She made her way upstream along the shore until she found one of the tallest trees hanging over the river, its great, spreading boughs almost reaching across and touching the trees on the other side. She knew the relentless current tearing at its roots would soon bring the tree crashing down into the river, but for now it was her path.
She climbed up the trunk and then outward on the limbs, high up over the river’s tumbling flow, moving from branch to branch, her goal to cross over the river the way she’d seen squirrels do it, using the canopy of the trees as her bridge.
But as she crawled further out, the tree’s branches became slender green saplings bending and whipping in the wind. It felt like the wind was going to sweep her away. Every muscle in her body clenched as she bobbed and swayed in the upper branches. She could see the closest tree on the other side, a great pine with sturdy branches thick with needles, but she couldn’t leap across such a great distance. It was just too far.
Looking down, all she could see a hundred feet below her was the swirling black water of the river. If she lost her grip here, or tried to jump to the tree on the other side, then she’d go plummeting down. She’d either die when she hit the water or get swept away in the current and drown. One way or another the river would have her, just like it wanted.
As she was trying to figure out what to do, she heard a stick break on the forest floor down below her, back in the direction from which she had come. She swivelled, scanning the forest for danger. Had the storm-creech followed her scent and tracked her here? But then she spotted a robed figure moving slowly through the trees.
What kind of devil-spawn is comin’ now? she thought in exasperation. I just want to get on home!
She squinted her eyes and peered down through the branches of the trees, trying to make out who or what was down there.
It was a man wearing long robes, and a hood of some sort covered his head, like one of the old Celtic druids from ancient Britain that she’d seen depicted in Mr Vanderbilt’s books.
As he made his way through the forest, the robed man opened a pale and delicate hand in front of him. Suddenly, a glowing, hissing torch of blue light, like a tiny ball of lightning, rose up from his palm and hovered over his shoulder, lighting his way through the darkness.
Some kind of sorcerer, Serafina thought as she crouched lower. Her heart began to pound in her chest. The storm-creech, the floating black shapes, the storms . . . They were all his doing. Everything she had seen must have been the sorcerer’s conjurations. Had it been the sorcerer who attacked her on the loggia? Had he already taken over Biltmore? She had to get home.
But how? She was stuck up in a tree a hundred feet above a raging river.
When the dark-robed sorcerer stopped walking, the hair on the back of Serafina’s neck stood on end. Her whole body began to shake. Every sense inside her was telling her to fight or flee. Flee, her mind kept telling her. Flee before it’s too late!
The sorcerer slowly lifted his head and looked up into the trees in her direction.
Serafina scurried for cover, pushing herself further out onto the thinner branches of the tree even as they bent and twisted in the wind, lifting her and dropping her in sudden movements that made her stomach feel like it was floating.
She scanned the branches on the opposite side of the river. A moment before, it had been too far to jump, but her muscles were bursting now, her whole body filled with panic.
She focused her eyes on the branch she had to jump to, tilted her head to study the angle, then leapt for it with a mighty grunt.
As she flew through the air she envisioned herself as the black panther deep inside her soul and tried to shift her shape. She could see her panther form clearly in her mind. This was the moment. She was in midair. She had to do it now!
But the shift didn’t come.
She reached out desperately with her thin, human arms as she sailed through the air, trying to grab hold of the branches of the pine tree on the other side. When she felt her hands touch the branches, she grabbed hold. She had made the distance! But her body swung too hard, and she immediately lost her grip and continued to fall.
Her arms flailed, reaching out in all directions as she tried to catch hold of something, anything, on the way down.
She slammed into a thick branch. It knocked the wind out of her with a painful crack. She twisted around and frantically tried to hold on to the branch, but couldn’t.
She fell again, hit the branch below her, reached out, fell, grabbed, fell, slipped again, reached out, slipped, then grabbed hold with an infuriated snarl and finally held fast.
She found herself clinging to the bough of a pine tree some fifty feet lower than where she’d started. Her arms and legs were scratched and bleeding. The long, curving spine of her back, usually so supple and strong, hurt something fierce. Grabbing at the hard branches on the way down had jammed her measly human fingernails painfully into her fingers.
Frightened to make any more racket than she already had, and still wincing from the pain of the crashing fall, she gritted her teeth and quickly crawled into the cover of the pine tree’s inner branches and hid.
She peered out from her hiding spot, sure that the sorcerer must have heard her. She expected to see him staring up at her, or casting a spell, or summoning one of the black shapes to finish her off.
Instead, the smoking, hissing blue ball of burning light came towards her, floating up into the trees, illuminating everything around it in a bright halo as the sorcerer looked on from below. Serafina cowered into her hiding spot in the thick cluster of pine needles as the eerie blue light came closer.
The buzzing, burning light smelled like a lightning storm, and made her hair float up around her head. But she stayed hidden where she was, her skin tingling.
Finally, the light floated on, and the sorcerer continued his journey through the forest.
Serafina let out a deep sigh of relief and started breathing again.
She watched as the sorcerer made his way through the ferns that grew along the edge of the river. He leaned down and pulled some sort of plant from the ground, then moved on.
Suddenly, Serafina noticed something out of the corner of her eye, something moving much closer to her. Snapping her head towards it, she saw a large, silvery spiderweb glistening in the starlight, its eight-legged spinner lurking on the outer edge with its many eyes watching her. As the spider moved, tiny droplets of dew on the web shimmered in the light, some jostling loose and falling to the forest floor below, others moving like quicksilver along the strands. Serafina knew it was impossible, but she swore she could not just see, but hear the droplets sliding along the strands of the web. She could actually feel them skittering along, like a shudder down her spine.
Startled, she climbed away from the spider’s web and looked back down into the forest. The druid-sorcerer, or whatever he was, had gone down onto his knees now. The burning blue orb hovered over him like a lantern, giving him light to work. He dug through the boggy area at the edge of the river, gathering the tall, pitcher-shaped carnivorous plants that grew there.
Just as she was about to creep away, the sorcerer spoke. He did not stop his work or look around him. He didn’t speak in a deep and frightening man’s voice like she expected, but a surprisingly soft, calm, steady tone. It was as if Serafina wasn’t hidden in a tree a hundred feet away but concealed in the bushes beside the hooded figure.
‘I can’t see you, but I know you’re there,’ the voice said.