Archive for April, 2002

First Contact

Tuesday, April 9th, 2002

As the weeks went by and the days grew shorter, there followed many more gift exchanges between the two, and often, just as the twilight fell, she heard the music of the silver pennywhistle, drifting in on the breeze, and her mind was filled with images of other times and other places, and the tunes carried stories to her, and remembrances, too… and as time went on, she experienced something else, entirely unexpected. As the season drifted from late Summer into late Fall, Áine found herself changing, and she was often very tired. Her bones began to ache whenever it rained, and rising each morning became more and more of an effort. She did her best to take care of the animals and herself, but each day it seemed a little harder than the day before.

Áine bundled more clothes on, feeling chilled to the bone even on warm, sunny days. She kept the fire burning in the stove in the kitchen to ward off the chill she felt. The swan eggs had hatched and she did her best to care for them, feeding them by hand. She treated herself with herbs and various magical concoctions, but nothing seemed to stop the aging, and as each day went by, she felt herself getting older and older. Was this aging an effect of living in a place where the Old Magics flowed freely? She did not know, but it worried her enough to send a letter to her friend Dagoba, the fortuneteller, by messenger pigeon.

Dearest Dagoba,

I think of you often, and I hope you are well. I have no idea how long I have been gone or how far I have traveled, but I am currently making my home somewhere in the Windlass Mountains, on an island in the middle of a lake. The place seems cozy enough, there is a beautiful garden here, and a very large house built within a hill. It’s prior resident, one Conaire MacNeesh, Third Lord of Calatin, (perhaps you knew of him?) has provided for, seemingly, every need a person could ever have here. Enclosed please find his letter. If you could favor me by filing this letter with the court in the Akkadian Hall of Echoes, I would be most appreciative, as I am not sure when I will be in Akkadia next, though certainly not before Spring, I’m sure.

On the whole, this place is wonderfully magical and I am happy here. There is someone else living out here in the mountains, though. I haven’t met him face to face yet, and he often brings me wild game and other things he collects on his wanderings. :) I do, however, seem to have a small problem and that is that I am rapidly aging. I’ve used every herb I can think of to try and counteract the effect, but have managed to do nothing more than slow its pace somewhat. I am thinking it has something to do with the effect of my Being combined with the Magics here, and I must learn to work with them… and quickly, it seems.

I do miss you and the DreamMistress. Oh, what I wouldn’t give to have you two here with me for an afternoon of tea and gossip, though! Hehehe.

With Love,
Áine

She carefully rolled up her letter and MacNeesh’s and put them into the leather tube, instructing the pigeon where to take it and whom to deliver it to. The pigeon promptly flew off in the direction of Akkadia.

The garden was prepared for the coming winter. She’d preserved the harvest by drying and bottling what she could to see her through until Spring, so there was little she needed to do each day other than keep the fire burning and the animals fed and watered. It wasn’t long before the snows came into the mountains and the lake froze over. She spent more time in the libraries, gradually working her way through shelf after shelf of books, though there were many years’ worth of reading here.

By the dark of the year at winter solstice, her hair had become fine and white as a spider’s web. Her hands were as gnarled as tree branches, and her back was bent and crooked. With the aid of an alder staff she shuffled throughout the house painfully slow. She didn’t know it but out there, in the wood, as the season changed, He grew ever younger, more muscular and athletic, able to walk or run for many leagues without tiring. He hunted and often left venison, elk, and other wild game at her doorstep. The two of them having formed a sort of silent partnership out here in the wilderness, and never having met or spoken face to face. She was, of course, curious as to what He looked like, but she didn’t force Him to show Himself to her. He, of course, had already seen Her and had been observing the changes in both himself and Her throughout the season. They both kept their distance.

One morning in the midst of the coldest winter the mountains had ever seen, He noticed no smoke coming from the stovepipe of Her home, nor did He see the old woman shuffling about to feed the birds as she always did. He set his rabbit snares out in the woods, and then went back to the front door of Her house and knocked loudly.

No one came to the door.

He pounded on the door a bit more, but still there was no answer from within. He stood there for long minutes… half turning away to go back into the wood, then turning back to face the door. He was in a quandry about what to do. He had to know if She was alright, and He knew that if He returned to the wood without knowing, He would constantly be returning to see if She’d come outside or lit the fire anyway, and His whole day would be useless. He stood there debating with himself a few minutes more, and then tried the door knob and found it was unlocked. Very quietly he crept into Her home, and room by room, He searched for Her.

He found Her at last in one of the bedrooms lying in a huge bed covered with a very large pile of hand-stitched quilts. She was cold to the touch, unconscious, and just barely breathing. He almost didn’t recognize Her at first, She was very aged, yet still beautiful in His eyes, for though He hadn’t yet said it to Her, He had through the months been falling in love with Her ever since She’d first come into the glen in late summer.

Quickly he filled a tub in one of the bathrooms with water fed by a hot spring within the mountain. He raced back to the bedroom and tore the quilts off the bed, and then stripped the clothes off of her. He carried her naked into the bathroom and gently lowered her into the water, where he massaged and bathed her body until the skin began turning a healthy pink. By this time, Áine was conscious and aware of her circumstances… and that He was there, as well as what He was doing. She was too weak to protest or show any embarassment, and likely wouldn’t have anyway. This was the first she’d seen of Him, and what she saw was not at all unpleasant.

He was young and handsome, strong, yet so very gentle with her. And when she looked into His eyes, she Knew that this was the one who had been waiting for her here, and that she would never again be happy without Him. And she saw that same look there in His eyes. Still, she was so old and He so young… it seemed an unbearable cruelty that they should find each other in this way, and a feeling of profound sadness crept into her heart.

“How can you bear to touch me… as I am… like this?” she hoarsely whispered to him.

“Shhhh now, lass,… we’ll speak later. Right now, you need warmth and food in you,” He said in a gentle whisper, “Will you be fine here if I let you soak for a bit and cook us something in your kitchen?”

“Aye,” she smiled and slid further down into the water, and He washed her hair for her, and then went off to the kitchen.

[This part of the story crosses over into Mal’ahk’s character, Dagoba… and this is what she wrote in her story…]

Dagoba shook her head and chuckled quietly to herself after Akila departed. As fond as I was of her mother, she thought musingly, I must admit Akila and Gja give me more hope for the future of this Isle than anyone has in a long time. I love them both as if they were my own daughters.

She was interrupted in her musings by a flutter of wings. Looking up, she noticed a messenger pigeon fluttering just outside the window of the crystalline ziggurat-like structure, attempting to find foothold on the thin sill before giving up and perching on the gradiated step below it. With a sigh, Dagoba heaved herself to her feet and hobbled over to the window.

The pigeon hopped up onto the sill of the open window, cooing softly, turning it’s head this way and that as it regarded her with bright black eyes. “Well, goodness,” said Dagoba in an amused voice as she offered an arm to the pigeon. Obediently, the trained bird settled itself on the old woman’s arm and waited patiently while Dagoba removed it’s message.

She read Aine’s letter quickly, then a second time more slowly as a warm smile touched her lips. Though it had been a good many years in her subjective time since she’d last seen the Faerie woman, she’d corresponded with Aine often and had been concerned with the letters had suddenly ceased a few years ago. It made her heart joyful to realize her old friend was still in the Windlass Mountains.

With a start, she realized that this was the first letter she’d had since Akila and Gja had taken over the Isle of Dreams, and it was very possible Aine had no idea that so much had changed. “Well, that’s going to be a tricky bit of news to impart,” she said out loud to nobody in particular.

She patted her pockets, then smiled at the pigeon apologetically. “You’ll have to come back to my shop with me, Wingchild,” she told the bird. “And I’ll give you some suet and a comfortable perch whilst I figure out how to send the news to my old friend without giving her heart failure!” The pigeon cooed agreeably and hopped up to Dagoba’s shoulder.

The old woman shuffled out into the sunshine, her gait was slow but to the more observant there was a definite lift to her steps that hadn’t been there this morning.

Twilight’s GateKeeper

Sunday, April 7th, 2002

Áine awoke on a sandy beach by a lake somewhere in the Windlass Mountains. She knew not how long she had lain there, nor how she had come to this place. A black mare was standing nearby chewing on some grass. In the back of her mind, Áine was aware that the mists of the Isle of Dreams had been summoned, cutting the pathways to this place some time ago, but she was uncertain how long ago that had been or whether all of that had simply been a dream.

The clearing by the lake she now found herself in was really quite lovely, a tiny green patch amidst the grey weave of the surrounding hills and woods. She looked at the black mare and in mindspeak asked, “Where is…? How…? Hmmm, it seems I’ve forgotten his name.” She brought her hand up to her forehead and winced, having found a nasty knot sprouting there, probably sustained in her fall from the white horse she’d been riding.

“The Eacha don’t speak one another’s names, Miss,” the black mare replied in mindspeak, “but the one who was serving you had to return to his mare, who is even now birthing a new foal. He sent me in his place, ma’am, to serve you as long as you wish.” Áine nodded and her head throbbed. “Argh! It seems I’ve taken a nasty tumble,” Áine groaned with pain.

“Aye, Miss, he carried you unconscious for some time. Said you’d knocked your head while coming ’round a sharp bend on the way here, but even unconscious you managed to stay on his back until you arrived here at the lake. He waited nearby for you to awaken as long as he could, but with the foal coming, he could wait no longer. They say it will be a fine young silver one that is born… a Special one,” the mare told her.

Áine carefully brushed the sand from her face, avoiding the knot on her forehead, and slowly stood and shook the sand from her clothing. “What name might I call you?” she inquired of the black mare. “The two-legged call me Dubhealaín, Miss Áine,” spoke the mare.

“Ahhh… Dubhealaín… black arts… black magic… a good name, to be sure,” Áine smiled and winked at the horse, who nodded and whickered in reply.

Áine looked about and found her traveling bag nearby, glad it wasn’t lost. She slung this over her shoulder, then surveyed the surrounding terrain. Nothing seemed familiar about this place, though it was a truly beautiful glen in the mountains, and there was an air of the Old Magics drifting about. The grasses were a rich, deep green color, the lake was crystal clear and its bottom could be plainly seen. All about were the sounds of birds, frogs, buzzing insects, and occasionally a fish would rise to the surface and pluck a few bugs for its lunch. On the north shore was a small hut built against a hillside. It had a perfectly round door, almost like a port hole, and it was at one time blue, though the paint was almost completely gone with weathering.

Áine and Dubhealaín wandered around the shoreline until they stood quietly in front of this hut. There were no foot tracks leading from the doorway, no smoke trails coming from the small stovepipe they now saw emerging from the top of the hill, nor any sign that anyone had been here in quite some time. Nonetheless, Áine slowly approached the door and gave it a satisfactory knock, then stood back and waited to see if anyone would answer. When no one did, Áine knocked again.

After several minutes when still no one came to the door, Áine tried the doorknob and found it unlocked, and she stepped inside. Dubhealaín followed her, for, indeed, the entrance was actually quite large, though appeared small from the outside, it was large enough for a horse to enter.

The door of the hut opened onto a tunnel-shaped hallway, a very comfortable hall which led further into the hillside with many twists and turns. There seemed to be no end of doorways leading off into other rooms within the hill. Amidst all the doorways were bedrooms, bathrooms, sitting rooms, cellars, pantries, a very large stable suitable for dozens of horses and cattle, kitchens, dining rooms, a banquet hall, several libraries filled with books from floor to ceiling, an armory, and a grand ballroom complete with musical instruments of many kinds. The floor throughout was of oak, worn golden with age and polished smooth with use, though it seemed no one had, indeed, been here in many, many years. The walls were of the same oak and consisted of uncounted numbers of wooden panels, each inlaid with many other colored woods depicting scenes of feasts, battles, hunts, and all manner of creatures and beings. Altogether, it was a very artistic rendering of some history of adventures. Áine thought it might take weeks to explore it all, and since she had no idea where exactly she was, nor any better place to be at the moment, she thought it might be a rather nice place to rest for a while, provided the owner didn’t return and kick her out, that is.

Áine wandered into what seemed to be the main kitchen and found a piece of parchment on the kitchen table. On it was some handwriting which was not only legible, but highly decorated with flourishes and such. The note read:

To Whomsoever Should Find This:

Greetings, Wanderer!! On this side board you will find an annual glass with flowing sands (or not, as the case may be). If those sands are no longer flowing, it means that I did not return to this homestead for over a year, and You, having found this letter, may consider that I have no intentions of returning to this household. You may also consider that my latest adventure has been either a wild success, or that I have met an untimely demise.

Whatever the case may be, You (whomever You may be) may consider this letter to be a legal document rendering this household, its contents, and the surrounding lands and waterways, over to your legal possession and care with full rights thereto, etc., etc. to keep in perpetuity for as long as you or your heirs may desire. You, by virtue of making it into this valley past its enchantments and other magical protections, are now the legal owner of everything you see around you.

And now, you may be wondering where I’ve gone off to and whether I shall return? I am, as near as I can tell, the last of my kind in these fair Isles, and so I have no further reason to remain here. I now journey alone to the world of Men to make a new life and in hope of finding some of my own Kin who may yet survive there.

If you wish to remain here and make this your home, and that is my hope, you will find this to be a comfortable home in all seasons. The lake and adjoining stream are always rich with fish, and the garden on the southeastern side of the hill is also well-planted, and these should see you through many seasons (provided the weeds and the deer and such haven’t taken over by now). In addition, you will find the pantries and cellars stocked with provisions, so you need not fear starvation whilst you accustom yourself and your family to life in this glen… provided you decide to remain here.

In the libraries you will find an abundance of reading materials, maps, useful bits of advice, and other things with which to occupy your spare hours. I do hope you enjoy reading as much as I do. You will also find parchments and other such writing materials scattered here and there, with which you may send messages to residents of Akkadia and whomever is in charge of this Isle by way of the pigeons I have bred for this purpose.

Please take good care of all you find here, as it now belongs to you and you alone. I hope that life within this glen is as pleasant for you and yours as it has been for me. At any rate, I am off!

May the gods watch over me in my travels, and may you find life here to your liking.

Signed,

Conaire MacNeesh
3rd Lord of Calatin
Windlass Mountains
Isle of Dreams

Áine put the parchment back on the table. “Hmmm… well, I guess that explains that,” she mused as she looked at the glass on the sideboard. The sands hadn’t flowed for quite some time, judging by the layer of dust that covered it. “Well, Dubhealaín, what say you and I make this home for a time?” Áine turned to find the black mare had already made its way to the stables and was even now fast asleep. She chuckled softly, then found a warm woolen blanket among the things in the stable and carefully covered Dubh’s back with it.

Returning to the kitchen where she’d found the letter, she realized the place needed a good dusting, but for however long it had been vacant, it was still fairly clean and cozy. She’d see to the dusting on the morrow, but for now her concern focused on getting a nice hot cup of tea and a bite to eat, so she lit a warm fire in the kitchen stove and put some water into a kettle to boil. In a nearby pantry she found a tin of shredded tea leaves, some bottled salted chicken meat, flour and other baking goods, dried vegetables, spices, etc., and set about to making a nice meal.

While it was simmering on the stove, she wandered off and found a bathroom where she washed herself. Surprisingly, there were ladies’ clothes in the wardrobe, and though years out of fashion, they were in good condition and quite moth-free, and from these she selected a pretty green frock, a blue hand-knit shawl, and a warm pair of sheepskin slippers. In the cupboard in the bathroom she found vials and tins with healing herbs and balms of all sorts, and having some knowledge of the healing arts, she set about to treating the painful knot on her forehead. It wasn’t going to look pretty for a few days, at least, but it would heal in time.

The tea kettle began to whistle in the kitchen, and the soda bread was ready to go into the oven, so Áine fixed herself a cup of tea and popped the bread into the oven, then stirred the chicken stew on the stove. She hadn’t long to wait until everything was ready to eat, and when she finally sat down at the table with spoon in hand, it occurred to her that this was her very first meal in her new home. The thought pleased her. It had been quite some time since she’d had any place to call home… she’d been wandering a long time… even she wasn’t quite sure how long. After a satisfying meal, Áine crept off into a nearby bedroom and fell fast asleep.

The next morning Áine worked on dusting. She found cleaning supplies in a closet off the kitchen she’d used the night before, and got to work just as the sun was rising. Normally, she would have preferred to sleep in until mid-morning, but today was the first full day in her new home, and she was excited. As she went about her cleaning, she discovered more and more rooms leading off other corridors in every direction. “I’ll never catch up with the cleaning at this rate,” she thought, and at mid-morning she put the kettle on and went into the stable to see if Dubhealaín was awake yet.

The black mare was standing there having a mindspeak conversation with a group of pigeons. They, apparently, were the messenger pigeons and were familiar with the terrain of the Isle of Dreams, and they indicated to her that for a few handfuls of seed, they would be happy to carry messages to anyone on the Isle that Lady Áine wished to communicate with.

“Very good, Dubh, I see you’ve found some friends here,” Áine grinned. She walked around inside of the stables until she came to the grainery. “Hmmm… it seems Lord MacNeesh kept the place well-stocked inDEED!” she said aloud, “though I wonder how he managed it all by himself?” She found a feedbag marked “pigeon seed” and scooped out a generous measure which she placed in a tin and gave to the pigeons, who seemed very grateful to have it. Here, she also found a mix of oats, barley, and sorghum which she gave to Dubh, and the mare nickered her thanks.

Áine wandered deeper into the stables and at the far end found stalls for sheep, sows, and a coop for raising hens and ducks and other fowl. On the wall was a note tacked up which read:

“Seed on the floor
fowl galore,
Seed in the tray
all the hens lay.”

Áine chuckled, “It seems MacNeesh had a way with magic.” She took a handful of feed and flung it across the floor, raising a cloud of dust as she did so.

Nothing happened.

“Heh, well, I suppose that one takes a bit of time to work,” she smiled. She poured more feed into the tray, as well, and then went back into the main hallway. Áine wandered into one of the libraries. There were, of course, books from floor to ceiling, their bindings standing at attention in colorful ranks. There was also a large desk in one corner adorned with colorful inlays of oak leaf and acorn around its edges. On top was an ornate ink blotter, quill, ink bottles of many colors, parchments, sealing wax, and other such supplies. A large over-stuffed chair with side table, oil lamp, and tobacco humidor stood next to a small fireplace in another corner. The room was neat and tidy, and Áine thought she might spend many pleasant hours here when the snows came. But now was not the time for that, she must see to the rest of this household and glen.

Back in the main hallway she wandered deeper into the hillside home looking for a passageway that would lead her outdoors to the southeast, where the garden MacNeesh had written about was located. After opening several doors and discovering various rooms filled with all manner of things, she finally found the side hall leading out.

It was a fairly large garden; concentric circles of planting beds cut by pathways in eight directions, aligned with the directions of the winds, or the sun’s path. Each bed had been built up, above ground level, and shored with mortared river stones of various colors. Surrounding the outside ring of beds was a rounded stone wall built of the same stones as the beds themselves, and this was built to the height of a man’s shoulders, a good height to deter cattle and other animals from entering and destroying the garden. All along the wall were espaliered fruit trees… apple, pear, cherry… all were heavy with fruit not quite ripe. Another few weeks until the chill winds came, and with it, the harvest. The stone work of wall and planting beds was very well made; it had withstood uncounted years of seasons and changing weather.

Áine strolled ’round the garden in a clockwise direction, gradually coming to the center where she stood before some sort of circular table or platform. She didn’t quite know what to make of it, though it was carved with all sorts of magical symbols and pictures of animals and birds of all kinds. The thought of stepping upon it seemed somehow wrong, and so she didn’t, and for the time being turned her attention to the rest of the garden and surveyed it over all.

The garden wouldn’t amount to much this year, overgrown and late in the season as it was, but it would be enough. It was full of volunteers from many seasons’ worth of fallen seed. There would be much needing pruning and thinning, and so she threw herself into work. Gardening is difficult work, hard labor, but it is the kind of work which requires strong muscles and leaves the mind free to think its thoughts.

Áine wondered about MacNeesh… the kind of man he was… the reasons he abandoned this glen, his home. She thought about her own reasons for entering these mountains, as well. If asked, it seemed doubtful even she could explain exactly. Somewhere out here, she knew, was someone who awaited her… but whether it was a memory, dream, or reality, even she couldn’t say.

“The world shows a different face among these peaks… sometimes real… sometimes unreal,” she whispered, though there was no one save the wind to hear her. She thought about all the people she’d known, both human and otherwise, their proclivity toward either kindness or meanness; how some were no better than animals, heh, the animals would be insulted by some… how others set themselves up as judges over others when their own actions were blind to themselves.

Áine muttered, “Aye, the roads were full of wolves in those days, nearly all of them two-legged, and just as dangerous and deadly.” She was glad to be away from others, out here in the mountains. She wasn’t a bit frightened being alone out here. Some in the past had made the mistake of thinking her frail and vulnerable, without protection. They soon learned otherwise. Oh, she’d been trapped a time or two, but she’d always found a way to free herself, and the two-legged wolves had been made to regret tangling with her.

Just then, the hair stood up on the nape of her neck; she felt like she was being watched. She stood and did a scan of the area, but found nothing… which was, itself, unusual. Someone or something was out there in the hills watching, but whoever or whatever it was, it was capable of shielding itself from her probes. And that usually meant danger.

She slowly made her way back into the hillside, acting as if nothing whatsoever was amiss, yet every one of her senses was acutely aware. Once inside, she ran quickly to every outside door that she knew of and secured them with bolt or latch, then placed magical guards about the place as well. Locked within the hill might keep her safe, but knowing there was one outside who could block her scans, and not being where she might observe this one, did little to make her feel secure. Besides, she couldn’t stay locked within forever, could she?

“All there is for it is to make a map of this house, so that I might know its passageways and rooms as well as I know my own hands,” she whispered to no one. Áine went to the library she’d visited before and got the parchments and quill and ink, and then began at the lakeside door, drawing a crude map of the interior of the house, marking on it rooms, bends in the main hallway, and exits from the hill. She worked on this map for days.

By the third day of map-making, Áine was fairly sure she had covered most of the house, though she knew in a place like this there could easily be hidden passageways or corridors throughout the mountains that her map did not encompass. It was on this third day of map-making as she was having mid-morning tea that she heard someone knocking on the front door. She hurried to it and threw the door open fully prepared to magically bind whoever was there in an instant, but when she flung the door open, no one was there, and looking down, she saw footprints in the sand, as well as a parcel left on her doorstep.

The footprints appeared to go from west to east through the glen, stopping only at her doorstep to drop off the parcel and then hurrying quickly into the woods on the other side. They were made by man-sized boots. Áine picked up the parcel, scanned it briefly, then opened it. Inside were a freshly killed pheasant, two swan eggs, wild mint, thyme, sage, parsley, and some carved bone fishing hooks and sewing needles. She smiled. “Well, that was nice of Him… I suppose now I’ll need to give a gift in return… but… hmmm… perhaps if I left something by the lake, He’d find it?” She searched the surrounding peaks, but found not a trace of him. Aloud she called out, “Beannacht! Guím an t-ádh leat!” [Blessings! May good luck go with you!] Then she turned and went back inside.

She cleaned and dressed the pheasant and put it in the oven to roast. The swan eggs she brought to the stable, where she found several dozen chickens and ducks running around loose. Áine giggled and shooed them all back into the coop on the far side of the stables and closed the gate so they wouldn’t get out again. She placed the swan eggs into one of the hen’s nests, replacing the chicken eggs with them, and brought the chicken eggs back to the kitchen. She’d now have fresh eggs every day, thanks to MacNeesh. She pumped water from the pump at the sink and filled two buckets. One she brought to Dubhealaín, the other to the fowl.

Áine returned to the kitchen and sat down at the table, thinking. The aroma of roasting pheasant wafted around the kitchen. She began to think of what sort of gift she should give to her mysterious benefactor, and she also wondered how he’d found his way into this glen, if MacNeesh had protected it with enchantments as it said in the letter. There was more to this mysterious stranger than meets the eyes, but not having caught a glimpse of Him, she had no idea what sorts of things He might need. Then again, there were things that all Beings have need of, no matter their circumstances or what station of life they may occupy, by chance or by birth or by their own efforts of labor. She picked up the parcel and opened it again, then took out one of the bone sewing needles.

She went to the library where she’d left the house map. She studied the map carefully, then walked down the main hallway, perhaps forty paces, and turned left. She opened the door to a room containing cloth, a loom, thread, yarn, and other notions. She selected some heavy green canvas and began constructing a strong knapsack with numerous pockets on the outside, and she put loops of cloth here and there, suitable for tying on any number of things. She melted some parafin and soaked the knapsack in it so as to render it waterproof, and set this to dry. Then she went into one of the bedrooms and opened a wardrobe.

She took out several shirts, trousers, and a green woolen cloak. On a fine shirt of saffron linen she began an embroidery. She threaded the needle with hairs from her own head and began sewing an intricate design across the back of it, humming an ancient tune as she did so. Her fingers moved deftly and so quickly it seemed a blur. When she finished, the design on the shirt could have been mistaken for a sepia tone photograph of the glen, the lake, the surrounding mountains, and her hillside home on the island. It was truly beautiful, and she hoped He would like it.

She carefully packed everything into the knapsack. Into the side pockets she placed tins of tobacco, a new clay pipe, an ivory comb, a pair of sharp scissors, a shaving razor, a small mirror, and a packet of chocolate bars wrapped in waxed paper. She placed the embroidered shirt in last so that it would be the first thing He saw when He opened it. Almost as an afterthought, she added a silver penny whistle, tying it to the top of the pack with a leather thong. She hoisted the pack and carried it outside to the shore of the lake, and left it in plain sight. Then she went back inside and enjoyed a delicious dinner of roast pheasant, potatoes, and corn. The next morning, she saw that the knapsack had been taken, her gift accepted.

She didn’t know it, but the sight of the embroidery had made Him weep, so touched was He by her gift, for He saw it for what it was.

Introduction

Saturday, April 6th, 2002

Once you have tasted the Twilight, you will have a strong desire to Understand it.

BEING a place of both darkness and light, and yet both and neither of those, the Windlass Mountains are an unusual place for the traveler venturing through them, and there are treasures here to be found among its peaks for those bold enough to venture in search of them. It is said that there was once an ancient city here built by the Shining Ones, made of crystal and sapphire, and many adventurers have entered these mountains in search of it and the magics it holds.

Legend also has it that somewhere among these mountains lies a beautiful and romantic lake whose waters have many magical properties. In ancient times it was said that a door in a rock somewhere near this lake is found open upon a certain day every year. Those who have the curiosity and courage to enter are conducted by a secret passage through the mountain, which terminates in a small island in the center of the lake.

On this island is a most enchanted garden with the choicest fruits and flowers and a most wonderous Tree. The island is inhabited by Áine, a Being who is called Twilight’s GateKeeper. She is dressed in a fine grey robe, bound by a golden girdle; her hair is long, and wild, and the color of fire, like red gold; her face is pale and often appears melancholy; her eyes are oceanic blue, changing in color with the light or perhaps with her mood. She is often seen in a golden boat on the lake, combing her hair with a silver comb. She is ageless, timeless, and it is whispered among the inhabitants of the Isle of Dreams that she is very wise, and very magical. Do not mistake the Lady Áine as completely benevolent and harmless, however… legend also has it that some who have ventured into these mountains have never been seen again.

Travelers, the watch word here is “expect the unexpected”… in a land of Twilight, anything can and does happen. Teleportation and magic do not always act as expected, and it is thought that this is possibly due to the geology of the place. Legend has it, however, that these mountains are replete with the Old Magics which few remember or know how to work with, and there are old relics from a more magical time, and there are places among these mountains from both Memory and Dream.

+++ Look to this Book for further information as you progress through these mountains. Its pages are magical and new writings appear here from time to time to aid you in your journey. +++

May the Lady watch over you, and good luck!

THERE ARE VISIONS, THERE ARE MEMORIES
THERE ARE ECHOES OF THUNDERING HOOVES
THERE ARE FIRES, THERE IS LAUGHTER
THERE’S THE SOUND OF A THOUSAND DOVES

IN THE VELVET OF THE DARKNESS
BY THE SILHOUETTE OF SILENT TREES
THEY ARE WATCHING, THEY ARE WAITING
THEY ARE WITNESSING LIFE’S MYSTERIES

CASCADING STARS ON THE SLUMBERING HILLS
THEY ARE DANCING AS FAR AS THE SEA
RIDING O’ER THE LAND, YOU CAN FEEL ITS GENTLE HAND
LEADING ON TO ITS DESTINY

TAKE ME WITH YOU ON THIS JOURNEY
WHERE THE BOUNDARIES OF TIME ARE NOW TOSSED
IN CATHEDRALS OF THE FOREST
IN THE WORDS OF THE TONGUES NOW LOST

FIND THE ANSWERS, ASK THE QUESTIONS
FIND THE ROOTS OF AN ANCIENT TREE
TAKE ME DANCING, TAKE ME SINGING
I’LL RIDE ON TILL THE MOON MEETS THE SEA.

*Night Ride Across the Caucasus - Loreena McKennitt