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the Dark Pilgrim yourself, and pledge yourself personally to his service, you must practice your song and
help transport this new beast peacefully to the stronghold. Then I won't have to slay you. All right?"
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Colin was flabbergasted by the reprieve, and almost as much by the fickle shifting of the lady's moods,
but he hastened to agree. He couldn't have proposed a better device for gaining time until Maggie could
rescue them himself. He cheerfully sent Moonshine an image of Maggie stopping long enough for a
toasted wolf sandwich to bolster her strength before she led a small army to save them.
"It ain't easy bein' a messenger on the best of days," the arrow-bearing emissary complained in a whining
voice. "But with women in command, a man can't get a word in to save 'is soul." He muttered his
complaint to the burly bandit to whom he had first spoken, out of earshot of the nymph.
The other man shoved the arrow back into his hand and growled, " 'erself don't read minds, ya knows.
Tell 'er."
The messenger rose and went to Sally, presenting her with the arrow as a gentleman would present a
calling card. " 'is Worship needs you 'n' t'lads back ter t'stronghold, mum. Now. 'E says t' tell you that t'
king's forces've landed, an' 'e needs you ter wipe 'em out, like."
Sally's face brightened and softened at once as if she'd received a pretty compliment. "Why, certainly. At
once," she agreed, and put her silver hunting horn to her lips and blew a blast worthy of a woman whose
alter ego was a wind storm.
Maggie rolled to one side of the charging wolf, leaping to her feet as he flew past her and landed on the
ground.
"Shoo, you stupid animal!" she said. "I haven't the patience to put up with your nastiness right now. Get
on with you, and I'll forget it happened."
Unimpressed by her magnanimity, the wolf sprang again, but she ducked around a tree and began to try
to shinny up it. Fangs snapped shut on her skirt tail, and she felt a tug and heard a rip. She tried to
conjure up a fire, just a little hotfoot for the beast, but no flame appeared, and the animal's feet remained
busily engaged in propelling him past her skirt, toward her fleshier outcroppings.
Of all the times for her magic to fail! If she lived to think about it, she decided, she'd have to try to
discover why it had chosen this particular time, but right now she was preoccupied with losing her grip.
She clutched desperately at a fungus growth near her fingertips, trying to use it to pull herself up. It broke,
and she fell.
She landed squarely in the middle of a furry, squirming, snarling mass of wolf, her knee in his midsection,
his claws raking her arm. She rolled to the side, but this time he rolled with her, and then they both rolled
over and over down a slight incline at the base of which was a stream.
Just before they rolled into the water, they stopped. She was on top, and grabbed his muzzle in one
hand to keep him from biting her nose off. With her other hand she sought his throat, determined to
throttle him if she could. His hind legs pedaled at her middle, trying to disembowel her, and almost
succeeded when she leaned in to try to make her stranglehold more secure. She leapt aside and
scrambled to her feet and ran, heedless of what the sensible thing to do when faced with wild animals
was supposed to be.
He was on her again before she knew it, slamming against her back and knocking her to the ground
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again. One arm was pinned under her. The other she braced against his neck, keeping his teeth at bay
and also getting a much closer look than she really wanted at the inside of a wolf's mouth.
Then the mouth started to change, and the entire face with it, dissolving into something neither wolf nor
man, and horrible in its indecision. In a moment, the paws on her shoulders became long-nailed,
bristle-covered hands and the face before her melted into a man's. Someone she'd met, as a matter of
fact.
"Jivemgood!" she exclaimed. "Aren't you Count Jivemgood?"
"Yeeess," he said, slobbering, mocking her, "And aren't you delicious?"
But he shifted his weight slightly when he said it, and she shifted hers enough to free her hand. She
grabbed for her medicine pouch, dangling out of her skirt pocket, and pulled forth its contents, whatever
it was. "Not without seasoning," she replied, and flung assorted herbs and powders straight into his face.
They parted, sneezing, but he got the worst of it, and hacked and choked, and in the process changed
back into a wolf, who hacked and choked even more violently.
Now that she knew what he was and that he had no intention of running off into the woods like a decent,
sane wild animal, and also realized that no retreat of hers would be fast enough to save her, she had no
scruples about slaying him. Closing her hand over the sewing shears she had dropped into her pocket
after using them to make her useless torch, she opened them, clutching them like a dagger in her fist, and
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