little!” Evie
insisted.
“What’s this? Another little girl?”
Uncle Cal asked as he came around the corner. “Just what we need!”
“Hey!” Cal’s daughters Sophie,
Esmeralda, and Gina exclaimed together from where they were playing with dolls
by the roaring fireplace.
“She was hurt in the woods and—”
Lorcan tried to explain.
“The woods? Who was in the woods at
this time of night?” Great Aunt Lorna inquired as she wandered in from the
study. “Oh my! Will you look at that? A little girl! What’s this about, then?”
“She was—” Lorcan began.
“What’s all this about a little
girl?” Lorcan’s father boomed from the kitchen. He peaked around the corner.
“Good Lord! Will you look at that! A little girl!”
“I’m not little!” Evie protested.
Lorcan gave up trying to explain
the story to them. He carefully helped Evie out of his coat so they would
finally see the blood soaked side of her dress and the bandage he had covered
her cut with.
A slew of exclamations rang out at
seeing that Evie was injured. Crazy drunks though they were, the Moon family
was also quite skilled at healing. It was not uncommon for the villagers to
bring their sick or injured to Weyrd Mountain for care. Several people rushed
forward and crowded around Evie, each one trying to get a good look at her
wound.
“Get away from her, you damn
vultures!” A gravely old voice snarled and Lorcan’s relatives parted to let his
great grandmother totter forward. “I want to have a look at her.”
“But Grandma…you’re blind!” Uncle
Pete protested.
Great Grandma scowled at her
grandson, who visibly wilted under her sightless gaze.
“Well, you are,” Mort’s handsome
son Julian offered unhelpfully.
Great Grandma spun around nimbly
and whacked Julian on the side of his head with her gnarled cane. Julian
collapsed to the floor with a yelp.
Several people muttered, “How does
she do that?” But they all moved a
fair distance away as Great Grandma hobbled forward to inspect Evie.
“Are you the witch that I heard the
villagers talking about?” Evie asked, her tiny hand wandering down to the hilt
of her sword.
Great Grandmother cackled. “Why…yes
I am. Does that frighten you?” She leaned in close so her wrinkled face was
only a few inches from Evie’s.
“No. Nothing frightens me,” Evie
declared resolutely.
“Hmph. We shall see about that.”
Great Grandma cackled once again.
“Alright, you’ve had your fun. How
did I do with the bandage?” Lorcan asked gently.
“Oh, marvelous I’m sure.” She waved
her hand dismissively. “I just wanted to scare the others away so I could have
a word with the young lady. What are you doing here?” She asked pointedly.
Evie kept her stern façade in
place. “I was walking in the forest.”
“With a slash from a sword along
your side?” Great Grandmother scoffed.
“How do you know that?” Evie asked,
narrowing her eyes skeptically.
“Never mind how I know. I know. Now answer the question.”
“You’d better do as she says.
There’s no avoiding her when she gets like this,” Lorcan advised.
Evie considered this for a moment.
“Well…I almost got stabbed…and then I
went for a walk in the forest.”
Great Grandma groaned. “A girl
ought to be a better liar. Especially a girl as mischievous as you.”
“I usually am! I don’t know why I
can’t think of anything to make up!” At last Evie started to look a bit
fearful, if only a little.
“Great Grandma! Are you using your
magic on our guest?” Lorcan eyed his oldest relative.
“Bah! No! Well, maybe. Oh, shut up,
Lorcan! I’m old, I’ll do as I please,” Great Grandma growled.
“She used magic on me?” Evie
glanced down at herself as though to make sure she hadn’t been turned into a
toad while she wasn’t looking.
“Don’t worry about it,” Lorcan told
her. “Come on, you need to rest. I’ll get you settled into the room I share
with my sister Mandy. I can brave a night in the boys’ room so you can have
some peace and quiet.” Lorcan got the still nervous Evie turned away from Great
Grandma and started down the hallway.
“She really cast a spell on me?”
Evie asked as Lorcan ushered her towards his room.
“Probably. She’s pretty sneaky
about it so it’s hard to be sure. A lot of the time she just gets lazy now and
relies on the fact that she’s a scary old witch to startle people into thinking
she’s done magic. You’d be surprised what a good stern glare can get out of
most people.” Lorcan opened the door to his bedroom and gestured for Evie to
enter.
Lorcan and Mandy’s bedroom was
small, but it had a window on the scenic side of the house and it was just the
two of them in there. Mandy had painted dragons all over the four walls and the
ceiling, Lorcan was nearly too tall for his bed, and that about covered the
highlights of their room.
“Whoa!” Evie gasped when she saw
the paintings. “Did you do these?”
Mandy let out a single sharp bark
of laughter. She was sitting on her bed, reading a book about sea monsters.
“Lorcan can barely paint a stick figure. These are my dragons. Would you like
me to tell you about them?”
Evie nodded enthusiastically.
“Well that black one is Herrandron.
People think he’s evil because of his coloring, but actually he helps protect
people from the real monsters. The red one next to him is his mate, Rezzelthra.
She’s probably the smartest of my dragons. She…” Mandy continued talking about
her beloved paintings to an enraptured Evie while Lorcan snuck out. He was only
two years older than Mandy and had heard every one of her dragons’ life stories
many times over.
Although Mandy tended to get overly
intense about her art, she was a cakewalk compared to what Lorcan was about to
step into. The room that Earl and Errol shared with Lorcan’s younger brothers
Fester and Thomas was a warzone on a good
day. He took a deep breath and entered.
Thomas hooted like an owl as Lorcan
stepped inside and several things happened very fast. Festus shoved something
out the window, Errol stepped to the side to block Lorcan’s view of said
window, and someone—presumably Earl—made a considerable amount of noise
rustling around in the bushes just outside their room.
“Whatever it is, let it go, Earl,”
Lorcan said wearily.
“Earl’s not here,” Errol responded
quickly. “He’s hasn’t come back in yet. Only me. I came through the window
because it’s quicker. That’s why the window’s open. I went through it.”
Lorcan shook his head. “You aren’t
fooling anyone. Earl! Let go of whatever creature you’ve caught and climb back
in here.”
“How does he always know?” Earl
groaned. A baby deer leapt up from the bushes and bounded away, clearly
terrified. Earl stood up, brushed some of the mud from his overalls, and
climbed through the window just as Lorcan had asked.
“What did you want with a fawn in
the house anyway? Actually, never mind. I don’t want to know. Just settle down
and try to contain yourselves for once tonight.” Lorcan grabbed a blanket and
pillow from the closet and threw them down on the floor. The boys tended to
destroy their bedding—and everything else—on a fairly regular basis so extras
were always close at hand.
“Oh man! You’re sleeping here
tonight? What did we do this time? I swear, the fire wasn’t us this time!”
Errol protested.
“What fire? Dammit, never mind. You
aren’t in trouble. I found a girl in the woods who was hurt and she’s sleeping
in my room so Mandy can look after her.” Lorcan finished laying out his
makeshift bed on the floor. It would be uncomfortable, but a lot less filthy
than sleeping in one of the boys’ beds.
“A girl? I bet she’s pretty!”
Thomas gushed.
Earl and Errol mimed gagging.
“You’re six, Thomas! What do you care if she’s pretty or not?” Earl asked.
“I like pretty girls! They’re
so…pretty!” Thomas grinned.
Festus rolled his eyes. He was ten
and like his twin cousins, thought girls were an incredible waste of space.
“You are so dumb, Thomas! I don’t know why mom and dad make you sleep in our
room, you ruin everything with your girl talk!”
Lorcan chuckled to himself. He was
old enough to wish that when village girls came along with their fathers to buy
whiskey that they were ogling him instead of Julian. But Lorcan was a gangly
and plain looking fifteen year old and Julian was twenty-five, handsome, and
incredibly charming. Every time Julian came back from attending a festival in
town he had fresh stories of beautiful woman chasing after him. Lorcan had
always assumed Julian was lying until he attended a festival with him last year
and had seen it for himself. Lorcan had not enjoyed the crowds, the noise, or
the dancing and he had definitely not liked being ignored by all the girls as
they pined for Julian.
But for now Festus, Earl, and Errol
were blissfully ignorant of such things. Lorcan did feel bad for his youngest
brother Thomas, though. Six years old and already a hopeless romantic. Life was
going to be tough for that little guy.
For some reason that Lorcan had not
noticed while his thoughts wandered, Errol punched Festus in the nose. Festus
retaliated with a headbutt and Earl threw himself into the fray, likely just
for fun. Muttering to himself about what a long night it was going to be,
Lorcan climbed out of his makeshift bed and pried the three of them apart.
“See? Pretty girls never do that
because they aren’t stupid like you!”
Thomas declared as he stuck his tongue out at his cousins and Festus.
“That’s it, I’m putting him out of
my misery!” Festus shouted. Earl and Errol agreed with wordless snarls as the
three of them tried to get around Lorcan’s octopus-like arms to murder poor
little Thomas.
This was the only good thing about
his gangliness that Lorcan had found. He was able to hold off all three of
Thomas’ would-be killers with his extra-long limbs until they got bored and
started fighting each other again.
Sighing, Lorcan blew out the candle
and let them fight. It was either that or stay up all night trying to wrangle
them into bed. He had done that before and found the sun rising before the
three of them gave up fighting one another. Lorcan closed his eyes and hoped he
wouldn’t dream.
Lorcan
stood in a fancy room with a large window overlooking the village square. He
had never seen the square from above before, it was quite beautiful with its
patterned stone tiles and massive rose bushes. From this height the roses
seemed heavenly despite the fact that Lorcan’s only real memory of them was
being picked up and thrown into a particularly thorny bush by some of Julian’s
drunken friends.
There
was a handsome man with broad shoulders, yet grey at his temples in the room
that Lorcan did not notice until the door opened and Evie entered. She was
wearing the same purple dress that Lorcan had seen her in when they met in the
forest, but her marvelous red-gold hair was done up in intricate curls on top
of her head rather than flowing wildly down her back. She had her tiny sword on
her hip and she approached the older man purposefully.
“Uncle
Arcon, you can’t do what you told father you were planning on doing. It’s not
right!” Evie shouted angrily.
The
man, Lorcan assumed it was Evie’s Uncle Arcon, smiled condescendingly. “Is that
so, child? And what is a little girl like you going to do to stop me?”
Evie
fumed. “I’m not a little girl! I’m nine and I know how to defend myself!”
Uncle
Arcon laughed at her. He turned his back and stared out the large window with
its view of the square. “Silly little girl. So much like your mother. Fierce,
idealistic, and yet ultimately ineffective. Your ridiculous morals will always
keep you from accomplishing your goals, Evangeline. You ought to learn to be
more like your sister Luciana.”
“Actually,
Uncle, I already have.” Evie drew her girl-sized sword and stabbed it upwards
into her uncle’s back. Lorcan observed the angle and saw that Evie’s thrust
carefully came up underneath the ribs, but still reached Uncle Arcon’s heart.
Evie’s
uncle bellowed with rage and spun, drawing his own sword and slashing wildly at
Evie. The blow would have been fatal if Evie had not managed to dodge to the
side and only take a glancing cut. Then Uncle Arcon collapsed, the last of his
lifeblood draining out of him. Evie slid her sword back into its scabbard
without cleaning it off and sprinted from the room.
The nightmare faded and as Lorcan
woke he could hear Evie screaming down the hall. He rose from his pile of
blankets on the floor, spared one last glare for Festus and Earl who were
punching each other once more, and headed for the room he usually shared with
Mandy.
Evie was sitting upright in
Lorcan’s bed, her eyes wide and her breathing coming in quick gasps.
“What’s the matter?” Mandy asked groggily
from her bed.
“She just had a nightmare, go back
to sleep,” Lorcan told her.
“M’kay.” Mandy rolled back over and
began snoring.
Lorcan crossed the room and sat on
his bed next to Evie. They sat in silence until Evie’s breathing began to
approach normal.
“How did you know I had a
nightmare?” Evie whispered.
Lorcan shrugged. “Sometimes I know
things. Part of having witches in the family, I guess.”
Evie nodded as though that were a
perfectly reasonable explanation. “Lorcan, I did something bad. Really bad.”
Lorcan nodded. He had a feeling
that he knew exactly what Evie had done. His dreams were like that sometimes.
“I…I think people are going to come
looking for me. Bad people. I don’t want to hurt your amazing family, but…”
Evie trailed off.
“But you need our help to hide from
these bad people.” Lorcan finished for her.
Evie nodded glumly.
“Well don’t worry about that. The
Moon Family has always protected the weirdos and loonies that seek refuge among
us. Heck, that’s how my parents met! Wyrd Mountain is our domain and no one can
take anyone away from us if we don’t want them to,” Lorcan assured her.
Evie smiled faintly. “Thank you.”
“Is there anyone we can contact for
you down in the village? Anyone you can trust who might be able to help you?”
Lorcan asked.
“My sister,” Evie answered
immediately. “But I don’t know how you could reach her without anyone else
knowing you were helping me.”
Lorcan nodded. “Tomorrow I’ll see
what I can do. Between me, my dad, and Great Grandma, we’ll think of something.
For now, sleep tight.”
Lorcan had gotten hardly any sleep
the rest of the night so he rose early and began his chores while everyone else
still slept. In addition to the still the Moon family had a small farm to help
keep their ever-growing family fed. Lorcan fed the chickens, collected their
eggs, and was weeding the field when he spotted a column of armed men on
horseback riding up the trail that led to Wyrd Mountain Still.
Quickly, Lorcan snatched a small
pebble and threw it as hard as he could in the direction of the house. He hoped
it had reached its intended target, the wall of his father’s bedroom. Lorcan
then leaned on his rake and hoped none of the riders had seen him attempt to
alert the rest of his family to their arrival. He waited patiently while they
rode closer. The forest was dense on the mountain, but the still had been built
such that it was difficult to sneak up on. Great Grandpa had been the paranoid
sort.
Lorcan waved at the men in their
shiny armor as they arrayed themselves in a line in front of him and did his
best to appear unconcerned. He had never seen so many soldiers in all his life.
The village had a few tough young men that donned ill-fitting armor to be an
honor guard when local dignitaries came to visit, but that was about the extent
of the armament that existed in these parts. Wyrd Mountain’s newest visitors
however, had full suits of armor including helmets that covered their faces,
swords, spears, bows, and who knew what else tucked away in the cavernous
saddlebags their very impressive steeds bore.
One of the soldiers, shorter and
slimmer than the rest, held out a piece of paper for Lorcan to see. “Have you
seen this girl?” A woman’s voice asked. Though she was clearly a woman, her
voice was hard and icy cold.
The paper had what was obviously a
drawing of Evie on it. “No,” Lorcan said immediately. “We don’t sell our booze
to kids that young. Sorry.”
The soldier holding the drawing
pulled off her helmet and her pale green eyes bore into Lorcan intently.
“You’re certain?” Her red-gold hair was pulled up into a severe bun, but it was
unmistakably the same fantastic hue as Evie’s. She looked to be about Lorcan’s
age based on her size, but the coldness in her eyes and the determined set of
her jaw made Lorcan wonder if she was older.
“Yes,” Lorcan replied, though he
felt sick doing it. Was this Evie’s sister? The resemblance was uncanny, but he
couldn’t be certain that this was her sister.
“Very well.” She sighed and nudged
her horse forward. She held out the drawing to Lorcan. “Please keep this and
seek me out in the village below if you see her. I am staying at the Old
Fisherman Inn. My sister is likely injured and alone, so any assistance you can
provide will be handsomely rewarded. Good day, citizen.”
What does Lorcan do?
2) Wait and seek Evie’s sister out at her inn
tonight and try to talk to her privately.
3) Help Evie fill out the proper paper work to legally change her name to Gerald.
ReplyDeleteIf 3 isn't a serious contender, I vote for 1... 2 leaves time for bad things to happen
ReplyDeleteHaha! Since I'm pretty sure option 3 would require Evie to go before some kind of official and reveal who she was originally, I'll count your vote for #1.
Delete1!
ReplyDelete