Edith Pattou - Fire Arrow
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Fire Arrow
Edith Pattou
Table of Contents
Title Page
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
What Has Gone Before...
Crann's Map
ONE
TWO
THREE
FOUR
FIVE
SIX
SEVEN
EIGHT
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
SEVENTEEN
EIGHTEEN
NINETEEN
TWENTY
TWENTY-ONE
TWENTY-TWO
TWENTY-THREE
Copyright 1998 by Edith Pattou
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to the following address:
Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.
www.HarcourtBooks.com
First Magic Carpet Books edition 1999
First published 1998
Magic Carpet Books is a trademark of Harcourt, Inc., registered in the United States of America and/or other jurisdictions.
The Library of Congress has cataloged an earlier edition as follows:
Pattou, Edith.
Fire arrow: the second song of Eirren/by Edith Pattou.
p. cm.(Songs of Eirren)
"Magic Carpet Books."
Summary: While on the trail of her father's murderers, the young archer from Hero's Song discovers her birthrighta magical arrowand the sinister doings of an evil sorcerer.
[1. Fantasy. 2. RevengeFiction.]
I. Title. II. Series: Pattou, Edith. Songs of Eirren.
PZ7.P278325Fi 1998
[Fic]dc21 97-40634
ISBN-13: 978-0152-05530-1 ISBN-10: 0-15-205530-4
Text set in Granjon
Designed by Kaelin Chappell
Map by Barry Age
E G H F D
Printed in the United States of America
For Vita
I am a wave of the deep.
from The Song of Amergin
Irish poet, ca. 1270 B.C.
(translation by A. P. Graves)
What Has Gone Before...
On a small farmhold in the land of Eirren there lived a gardener named Collun. He dwelt quietly in the village of Inkberrow with his mother, father, and sister; and his prized possession was a trine with a lucky blue stone embedded in the handle. When his sister, Nessa, went to visit her aunt in the city of Temair, seat of the royal family, she mysteriously disappeared, and it fell to Collun to find and rescue her.
Forging his trine into a dagger, Collun set forth, accompanied on his journey by the aspiring bard Talisen; Brie, a female archer with a quest of her own; an Ellyl prince called Silien; and Crann, the wizard of the trees.
As Collun and his company made their way through Eirren, facing many perils, they learned that Medb, ruler of the evil kingdom of Scath, which lay to the north of Eirren, had kidnapped Nessa and was in pursuit of Collun as well. Medb believed the brother and sister to be in possession of a shard of a great stone of power called the Cailceadon Lir.
Back in the days of the hero-king Amergin, there was an evil sorcerer named Cruachan, who by trickery and murder acquired the Cailceadon Lir. With the stone he created a host of malformed, deadly creatures that laid waste to Eirren; among these creatures was the loathsome Firewurme, Naid, which ultimately turned, on and destroyed Cruachan himself.
It was the hero-king Amergin who retrieved the stone and wielded it to subdue the creatures and to trap them inside the very cave from which Cruachan had first summoned them. During the sealing of the cave, the Cailceadon Lir shattered into three pieces.
One shard of the stone was taken safely to Eirren and was guarded well over the years by the reigning kings arid queens of Eirren. The other two pieces of the Cailceadon Lir were lost.
In the early days of the reign of King Gwynn and Queen Aine, Medb found one of the missing shards of the Cailceadon Lir, and it became her desire to reunite all three pieces, thereby gaining unlimited power to pursue her evil ends. Believing the girl Nessa to be the link to the third shard, Medb kidnapped Nessa and set the monstrous Firewurme to guard her on the isle of Thule.
As Collun journeyed to Thule, he learned the long-hidden secret of his parentagethat the cold and remote blacksmith Goban, who had raised him, was not his father. Cuillean, the legendary hero of Eirren, was his mother's first husband and Collun's true father. He also learned that the stone in his dagger was the last of the three shards of the Cailceadon Lir.
While Collun and Brie, the archer, made their way across the forsaken land of Scath to rescue Nessa, Medb was mounting a massive invasion of Eirren using Scathians as well as a host of morgs, evil creatures with yellow eyes who dwelled in the island kingdoms of Usna and Uneach.
And so did Collun face the Firewurme, with its lethal ooze that burned like fire. Sorely injured by the creature, Collun finally killed it, using the dagger with the lucky stone embedded in the handle. Finding that Naid was also guardian of Medb's shard of the Cailceadon Lir, Collun took it away with him, and his defeat of the wurme and the taking of the stone caused Medb's planned invasion of Eirren to collapse.
Given the name "Wurme-killer," Collun journeyed back to the dun of his true father, Cuillean, and there had his dagger forged back into a trine. His injuries slowly healed, and he and Brie found a measure of peace as they brought the long-deserted land around the dun back to life.
ONE
The Wyll
What think you of revenge?" Collun asked the soldier Kled, though his eyes were on Brie. She smiled to herself.
"Revenge? Why there's nothing I like better than a good tale of revenge, dripping with blood and avenged honor and all." Kled handed Collun his cup of chicory for refilling. "Have you one to tell?" he asked.
Collun shook his head, impatient. "No, I am speaking of true revenge, outside of books and stories."
Kled looked puzzled. "Well, I have had no experience with it myself, but certainly if one has been sorely wronged, then revenge is a just and honorable"
Brie let out a laugh. "Wrong answer, Kled."
"Why wrong?"
"Collun wanted you to say that revenge is a contemptible thing, fit only for cowards and scalawags."
"Why?"
"Because of me."
"You?" Kled's face was a study in bewilderment.
Brie's smile died. "Because I am sworn to revenge myself on the men who killed my father."
"In truth? How many men?" Kled asked, his eyes kindling with interest.
"There were twenty or more, all Scathians, but I would be content with the lives of three."
Collun let out a sound of disgust and threw the dregs of the chicory on the fire, making it hiss.
Brie ignored him. "Two who delivered the deathblows. And a third, whose orders they followed. When the killing was done it was he who came down off his horse to ensure they had done it well." Brie's voice was steady.
"By Amergin," Collun interrupted, "can neither of you see the folly? Ending the lives of these men will change nothing. The only one changed will be you, Brie. Remember the tale of Casiope, the archer? Revenge is as an arrow; it will surely return one day and pierce the one who shoots it."
Brie glared at Collun. She started to say something but bit it back. There was an awkward silence.
Kled cleared his throat. "Perhaps I should brew another pan of chicory, or have we all had enough?" But neither Collun nor Brie responded.
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