"I shall hit a tree, as the Gododdin once swung at the wicked Bryneich." But the elms' sough and sigh was becoming a low roar in the rush of early evening, and she didn't care about wicked war bands, defeated in the long ago by her Anglisc forefathers. She sat up.Ĭian, sitting cross-legged as a seven-year-old could and Hild as yet could not, looked up from the hazel switch he was stripping. She liked time at the edges of things-the edge of the crowd, the edge of the pool, the edge of the wood-where all must pass but none quite belonged. She liked the rhythm of her days: time alone (Cian didn't count) and time by the fire listening to the murmur of British and Anglisc and even Irish. Onnen, some leftwise cousin of Ceredig king, always hurried, but the child, Hild, did not. From far away came the indignant honking of geese as the goosegirl herded them back inside the wattle fence, and the child knew, in the wordless way that three-year-olds reckon time, that soon Onnen would come and find her and Cian and hurry them back. She lay at the edge of the hazel coppice, one cheek pressed to the moss that smelt of worm cast and the last of the sun, listening: to the wind in the elms, rushing away from the day, to the jackdaws changing their calls from "Outward! Outward!" to "Home now! Home!," to the rustle of the last frightened shrews scuttling under the layers of leaf fall before the owls began their hunt. THE CHILD'S WORLD CHANGED late one afternoon, though she didn't know it.
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