THE SEA HAG by David Drake

“But Dennis?” Chester continued. “They do not laugh at you now.”

“By heaven, they’d better not!” the youth muttered. The sword trembled with the fierceness of his grip on it.

He shook himself and managed to chuckle, though the sound as well was shaky. What was done, was done.

“At any rate, Chester,” he said, “it’s good steel.”

“It is that indeed, Dennis,” the robot agreed. “And there is a good man to use it.”

Dennis patted his companion in a rush of pride. “Let’s go see what this house is doing here,” he said.

CHAPTER 41

The grass at this end of the field was uncropped. The long stems were bent in graceful curves by the weight of their bristly seed heads. Thistles shot up like dark green pagodas, eight feet high and crowned with splendid purple flowers. Insects buzzed and quivered within their miniature landscape.

Ten yards from the front of the house, Dennis set his hand on his swordhilt and hesitated while he decided whether or not to unsheathe the weapon. The door opened.

The Founder’s Sword trilled like a mating frog as Dennis swept it from its scabbard.

“Oh, heaven save me, noble prince!” gasped the old woman, throwing her hands to her cheeks to amplify the amazed circle of her mouth. “Oh! You mustn’t be so frightening to an old body as me—begging your pardon, that is, for speaking so when it’s not my place.”

“Who are you?” Dennis demanded.

He lowered the point of his sword. Had it been smaller, he might have shielded it behind his body; but it was too long for that, and sheathing the blade again would have been as embarrassing a production as drawing it in the first place.

“Me, noble prince?” the old woman said, pulling out her drab skirts as she curtsied. “Oh, I’m no call for such as one as yourself to notice. Mother Grimes, they call me—”

She looked up. “Used to call me, I might better say. When there were folk here, and not all traipsing off to the fine city and leaving poor Mother Grimes to her loneliness.”

“Off to Rakastava?” Dennis said, frowning as he tried to understand the situation. “But then why didn’t you go too?”

Mother Grimes curtsied again. “Ah, noble prince, but there’s the question. It’s my sons, you see, headstrong lads that they are. They left me years ago to find their own way in the world, but it’s home they’ll return some day, for I’m sure of it. And what will become of them if I’m not here to greet them, tell me that?”

Dennis shook his head, as if to clear cobwebs from his brain. He could understand what the old woman was saying, but… Rakastava had existed for—from before men settled on Earth. And what about Malbawn and—

“But noble prince,” Mother Grimes was saying. “Forgive me my presumption, for I know my hut is unworthy of your highness’ feet, but—will you not come inside and talk with me for only a moment? It will remind me so of my boys, fine young lads that they were when they left me to seek their fortune.”

Dennis opened his mouth to refuse. The old woman held out her work-worn hands. The youth thought of his own mother, weeping for her son and for herself now in Emath.

“I have cider, noble prince,” Mother Grimes wheedled. “Fresh squeezed and cool in my root cellar.”

Dennis wiped his brow with the back of his left hand. He looked down at Chester and said, “Well, she seems glad to see us…?”

“She is that, Dennis.”

“All right,” Dennis said. “A mug of cider would be very good, mistress.”

“After you, then, noble prince,” Mother Grimes said, gesturing toward the door. Her beaming expression was enough to beautify even a face as ugly as hers.

Dennis shook his head as natural caution reasserted itself. “No,” he said brusquely. “You go first.”

“It’s not for me to take precedence over such as you,” said the old woman with a shake of her head. “But if the noble prince insists…”

Bowing to him, she stepped back through the doorway.

Dennis followed her, looking around sharply. It was just as the mirror had shown it, except that the lines of things—the stove, the cracks in the floorboards and walls—didn’t seem quite as crisp as they ought to.

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