Flying faster than they had imagined possible, Jean and Dana reached Toronto by mid-morning. They landed in a secluded spot in the Humber Marshes. Though they had flown over many towns, no one had looked up or taken any notice of them.
“Is the canoe invisible?” Dana wondered.
“Je n’sais pas.” Jean shrugged. “I think they don’t believe, they don’t see, eh?”
Pale and tired, the two dragged the boat into the bushes and made their way to the nearest subway.
Both were too exhausted to talk as the train rumbled eastbound. Dana got off first, barely managing a goodbye. Jean had farther to travel and was already nodding back asleep. His head bumped against the window as the train pulled away.
Dana dreaded going home. She was certain that the changeling couldn’t have lasted. How would she explain another disappearance?
On reaching the house and sneaking in the back door, she discovered there was no need to worry. Gabe and Radhi were apparently enjoying a lazy Sunday morning. Dana’s room had been undisturbed. The bed was still made up as she had left it. Under the duvet, the changeling was a mess of dirt and wet leaves. Dana removed the soiled linen and stuffed it into her closet. She would clean up later. Crawling onto her mattress, she collapsed into sleep.
• • •
Several hours later Dana woke with a start, overwhelmed by the sense that she had forgotten something. Memories of her adventure flooded into her mind: the spirit boat, Jean and his friends, the journey with Grandfather, the vision quest that awaited her and … the kiss, oh the kiss! She jumped out of bed. How wonderful life was!
Washed and dressed, she reached the kitchen door in time to overhear yet another argument about her.
“She is a teenager,” Aradhana was saying. “They sleep late because of their hormones and the upset of their body clock. It is not laziness.”
“You always take her side!” Gabriel complained. “Are you going to be like this with our children too?”
“All children in this family will be treated the same.”
“That’s not what I meant and you know it!”
Gabriel’s exasperation ended in a fit of spluttering punctuated by a hiccup. That made the two of them burst out laughing. Smooching noises followed, which Dana chose to ignore, but still she was pleased. Apparently her absence hadn’t been detected since no one had tried to wake her, thanks to Radhi. Once again Dana acknowledged how lucky she was that her father had married this wonderful woman.
A pang of guilt struck her. Gabriel and Radhi were only newlyweds. Had she helped them settle into their life together? She knew the answer to that. The past year hadn’t been easy for any of them. For the first time since she got there, Dana reflected that the move to Canada might have been hard for the others as well. For Radhi, it had meant leaving her beloved brother behind and the restaurant they had run together. For Gabe, the changes had been equally drastic. After ten years out of the country, he was back in the vicinity of his strong-willed mother. As well as that, there was the full-time job, so different from his work in Ireland where he had been a gig musician, part-time teacher, and even occasional busker on the streets. There had been less money back then, but also less responsibility and far less pressure. Being newly married was, in fact, a bonus for Gabe, as his wife made life easier for him.
I sure don’t, Dana reflected.
She couldn’t remember the last time she and her dad had had fun together. Once upon a time, they were so close they could read each other’s mind, finish each other’s sentences. Truth is, she had blamed him for the fact that she didn’t like Canada the way he and Radhi did.
Well, things could change.
Dana burst into the kitchen and gave her father a quick hug.
“Morning, Da. I’m making pancakes. Would you like some?”
“Good afternoon,” he responded, though there was no force to the reprimand. He was too surprised by the greeting, as well as the offer. “Hmm, yes, pancakes would be nice … for lunch.”
“I’ll make them Canadian-style, with bananas and maple syrup.”
Now he looked worried. She always insisted on “Irish” pancakes, cooked thin and rolled up like crepes with lemon and sugar.
Aradhana smiled and poured herself some tea.
“So, how’s work these days, Gabe?” Dana asked brightly.
“Well it’s … There’s … I mean …”
It took a few more questions, but she eventually got him talking about his students and the usual power politics in the department. Even as he talked she saw his features relax, saw how pleased he was that she was interested, that she cared. It was like the old days when he told her about his gigs. He even mimicked the voices of some of his colleagues till the three of them were laughing hysterically.
It was after lunch that Aradhana remembered to tell Dana about the phone call.
“A boy called Jean rang for you earlier. He asked that you call him when you are awake. His number is by the telephone.”
“A boy?” Gabriel’s good humor disappeared in an instant. “Who? How? When? Where?”
The look they both gave him formed a united front, a wall. He threw up his hands, knowing he had lost before he even began.
And they all laughed again.
• • •
When Dana rang Jean, the kiss they had shared hung in the air between them. After the initial hellos, an awkward silence fell over the line.
“You are fine today?” Jean managed at last.
“Yes,” Dana replied.
Long pause.
“You?”
“Oui. Bien. Très bien. I sleep a long time.”
“Me too.”
“Pas de problème at home?”
“No. You?”
“Non.”
Another long pause.
Dana was racking her brain to think of something to say. They had just shared the most amazing adventure together, why couldn’t she talk to him?!
Jean cleared his throat.
“So … I see you tomorrow at school?”
“Yes. Yes. See you then.”
She was both relieved and disappointed to end the call. As soon as she hung up, she screeched for her stepmother.
“Radhi! How do you talk to boys?”
• • •
The next day at school, it was easier. Face-to-face, Dana felt more comfortable with him. He was so at ease with himself, it helped her to talk and to act naturally as well. Besides his open, friendly manner, Dana liked the way he looked. Now she understood why he dressed as he did. His clothes suited the North—the leather boots and tight jeans, the woolen shirts, the beaded armband. Her own appearance had become more dramatic, with bright tops to liven up her jeans and Indian jewelry Radhi had given her. She had started to wear her hair in different styles, sometimes loose on her shoulders, sometimes braided or piled on her head. But it wasn’t only her new appearance that made her attractive. Having emerged from her cocoon, she was bursting with life. Her happiness brimmed over in smiles and laughter.
Apparently, Jean wasn’t the only boy who noticed the difference. When the others started looking her way, Jean moved his desk next to hers.
Dana was delighted with the move, but it took all her willpower not to blush whenever he leaned too close. She kept thinking about the kiss they had shared. To distract herself, she would concentrate on what they needed to talk about: the task at hand, the next step in the quest.
“I’ve been thinking about what Grandfather said. Where we start doesn’t seem to be so important, as long as we do the four directions. Maybe we should just pick one and go?”
“D’accord. But if we go far we need time,” he pointed out. “La chasse-galerie is fast, but not like a rocket.”
“This weekend would be perfect to start. With the Thanksgiving holiday we’d have an extra day. But how will we do it? I can’t just take off. My dad would have a fit. And where will we go?”
Their heads were close together as they talked in low voices. The first class of the morning had yet to begin. They were so engrossed in their conversation they didn’t hear the sniggers. One of the boys put his hand over his heart and was making exaggerated grimaces of true love. And neither noticed their teacher enter the room and walk casually in their direction. She hovered nearby, taking her time to open a window.
As soon as Dana grew aware of Ms. Woods, she signaled to Jean. They both stopped talking and opened their books. Dana was certain the teacher had been eavesdropping, but how much had she heard?
• • •
At the end of the day, Dana returned to her homeroom to pack up her books. That was when she found the note tucked discreetly in the corner of her desk. Handwritten on cream-colored paper with a border of gold spirals, it contained an urgent message.
Time is running out. The worlds are drifting apart. You must restore the gateways on Halloween or they will be closed forever. You are not alone. The Companions of Faerie are with you. Please let us help you!
The letter wasn’t signed, but Dana was sure of its author. She sniffed at the paper. There was a faint smell of apples. She wished she could show it to Jean, but he had left for hockey practice. He was already being hailed the best on the team. Dana looked around. A few students lingered in the classroom, preparing to leave. Ms. Woods sat at her desk, her blond head bent over test papers, seemingly busy; but the suspense in her posture was obvious.
Dana read the note again. Could she believe it? She vaguely remembered hearing about friends of Faerie in North America, including the High Queen’s twin sister. Ms. Woods didn’t look anything like Honor. Could it be a trick? Another attempt by her enemy to get her alone? The mention of a deadline was disturbing. Halloween was only four weeks away. Edane hadn’t said anything about it; but then, Dana realized with a wince, her mother wasn’t the most reliable source.
Torn with doubt, Dana glanced again at Ms. Woods. If her teacher had knowledge of the mission, wouldn’t it be best to find out? But what if this was a trap? And anyway, did Dana really want her help? The thought of someone else involved didn’t appeal to her. She liked that it was just her and Jean.
As Dana approached her teacher’s desk, Ms. Woods looked up hopefully; but the smile died as Dana hurried past. First she would talk to Jean. Together they would decide what to do about the note.
• • •
Going home on the subway, Dana kept a lookout, as always, for the little man. Would he show up again? Had she imagined he was special? Now that she had met Jean and his friends, now that she was deep in a Canadian fairy tale, she viewed the world around her with different eyes. There was magic here. Knowing that, she looked for it everywhere, in the tunnels of the subway, on the crowded city streets, in the green patches of park. As usual it played hide-and-seek, a veiled presence lingering at the edges of reality.
She left the subway at Spadina station. From there it was only a short walk home to Brunswick Avenue. The moment Dana stepped outside the station doors, she was struck by a blast of wind and music. She stood stock-still, a wolf catching the scent. Silvery notes winged through the air. It was an Irish tune. No, not quite. There was something different about it. She hurried toward the sound.
At the major intersection of Bloor and Spadina, the early rush-hour traffic had begun. Cars jammed the road. People crowded the sidewalks. On the other side of the street was a small square. White flagstones were laid around a grassy knoll planted with young trees. Scattered over the flagstones was a sculpture of huge black dominoes. The tiles were laid out as if for giants to play. Wooden benches bordered the square, and there was a space marked out for street performers.
The musicians were out of sight, behind the wall of people who had gathered to listen. Across the road, Dana strained to see as she waited impatiently for the lights to change. The music echoed over the noise of the traffic, teasing and taunting her: a tumult of merry reels and jigs. With a mild shock, she spotted a familiar figure in the crowd. Despite the blue jeans and leather jacket, she would have recognized her anywhere: Honor, the High Queen of Faerie! How did she get here?
Dana waved wildly to catch her attention. Would the lights never change?
She was certain Honor had seen her, but when at last the light turned green and Dana raced across the road, there was no sign of the High Queen. Was she imagining things? Dana’s disappointment was soon forgotten as she caught sight of the musicians.
Shabbily dressed in torn jeans and old sweaters, the three men were remarkably ugly in a humorous way. All were of stocky build and very short, no more than five feet, with bulbous noses and bulging eyes. The fiddler had a mane of hair like a nest of red curls, with a bushy beard to match. The tin whistler’s ponytail was a piebald black-and-gray. The drummer, who played a handheld bodhran, was as bald as an egg. All of them had tufts of hair growing from their ears and nostrils.
The music was fast and frenetic. They played as if their lives depended upon it. In a dazzling display of virtuosity, tune chased after tune without stopping for breath. The tin whistle trilled like birds at dawn. The drum rumbled like thunder. The fiddler’s bow skipped over taut strings, a dancer leaping.
Standing in a half-moon around the musicians, the audience jiggled and jittered like puppets on a string.
“Ize the bye!” someone shouted, and everyone cheered at the Newfoundland expression.
“Newfies go home!” cried a lout from an apartment balcony up the street.
When some of the crowd shook their fists at him, he quickly retreated.
Oblivious to all, the red-haired fiddler was bent almost double as he strained and sweated over his instrument. He finished the medley of airs with a frenzied flourish. There was an uproar of applause. Coins cascaded into his open case.
Dana edged to the front of the crowd. The men were less comical close up. There was a wild and disreputable air about them. She could smell the alcohol wafting from their direction. Then the fiddler caught her eye. The look he gave her drew her up short. As if he knew her somehow. And there was something sly about the wink that made her uncomfortable.
He suddenly broke off what he was playing and began a new tune. First came a shivery quiver across the fiddle strings. Then all three of them let out a high-pitched whoop. Now they burst into song together. Their voices were raucous. The words and the music rushed toward her in a wave.
Cold wind on the harbor
And rain on the road
Wet promise of winter
Brings recourse to coal
There’s fire in the blood
And a fog on Bras d’Or.
THE GIANT WILL RISE WITH THE MOON.
With a breath-stopping pull, Dana no longer stood on the street in Toronto.
She was somewhere else. A damp, green place cupped by a range of hills. Behind her, a wintry sea crashed onto the shore. She could smell seaweed. The taste of salt was on her lips. With a surge of joy, she thought she had been transported back home to Ireland. Then she caught the sharp scent of pine in the air. The hills were sparsely dotted with fir. The landscape was more bleak and rugged than any she knew.
The wind’s in the North
There’ll be new moon tonight
And we have no circle to dance in her sight
So light a torch, bring the bottle
And build the fire bright.
THE GIANT WILL RISE WITH THE MOON.
It was evening time. The light was dusky, but no stars were out. On her right, in the distance, was a scatter of houses. To her left, a rough road meandered into the hills. Her eyes followed the worn path that wove from the road to the highest peak in the hills. Her heart beat quickly. On top of the hill was an ancient stone circle. Jagged rocks stood out against the sky like a great crown. At their heart burned a bonfire. The stones flickered fitfully, illumined by the flames. Dana blinked. The stones became men; short, stocky men like the street musicians! They were singing and shouting and waving bottles in the air.
’Twas the same ancient fever
That our fathers brought with them
When they went West
It’s the blood of the Druids
That never will rest.
THE GIANT WILL RISE WITH THE MOON.
With a dizzying lurch, Dana found herself back on the city sidewalk. The musicians had finished their song and were packing up to leave.
She ran over to the fiddler as he closed his case. “
Wait,” she said. “Please. Are you here to help me?”
The three stopped to stare at her. All had gray eyes, like the sea in her vision and just as cold. Though they barely reached her chin, she suffered the sensation that they were immense. As tall as the stones she had seen on the hilltop. She was completely unnerved. How could she have thought them comical, even for a moment?
“I … I’m about to go on a journey,” she stuttered.
They continued to regard her stonily.
“But I don’t know where I’m going,” she said desperately.
Still they kept silent. Their looks were veiled.
“The song you were singing … about the giant?”
“It be one of Stan Rogers.” The fiddler spoke at last. His voice was flat, as if to deliberately discourage her.
“Where does he live?” she asked.
“He don’t bide here no more,” came the answer.
Looks were exchanged between the musicians, but she couldn’t fathom their meaning.
Dana could have cried with frustration. It was obvious they weren’t going to divulge their secrets. Regardless, she was grateful for the music and the clues it seemed to provide. She had already taken out some money to give them. Since their cases were shut, she handed it to the fiddler. The red-haired man grinned with sudden mischief.
“Ho byes. A generous hand, a generous heart. When I thinks about it, maybe we ought to tell her what she wants to know.”
The drummer shook his head. “You knows it ain’t like that. We can’t do no more.”
The tin-whistler agreed. “We’ve done our bit, that’s for darn sure.”
Dana caught her breath. “Do you have a message for me?” she pleaded. “Are you here to help? Are you Companions of Faerie?”
She was met with blank looks.
The drummer smirked. “A little birdie told us about ye. Asked a favor. And now we’ve done it.”
More questions rushed into Dana’s mind, but before she could open her mouth, the fiddler raised his hand.
“Look, lass, what’s to be said was said in the song. You seen the Place of Stones in the music. You’ll know it when you sees it in the world.”
Though the fiddler’s tone was almost friendly, the other two were growing more agitated by the minute. Fidgeting impatiently, they looked at their watches and then glared at her. Though she wanted, needed, to know more, she found her courage failing. The three were rank with the smell of whiskey and there was a dangerous edge to their annoyance.
“Go raibh míle maith agaibh,” said Dana, thanking them in her own language as she backed away.
With a last glance at his watch, the tin-whistler eyed the Irish pub up the street and smacked his lips. Tipping his cap in farewell, he dashed away, running across the road against a red light. The drummer raced after him without another word to Dana. Only the fiddler lingered.
“Don’t be afeard where ye go, lass,” he said quietly. “The morning star shines in the east and there be my own country.”
Then he, too, darted across the road, dodging the traffic, ignoring the blare of horns from irate drivers. Arms and legs akimbo, he held his fiddle above his head as if he were forging a river. When he reached the other side he turned back to her, beaming.
“Mind now,” he shouted, “we are all family!”
• • •
Dana couldn’t wait to ring Jean with the news. There was no question now about which way they should go. To the east it was. And the song was the other clue. What was the place mentioned? She had heard them say “Bradore.” It sounded French. Somewhere in Quebec? Jean was bound to know.
“Bras d’Or?” he repeated, when she called him. “Oui, je connais. It’s not Québec, non. It’s a big lake on Île Royale. Cape Breton Island. I never see this place but I think you will like it. They say it look like Scotland and also your country.”
“Well, that’s where we start,” Dana said, delighted.
They were both over the moon that they had a destination.
“So how we do this?” said Jean.
“There’s someone who might help.”
Dana told him about the note from Ms. Woods.
“So, she do know about the mission,” he said. “Remember she try to talk with you? What do you think?”
“I’m not sure I trust her, but between you and me we should be able to tell if she’s an enemy or not. Maybe one could ask questions while the other watches her reactions.”
“Good cop, bad cop?” Jean suggested.
“Something like that,” Dana said with a laugh.
“Bon,” said Jean. “We do this tomorrow.”
• • •
As it turned out, Ms. Woods had already moved to help them. Dana discovered that fact when Gabriel got home from work.
“Your teacher rang today. Radhi got the call before she went out. Something about a field trip this weekend? Did you forget to tell us?”
Dana was too surprised to answer right away, but her father didn’t notice.
“That rules out Thanksgiving in Creemore. Your gran will be disappointed but it gets me off the hook. Don’t repeat that.”
“So,” said Dana, recovering, “can I go?”
“Sure. It sounds good and I can’t believe there’s no cost. She says she’s looking after transportation and everything. Talk about last-minute arrangements. Do you have a list of things to bring?”
“No, but I know what I need. The usual stuff.”
Dana’s head was spinning. Between the musicians and Ms. Woods, things were happening very fast. It seemed forces were moving at last to help her. Or was it that she had finally let them? The words of Lord Ganesha echoed through her mind. Your gods are all around you, child of Faerie, you need but open your heart.
She rang Jean back only to find he was about to call her. His parents had just come home and Ms. Woods had rung them too.
“So, she’s put the two of us together in this,” Dana said uneasily.
She was not happy that Ms. Woods was taking charge and making plans on their behalf. But Jean was pleased.
“This is good, eh? We take the help she give us. But still we go and demand who is she and what is she. We do this tomorrow.”
In the end, Dana agreed to the plan, as it obviously made sense.
But they didn’t get the chance to put it into action.
For earlier that day, Gwen Woods had met Crowley.