"The only thing worse than a boy who hates you: a boy that loves you."
-Markus Zusak, The Book Thief
***
An owl came to the kitchen window and shrieked twice, and Branwen knew she'd have two visitors tonight. So she put the kettle on the fire, lit candles in every window, and waited to see what trouble this way came.
Her cottage was far away from the river but just barely close enough to the village that a determined person could make the trip through the pathless woods to her front door. Not many people did come; not many people even liked to remember that Branwen existed. Life was easier—and safer—without thinking about such things.
But there were always some. However long they put it off, someone always came eventually.
Now she stood at the door and waited. Before long, a light appeared between the trees. It grew brighter as it bobbed along, and behind it Branwen gradually made out the figure of a young man. He was tall, broad, dark, and his clothes were simple but good. From the looks of him he'd been walking for a long time in the pathless woods with only a small light to keep him out of the brush and mire, but he appeared little worse for the wear.
Only now that he was almost at the threshold of the narrow course of ruined planks that served her for a fence did he hesitate. Branwen saw him lean away almost imperceptibly, as if invisible hands pulled him back...
But then she raised her candle higher to make sure that he saw her waiting, and once he did he pushed himself the rest of the way to the door, leaving the dark, leaning tree trunks and shallow bogs behind.
He'd never been here before, but Branwen recognized him anyway. She knew everybody; she'd been here for a long time, much longer than anyone really knew "Come in, Marshal," she said, stepping aside.
She could tell that the cottage was not what he expected: Nothing sinister or hellish, no fiendish creatures or bones of previous guests in the corners. Just a simple space, large enough to suit a simple woman, with a kettle over the fire instead of a cauldron. She had dried flowers and herbs hanging in the windows but mostly the same type as you'd find in any house in the village. There were some cobwebs in the eaves, but only as many as could settle between dustings.
Branwen was probably not what he expected either: not a hag or a monster or even a temptress. Just a woman, albeit one who regarded him with peculiar familiarity. "You know my name?" Marshal said, taking off his coat but declining to hang it and hugging it to his chest instead.
"Of course I know you," Branwen said. "Warm up by the fire." She paused to sweep out the dirt he'd tracked in. "Then you can tell me what you've come for."
But the boy didn't say anything as he moved to the hearth, and he didn't take his eyes off of her. He had dull blue eyes, the color of bad seas, and a smooth face, soft like a child's, though she knew him to be at least 20.
It was a quiet night, and you could hear the creak of every timber in the cottage and the rustle of every branch outside. When she was done with the broom Branwen sat in her favorite chair and picked up her embroidery hoop.
"Are you scared?" she said, testing the point of a needle with her thumb.
The boy swallowed. "Yes. But not for my life."
"What then?"
"For my soul. They say it's a mortal sin to come here."
"They're right," said Branwen. "You'll roast an extra ten years in purgatory just for talking to me. But it's too late to do anything about that now, so you may as well tell me what you want."
The boy started. Branwen laughed. Then he jumped when the kettle screamed on the fire, and Branwen took it off.
"What else do they say about me in town?" she said. "That I sold my soul? That I can turn men into horses or goats or hogs and ride them to the Sabbat, where I dance naked in the woods for my Master? Well, it's all true."
She was pouring the water from the kettle into a bowl on the sideboard.
"But you knew all that before you came here and you came here anyway. So you must have come for something awfully important. Are you in love?"
Startled again, Marshal dropped his coat. "Do you know my thoughts?" he said as she stooped to pick it up again. Branwen shook her head.
"I don't have to. That's what men your age always come for."
She might have added: It's what your father came to me for when he was your age.
Leaves were steeping in the hot water in the bowl, and Branwen gave them a good stir and then straightened her apron and smiled at him. "I can read it in your palm, if you prefer something a little more exciting," she said. He went stiff as a dead cat when she took his hand and traced the lines with one fingertip. He had strong hands, calloused from work.
She really could tell a lot from a man's hands: Marshal was a carpenter by craft, a good hand at repairing roofs, rails, and fences. She could tell that he was practical and shy, and although he tried to act brave his racing pulse gave him away. But instead of that she said, "You've a long love line."
"Do I?"
"No. But that's that kind of thing young men want to hear. Your future isn't in your hand, Marshal, it's in your brains and your mouth. Tell me who the girl is."
He swelled up as he said, "Eimhear Devlin."
Oh of course, thought Branwen.
"I know she wouldn't listen to suit from a man like me..." he continued.
"Why not?"
Marshal blinked. "Well, she's rich. Or her father is rich, anyway."
"And you'd be rich if you married her."
"I don't care about that! I love Eimhear because..." He tripped over his words for a second. "She's wise. And beautiful, and chaste—"