flashed out and neatly razored the supplicating ghost in half; with a faint cry the thing dissolved like smoke.
âBen!â screeched up another. âBless you, son, youâve brought refreshments for your father! I knewââ
âNo,â said Hurwood. His mouth was a straight line as the knife flashed out again and another lost wail flitted away on the breeze.
âCanât hold âem back forever,â panted the
bocor
.
âA little longer,â Hurwood snapped. â
Margaret!
â
There was a curdling agitation off to one side, and then a cobwebby form drifted to the front. âBenjamin, how have you come here?â
âMargaret!â His cry was more one of pain than triumph. âHer,â he snarled at the
bocor
. âLet her come up.â
The
bocor
quit the sweeping motion and began jabbing back all the shadows except the one Hurwood had indicated. The ghost approached the trench, then blurred and shrank and became clearly visible again in a kneeling posture. She reached out toward the blood, then halted and simply touched the flour-and-rum paste on the rim. For a moment she was opaque in the torchlight, and her hand became substantial enough to roll one of the candy balls a few inches. âWe shouldnât be here, Benjamin,â she said, her voice a bit more resonant now.
âThe
blood,
take the
blood
ââ the one-armed man shouted, falling to his knees on the other side of the trench.
With no sound at all the ghostâs form relaxed into smoke and blew away, though the cold blade hadnât come near her.
â
Margaret!
â the man roared, and dove over the trench into the massed ghosts; they gave way before him like spider webs strung between trees, and his jaw clacked shut against the hard-packed dirt. The ringing in his ears almost prevented him from hearing the chorus of dismayed ghost-voices fading away to silence.
After a few moments Hurwood sat up and squinted around. The torchlight was brighter, now that there were no ghost-forms to filter it.
The
bocor
was staring at him. âI hope it was worth it.â
Hurwood didnât answer, just got slowly, wearily to his feet, rubbing his scraped chin and pushing the damp white hair back out of his face. The monsters still stood and crouched and hung just outside the ash lines; evidently none of them had moved, or even blinked, probably, during the whole business.
âEntertained, were you?â shouted Hurwood in English, shaking his lone fist at them. âDive over the trench again, shall I, just so you wonât feel cheated?â His voice was getting tight and shrill, and he was blinking rapidly as he took a step toward the edge of the clearing, pointing at one of the watchers, a huge pig with a cluster of rooster heads sprouting from its neck. âAh, you there, sir,â Hurwood went on in a travesty of hearty friendliness, âdo favor us with your frankest opinions. Would I have been better advised to do a spot of juggling instead? Or, perhaps, with face paint and a false noseââ
The
bocor
caught his elbow from behind and turned him around and stared at him with wonder and something that was almost pity. âStop,â he said softly. âMost of them canât hear, and I donât think
any
of them understand English. At sunrise theyâll go away and weâll leave.â
Hurwood pulled free of the other manâs grasp, walked back to the center of the clearing and sat down, not far from the trench and the two drained corpses. The hot-metal smell ofmagic was gone, but the breeze wasnât dispelling the blood-reek very much.
Sunrise wouldnât be for another nine or ten hours; and though he had to stay here until then, it would certainly be impossible to sleep. The prospect of the long wait sickened him.
He remembered the
bocor
âs statement: âI hope it was worth it.â
He looked up at the stars and sneered a
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