make a temporary gate and then close it permanentlyâthe Belmage couldnât use that to get to Westil.
Unless he struck while Wad was still on Mittlegard. Danny North would sense Wadâs arrivalâindeed, he would know that a Great Gate had been made. But would that knowledge be available to the Belmage? Would he understand it if he felt it himself? Danny was still able to make gates, using the captive outselves of long-dead gatemages; if the Belmage understood what was happening, he could force Danny to bring him directly to the Great Gate; Wad would have no choice then but to eat the gate before the Belmage could use it to go to Westil.
It would require alertness. But since Wad held all of Dannyâs gates inside him, Wad would be aware of whatever Danny did. There would be warning.
But it was still a risk; why chance it just to tell two boys that their mother was dead? Surely that was information that could wait a week or two more.
No. Wad had harmed the boys enough. He owed them honorable treatment now. To leave them in ignorance of such a terrible transformation of their lives was wrong. It had to be done.
Wad made the Great Gate in the clearing where Ced was studying with the treemage. âIf anyone but me comes through this Great Gate,â said Wad, âkill him immediately. Or her. Whoever it is.â
âEven if they come with you?â asked the treemage.
âEspecially if they come with me,â said Wad.
âAnd what if the Belmage has entered you ?â asked Ced.
âThen itâs all over, because you wonât be able to kill me,â said Wad.
âWe could try,â said the treemage.
âYou would fail,â said Wad. âAnd you wouldnât know the Belmage had me, anyway. Not quickly enough. So I need you to watch for anyone else . It means they snuck through when I wasnât looking.â
âAnd the penalty for that is death?â asked Ced.
âThe fate of this world is at risk here,â said Wad. âIf someone comes through it means I failed and somethingâs seriously wrong. It probably means Iâm dead. Whoever comes through will be powerful and dangerous, and if you donât kill them at once, theyâll probably kill you .â
âRemember, only you can prevent forest fires,â said Ced.
âI have no idea what you mean by that,â said Wad.
âIâm saying that weâll do what it takes,â Ced answered.
âCed and I will talk about this when youâre gone and reach our own decision,â said the treemage.
âIâm making such a huge mistake,â said Wad.
âProbably,â said the treemage. âBut we treemages know that doing anything is usually a mistake. And so is doing nothing. Almost everything is a mistake. Have a nice visit to Mittlegard.â
Wad turned slowly a couple of times, and cast a Great Gate with both ends sealed against anybody but himself. But since there were Lock- and Keyfriends on Mittlegard, it would not guarantee anything.
He found the two boys, Eluik and Enopp, racing each other through a pasture behind the home of Marion and Leslie Silverman. They were running toward the Great Gate, so they saw Wad arrive and changed direction, both at once.
For a moment Wad thought the older boy, Eluik, might have brought his ka out of his brotherâs body, but no. His eyes were still dead and empty. Yet he had been running, as surefooted as his brother. He must have been using his own eyes to seeâthe pasture was too clumpy and uneven for him to have been relying on Enoppâs eyes to see for them both.
But either way, Wad knew that both boys would hear and understand whatever he said, even if Enopp was the one who would speak for them.
âThatâs a Great Gate you came through, isnât it,â said Enopp.
âYouâre speaking the local language very well,â said Wad, âbut you should speak to me in