* * * * *
...the pair had met some eighteen months previously and in similar circumstances. Shona had been in the forest, to the glade where she often found the plumpest mushrooms, the freshest of forest berries and the most aromatic herbs. The day was hot and Shona, being in no great hurry to complete her given tasks, thought it would be pleasant to rest awhile in this quiet place, undisturbed by anything save the sweet trilling of song-birds in the trees and bushes about her. Lifting her shift-dress, her sole garment, she settled beside the chuckling stream, the mossy bank soft and cooling beneath her bare bottom. She refreshed herself by dabbling her feet in the cool water.
Then she felt that she was not alone, the heightened senses bestowed by her heritage telling her that another was nearby. She turned when she heard a low growl and saw a white wolf emerging from among the trees. The beast crouched as if preparing to attack and slunk forward, eyes fixed on Shona.
Shona relaxed with a sigh. "If you think I'm afraid of you," she laughed, "you are very much mistaken. If you want to frighten someone, go and find some ignorant villager to do so. But remember, the gods frown on those who would break The Pact."
The wolf arose from its hunting crouch and sat back on its haunches, head cocked on one side as if puzzled.
"Come on," the girl said, "come on and show yourself, if you are able."
The wolf stood and shook itself. Its fur rippled and crept in an unnatural way and the very air around it seem to shimmer. And then in place of a wolf there stood a tall and lovely young woman with startling blue eyes and a cascade of silvery-white hair which hung well below her waist.
"Did you not recognise me for what I am?" asked Shona "Were you truly trying to frighten me?"
"Of course I recognised what you are," the woman replied, "I just wanted to see if you had courage." She seemed to ponder for a few seconds then added: "I'm Maeve."
Taking her feet from the stream and standing, the girl said: "And I'm Shona."
"You are of the forest pack," said Maeve, a statement, not a question.
Shona nodded. "And you?"
"I am of the hill pack."
A worried look crossed Shona's pretty face. "Then we are enemies," she said.
Maeve did not reply. She stood, head cocked on one side as if listening. Without warning she seized Shona's arm with one hand while scooping up the girl's basket with the other. She hustled Shona from clearing, almost dragging her among the trees until they were well concealed. "Men coming," she hissed, "Stay quiet." Moments later a band of half-dozen or so rough-looking fellows crossed the clearing, some carrying large baskets filled with fallen wood, others wearing belts laden with various tools. They disappeared into the trees at the far side of the glade. When Maeve judged that the men were out of earshot, she whispered, "Charcoal burners and tinkers, not always to be trusted. Most are honest workmen but there are always rogues amongst them. A lone girl such as yourself might be in peril from their lusts. And that could trigger conflict between our species."
"And would you not also be in danger from them?"
Maeve grinned. "I don't believe they would linger to confront an angry wolf. She looked around the glade. "This is a fine enough place for collecting berries and fruits but as you have just witnessed, others do come through here and often. I know a secluded place where no others tread. Will you come with me so that we can get to know each other?"
"What is your intention," said Shona, "are you going to change back and devour me?"
Maeve laughed, a beautiful silvery sound reinforced by the whistling and chattering of the birds among the leaves. "Well, you would make a toothsome morsel but I have broken my fast for today so perhaps not." She held out an elegant hand which Shona accepted after a moment's hesitation.
For reasons time itself had forgotten, there had been decades-long bad blood between their packs. Mostly the pack members tended to avoid each other or to tread carefully when encounters could not be avoided but occasionally there was an eruption of violence, usually among the immature younger males of the packs. Then the pack elders had to meet and thrash out new peace proposals. "If only the damned fool youngsters could see how much better off we would be as a combined pack," Darragh, Shona's father, had once complained over their evening meal. Darragh was the acknowledged Beta male of the pack and generally accepted as having the finest mind of them all, even when in wolf-shape.
Maeve led Shona along yet another track, this one largely concealed by layers of bracken and wild forest flowers. Several minutes of walking brought them to a small glade carpeted with thick layers of moss and tiny flowers. Boughs overhead contorted and weaved themselves in a bower, providing shelter from the sun. Maeve sat and beckoned Shona to join her. Still with doubt in her mind, Shona obeyed but did not sit too close to the other woman.
"Don't be afraid," Maeve told her, "I mean no harm."
"But our packs are enemies."
"Only among the more stupid of our young men." Maeve picked a number of daisies and began to fashion them into something. "I am certain that our elders would live in harmony, friendship even, if they could but disregard the prejudices of yesteryear."
While Maeve talked, Shona had been looking around the glade and was taken aback by a strange sight. Around the edge of the glade lay and sat an audience of the wild animals of the forest, rabbits, foxes, badgers, hares and others. Even squirrels had descended from their dreys in the upper branches and clung to the lower boles to watch the women. But why? Wild things were usually sensitive to the presence of
ciaróea
or even men and went into hiding at their approach. She touched Maeve's arm gently and nodded towards the assembled creatures.
Maeve looked up from her task. "Didn't I say?" she smiled, "This glade is enchanted, it is dedicated to the
fae
and I have been granted privilege to visit here. There are no hunters and hunted here, only beings that can meet without fear." She finished what she was doing and held it up for Shona to see. She had fashioned a crown of the interwoven daisies.
She leaned forward and placed the flowers on Shona's head. "There, now you are no longer just Shona of the forest pack, now you are Shona, lovely queen of the forest." She took Shona's hands in hers and regarded her solemnly. "Which would you choose, Shona, for us to be foes or for us to exchange the kiss of peace?"
"I... I... I think the kiss of peace..."
* * * * *
"...one day," said Maeve, "you will mistake another for me, another who may be a rogue and neither recognise you for one of our kind nor care."
Shona laughed. She had heard this warning from Maeve so often. "True love doesn't blind me," she replied, "it opens my eyes. And anyway, even though I have not yet gained full powers, I do have our high sense of smell. I could never mistake the scent of another for you. You followed me from the village and I tracked you all the way. It was only a case of when and where you would choose to show yourself."
Maeve laughed too, a joyful sound in that autumn-bleak woodland. "My darling Shona is coming on." Following that first encounter they had met as often as circumstances allowed. At first they came together as developing friends, exchanging the kiss of peace each time that they met, Shona quickly accepting that there was a better way to live than enmity. In time the kisses became more passionate than the traditional and slowly the two fell deeply in love although neither admitted it for some time.
The day came when they could no longer contain the ache, when their emotional love spilled over into a more intimate and physical one. They had gone, as usual, to the glade of the
fae
and knelt to face each other. Maeve held out her hands and Shona took them in hers. "
Is breá liom tú
...I love you," said Maeve, "I love you and want you."