9th January #3
“Fascinating,” Farris said. I did not take offence to the excitement in his voice, recognizing it for scholarly enthusiasm and nothing more. “Other realms have fallen into states of decay due to curses and suchlike, but this situation strikes me as unique.”
I frowned as a thought occurred to me. “You must have left Cambridge directly after reading my letter.”
“Naturally!” he said, becoming preoccupied with the sugar. “What could be of greater scholarly interest than the inner workings of the Silva Lupi?”
If I hadn’t known him better, I would have thought he was being dismissive; but Farris, I know now, often gives off an impression of rudeness when he is flustered.
I looked down at my own cup, blushing a little and feeling dreadfully awkward.
He had abandoned his own research, as well as the graduate seminar he was teaching on Renaissance faerie art, and come all this way in the hopes of assisting me, and he had done so at the drop of a hat.
And here I’d been worried about whether I would be taking liberties in writing him a letter.
“It is—an intriguing conundrum,” I finally said lamely.
Farris affected not to notice. “Indeed! Your travails in the Silva Lupi are rivalled only by Blake’s wanderings in Orkney.”
And just like that, we were back on ground more comfortable to the both of us. “Poor Blake,” I said. “It is a pity he never finished his book.” [*1]
“We should locate Ariadne,” Farris said. “She would be disappointed to be left out of this conversation.”
“She’s here?”
“Naturally. Since your foray into the Silva Lupi, she has become something of an expert on the subject—reads everything she can get her hands on. She is talking of specializing in Irish dryadology, though I have warned her against deciding on such things so early in her career…Anyhow, I could not very well leave her behind, all things considered.”
He made a dismissive gesture at the end of this vague statement, and I understood.
Ariadne too had been eager to help me! Here I had thought that Wendell and I were navigating this path alone, with his magic and my ingenuity our only defences against a realm teeming with monsters.
Yet here were two people who had crossed a sea to assist us.
I took a swallow of tea. “Where is the girl, anyway?” I said in a gruff voice.
“The museum,” Farris replied. “They have a fine collection of faerie stones and other artefacts—she had an idea that the stones might function as weapons against this Queen Arna. Several stories from that part of the country feature them, and why leave any stone unturned, pun intended. Let us go and seek her out.”
—
It took only a quarter hour or so to locate Ariadne—Trinity’s Museum of the Good Folk is a tall, narrow building [*2] of stone and ivy a short walk from the library, with an entire floor dedicated to the realms of the country’s southwest. The girl was hunched over a notebook on a flat bench across from the faerie stone display, a pensive look on her round, freckled face.
She gave a cry of delight and astonishment when she saw me, and needed several reassurances that I had arrived by train, in the human fashion, and had not stepped out of one of the dozen or so faerie doors on display in the museum.
“Come,” Farris said, “let us go somewhere more private before we continue our discussion.”
We made our way to Farris’s lodgings in Scholars’ Square.
He had been given one of the larger suites, as is customarily afforded to the most eminent visiting scholars, which included a sunny reception room facing another handsome library, this one dedicated to literature and the humanities.
Ariadne had a childhood friend studying at Trinity, and was staying in her flat.
Farris made tea in his small kitchen—we had just had it, of course, he and I, but I made no objection and sipped mine gratefully, warming my chilled hands against the cup.
“So,” he said, settling himself by the fire, “these corrupted groves may be healed with a little bloodletting. Well, that has precedent in the literature, doesn’t it?
‘The Winding Ways of Tatty Tom,’ for instance. ”
“That is a Scots tale,” I said. “It is often attributed to the Irish due to its erroneous inclusion in Baker’s Evergreen Ballads. [*3] Wendell’s blood will not heal his realm, for by now there is too much corruption in it, and each time he heals one grove, his stepmother will poison another.”
Farris’s wiry white eyebrows had pushed closer and closer together until they were touching. “You are not thinking of ‘The Shoemaker and His Lost Queen’?”
“I am,” I said. “As well as ‘The Winter Gardener.’ [*4] In theme, the two tales are nearly identical, despite their differing origins—Wendell’s situation makes three.
It seems clear that the only way to end the curse the old queen has inflicted upon Wendell’s realm is for him to sacrifice himself.
To die. A little blood may heal half an acre; only his life will heal the realm. ”
There was a silence.
“It is a neatly constructed vengeance on Queen Arna’s part,” Farris said slowly. “One cannot argue with that. The faerie rulers of old would applaud her.”
I gave a ghost of a laugh. It was relief I felt, more than anything else, to be able to discuss this ghastly revelation with my fellow scholars, as if it were merely some academic riddle to be scribbled upon a blackboard and coldly analyzed. “I have no doubt.”
“I suppose, as she has somehow tied herself to the land, she would be healed as well,” he continued in a musing voice. “And, with her stepson out of the way, free to assume the throne once more.”
“That I cannot say for certain, but it is plausible.”
“It cannot be,” Ariadne burst out. She had been watching Farris and me, seeming to grow more and more astonished by our detachment. “Professor Bambleby must be able to heal his realm some other way. He—” She broke off, biting her lip.
Now, Wendell is not really a professor anymore; though he was granted leave from Cambridge, supposedly to conduct an in-depth investigation of the Hidden Ones of Ljosland—a plausible story, given that he and I were the first scholars to conclusively document their existence—this was mainly to provide an explanation for his eventual disappearance from the mortal world, hopefully preventing anyone from going looking for him. But I did not correct her.
“I don’t believe he can,” I said. “In fact, Wendell has come to the same conclusion—that only by giving his life will he drive out his stepmother’s poison, and stop it from destroying the realm.”
Farris rubbed his face. “Then there is no other way for the curse to be lifted.”
“I do not believe that is the correct concern,” I said. “Yes, Wendell’s life is the antidote, but what is more effective than finding antidotes?”
Ariadne’s face lit up. “Stopping the poisoner.”
“Precisely. The problem is that Queen Arna has spirited herself away so effectively that none of our scouts have been able to track her. She is somewhere within the Silva Lupi, of course, or she would not be able to damage it so, but the Silva Lupi is vast, and not merely in the mortal sense, for it is full of shifting landscapes and layered in enchantments. It would take Wendell years to scour it all. So that is the mystery I am attempting to unravel: Where has she gone? How can we find her?”
I opened my briefcase and removed the book I had smuggled out of the special collections section.
(I am aware that I am getting into a bad habit with this sort of thing, but I would be returning the volume before I left Dublin; also, I looked through the records, and not one scholar has requested it in over a year.)
“I have been combing through the folklore of County Leane, from which we have most of our tales of the Silva Lupi,” I said.
“It took some time, but I believe I have come across a tale that describes a situation similar to our own. From what I have been able to glean, it was first recorded in 1480 by a theologian named Geoffrey Molloy—this was before the invention of dryadology as a discipline, as you know, and thus many of our sources are from the Church.” [*5]
I handed Farris the book, and he opened it to the page I had marked. “The only problem,” I continued, “is that Molloy was recording from the oral tradition, and many such tales are fragmentary. Including this one.”
“?‘Kinge Macan’s Bees,’?” Farris read. “I’m not familiar withit.”
“Few are, I suspect. But I must try to track down the complete version; perhaps more fragments have been preserved by another theologian.”
“Hm!” Farris said. He adjusted his glasses on his nose and peered at the book.
Ariadne read over his shoulder. There followed a few moments of quiet, the only sounds coming from Shadow snoring by the fire and the boards creaking overhead as another lodger walked about.
I restrained myself from tapping my foot in impatience.
“Interesting,” Farris said at last. He handed Ariadne the book so that she could continue reading.
“I see why it caught your interest. The curse, the former monarch being chased out by a new one, etcetera—it certainly follows the pattern of current events. Then you think it might provide you with some clue for locating Queen Arna?”
“That is the hope,” I said. “You know the importance of stories to the Folk.”
He murmured assent. “Well! We shall see if we can’t find the rest of it.”
“I should—you need not—” I began, stumbling to a stop. At last I said simply, “Thank you.”
“Thank yourself!” Farris said, smiling. “Our foray into the Alps has advanced our understanding of Faerie by a decade or more; I should be pleading with you to allow me to help. I am beginning to feel, Emily, that simply following you about from place to place would afford me enough scientific discoveries to make my career all over again. Well, Russell-Brown and Eliades had their hangers-on, did they not?” [*6]