CHAPTER 5
George took the pack on another circuit of the grounds below the manor in the early morning. Rhian was right—between the hounds and the horses getting their exercise here, the depth of snow was much reduced. Benitoe whipped-in on the left, and Brynach on the right, in Rhys’s old spot.
Brynach was coming along nicely, for all that he lacked George and Rhian’s special gift of bespeaking the hounds and other beasts. He was picking up the job in the old way, the one which George was familiar with in the human world, observing each hound and learning its behavior, anticipating what it would do. Benitoe operated in the same style, for the same reasons, and they made a good pair, with Benitoe’s experience matched to young Brynach’s steadiness and eagerness to learn.
Still, they were short-staffed. It was time to find another whipper-in or two to bring along. He’d have to speak to Gwyn about that.
Alright, he decided, he’d come out here for some exercise, and this wasn’t really enough. “Let’s take them up to the orchard and get them nice and tired,” he called to his whippers-in.
He used his horn to get the attention of the hounds. “Pack up,” he said, firmly, and they fell into place behind him in a close group.
He brought them through the north curtain wall past the manor house into the orchards at the far end of the rear grounds. Here the snow was almost undisturbed and much thicker. It wasn’t a safe place for the horses to exercise, with so much of the ground invisible under the snow, but it wouldn’t hurt the hounds any, and they could keep their horses to a cautious walk.
It didn’t take too many minutes before even the liveliest hounds showed the effects of trying to breast that much snow. They turned when he called it quits and followed him happily back across the rear grounds to the kennels. He felt better himself for a bit of hard work.
A knock on the door of the workroom at the kennels brought Benitoe to his feet. “I lost track of time,” he said to Ives, “that must be Maëlys.”
He opened the door and found her on the threshold, hand raised to knock a second time. “I see you managed to find us.”
“It was easy enough,” she said. “I just followed the smell of the cooking.”
The great cauldrons were simmering as usual, one with a warm porridge for the winter cold, and the other with boiling meat.
He introduced the two kennel-men, Huon and Tanguy, while Ives rose from the table. “And this is our kennel-master, Ives.”
She curtsied to him. “Brittou asked to be remembered to you.”
He bowed to her in turn. “I met your husband, Luhedoc, on his way north. They were all excited to visit Edgewood, the first lutins in many years, and would not be dissuaded. I was sorry to see our fears realized.”
Benitoe admired her composure as she murmured, “We were all younger then, and more foolhardy.”
He turned to Ives. “I’ve promised her a riding lesson this morning. Could I use one of the hound yards for a bit of privacy, do you think?”
“No problem at all,” Ives said. He led her to the door. “You’ll be wanting someplace to change into the breeches Benitoe brought you. Let me show you into the huntsman’s office.”
Benitoe scooped up the clothing he’d borrowed, two choices provided by his riding friends, and the three of them went back outside and across the inner yard between the pens to the matching entryway on the other side, where Ives showed her into the huntsman’s office and sent her inside, warning her to draw the curtain.
Benitoe walked back out and took the blankets off the two waiting ponies, both of which had come from her own place, from Iona, provided by Ifor Moel for his use as a whipper-in. He’d brought Eleri for her, a kind bay mare, and the boss mare, gray Gwladus, for himself.
When Maëlys returned, he introduced her to her mount and encouraged her to pet her and make much of her. Then he showed her how to tighten the girth and let her do it herself. He gave her a leg up, pleased to find her wearing sensible boots. “My friends tell me that the easiest thing for you to do with a full skirt and breeches under it is to let nothing come between the breeches and the saddle. Let the back of the skirt drape over the pony’s back, petticoat and all. It’ll keep the pony warm, and you, too, once you get off and claim it back.”
She stood in the stirrups and rearranged her clothing until she had achieved a comfortable result. Benitoe, still standing on the ground next to her, showed her how to adjust her stirrup leathers and let her do it.
He mounted his own pony and looked at her. “All set?”
She looked apprehensive, and he reassured her. “We won’t be going anywhere without a fence, and no one can see you.”
“Why are you being so kind to a stranger?” she asked him, forthrightly.
He was startled into an unconsidered response. “I like your courage, setting out on your own like this, and your loyalty seeking your husband and not just leaving him to his fate. Ives mentioned something of how Brittou has offered you his own home.”
He cleared his throat. “I was raised by my mother’s sister and you remind me of her. She would have done the same.” He spread his hands and shrugged. “I can’t see your situation and not want to help.”
He rarely spoke of his family. For the clannish lutins, he was something of an odd character, content to be independent and observe his folk from the outside. But he also felt the estrangement and wanted the warmth of family for himself. He couldn’t think of Isolda’s death without a hitch in his heart, but he knew that in time the pain would diminish and he would want to try again.
For Maëlys’s sake, he said, “I suppose I just miss my family. Shall I call you ‘Auntie’ for the trip?”
He smiled as he said it, to lighten the mood but was surprised when her face filled with longing. “I would truly like that, young Benitoe. I haven’t had children yet, and I miss family myself.”
“Well, then,” he said, turning his pony and letting hers follow him. “Let’s find out what you can do on a horse, Auntie.”
George mounted the sledge behind the manor and picked up the long reins looped around the pole on the front boards, waist high, standing with his legs braced. There were three or four inches of snow under the runners even here in front of the stables, and he gave an experimental cluck to the two heavy draft horses to see what they made of the weight and the whole contraption. They leaned forward into the harness and easily moved it a few feet before George stopped them again.
The head groom who’d found the old stone boat for him nodded with satisfaction. “I think this’ll do fine, sir. With the snow under it, they should have no difficulty bringing that a couple of miles, even if you carry a person or two. Folk don’t weigh like stones, after all.”
He’d spent much of the morning after the hound walking trying to arrange a means of transport for getting to the nearby woods for his tree. This sledge, a bit larger than a single bed, would carry his tools and the small barrel end he would use for the tree itself, with the tree in it on the way back. In the deep snow, the runners reduced the friction and made it easier to draw.
The word had spread at lunch, and he’d found a couple dozen people mounted and loitering when he’d emerged, asking to come along for a break from staying indoors, now that the morning’s light snowfall had stopped. He’d invited several of them himself, but at the sight of so many he ducked back into the manor and begged a large sack of apples from one of the cooks. He’d carry that out in the empty barrel end.
After his experiment with the full harness, he looped the reins around the pole and stepped down to face the gathering.
“Glad to see you all. I’m just headed to the woods to bring back a tree for the winter solstice, but I thought we could make a party of it since the snow has eased off again. We’ll be going down to the manor gates, then up the nearby slope to the edge of the woods, maybe a total of a mile each way.
“The snow’s too deep for walking, but the distance is short enough that you could ride double with some of the kids, maybe. I can take a couple of the small folk, but it could be dangerous without side rails. I don’t want to try it with children. And coming back, with a tree, it’ll get crowded.
“So, sort yourselves out. Who wants to come with me?”
The local folk, all mounted, stood off to the side. Eurig and Brynach were joking with each other, their cheeks already red in the cold, and Rhian joined them. Ceridwen had introduced George to her colleague Eluned at lunch, and the two women were sitting together astride their horses, well-wrapped against the chill.
Benitoe had persuaded Maëlys to come, mounted. George overheard him explaining that her pony could hardly run away in such deep snow. Kennel-man Tanguy had fetched Armelle, his betrothed, and now the two lutins came forward to join George on the sledge, neither one having learned to ride.
Only Broch and Tiernoc among the korrigans came along, on their ponies, but Cydifor and many of the other traveling fae had decided that this promised some fun, especially for the kids. The older children were mounted, and a few younger ones sat in front of a parent, wide-eyed.
George looked over the group and nodded. Before he turned to step up to the stone boat again, he caught sight of Cadugan walking by with Ifor, headed to a meeting with Gwyn. Cadugan was shaking his head at the spectacle, but smiling, too.
George asked the head groom for a short leather strap to buckle around his waist so that the two lutins would have something to hang onto, without a side rail to steady themselves. He knew it would be difficult to keep their footing standing up all the way.
He picked up the reins and clucked to the horses. They moved out at a slow walking pace, and his dogs bounded through the snow ahead of them.
It was tricky keeping his balance, but with a lutin on each side of him, holding to the front boards with one hand and his impromptu belt with the other, they worked out a method of swaying with the motion, knees bent, that kept them all upright. The horses pulling the sledge seemed to take its weight as inconsequential and were enjoying being outside. George held a light mental touch on them and felt their pleasure.
If he only had a red suit and a white beard, maybe a few jingle bells, the scene would be complete, he thought, smiling to himself.
The voices of the children behind him rose with excitement as they approached their destination.
He pulled the stone boat up in front of the small balsam fir he had in mind. Good, he thought, as he looked it over. It’s still in fine shape. Before unhooking the horses, he looped the reins on the pole and hopped out to check its size, pulling a cord out of his pocket. He’d measured the ceiling height in the hall, and the width available, and knotted the cord appropriately. Now he stretched it against the actual tree. Seven feet tall, plus the root ball—should be fine.
“Alright, we’re here. Let’s bring the horses under the shelter of the trees so they don’t have to stand in such deep snow.”
He pocketed a couple of the apples, then unhooked the doubletree from the stone boat and led his team into the woods several yards, tethering it to a sturdy tree. They each took an apple delicately from his hands and munched appreciatively. When he returned, he found that everyone had dismounted. One of the fae borrowed his spade as a shovel and cleared a spot for a fire, in the open away from the trees, while others gathered fallen branches to use for fuel.