VII. The Feast
The cheering and
battleground celebrations of the First Legion continued for another few
minutes, during which Thomas was invited into the center of the clearing to sit
next to the fallen Nathaia Iór. He did so warily, finding a spot on the grass
relatively unspotted by blood and leaning away from the tattered wings and
broken claws. The mice had begun planting tiny torches all around the clearing
to ward away the shadows of night. Their lights cast the brambles and briars in
shades of orange and red. Thomas appreciated the light and the warmth both, as
by the battle’s end night had fully descended upon the wooded hills.
He sat cross-legged on
the grass and set his satchel next to him. Immediately the Mouse Knights
surrounded him, jumping up on his legs and knees and congregating on all sides.
Thomas saw that most of the First Legion were hearty and vigorous mice in the
prime of their lives, just like Cathán, though here and there he spotted a few
whose whiskers drooped a little and whose tails had lost just a bit of their
spring. These elder-mice tended to keep their distance from Thomas, though he
couldn’t tell if they did so out of distrust or respect.
He also couldn’t tell
if a mouse was a boy or a girl until he or she spoke. Cathán was quick to
explain the many minor distinguishing features of male and female mice, but his
descriptions were lost to Thomas’s eyes, which saw instead just a great
gathering of small furry excitable friends. The lads carrying banners and
acorn-horns were particularly entertaining, each trying to impress their
captain and his new human friend with acrobatics and short songs and tricks.
Thomas laughed and basked in the unexpected attention.
While he sat in their
midst, the First Legion made quick work of the corpse of the Nathaia Iór,
wrapping its wings around its sinuous torso and lashing the two tails together.
Thomas watched in gruesome fascination as a group of the mice placed large
orange leaves over the serpent’s eyes and used thorns from the nearby bushes to
pin the leaves into the scaly flesh around its sockets.
“The Nathaia Iór has no
eyelids, it seems,” Cathán explained. He’d taken his now-customary position
atop Thomas’s left shoulder. “It never closed its eyes. That perhaps explains
its uncontrollable rage and the redness of its glare. Still, it was a worthy
foe to vanquish, and I would not disturb it so except that its dead gaze
frightens some of the younger mice.”
“What are you planning
on doing with it?” Thomas asked. The mice of the First Legion had begun rolling
the long body out of the clearing.
“Well, first some of my
boys will take it back to our outpost; it’s only a short distance from here.
After that, they’ll dispatch a messenger to the Whiskered Woods to summon a
mouse-mage and a cleric and a scribe. They’ll oversee the dismemberment and
preservation of the Nathaia Iór, and they’ll ensure that it’s all done with the
greatest respect and care. Their work will likely take a few hours. In the
meantime, the rest of us will return to the city to give our full report. When the
mage and cleric and scribe are finished with their work, they’ll present the
polished skull of the felled beast before the Royal Seat of Luchamhá in honor
of our victory here this evening.”
Cathán patted Thomas
behind the ear. “At that point, we’ll be well into our cups and feast-platters,
my friend!” he said. “That is, if you’ll deign to accompany the First Legion as
we make our report. You were instrumental in this battle and are owed much
respect and accolades. Still, if you need to be moving on, I’ll understand.”
Thomas stomach growled
at the thought of food, and he realized how hungry he was: hungry and sleepy
both, in fact. He desperately needed to continue in his search for the boar’s
tusk, however, especially now that he had the advantage of sneaking up on the
boar while it slept. He opened his mouth to say as much.
“You know,” came Edan’s
voice from above, “it really wouldn’t be the same without you.” Thomas realized
that the mouse still stood on his head. He’d grown used to the weight in all
the commotion. “Not the same at all without the Feaster of Honor.”
“The Feaster of Honor?”
“Aye,” said Edan, his
tail swishing through Thomas’s hair. “You brought us to victory, after all. You
and the captain will be hailed as heroes by all the citizens of the Thistledown
Kingdom. The feast will be extravagant and joyous. You’ll be named the Feaster
of Honor, both for your role in the battle and for your size—I’d wager you
could out-eat a dozen mice without much effort!”
“I suppose that part’s
true,” Thomas began. “But I’m not sure I did all that much during the
battle . . .”
“Nonsense!” cried
Cathán. “Your bravery and quick strikes with your makeshift bramble-sword won
the day! You gave us the inspiration and the energy we needed to prevail,
Thomas, and without you we surely would have been lost. I wouldn’t’ve dared to
take on the Nathaia Iór alone, after all, but I know you were there with me.”
Thomas felt a new
sensation—a feeling of kinship and belonging—settle next to the hunger and
sleepiness simmering in his midsection. He smiled. “Well, you’re my first mouse
friend. And my best mouse friend, at that. I couldn’t leave you to fight on
your own.”
Cathán gave Thomas’s
shoulder a bit of a jig. “So you’ll come to the feast with us?”
Thomas couldn’t see
Cathán’s face, but he could clearly hear the eagerness and the hint of
uncertainty. His smile broadened. “Of course I will, my friend. My tasks can
wait a short while longer. Let’s celebrate our victory!”
The gathered Mouse
Knights cheered. Another acorn song started up, a lively tune that reminded
Thomas of a fiddle song he’d heard at the midsummer bonfire. Cathán and Edan
and many of the other mice tapped their paws and tails in appreciation of the
fine melody.
Presently the Nathaia
Iór’s corpse had been removed from the clearing. The First Legion set about
straightening the trampled grasses and picking up their weapons of war. The
bent darts and cracked shields and splintered swords they tossed into the
brambles, saving only the intact weapons and slinging them through
thread-belts. Then they formed into orderly ranks and marched out of the
clearing toward the south, accompanied by sounding acorn-horns and led by a
torch-bearing vanguard.
At last only Thomas,
Cathán, and Edan remained in the clearing. “Do you mind if we ride with you?”
Cathán asked Thomas. “It’s not far to Luchamhá, but we’ll get there even faster
on your legs. Besides, Edan could use the rest: he’s not as spry as he once
was.”
Thomas chuckled. “I
don’t mind. Hold on tight.” He stood and grabbed his satchel, looping its strap
over his right shoulder. He felt Edan sit down on his head and Cathán lean
against his ear for support. Both mice squeaked their readiness. At that
signal, and after a last glance around the clearing, off Thomas walked,
following about a dozen feet behind the torch-led procession of triumphant
Mouse Knights of the First Legion.
Cathán had spoken true:
Luchamhá was only a mile or so south of the clearing, an easy walk through a
long gentle valley dotted with cedars. The Mouse Knights picked a clear path
between bushes and brambles so that Thomas could follow without trouble. Their
torches, their songs and chants, and the incessant jests and chatter of his two
passengers kept Thomas from worrying overmuch about the shadows surrounding him
or the deepening night or the trials that still awaited him.
The procession slowed
near the leeward slope of a hill thickly covered in pinkish heather and
flowering thistles. When all the Mouse Knights were smartly arranged, the
vanguard carried their banners up to the trunk of a massive, gnarled oak tree
and planted them in the soil among the protruding roots. Next, the horn-blowers
approached and played a soft, distinct, three-note song that seemed to reverberate
off the oak-trunk and repeat throughout the glade. Then the banner-boys and
horn-blowers stepped back into their ranks.
Cathán tapped Thomas on
the shoulder. “If you wouldn’t mind, Thomas,” said the mouse, “could you stride
up there to the Tree of Opening and give the trunk a few sturdy knocks? They’ll
be coming to open the way already, but that’ll let them know we’ve got a guest.
You’ll not find entrance through the normal route, I’m afraid.”
“Okay,” said Thomas, a
little trepidation creeping into his contentment at receiving an invitation to
feast with the mice of the Thistledown Kingdom.
“It’s nothing to worry
about,” Edan added from above. “Our halls are safe and not at all damp or
unpleasant. Just takes a bit of work to get down in them for one of the big
folk.”
That did little to ease
Thomas’s mind, but he followed Cathán’s directions anyway. He skirted the ranks
of the First Legion, stepped up to the base of the sprawling oak, and knocked
thrice upon its rough bark. The knocks resounded and the tree creaked in
response: deep and old, rasping and shuffling, not hollow but filled with life.
It was, surprisingly, not an unfamiliar sound; Thomas was sure he’d heard it
several times before while strolling in the woods, though he’d never thought to
wonder what it was.
The creaking shuddered
through the tree and Thomas looked down. The roots at his feet were moving,
parting like flower-petals instead of writhing like snakes, which had been his
first startled thought. He backed up to clear the way for the tree.
Quickly the roots
unraveled. In hardly a moment they had stretched outward to reveal a deep dark
hole at the base of the trunk, a hole that was a tunnel that was a passage into
the city of the mice. Thomas peered into the hole. He thought he could see it
level out only a few feet down and then continue on underground. Two roots framed
either side like a doorway.
“This is the door to
Luchamhá,” Cathán proudly announced. “The Great Door, in fact, reserved for
special occasions and such. Typically we just squeeze in between the roots.
This will be much nicer; we won’t ruin our battle-wounds by smudging dirt into
them.”
“Are you hurt, Cathán?”
Thomas asked.
The Mouse Knight slid
down Thomas’s arm to land in the crook of his elbow. He waved his free paw,
holding on to Thomas’s shirt with the other. “Nicks and scrapes and nothing
more, my friend. Nothing to be concerned with. Spoils of battle, in fact, and
trophies of a sort. They’ll be sure to impress. We all did rather well in that
regard, in fact. None of my soldiers were injured, but all returned from the
fight with something to show for their efforts.
“Now!” he called out to
the gathered troops. “Mouse Knights of the First Legion! You have fought
bravely, honorably, and have won yourself a great celebration and rest! Let us
go on to the Royal Seat and present our report before the King and the
Queen—and quickly, for I can already smell the feast-fires and hear the
tinkling of the minstrels’ harps! On into the Fair City!”
The gathered mice cheered.
Cathán looked up at Thomas. “In we go first, my friend, and the rest will
follow. Duck your head and mind your elbows, if it’s not too difficult.”
Thomas stepped back up
to the tree. There were no stairs leading down, so he crouched and then dropped
through the Great Door, dirtying his left hand but otherwise passing through
unscathed. He couldn’t stand fully, so he walked forward with his head ducked
and his shoulders bent forward. The passage was as Edan had described: not damp
or unpleasant, but instead dry and well-packed and smooth and straight.
Ahead, Thomas saw a
flickering light illuminating a sharp turn in the tunnel. He shuffled toward it
quickly, his free right hand lightly trailing the ceiling overhead so as to
ensure the safety of his head and its passenger. He heard the rustling and
scuffling of tiny paws and leaf-caps and acorn-shields behind him, followed by
the creaking of the Tree of Opening as its roots closed over to hide the Great
Door. He could also hear noise up ahead, around the corner—undistinguished
movements, a faint clatter, a whisper of breath and voice.
Thomas rounded the
corner and jerked to a stop in amazement. Here, the passage opened up into a
spacious chamber into which Thomas’s own house could have fit without bumping
its chimney on the domed ceiling or scraping its outer stones on the
packed-dirt walls draped with tapestries and plaited vines. A glittering
chandelier hung at the center of the room; lanterns had been affixed to
wall-brackets or suspended from chains at various other places, some of them
with colored-glass filters that cast shafts of red and gold and green around
the room. Thomas stood between two staircases, one leading down to the floor of
the room some eight feet below, the other climbing to a walkway that wrapped
around the room near the ceiling. On the floor, he saw three pairs of wooden
tables with accompanying stools and benches. At the far end of the room waited
a high-backed throne adorned with wrought iron and shining stones. The rest of
the room was filled with statues and paintings and boxes and furniture and mice.
The denizens of
underground Luchamhá brought the room to life with their activity. Some lounged
on small cushions and chairs in tucked-away circles; others dueled or wrestled
atop the broad tables; still others scampered and scurried here and there,
chattering or bearing parcels and provisions or simply hurrying about whatever
tasks might keep a mouse awake in the middle of the night. Thomas glanced at
one group of mice in the corner and saw that they were playing some sort of
game with tiny carved dice and cards made of wood shavings.
Thomas stared while the
rest of the First Legion filed into the room behind him. He noted the peculiar
disparity in size of the room’s furniture and trappings: the chandelier, the
tables and benches, the throne, and several of the tapestries were human-sized,
whereas the rest of the room had clearly been built by and for mice. The sight
created an odd sense of respect in Thomas for the Thistledown Kingdom, for
their resilience and creativity.
One part of his
thoughts noticed and reflected on these things while the rest of him was
overwhelmed at the sight of it all. He stood there at the top of the stairs
until Cathán gave him a poke.
“That’s the signal, my
friend,” said the Mouse Knight. Thomas realized that the acorn-horns were
sounding their triumphant return and that most of the activity in the room had
paused, if only briefly. “Go on, down the stairs and up to the throne there.
We’ll present you and give our report to the King and the Queen and then jump
right into the feasting.”
Thomas complied, though
his legs were a little shaky on the stairs. Mice scurried everywhere, and he
worried he’d squash them with every step until Cathán advised him not to
bother. “You’re a fair deal slower than we are,” Cathán said, “at least when
you’re walking like that. They’ll be fine to avoid you without any trouble. And
if a young mouseling should catch his tail under your shoe—well, that’ll serve
him a valuable lesson he shan’t forget! So onward fearless, my friend!”
The stairs ended and
Thomas turned and walked toward the throne. He passed between the large tables
and the frantic activity of the mice while the First Legion marched behind him,
their paws like raindrops and their leaf-armor like the rustle of wind in the
heather. Thomas gave a little wave in response to a group of mice who were
cheering and tossing their felt caps in the air; they squeaked with delight and
chittered nervously until he’d moved past their table. That made Thomas smile,
and the nervous fluttering in his stomach subsided somewhat.
It returned all at once
when he arrived before the high throne. Thomas jerked to a stop a few feet in
front of the earthen dais, noticing now the very royal-looking mice who sat
atop the inner arms of the two throne-chairs. The throne was constructed of
solid iron wrought into the shape of vines and leaves and various animals, the
bars twisting around straight backs and concave seats and jutting arm-rests. Among
the coiled iron stones and trinkets sparkled. Some were clearly gemstones,
rubies and amethysts; others appeared to be bits of hammered tin, scraps of
colorful fabric, small circles of tinted glass—and, in one spot near the
ground, a shard of melting ice. As Thomas took in the sight, he watched a tiny
mouse dart up to the base of the throne, tuck a fragment of white bone into a
cranny, and scurry away.
But by then the nervous
fluttering had seized full control of Thomas and he saw nothing more but the
Mouse King and the Mouse Queen sitting atop the arms of their throne. They were
dressed in mouse-robes of soft velvet trimmed with scales that glistened and
strands of silken white that splayed around them. A crown of violet feathers
rested on the Mouse King’s head; the Mouse Queen wore a circlet of bronze wire
with two tiny black smooth stones lying flat behind her ears.
The sight was acutely
majestic. Thomas felt Cathán shift on his shoulder; a second later Thomas
himself dropped to his knees, grateful for the excuse to lower his eyes a
moment and collect his thoughts. At Cathán’s tug, he straightened once more,
listening to the rustle of the First Legion behind him as they stood and
clapped to attention.
“Welcome, far-friend of
the Human Realm!” shouted the Mouse King suddenly, his voice deeper than Thomas
had expected. Thomas jumped, and the Mouse King laughed. “Welcome indeed, my
boy, a thousand welcomes and a laugh and a cheer for your safe arrival!”
The hall erupted into
squeaks and chitters as the citizens of Luchamhá obeyed their king’s boisterous
suggestion. The Mouse Queen laughed along with them, the sound a glide of
silver rain upon a misty mere. The black stones in her crown caught the
reflected light from the throne’s decorations and exuded their own glow, a soft
gray with flecks of yellow. Like the sun
in a cloak, thought Thomas, a bit dizzy. He was mostly certain the stones
were magical, but not the kind of magic he’d seen and felt the witch use. This
magic was pleasant, soothing, and it seemed to dull the chaos of the Royal Seat
so Thomas could catch his breath.
He realized that the
Mouse King had resumed speaking. Thomas pulled his attention from the two black
stones, though not before the Mouse Queen caught his eye and gave him a wink and
a nod.
“What then, First
Captain, Sir Caolán, of your exploits?” the Mouse King was saying, his voice
still echoing through the chamber. “What can you tell us of your adventures
beyond the Tree? Spare us no detail of your victories—for nothing whets the
appetite like tales of heroes and monsters! Is this not so, human boy?”
Thomas nodded while the
First Legion cheered. He’d taken an instant liking to the Mouse King, with his
booming voice and jovial words. To the Mouse Queen as well Thomas felt an attraction
and a sense of friendship, of common purpose and value. He was still altogether
overwhelmed by the scene in the Royal Seat of Luchamhá, but it was a nice place
to be overwhelmed.
“Please,” said the
Mouse Queen, leaning against the Mouse King’s shoulder, “consider yourself at
liberty to spare us a few of the
details, should you wish. The sooner the tale is told, the sooner the wine will
be drunk, as they say.”
The Mouse King voiced
his assent with another wordless cry. “Proceed, then, First Captain, with
moderate detail and all eager efficiency in the telling, that we might not keep
the mouselings from their meals nor the cooks from their praise!”
And so Cathán related
the events of the day and night, beginning with his fortunate encounter with
Thomas and their agreement, continuing on to their initial scrap with the
Nathaia Iór, and concluding at reasonable length and with exceptional
exuberance with the true battle between the Winged Serpent and the First
Legion, including the monster’s eventual defeat and the capture and transport
of its body. At various points throughout the tale, the gathered mice cheered
or gasped or clapped the Mouse Knights on their leaf-capped heads or
acorn-shielded backs. The Mouse King joined in fervent applause and cheering,
while the Mouse Queen smiled, laughed, and twitched her tail at appropriate
moments in the story.
When at last Cathán had
exhausted his words and crowned them with a flourishing bow, the Mouse King
jumped to his paws and scampered forward to the edge of the arm-rest and raised
himself to his full height. “A fabulous story, First Captain, and a thrilling
journey of fine-spun prose! Tonight a legend has been born: the mighty First
Legion and the fearsome Nathaia Iór! Now let us tarry no longer with words. Let
the celebratory feast begin!”
Thomas and his two
mouse passengers were quickly ushered to one of the tables nearest the throne.
Thomas sat at the proffered stool and set his satchel and jacket on the earthen
floor near his feet, then removed his knit cap from the satchel and placed it
on the table. “You can sit here, if you’d like,” he told Cathán on his
shoulder. “You too, Edan,” he added, trying to arch his eyebrows enough to see
the mouse still sitting atop his head. “I don’t know if you normally use the chairs
and stools: they don’t seem high enough. But the table is hard, so this might
make it a little softer.”
Cathán squeaked in
surprise and delight and raced down Thomas’s arm to the table. He touched the
edge of the knit cap with his two paws, rubbed the soft wool, and then happily
climbed atop it and huddled himself into a comfortably reclined position. Edan
followed, sliding down Thomas’s sleeve and burrowing into the open end of the
knit cap.
“Thomas, this is a
great honor,” said Cathán with another little squeak. “As you’ll see, we
normally sit on the table with small cushions or stacks of leaves. But this is
a fine treat and much appreciated. You are a true friend indeed.”
“And an honored guest!”
came the voice of the Mouse King. Thomas glanced down the table and saw the
Mouse King and Mouse Queen propped up on puffs of cotton draped in velvet. “You’ll
want for nothing but sleep once we’ve finished! When word reached us that the
First Captain was bringing back a human companion-in-arms, I instructed the
cooks to prepare a few special morsels for your”—the Mouse King hemmed a moment,
his whiskers vibrating—“larger
palate, let’s say. And now to me, cooks and stewards and servants, and let us
all celebrate!”
The table, bathed in
green and gold from nearby lanterns, was at once piled high with plates and
bowls and tureens and pots and cups and silverware and napkins and the other
accoutrements of dining. Some of the implements were clearly human-sized and
appeared to have been scavenged or perhaps stolen; the rest were of mouse-make
and in varying shapes, sizes, and states.
All served their
purpose well. Thomas could hardly believe the breadth and variety of dishes he
saw before him. He saw every nut, root vegetable, herb, berry, seed, and legume
that he could name, and many more that he could not, filling the plates and
bowls and thimble-cups, along with a number of sauces and soups and wafers and
other delicacies. He also spotted roasted insects, grilled minnows, braised quail’s
eggs, tadpoles skewered on twigs and served with quartered apricots, and poached
snails in their shells.
Thomas felt a little
squeamish about some of these foods, but the mice around him piled his plate
and urged him to eat with such fervor and aplomb that he swallowed both his
worries and the exotic fare. He found, to his great surprise, that the mouse
chefs of the Thistledown Kingdom were virtuosos of their craft; and thereafter
he wolfed down whatever was placed before him, as he had eaten very little and
had adventured for most of the day.
Halfway through the
feast, the Mouse King had a steward ring a small, tinny brass bell and hopped
up onto the table. “A brief announcement, my friends, if you will!” he shouted to
the rest of the hall. “I would not interrupt your merriment but for long. As we
have heard, our brave Knights of the First Legion have slain the Nathaia Iór
and delivered its carcass to the mages and clerics in the Whiskered Wood. My
pleasure is doubled in announcing that the skull of the terrible monster has
been cleaned and prepared and is ready for presentation!”
The Mouse King’s
steward rang the bell again and the great mouse-doors at the far end of the
hall opened up. In marched a procession of eight robed mice with tall hats.
Some carried walking-sticks or wore necklaces of wire and thread. Thomas
guessed that these were the mouse-mages. Next came a few smaller mice with
bundles of leaves in their arms. As Thomas watched, he saw these mice pull out
tiny bits of charcoal and scratch notes upon the leaves.
Scribes,
Thomas thought.
After the mouse-scribes
came the clerics, so identified by their austere wardrobes and solemn
expressions. There were eight clerics to match the eight mages, and each group
formed a single file so that they created a walkway from the mouse-doors to the
table of the Mouse King.
Finally, to much
excited whispering and chatter of the gathered mice, another mouse of the
Whiskered Wood entered the dining hall. He was easily the largest mouse Thomas had
ever seen, large enough that at first Thomas was sure he was looking at a
rabbit or a hedgehog or even an oddly shaped cat. The mouse wore a long cape of
white linen and carried a rope of golden threads over each shoulder, dragging
behind him a heavy object covered in black cloth on a long canvas sheet.
The mages and clerics
widened their avenue to allow the newcomer passage. He walked upright, towering
over those he passed, his gait purposeful and his carriage regal. As the mouse
neared, Thomas saw that he was indeed a mouse after all, and a very handsome,
striking mouse at that. His fur was tawny with an auburn stripe from the crown
of his head to the tufts at the base of his tail. His eyes were coal-black,
piercing and keen; he carried a blade at his hip that looked to be the same
length as Thomas’s hand from wrist to fingertip.
“The King’s Champion,”
Cathán whispered to Thomas as the giant mouse continued his steady approach. “His
name is Baylock the Bold, but you’ll hear him called Brother most often,
especially by His Majesty. They’re not brothers by birth, of course, but that
matters not a bit with things of this nature.”
“He looks a frightening
brute,” added Edan, munching unceremoniously on a cheekful of barley seeds, “but
he’s not at all. He’s like a brother to all of us. A fearsome warrior in battle
and a boisterous companion at the table. It’s a wonder he can keep still for
this.”
“Hush now,” advised
Cathán. Baylock the Bold had arrived at the leg of the table at which the Mouse
King and the Mouse Queen, Cathán and Edan and Thomas, and most of the First
Legion were seated.
Thomas leaned back in
his stool to watch Baylock the Bold drop the golden ropes and turn to face his
hidden parcel. The giant mouse bent over and wrapped his paws around the black-veiled
object, hefting it and the canvas beneath into the air and over one shoulder.
The gathered mice gasped. Even Thomas was impressed, as the weight did not seem
to bother Baylock the Bold one bit.
Then Thomas joined the
mice in another round of gasps as the Brother of Mice leapt high into the air
and landed atop the Mouse King’s table with a loud thud. Baylock steadied
himself a moment before leaping forward again, clearing the Mouse King’s plate,
and depositing his burden in the only open space on the tabletop. With a
flourish he ripped the black covering from the object and flung it aside; and
the gasps became stunned silence became a rousing infectious shout that swept
the hall and rattled the chandelier.
Thomas gaped at the
gleaming skull of the Nathaia Iór, which grinned right back at him, all fangs
and empty eye-sockets and tiny slits where the nose had been. The death-grin
was doubly disturbing due to the extra set of fangs and the protruding spikes
of horn at the crown. Strangest was the bone itself, which was a yellow-white
marbled with streaks of red and black. Thomas had never seen anything like it,
but the skull matched in the color the temperament of the Winged Serpent in
life.
It appeared as though the
mouse-mages and clerics of the Whiskered Wood had taken their time in polishing
the skull until it properly shone in the multicolored lights of the lanterns
and torches and the chandelier. Baylock the Bold stepped back to the side of
the Mouse King as dozens of mice swarmed forward for a better look at the
macabre spectacle.
Initially unsettled,
Thomas soon found himself cheering along with the rest and trading claps on the
backs and shoulders of his fellow warriors, though Thomas’s were far gentler
and only involved a fingertip. Edan took a leisurely walk the length of the
table, enjoying the praise of his companions and well-wishers for his role in
the great defeat of the Winged Serpent. Cathán remained close to Thomas, a bit
more reserved than the rest, though Thomas heard the occasional squeak of
delight escape the First Captain as the commotion continued.
At last the Mouse King
jumped up again, a skewer of grasshopper in his royal paw. “Friends and
companions!” he shouted, somehow projecting his voice over the tumult. “We have
one last ceremony to which we must attend before our revelry can begin in full.
We must recognize the Feaster of Honor!”
All eyes turned to
Thomas, who’d nearly forgotten about the title. He gave a little wave.
“Our human friend
deserves ample recompense and glories heaped untold,” continued the Mouse King,
“for his gallant efforts at the side of the brave First Legion! Thomas the
human boy of Mídhel, thank you everlasting for your services to the Thistledown
Kingdom! Ever shall you be welcome in our halls and dining chambers. You have
my word as King of the Mice that the full strength of the Royal Seat of Luchamhá
will come to your aid whenever the need arise. Hail the Feaster of Honor!”
The resounding reply
rattled the rafters and shook the roots of the great hall of Luchamhá. Thomas
knew he blushed under the green and gold lights and didn’t much mind, for he
felt the sincerity of his newfound friends. Cathán clapped and whistled and
cheered especially loudly, and when the fervor died down just a bit, the First
Captain scampered back to Thomas’s shoulder and gave him a hearty pat on the ear.
“See now the great
reward for aiding the First Legion,” Cathán said amidst further cheering.
Thomas looked and saw that the mouse-mages and clerics and scribes had been
replaced by a group of mice who must have been cooks and chefs, as they were
speckled with flour and sauce and one of them had long black singe-mark on the
fur above his tail. They carried a silver platter with a silver lid that
rattled and steamed. When they reached the foot of the table, they passed the platter
to Baylock the Bold, who lifted it with ease and placed it next to the skull of
the Nathaia Iór.
The mouse chef with the
singed tail appeared next to Baylock and bowed low. “Revered guest,” the mouse
said in a voice that trembled more with excitement than fear, “please accept
our humble offering to thank you for what you have done. May it be to your
liking and satisfy nose and tongue and throat and belly.”
He nodded to Baylock.
The giant mouse hefted the silver lid and lifted it from the platter, tossing
it over his shoulder to waiting stewards. When the steam cleared, Thomas found
himself staring at a roasted whole game hen bedecked with sliced turnips and
halved apricots and sprigs of fennel and thyme. The smell of the elaborate dish
nearly overwhelmed him with its warmth and savor and spice.
“It’s—” Thomas
stammered, his mouth watering, even though he’d already eaten more than his
fill of the dishes on the table. “It looks wonderful!”
“Smells it too!” Cathán
said, hopping down to the table. The First Captain’s nose prickled as he sniffed
the wafting steam from the game hen. “Smells wonderful. Think you can manage
the whole thing?”
“I might need help with
a few bites,” Thomas replied. “Mouse-sized bites, anyway.”
Cathán laughed. “At
your service, my human friend.”
“And so the Feaster of
Honor is duly honored with a feast of his own!” the Mouse King intoned. “Back
to your seats, all of you! We’ve plenty of food and night left to enjoy! Eat
and drink and dance and sing in celebration of the defeat of the Nathaia Iór!”
Thomas heeded the Mouse
King’s command and attacked the roasted game hen with knife and fork and, when
it had cooled a little, his fingers. The bird was as delicate and tender and
juicy and well-seasoned as anything he’d eaten in Mídhel or, indeed, his
fondest dreams. He and Cathán picked the game hen clean, stripped the bones,
and savored the turnips and apricots and other adornments.
When at last the silver
platter was empty, the Feaster of Honor and the First Captain of the
Thistledown Kingdom sat back satisfied, the former in his stool and the latter
upon Thomas’s knit cap. Thomas let out a sigh of contentment and indulgence;
Cathán chittered his response and nestled deeper into the woolen cap, curling
his tail around him.
After a few minutes,
Thomas roused himself a little and tapped Cathán on the shoulder. The Mouse
Knight stirred and peeked open a single brown eye.
“Cathán,” said Thomas, “I
hate to say this now, but what about my quest for the boar’s tusk? This feast
has been wonderful, just incredible, but I can’t forget that my sister Eleanor
is a witch’s captive and I have less than a week to save her. I should probably
go out hunting for the tusk now.”
Cathán sat up a little
and opened his other eye. “Friend Thomas, don’t worry,” he said kindly. “I have
not forgotten your quest nor my own oath to aid you. Before the feast began, I
sent out watchers, mouselings with sharp eyes and noses. They’re keeping
watching on the boar you and I startled earlier. Last they reported, he was
still rooting about in the brambles not far from here. They’ll bring us word
when he falls asleep, and then we can go see about snatching a bit of his tusk
with him unaware.”
Thomas nodded, a little
unsure. “Okay,” he said. “Thank you. But—I’m still worried . . .”
The First Captain rose
to all four paws and reached for a nearby cup. He sniffed at it, then offered
it to Thomas. “Mead with honey. Of human make, I believe. It will help you
rest.”
Thomas accepted the cup
and drank. It was sweet and warm and soothing.
Cathán came forward and
rested a paw on Thomas’s arm. “Thomas,” said he, “do not worry. Sleep now. I
will make sure that you get the boar’s tusk without delay, and I will help you
save your sister from the witch. You have given the Thistledown Kingdom much,
and you have brought me honor and friendship besides. I am grateful to be able
to repay some of that now. Sleep, and I will wake you when it’s time.”
Thomas nodded again, a
wordless sign of heartfelt thanks, and let his eyes droop and then his head
until his forehead rested against the rough grain of the tabletop. While he
still drowsed, he felt Cathán curl up in the crook of his elbow and nestle
tightly against him. The softness of the Mouse Knight’s fur brought a warm tightness
to Thomas’s throat.
And then Thomas fell
asleep amidst the dance and song and merriment of the victorious dining hall of
Luchamhá, and his dreams were sweet and pleasant and soft.
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