
come—together alone, the two of them.
The oaken board was there, and Ergris began to woo it aside. Yet even as he did, the possibilities made
him uneasy—magical traps, hidden deaths—humans had been known to lose their minds, or simply
change them. Most of them were horrible creatures. He pressed on, caressing the wood with his mind.
Ergris knew no fear in his own forest, unlike human kings, who feared to go beyond their own
bedchambers without armor and weapons. And Ergris considered himself the wisest, strongest leshy king
of all. The Old One—Ramins, as he called himself—was wise in many ways, and he had taught Ergris
such things as no leshy king before him had been taught. But Ergris had initiated the talks knowing the
risks were great. He still recalled the first two leshy who had tried to climb one on the other into the hut's
only window, their petrified bodies lying piled up next to the wall for weeks, until Ergris had come with a
party in the deepest depths of night to take them away.
But it was not curiosity, posturing, or even lack of good sense that finally brought Ergris out of the forest
to confront old Ramins at the stream one day. In part the attraction was the wizard's own potent aura,
but more, Ergris was drawn to the other aura that came from within the human's dwelling, that of
something made by the gods themselves—a blade of some kind, Ergris was certain. He had sensed it
with his leshy spirit the way one might smell ripe cherries on the mid-summer winds, incredibly sweet,
alluring. He could not help his fascination any more than the leaves of plants could resist the sunlight.
None of the leshy could, until two of them had been turned to stone.
The Old One had finally shown Ergris the Blade, even let him touch it several times—out of respect for
Ergris' bravery, his wisdom, and, Ramins explained, out of gratitude for his good company. The sword's
short blade shined with a glow that persisted, if faintly, even in darkness, at least to Ergris' leshy eyes. Its
hilt was thick and black and smooth, too thick in fact for a leshy's tiny hands to properly wrap around.
Ergris had never known or imagined the like of that magical blade, or the Old One, or the visits they had
had together.
The brothers of the council had deemed the whole relationship utterly foolish and worthless—no good
could ever come from contact with man, even this wizard-man. And the wizard had raised a dampening
spell outside his house soon enough, which kept even leshy from sensing the Blade beyond the four walls
that kept it. Without that subtle lure many others had begun to question Ergris's strange conduct as well.
But Ergris was King, and Ergris had proven them wrong.
He cleared the past from his mind and focussed on the present as he leaned against the center of the
cabin door. He smoothed his voice, adjusted his tone, caressing each band of the board's raw grain until
it rose just high enough. Then he pushed the door open as the board dropped away; he picked it up,
touching it gently with his hands now, then set the piece against the wall just inside the door.
Ergris stood still a moment, his eyes adjusting to the dimly lit interior of the hut. The Old One was seated
in his chair at his table, head slumped forward onto the pages of an open book, a quill clutched in his
bony fingers. His short staff of birch-wood lay on the floor beside him. The aura of power that had been
Ramins' was gone, Ergris sensed, completely and forever.
I have lost a great companion, he thought, forcing himself to think it, since thinking such things of
creatures like men was strange and difficult even now. But the Old One had come to treat the forest and
its rightful occupants with the favor and regard they deserved, and was the only human any leshy now
living had ever shared thoughts and fruit with, so far as Ergris knew. . . .
Ergris began to lose his thoughts, his nature overruling his mind as the sweetness of a very different aura,