Doran listened to the breeze approaching through the forest around him and felt thankful that he was nearly through the oak before him. This was just the second wind he needed to get the last bit of the way through.
His axe bit home and he left it there, leaning on the fallen oak as the rustling leaves and greenery arrived, the wind bound within. A cool sensation overtook him from the small of his back to the tip of each hair on his head. He sighed with relief, the summer heat dissipating for a moment while the breeze continued through toward an unseen destination.
Somewhere behind him, he could feel a presence spinning itself out of the passing breeze.
Never a blessing without a curse
. He enjoyed what little time he had in the relative shaded coolness in the breeze's wake. Eventually, the age-old back and forth of fay and man would have to begin; it was only a matter of who had the greater store of patience. A foregone conclusion if ever there were one.
He broke first. "I can hear you frowning from over there."
"You must be fayfolk to hear a frown," came the swift riposte.
Doran put a hand on the haft of his axe and cast a glance over his shoulder. Maenyr, the fay, was gone. "You'd think with all the attention I get from them I'd be one," he said as her presence bubbled up, closer this time.
"Mmm," she began questioningly. "Just the one. Don't think yourself so high and mighty, woodcutter."
"Forester." His tone was resigned. They'd had this conversation for nearly two years, every other day. Like a wheel with a stone lodged in its rim, the cycle of sharp, keen interruption renewed itself with the passage of time.
He inclined his head toward the sun and found a familiar silhouette waiting for him on the low branch of a magnolia. Her hair dangled through the leaves in a midnight waterfall, hanging moss from another world entirely. Her impish grin set itself firmly against her features.
"Is there a difference? You're felling someone's home all the same,
woodcutter
."
"And planting two in its wake." His axe rose and fell once. The fay shivered visibly in his periphery.
"How magnanimous," rose sardonically through the leaves. The raven-haired fay sank into the greenery and revealed herself further up the tree. "You take one home and plant another. How long must one go without shelter before your gift grows roots?"
"There are plenty unclaimed trees."
"And none with stories all the same." Her voice was matter-of-fact.
"We've been over this a hundred times, Maenyr. I take what I need and give what I can. You'll recall what the valley looked like before I arrived."
"Beautiful. Green. Alive." She twirled a few strands of hair around her finger and waited for his inevitable response.
"And what does it look like now?" he yielded finally.
"Broad. Bare. Stony."
Doran's axe found the trunk again and it punctuated her remark. A grin crept into the forester's features. "Does that describe the valley or the man?"
Maenyr rolled her eyes. "Your vanity is boundless."
"Yours is just the same," he returned.
"And yet
my
home fed
your
furnace."
He paused again. "Your
home
fed my
home
."
"Just the same; you stole it from me."
"And gave you two in its place."
This time, Maenyr was indignant enough to sit up, long hair falling over her shoulders. "You call two saplings a replacement for an oak as old as the moon?"
Doran shrugged. "They won't always be saplings."
"And how long must I wait to reap the
generous
reward you gave? Twenty, thirty,
a hundred
seasons?"
"As long as it takes." He restarted the iron rhythm causing the trees to whisper his name in fear, so the fayfolk had told him. It appeared that Maenyr's usual stockpile of banter was depleted early. He almost found the resumed silence, punctuated only by his axe, to be a little disappointing.
"You know, some of them never forgave you for what you did," she said eventually, picking through the woven greenery of her shirt. Bits of clover fell through her fingertips like little dartmouth raindrops.
"I paid them back in full." Doran's mind went to the blood and runes offered to the offended fayfolk years ago. Delirious nights spent wrapped in a fur cloak, the stars overhead, things from 'Neath deciding just how many years to shave off his life. He thought the night Yigun came to collect her due would be his last.
Maenyr nodded. "I know."
"Does that bother you?"
"Your blood? Of course not." Her expression changed. "But you settled debts and they still held grudges."
"Some people are like that. I suppose it follows that some fayfolk are too."
"They agreed not to be. They agreed to hold no grudges, and yet they did. They broke their word."
"They never agreed not to hold grudges, only to let me live," Doran corrected. "I don't blame them."
"I do." She turned her eyes away. "They reneged on the agreement."
Maenyr rolled off her branch and disappeared into the leaves like a shadow, reappearing on the ground and springing out of the leaves just as quickly. Her feet touched the pile of leaves on the ground like the surface of a stream, just so. She moved to stand a little closer, keeping herself at arm's length as she peered at the forester's handiwork.
"That was Aurnur's home before he left. The tree you're chopping now."
Doran nodded knowingly. "He'll come back to two just like it. Just like Tuina and Gillondie before him."
"He's not coming back."
Doran stopped.
"He isn't?"