It was cold and windy on the hillside. The moon was full, but wisps of cloud kept floating across it and they could only really see the vague shapes of the trees nearby and the looming bulk of the hill above them. They were standing by a small cave, and Caradoc was weaving little silvery spells across the entrance. Arthur was beside him, wearing armour and carrying his long sword, Excalibur. Merlin, looking grim, was similarly armed, and Sir Bertram was next to Max, telling him for the tenth time that he was to stay close, not wander away, and on no account get himself killed. Max was clutching the cauldron Great-Aunt Wilhelmina had given him, wrapped up in a cloak, replacing the one Morgana had given Arthur. “Keep it safe, Max,” Merlin had said as he switched the cauldrons over. “Something tells me that it came to you – and that you must be the one to return it.”
As Caradoc stepped back from the cave entrance, they could all see the small silvery outline of a door glowing in the darkness.
“So,” said Arthur. “It is time. Six of us go forth; seven shall return. Look out for us, Caradoc – we shall be back before dawn.”
“We’ll have to be,” said Merlin. “At dawn the spell is broken and we won’t be able to get back at all.”
“We’ll be there, don’t worry,” said Sir Bertram, gruffly. “Griselda would never let me hear the end of it, otherwise.”
And one by one they strode through the glowing doorway, Max with Ferocious perched on his shoulder and Adolphus, who was quieter than usual, at his feet.
As Max walked through the silvery outline of the door, it felt as if he were wading into the sea; it was hard to walk and there was pressure all round him. Then he suddenly passed through to the other side, from night into day. A pale sun was burning through Annwn’s early morning mist, dew was sparkling on the grass and ahead of them was a frothing, bubbling, cool stream of jet-black water.
“Ah,” said Merlin, heavily. “I had hoped this would not be the first challenge.”
Arthur turned to him and frowned. “And this is?”
“The Stream of Jet,” said Merlin. “It’s an enchanted river. We can cross it if I make a magic bridge – but I can only do this once, and it will fail if I am not here, keeping the spell going. I’m afraid this is where I must stop, and wait for your return.”
“Great,” said Ferocious. “We’ve only just got here and we’ve lost the one person who knows what they’re doing.”
Arthur turned to Max and raised one eyebrow. “You know, Max – Merlin once spent a whole summer turning me into various strange creatures. With the useful result that I can now understand animal speech… So, Ferocious, rest assured – Merlin is not the only person here who knows what they’re doing.”
Ferocious squeaked, and burrowed himself into Max’s tunic in embarrassment, and Arthur laughed. His laughter was strong and clear and it made his face look younger, his blue eyes sparkling with amusement. Max found himself laughing too, and it made him feel braver and bolder, and sure that they were going to find Olivia and come home safely.
Merlin was standing by the stream, looking casually at the other bank. Now he turned and beckoned to them.
“All right,” he said. “Go over as swiftly as possible once the bridge is made. There are six more tests, one for each of you and the last for Olivia. You must come back as quickly as you can. Don’t get distracted – time is not quite the same in this land and it may pass more swiftly than it seems. Good luck!”
He gestured towards the stream, and there it was – a small wooden bridge, arching over the water, looking entirely solid and somehow very much like Merlin: deceptively plain, but strong, reliable and with a twist of bright magic running through every plank. Crossing over it, Max felt as if some of Merlin’s strength and magic was passing into him with each step, and it was just as well it was, because Merlin’s words had left him feeling rather apprehensive. A test for each of them? For him, and Ferocious and Adolphus? How on earth were they supposed to know what to do when it was their turn? And what if they were last, and they didn’t have Arthur or Sir Bertram to help them? Max bit his lip and tried not to think about it as he stepped off the bridge and onto firm ground on the other side.
It seemed like they walked through meadows and over rough pasture for hours without seeing anyone or anything. There was an eerie silence around them, and although the day seemed bright and clear, it was somehow hard to see any great distance. Sir Bertram, in full armour, was starting to get hot, and fed up.
At last he stopped.
“Sorry, but I’ve had enough,” he said. “It’s about time we met someone.”
He looked all around, and then cupped his hands and roared out at the nothingness.
“Come on! We’ve come to get Olivia! Come and stop us! Come and fight! Sneaks! Cowards! Come out and fight us!”
Arthur looked amused.
“Maybe you’re right,” he said, and added his voice to Sir Bertram’s.
“It is I, High King Arthur of Britain, who calls you to a challenge. We seek Olivia Pendragon. Bring her to us, or face our swords!”
A ringing silence greeted these words, but then they heard a rattle of stones ahead, and as they walked forward, suddenly a huge fortress loomed in front of them, a fortress that looked entirely solid and yet hadn’t been there a moment before.
As they looked at it, the door in front of them creaked open and a servant beckoned them inside. She was small and slight, and had pale skin and merry green eyes that sparkled as she looked at each of them in turn.
“Welcome,” she said, in a musical voice, “to the Fortress of Mead Drunkenness.”
They walked into a long hall, and saw tables laden with jugs of mead and a feast of amazing food – roast swan, boars’ heads, pastries and cakes and fruit, piles and piles of it. Around the tables were people dressed in bright colours, making merry and drinking and eating and dancing to wild music.
“One of you must stay,” said the servant, and suddenly she looked more like a lady, dressed in finery, her long red hair braided with silver. “He must eat and drink and make merry until you return. Then, if he is still standing, you may collect him – but if he falls, overcome with mead, he must remain. And then there will not be seven to pass over the bridge back to the kingdom of Britain.”
They all looked at each other, and Sir Bertram coughed apologetically.
“Er… well… it looks like this one’s mine, then. Knight who can quaff the most ale and all that… Do my best.”
He turned to Max and looked at him solemnly.
“Make sure you come back with Olivia, Max. I know you can do it.” And he clapped him on the back, saluted Arthur and allowed the lady to lead him over to the tables.
At once the rest of them found themselves outside the fortress, back on the long, winding path through the Otherworld, and as Max looked up at the sky he realised it was already midday.
Bright though the overhead sun was, it was still impossible to see further than a few hundred yards in any direction. It wasn’t that there was a mist, just that somehow it was hard to make your eyes focus on the distance. They just slid over things and didn’t quite register what they were. So it was a shock when, after another hour or so of tramping on along the path, Max suddenly realised that there was a crowd of people in front of them. People who seemed to have appeared out of nowhere. They were tall, and they were wearing long floaty dresses, and they all had long shining hair down to their waists.
“The Nine Maidens,” said Arthur, and he smiled. “Now, I wonder whose challenge this is?”
The maidens looked at him, and simpered, and pouted, and ran their lily-white hands through their hair. They started to glide towards the group, eyes only for the king, with his tall frame and dark good looks, and Arthur found it hard not to return their smiles. He took his hand off the hilt of Excalibur, where it had rested almost since they’d entered the Otherworld, and reached out towards them as they approached.
“Hang on,” said Max. “I don’t think that’s such a good idea.”
But Arthur was walking forward as if entranced and he didn’t seem to hear anything Max said.
“Well,” said Ferocious, poking his head out and surveying the scene. “I think this one must be mine.”
He slipped out of Max’s tunic, scampered over the grass towards the maidens and started to bite their ankles.
At once they started to shriek, pull up their skirts, and run around hopping and jumping to try and get away from the rat, who was like a small whirlwind of teeth and claws. And suddenly they didn’t seem quite so beautiful or alluring. Ferocious drove them along the path until they reached a low flattish boulder onto which all nine climbed and then stood there, hissing with rage, while he circled the edge of the stone, baring his teeth at any of them who tried to come down.
King Arthur clapped his hands and bowed to Ferocious.
“I think we are now even,” he said, looking slightly pink. “I am afraid I nearly made a very big fool of myself.”
Ferocious grinned. “Well, I think we’ll forgive you. Luckily beautiful maidens are not my sort of thing at all. Except for their nice plump ankles,” he added, as one of them tried to put her foot down. She shrieked and whipped it out of the way.
“Go on then, quick,” said Ferocious to the others. “I’ll keep them here till you get back. But get a move on, won’t you? It looks like it’s mid-afternoon already.”
Max looked at the sun. Ferocious was right. Time was definitely running faster here than at home. And they still had to find Olivia and be back by Annwn’s sunset, which would signal dawn in their own world. Arthur nodded.
“You and me, now, Max.”
“And Adolphus,” Max reminded him. Adolphus had been very subdued ever since they’d entered the Otherworld. His tail was tucked down low and he’d barely said a word. He looked up now and licked Max’s hand, but he didn’t look happy. Max hoped that Adolphus’s challenge wouldn’t involve having to think too much.
They strode forward and almost instantly found themselves in a forest, with huge trees that seemed to reach up forever and disappear into a cool green darkness above them. There were no gleams of sunlight, and the forest floor was soft with layer upon layer of dead rotting leaves. They walked on in silence and then, faintly, Max heard a baying sound.
He turned to Arthur, who was also listening hard.
“Hounds,” said the king at last, looking worried. “The hell hounds – the Hounds of Annwn – the Wild Hunt. They are supposed to be huge and fierce and each one has three heads… I think maybe this one is for me.”
He drew Excalibur and stood, gesturing Max behind him, facing the sound of baying as it drew gradually nearer.
Now they could hear the crack of dry branches trampled underfoot and the rustle of undergrowth pushed aside by heavy bodies, the pant and roar of huge beasts as they came on through the forest, and then, there they were. Seven huge dogs – black as night, with white teeth, each with three heads – crouching together as if ready to spring, their eyes focused on Arthur and the bright sword in his hand.