continued walking together, and Marcus found he was glad for the company. âHave you seen any of the others?â he asked after a while.
âNot since we left home,â replied Clovis. âBut before we divided up, I heard Jerrid say heâs going to try to cut through the forest.â
Marcus had heard stories of the Black Forest and the terrifying creatures that lived among the entangled trunksand limbs. Anyone who was presumptuous enough to think he could get through it and live was either naïve or arrogantâand Jerrid Zwelger was both.
âOf course heâd try a shortcut,â said Marcus. âHe wants the Rock of Ivanore for himself.â
âDo you really think so?â
âHeâs been boasting for weeks about how heâs going to finish the quest before the rest of usânot content to share the glory, I suppose.â
âWell, I for one hope we find the Rock of Ivanore quickly,â said Clovis. âIâve never been away from home before.â
âBut how can any of us find it if we donât even know what it is?â Marcus felt annoyed that Zyll had not at least given him a clue as to the rockâs location.
âI think itâs something magical,â Clovis suggested.
âWhat makes you say that?â
âI overheard my parents talking with the Archers about it once, though I only heard snippets. Supposed to be powerful enough to build and destroy entire kingdoms.â
Marcus laughed. âSounds like a fable to me.â
âMaybe, but . . . oh no!â Clovis stopped abruptly and pinched his nose.
âWhatâs wrong?â Marcus dropped his satchel to the ground and hurried to Clovisâs side. A thin, red line trickled down Clovisâs upper lip.
âItâs nothing,â he whined in a muffled, nasal voice. âJust a bloody nose. I get them sometimes. Quite often, actually. Iâm fine. Really.â
âAre you sure?â Marcus glanced up through the trees. Daylight would be fading soon, and they had not traveled half the distance he had hoped to.
âIâll be fine in a few minutes,â said Clovis, âhalf an hour at most.â
Marcus sat down on a boulder jutting out from the soft earth and wished he had brought one of Zyllâs books along for the journey. âItâll be dusk by then,â he said. âWe might as well camp here.â
âI donât mind going on,â said Clovis. âWe could reach Vrystal Canyon in two or three hours.â
âThe sunâs going down,â replied Marcus. He was beginning to regret letting Clovis come along. Clovis released his nose, but the blood still flowed freely. He pinched it again.
âNearly clotted,â he said apologetically. âIn five minutes, Iâll be ready to goââ
âI told you, weâre making camp!â snapped Marcus. The moment he did so, he regretted the outburst. He looked away from the stunned expression on Clovisâs face, afraid his own shame was apparent.
âIâm sorry,â he said. âI didnât mean to lose my temper. Itâs just thatââ He felt his cheeks grow warm. âI donât like the dark.â
He was certain that Clovis would burst into laughter. Marcus, nearly a man and afraid of the dark. But there was no laughter.
âOh,â said Clovis, as though the news were as trivial as a fruit fly. âWeâll need wood for the fire then. Shall I go?â
Marcus smiled at his companion, whose nostrils were still clamped in the vise-like grip of his fingers. âIâll go,â he said and set off to gather wood in the forest.
When he returned, he found Clovis devouring a plump slice of roasted quail, his nosebleed all but forgotten. âMother packed it for me,â Clovis said through greasy lips. Marcus eyed the meat hungrily and reached into his satchel. Just as he had feared, his bread had turned to