The Forest House Read Online Free Page B

The Forest House
Book: The Forest House Read Online Free
Author: Marion Zimmer Bradley
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gone into your lungs. Cynric, girls, look at that,” he went on. "Where the shoulder is still bleeding, the blood is dark and slow, so it is returning to the heart; if it were coming from the heart it would be bright red and spurting forth; and he would probably have bled to death before we found him.”
    The blond boy and the two girls bent over, one after the other, to see. Gaius lay silent. A dreadful suspicion had begun to steal over him. He had already abandoned all thought of identifying himself and asking them to take him to the house of Clotinus Albus in return for a substantial reward. Now he knew that only the old British tunic he had put on that morning for traveling had saved him. The offhand medical expertise of that speech told him that he was in the presence of a Druid. Then someone lifted him, and the world darkened and disappeared.
    Gaius awakened to firelight and the face of a girl looking down at him. For a moment her features seemed to swim in a fiery halo. She was young and her face was fair, but the eyes were an odd shade between hazel and grey; wide-spaced under pale lashes. Her mouth was dimpled, but so grave that it looked older than the rest of her; her hair was as light as her lashes, almost colorless except where the firelight lay red across it. One of her hands moved across his face and he felt it cool; she had been bathing his face in water.
    He looked for what seemed a long time, until her features were drawn for ever on his memory. Then someone said, "That’s enough, Eilan, I think he’s awake,” and the girl withdrew.
    Eilan …He had heard the name before. Had it been in some dream? She was lovely.
    Gaius struggled to see, and realized that he was lying in a bench bed built into the wall. He looked about him, trying to understand where he was. Cynric, the young man who had drawn him out of the pit, and the old Druid whose name he did not know, were standing beside him. He was lying in a wood-framed roundhouse built in the old Celtic style, with smoothed logs radiating out from the high peak of the roof to the low wall. He had not been in such a house since he was a little child, when his mother had taken him to visit her kin.
    The floor was thickly strewn with rushes; the wall of woven hazel withies was chinked and plastered with white-washed clay, and the partitions between the bed boxes were made of wicker as well. A great flap of leather curtained the entrance instead of a door. To lie in this place made him feel very young, as if all the intervening years of Roman training had been stripped away.
    His gaze moved slowly around the house and back to the girl. Her dress was of red-brown linen and she held a copper basin in her hand; she was tall, but younger than he had thought, her body still straight as a child’s beneath the folds of her gown. Light from the central hearth behind her glowed in her fair hair.
    The firelight also showed him the older man, the Druid. Gaius shifted his head a little and looked at him from beneath his lashes. The Druids were learned men among the Britons, but he had been told all his life that they were fanatics. To find himself in a Druid’s house was like waking up in a wolf’s lair, and Gaius did not mind admitting that he was afraid.
    At least when he had heard the old man calmly discoursing on the circulation of the blood, a thing he had heard from his father’s Greek physician was a teaching of the healer-priests of the highest rank, he had the sense to conceal his Roman identity.
    Not that these folk made any secret of who they were. "We dug that pit for boars and bears and Romans,” the young man had said quite casually. This should have told him at once that he was a good long way outside the little protected circle of Roman domination. Yet he was no more than a day’s ride from the Legion post at Deva!
    But if he was in the hands of the enemy, at least they were treating him well. The clothes the girl wore

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