down. âI just wanted to knowââ
âMy body canât take another beating,â said Magnus, shifting closer to the wall.
Oland stood up quickly. âI donât want to hurt you. Who hurt you?â
Magnus snorted. âThe list would be as long as a Decresian night,â he said, âexcept for the fact that no one can hurt me. Not any more.â He still hadnât opened his eyes. âI know that The Great Rains are nigh; itâs a fact. I know they are, and whether people believe me or not is no concern of mine. They can laugh at me, they can beat me in the shadows when no one is looking, but I know.â
Oland lowered his voice. âDid King Micah tell you that?â he said.
Magnus went very still. âNoâ¦â He turned slightly and opened one eye to look at Oland. âHa!â he said. âA spy from The Craven Lodge!â
âIâm not a spy,â said Oland. âAnd Iâm not from The Craven Lodge.â
âI know you live up there with them.â He laughed. âWhat fool mans my mill now?â
âPardon me?â said Oland.
âPardon you?â Again, Magnus snorted. âTwenty-eight years,â he said. âFor twenty-eight years, I was the kingâs miller. Along with my sons, long dead now. And my wife, long dead now. My beautiful Hester Rose.â He paused. âAnd I no different,â said Magnus. âLong dead now. Dead of heart.â
Oland had no words of reply.
âAnd my beloved was guardian of the king and queenâs one hundred beautiful acres. Every morning, safe from the winds and the biting rain, she would fill the throne room while all were sleeping. Flowers and plants and all manner of fruits and vegetables from our very own garden in the grounds.â He paused. âAnd then came the cravenâ¦â
âIâm sorryââ said Oland.
âAt night I lie here and I watch the blades of my mill go round and round up on that screaming hill and I wonder what fool mans my mill,â said Magnus.
âIt was a tragedy what happened to King Micah,â said Oland.
âNot for you it wasnât,â said Magnus.
Oland knew that his association with The Craven Lodge would forever taint him. The fact that they had imprisoned him did not matter to a man who had lost his family, his livelihood, his home.
âCurse your souls,â spat Magnus. âA thousand times, curse your souls.â He closed his eyes again.
âPlease,â said Oland.
He waited, but the miller said nothing more⦠until Oland walked away. Then he shouted after him, âSheâs one of the souls! Sheâs one of the souls! My love lies with the seeds she sowed! And you! You all trample the ground!â
When Oland glanced back, Magnus had his hands over his ears and his face was twisted in grief. Oland was sickened, but he knew he had no words to soothe this broken man. Instead, he walked back and set down beside him the small parcel of food he had brought from the castle, and he left.
Â
There was no end to the poisonous reach of The Craven Lodge and Villius Renâs capacity for rage. Now that Oland was his masterâs focus, more than he had ever been before, the idea that he could perform the miracle of restoring Decresian made him laugh out loud.
I am no one , thought Oland. I am fourteen years old, I achieved nothing by my tenth birthday and I will no doubt achieve nothing by my twentieth.
But Oland Born had already achieved more than he would ever know. For somewhere in the filthy, dark and rowdy hallways of Castle Derrington, he had raised himself â a boy with a kind heart, a gentle soul. And, as he had only begun to discover⦠a fighting soul.
Oland Born, Oland bred.
LAND MADE HIS WAY TO THE VILLAGE SQUARE AND found a bench under a silver birch tree. A shadow passed across a thin sliver of moonlight on the grass in front of him. Oland leaned forward. The