Ben choked back whatever he was about to say next and stared. Deus ex machinal “You speak Latin?” he asked in disbelief.
“And I read Greek,” Dirk answered.
Ben nodded, wishing as he did that he might solve even a small part of the mystery of the cat. “Did you know ahead of time that the wood nymphs were going to be destroyed?” he asked finally.
The cat took its time answering. “I knew that the demon would not destroy you.”
“Because?”
“Because you are the High Lord.”
“A High Lord no one recognizes, however.”
“A High Lord who won’t recognize himself.”
Ben hesitated. He wanted to say, “I do, but my appearance has been changed and my medallion has been stolen, and so on and so forth.” But he didn’t because this was a road they had traveled down already. He simply said, “If the demon couldn’t recognize me, then how did you know he wouldn’t destroy me?”
Dirk almost seemed to shrug. “The medallion.”
Ben nodded. “Then I think I should get rid of the medallion. I think the medallion caused what happened back there — the appearance of the demon, the destruction of the wood nymphs, all of it. I think I should chuck it as far away as I can, Dirk.”
Dirk rose and. stretched. “I think you should see what the mud puppy wants first,” he said.
His gaze shifted and Ben’s followed. Rain and gloom almost hid the small, dark shape that crouched a dozen feet away on a scattering of pine needles. It was an odd-looking creature, vaguely reminiscent of a beaver with long ears. It stared back at him with eyes that glowed bright yellow in the dark.
“What is it?” he asked Dirk.
“A wight that scavenges and cleans up after other creatures — a sort of four-legged housekeeper.”
“What does it want?”
Dirk managed to look put upon. “Why ask me? Why not ask the mud puppy?”
Ben sighed. Why not, indeed? “Can I do something for you?” he asked the motionless shape.
The mud puppy dropped back down on all fours and started away, turned back momentarily, started away, and turned back again.
“Don’t tell me,” Ben advised Dirk. “It wants us to follow.”
“Very well, I won’t tell you,” Dirk promised.
They followed the mud puppy through the forest, angling north once more away from the city of Elderew and the people of the lake country. The rain lessened to a slow drizzle, and the clouds began to break, allowing some light to seep through to the forestland. The chill continued to hang in the air, but Ben was so numb with cold already that he no longer noticed. He plodded after the mud puppy in silence, wondering vaguely how the creature got its name, wondering where they were going and why, what he should do about the medallion, and most of all what he should do about Dirk. The cat trailed after him, picking its way with cautious steps and graceful leaps, avoiding the mud and the puddles, and working very hard at keeping itself clean.
Just like your typical cat, Ben thought.
Except that Edgewood Dirk was anything but a typical cat, of course, and it didn’t matter how long or how hard he protested otherwise. The real question was, what was Ben going to do about him? Traveling with Dirk was like traveling with that older person who always made you feel like a child and kept telling you not to be one. Dirk was obviously there for a reason, but Ben was beginning to wonder if it was a reason that would serve any useful purpose.
The hardwood trees of the high forest began to give way to swamp as they approached the far north boundary of Elderew. The land began to slope away, and mist to appear in long, winding trailers. The gloom thickened and the chill dampness turned to a clinging warmth. Ben was not comforted.
The mud puppy continued on without slowing.
“Do these creatures do this sort of thing often?” Ben whispered at last to Dirk. “Ask you to follow them, I mean?”
“Never,” Dirk responded and sneezed.
Ben scowled back at the cat. I hope you catch pneumonia, he thought darkly.