Heriot

Heriot by Margaret Mahy Page B

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Authors: Margaret Mahy
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momentarily, they all seemed to shrink from him.
    ‘Some Hero!’ Heriot said, directing his smile at Carlyon.
    ‘Just for a moment my breath was quite taken away from me, but I can clarify things,’ Lord Glass said quickly. ‘Lord King, this is none other than Heriot Tarbas, the boy who …’
    The crowned King turned sharply, interrupting him.
    ‘What? The one who …’
    ‘That very one, Lord King. Right at this moment he might look like a scrap left over from the battle, but, I promise you, he has the power. Dr Feo will confirm it. Heriot Tarbas, it seems as if you have had some adventures since I saw you last.’
    Still partly supported by Prince Dysart, Heriot continued to stare at Carlyon, Hero of Hoad. He dared not look at the Magician – that shadow of a creature – just a little beyond the King and the Hero.
    ‘Too many adventures,’ he said at last. ‘Too many to tell about. I’m nothing but a secret man.’ He saw the Hero’s tight expression alter, and saw his hand, which had moved to hover over the hilt of a sword that hung at his side, move back just a little. ‘I climbed and fell,’ Heriot said. ‘Broke a rib maybe.’
    He barely understood what he was saying or why he was saying it. It was partly because he feared that, even in that grand company, the Hero might strike him down. Yet, even as he lied, he felt the secret he shared with Carlyon suddenly twist and turn into a sort of power within him, for he knewsomething about the Hero of Hoad that no one else knew, and the knowledge was not to be carelessly spilled and wasted.
    ‘I think, perhaps, I should take Heriot Tarbas to the Doctors’ tent,’ Lord Glass said. ‘After all, he’s from my country. His family are my people.’
    ‘And I’m coming with him,’ said Prince Dysart quickly. ‘After all, I’m the one who found him. I rescued him.’
    ‘I’ve sat on his windowsill and looked in at him a thousand times,’ Heriot told them once again, but he was telling himself too.
    ‘Put him on my horse,’ Lord Glass told Dysart, and Dysart bent, cupping his hands so Heriot could put his foot on the small platform of locked fingers and hoist himself high into a saddle so grand that in a curious way it seemed to Heriot he had lifted himself into a safe room with invisible walls.
    ‘I’ll take him on,’ Lord Glass said. ‘Prince Dysart, you’ve been a friend to him, so walk with us.’
    Heriot felt himself hunching forward, longing to lie along the horse’s neck. And as they left he heard Carlyon the Hero of Hoad saying, ‘Perhaps he is some sort of Magician, but did you see that smile he gave us? He’s a monster as well as a Magician.’
    By now Heriot thought he might be right.

17
On Being Protected
    L innet would remember for ever the way Dysart behaved when he came upon Heriot being beaten and kicked by other boys. They had been walking together, arguing and joking, speculating about the possibilities of peace – a peace that would last. They had been arguing in a curious, light-hearted way, laughing at one another’s arguments, and it had seemed to Linnet that their voices were weaving a pattern of thought in the air around them as they danced along through a little forest of ideas.
    And then, within seconds it seemed, Dysart forgot her completely. He had leaped in to save the strange beggar boy as if the boy were a friend of his. And the beggar sat up, bleeding, bewildered and staring, covering one of his eyes as if seeing Dysart with both eyes was too much for him. Afterwards, though she followed them and even asked questions, it was as if she had ceased to exist. Linnet was taken aback to find how deeply this sudden exclusion hurt her feelings and how angry she was with Dysart, who was apparently able to forget her so easily. When, later that night, back in her parents’ tent, Linnet was told that she and her mother were to go home to Hagen in three days’ time, she was delighted.
    ‘I’ve had enough of it here,’

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