from the leads and handed both halves to Ynen.
âThere you are. Sheâs all yours now.â
Ynen sat holding both halves of the drawing. He was glad, but it seemed a shame. It was the high price Hildy had to pay for being important. Ynen reflected that this autumn he would at last be old enough to take part in the Sea Festival. He swore to himself that if he died in the attempt, he would catch his grandfather one on the nose with a rattle. Hadd deserved it if ever anyone did. Then he thought about the Earl of Hannartâs sons and hoped Uncle Harchad would be in the procession, too. He would catch a whopper.
Down in Holand, they were still talking about the Northmen. As Milda said, it seemed hard to hang them when they had only come in for shelter. Hobin said it was only to be expected. Mitt gradually forgot his mixed feelings. As time went on, he remembered more and more his glimpse of the Northerners shuffling like all prisoners. It came to something, he thought, when the tyranny of Holand could make free men of the North look so abject. In fact, as a free soul himself, he despised the Northmen a little for it. Come autumn, and Iâll show them! he thought.
Most people were sorry for the Northmen. Feeling ran high against Hadd all that summer. Then rumors were heard that the North had defeated the South in a great battle and blocked the last of the passes in the mountains between them. After that even people who were in favor of Hadd began saying it was Haddâs fault. He had let them in for a shameful defeat by hanging twenty innocent men.
âGood,â said Siriol. âThings are going our way nicely.â
The Free Holanders were planning long and carefully all through that summer. Among other things it suddenly dawned on Mitt and Milda that no one must connect Hobin with Mitt when Mitt threw his bomb. Give Harchadâs spies half a clue, as Mitt said, and Hobin would be hanged. Mitt was confident that he could lie well enough to keep Hobin out of it. âIâve had years of practice,â he said. âThe wonder is that I know how to tell the truth these days. But will Hobin keep himself out of it?â That was the trouble. Hobin seldom bothered to watch the Festival. But he might take it into his head to do so, and if he saw Mitt being arrested, he was quite capable of going with Mitt and spoiling everything. âThatâs the worst of him being so honest,â Mitt said.
Mitt took this problem to the Free Holanders. They put their heads together. The result was that Ham, who had always liked Hobin, struck up a proper friendship with him. The two of them went for walks together, out in the Flate, all that summer. Ham managed surprisingly cunningly. He got Hobin used to longer and longer walks. By the end of the summer they were spending all day in the Flate, having supper at an inn, and not getting back to Holand until after nightfall.
âSee?â Ham said, with his big, slow grin. âThen on the day of the Festival, we go out to High Mill, twenty-odd mile, and weâll be seen. Iâll make sure the innkeeper swears to us.â
Then, to Mittâs exasperation, another society of freedom fighters put its oar in. It was called Hands to the North. It tacked notices to the gates of the Palace and the barracks which promised, in crude writing and even cruder language, to kill Hadd during the Sea Festival. â AND AS MANY ER THE REST ER YU AS WE CAN GIT .â
âThatâs torn it!â Mitt said as soon as he heard the news. Milda broke the eggs again, and a jug of milk for good measure, and she and Mitt both seized a baby apiece and hurried round to see Siriol. âWhat shall we do?â said Mitt. âThereâll be spies and soldiers all over now. Who are these Hands to the North anyway?â
âNot any lot I know,â said Siriol. âThis is bad. It could have the Earl stopping the Festival.â
âHeâd better
Douglas E. Schoen, Melik Kaylan