"Easy now!" he said while the She-Goyl pointed her pistol at Clara. "I had a score to settle with your brother, but we won't harm a hair on you."
Fox struggled out of Clara's embrace and pulled the pistol from Jacob's belt. The She-Goyl kicked it out of her hand while Will just stood there, staring down at his brother.
"Look at him, Nesser," the Goyl said, roughly turning Will's face toward him. "He really is turning jade."
Will tried to ram his head into the Goyl's face, but he was too numbed. The Goyl laughed.
"You're one of us, all right!" he said. "Even if you can't accept it yet. Tie his hands!" he ordered the She-Goyl. Then he went over to Jacob's body and examined him as a hunter would his prey.
"His face looks familiar. What's his name?" he asked Will.
Will didn't answer.
"Never mind," the Goyl said, turning away. "You Doughskins all look the same, anyway. Round up the horses," he barked at the girl. Then he pushed Will toward Jacob's mare.
"Where are you taking him?" Clara barely recognized her own voice.
The Goyl didn't even turn around.
"Forget him!" he said over his shoulder. "He will soon forget you."
30
A Shroud of Red Bodies
The gunshot wound looked much less harmful that the wounds Jacob had suffered when the Unicorns tore open his back. Back then, however, Jacob had been breathing, and Fox had felt his faint pulse. Now he was just still.
So much pain. She wanted to dig her teeth into her flesh just not to feel it anymore. Her fur wouldn't come back, and she felt exposed and lost as an abandoned child.
Clara was cowering next to her in the grass, her arms clasped around her knees. She shed no tears. She just sat there, as if someone had cut out her heart.
Clara was the first to see the Dwarf. He was wading toward them through the grass, looking as innocent as if they'd caught him picking mushrooms. However, who else but a Dwarf could have told the Goyl that the only way out of the Fairy realm was through the Unicorn graveyard?
Fox wiped the tears from her eyes and felt through the grass for Jacob's pistol.
"Stop! Stop! What are you doing?" Valiant yelled as she pointed the weapon at him. He quickly cowered behind the nearest bush. "How could I know they'd shoot him right away? I thought they just wanted his brother."
Clara got to her feet.
"Shoot him, Fox," she said. "If you don't, I will."
"Wait!" Valiant clamored. "They caught me on my way back to the gorge. What was I supposed to do? Get myself killed as well?"
"And now?" Fox yelled at him. "Come to plunder a corpse on your way back?"
"That's outrageous! I'm here to rescue you!" the Dwarf retorted with genuine indignation. "Two girls, all alone, lost and helpless..."
"So helpless that we'll surely pay you to save us?"
The silence answering from the bush was very telling, and Fox lifted the pistol again. If only she could stop the tears. They blurred everything: the misty valley, the bush where the treacherous Dwarf was hiding, and Jacob's lifeless face.
"Fox!"
Clara put a hand on her arm. A red moth had landed on Jacob's punctured chest. Another landed on his brow.
Fox dropped the pistol.
"Get away from him!" she shouted, her voice drowning in tears. "Go and tell your mistress he's never coming back!" She leaned over Jacob. "Didn't I tell you," she whispered, "not to go back to the Fairies? This time it will kill you."