The Book Of Three
11
     
    Flight Through the Hills
     
    AT FIRST, TARAN OFFERED
    to let Eilonwy ride Melyngar, but the girl refused. “I can walk as well as any of you,” she cried, so angrily that Taran made no more of it; he had learned to be wary of the girl's sharp tongue. It was agreed that the white mare would carry the weapons taken from Spiral Castle--- except the sword Dyrnwyn, of which Eilonwy had appointed herself guardian.
    Scratching in the dirt with his dagger point, Fflewddur Fflam showed Taran the path he intended to follow. “The hosts of the Horned King will surely stay in the Valley of Ystrad. It's the easiest way for an army on the march. Spiral Castle was here,” he added, with an angry jab to mark the spot, “west of the River Ystrad. Now, the shortest road would be straight north over these hills.”
    “That is the one we must take,” said Taran, trying hard to make sense of Fflewddur's crisscrossing lines.
    “Wouldn't recommend it, my friend. We should be passing a little too near Annuvin. Arawn's strongholds are close to Spiral Castle; and I suggest we keep clear of them. No, what I believe we should do is this: stay on the high ground of the western bank of the Ystrad; we can go quite directly, since we needn't follow the valley itself. That way, we can avoid both Annuvin and the Horned King. The four of us can move faster than heavily armed warriors. We shall come out well ahead of them, not too far from Caer Dathyl. From there, we make a dash for it--- and our task is done.” Fflewddur straightened up, beaming with satisfaction. “There you have it,” he said, wiping the dirt from his dagger. “A brilliant strategy. My own war leader couldn't have arranged it better.”
    “Yes,” said Taran, his head still muddled with the bard's talk of high ground and western banks, “that sounds very reasonable.”
     
    THEY DESCENDED
    to a broad, sun-swept meadow. The morning had turned bright and warm; dew still clung to bending blades of grass. At the head of the travelers strode Fflewddur, stepping out briskly on his long, spindly shanks. The harp jogged on his back; his shabby cloak was rolled over his shoulder. Eilonwy, hair disheveled by the breeze, the great black sword slung behind her, followed next, with Gurgi immediately after. So many new leaves and twigs had stuck in Gurgi's hair that he had begun to look like a walking beaver dam; he loped along, swinging his arms, shaking his head from side to side, moaning and muttering. Holding Melyngar's bridle, Taran marched last in line. Except for the weapons lashed to the horse's saddle, these travelers might have been on a spring ramble. Eilonwy chattered gaily; now and then Fflewddur burst into a snatch of song. Taran alone was uneasy. To him, the bright morning felt deceptively gentle; the golden trees seemed to cover dark shadows. He shuddered even in the warmth. His heart was troubled, too, as he watched his companions. In Caer Dallben, he had dreamed of being a hero. But dreaming, he had come to learn, was easy; and at Caer Dallben no lives depended on his judgment. He longed for Gwydion's strength and guidance. His own strength, he feared, was not equal to his task. He turned once for a last look in the direction of Spiral Castle, Gwydion's burial mound. Over the hill crest, stark against the clouds, rose two figures on horseback.
    Taran shouted and gestured for his companions to take cover in the woods. Melyngar galloped forward. In another moment, they were all crouching in a thicket. The horsemen followed along the crest, too far away for Taran to see their faces clearly; but from their rigid postures he could guess at the livid features and dull eyes of the Cauldron-Born.
    “How long have they been behind us?” asked Fflewddur. “Have they seen us?”
    Taran looked cautiously through the screen of leaves. He pointed toward the slope. “There is your answer,” he said.
    From the crest the pale Cauldron warriors had turned their horses toward the

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