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The Summer of the Danes
Ellis Peters
The Summer of the Danes
Ellis Peters
The Eighteenth Chronicle of Brother Cadfael
Digital Edition v2 HTML – February 6, 2003
Copyright 1991 © by Ellis Peters
All rights reserved
CONTENTS
^
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter One
^ »
The extraordinary events of that summer of 1144
may properly be said to have begun the previous year, in a tangle
of threads both ecclesiastical and secular, a net in which any
number of diverse people became enmeshed, clerics, from the
archbishop down to Bishop Roger de Clinton’s lowliest deacon,
and the laity from the princes of North Wales down to the humblest
cottager in the trefs of Arfon. And among the commonalty thus
entrammelled, more to the point, an elderly Benedictine monk of the
Abbey of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, at Shrewsbury.
Brother Cadfael had approached that April in a mood of slightly
restless hopefulness, as was usual with him when the birds were
nesting, and the meadow flowers just beginning to thrust their buds
up through the new grass, and the sun to rise a little higher in
the sky every noon. True, there were troubles in the world, as
there always had been. The vexed affairs of England, torn in two by
two cousins contending for the throne, had still no visible hope of
a solution. King Stephen still held his own in the south and most
of the east; the Empress Maud, thanks to her loyal half-brother,
Robert of Gloucester, was securely established in the southwest and
maintained her own court unmolested in Devizes. But for some months
now there had been very little fighting between them, whether from
exhaustion or policy, and a strange calm had settled over the
country, almost peace. In the Fens the raging outlaw Geoffrey de
Mandeville, every man’s enemy, was still at liberty, but a
liberty constricted by the king’s new encircling fortresses,
and increasingly vulnerable. All in all, there was room for some
cautious optimism, and the very freshness and luster of the spring
forbade despondency, even had despondency been among
Cadfael’s propensities.
So he came to chapter, on this particular day at the end of
April, in the most serene and acquiescent of spirits, full of mild
good intentions towards all men, and content that things should
continue as bland and uneventful through the summer and into the
autumn. He certainly had no premonition of any immediate change in
this idyllic condition, much less of the agency by which it was to
come.
As though compelled, half fearfully and half gratefully, to the
same precarious but welcome quietude, the business at chapter that
day was modest and aroused no dispute, there was no one in default,
not even a small sin among the novices for Brother Jerome to
deplore, and the schoolboys, intoxicated with the spring and the
sunshine, seemed to be behaving like the angels they certainly were
not. Even the chapter of the Rule, read in the flat, deprecating
tones of Brother Francis, was the 34th, gently explaining that the
doctrine of equal shares for all could not always be maintained,
since the needs of one might exceed the needs of another, and he
who received more accordingly must not preen himself on being
supplied beyond his brothers, and he that received less but enough
must not grudge the extra bestowed on his brothers. And above all,
no grumbling, no envy. Everything was placid, conciliatory,
moderate. Perhaps, even, a shade on the dull side?
It is a blessed thing, on the whole, to live in slightly dull
times, especially after disorder, siege and bitter contention. But
there was still a morsel somewhere in Cadfael that itched if the
hush continued too long. A little excitement, after all, need not
be mischief, and does sound a pleasant counterpoint to the constant
order, however much that may be loved and however faithfully
served.
They were at the end of routine business, and Cadfael’s
attention had wandered away from the details of the
cellarer’s accounts, since he himself had no function as an
obedientiary, and was content to leave such matters to those who
had. Abbot Radulfus was about to close the chapter, with a sweeping
glance around him to make sure that no one else was brooding over
some demur or reservation, when the lay porter who served at the
gatehouse during service or chapter put his head in at the door, in
a manner which suggested he had been waiting for this very moment,
just out of sight.
“Father Abbot, there is a guest here from Lichfield.
Bishop de Clinton has sent him on an errand into Wales, and he asks
lodging here for a night or two.”
Anyone of less importance, thought Cadfael, and he would have
let it wait until we all emerged, but if the bishop is involved it
may well be serious business, and require official consideration
before we disperse. He had good memories of Roger de Clinton, a man
of decision and solid good sense, with an eye for the genuine and
the bogus in other men, and a short way with problems of doctrine.
By the spark in the abbot’s eye, though his face remained
impassive, Radulfus also recalled the bishop’s last visit
with appreciation.
“The bishop’s envoy is very welcome,” he said,
“and may lodge here for as long as he wishes. Has he some
immediate request of us, before I close this chapter?”
“Father, he would like to make his reverence to you at
once, and let you know what his errand is. At your will whether it
should be here or in private.”
“Let him come in,” said Radulfus.
The porter vanished, and the small, discreet buzz of curiosity
and speculation that went round the chapterhouse like a ripple on a
pond ebbed into anticipatory silence as the bishop’s envoy
came in and stood among them.
A little man, of slender bones and lean but wiry flesh,
diminutive as a sixteen-year-old boy, and looking very much like
one, until discerning attention discovered the quality and maturity
of the oval, beardless face. A Benedictine like these his brothers,
tonsured and habited, he stood erect in the dignity of his office
and the humility and simplicity of his nature, as fragile as a
child and as durable as a tree. His straw-coloured ring of cropped
hair had an unruly spikiness, recalling the child. His grey eyes,
formidably direct and clear, confirmed the man.
A small miracle! Cadfael found himself suddenly presented with a
gift he had often longed for in the past few years, by its very
suddenness and improbability surely miraculous. Roger de Clinton
had chosen as his accredited envoy into Wales not some portly canon
of imposing presence, from the inner hierarchy of his extensive
see, but the youngest and humblest deacon in his household, Brother
Mark, sometime of Shrewsbury abbey, and assistant for two fondly
remembered years among the herbs and medicines of Cadfael’s
workshop.
Brother Mark made a deep reverence to the abbot, dipping his
ebullient tonsure with a solemnity which still retained, until he
lifted those clear eyes again, the slight echo and charm of
absurdity which had always clung about the mute waif Cadfael first
recalled. When he stood erect he was again the ambassador; he would
always be both man and child from this time forth, until the day
when he became priest, which was his passionate desire. And that
could not be for some years yet, he was not old enough to be
accepted.
“My lord,” he said, “I am sent by my bishop on
an errand of goodwill into Wales. He prays you receive and house me
for a night or two among you.”
“My son,” said the abbot, smiling, “you need
here no credentials but your presence. Did you think we could have
forgotten you so soon? You have here as many friends as there are
brothers, and in only two days you will find it hard to satisfy
them all. And as for your errand, or your lord’s errand, we
will do all we can to forward it. Do you wish to speak of it? Here,
or in private?”
Brother Mark’s solemn face melted into a delighted smile
at being not only remembered, but remembered with obvious pleasure.
“It is no long story, Father,” he said, “and I
may well declare it here, though later I would entreat your advice
and counsel, for such an embassage is new to me, and there is no
one could better aid me to perform it faithfully than you. You know
that last year the Church chose to restore the bishopric of Saint
Asaph, at Llanelwy.”
Radulfus agreed, with an inclination of his head. The fourth
Welsh diocese had been in abeyance for some seventy years, very few
now living could remember when there had been a bishop on the
throne of Saint Kentigern. The location of the see, with a foot
either side the border, and all the power of Gwynedd to westward,
had always made it difficult to maintain. The cathedral stood on
land held by the earl of Chester, but all the Clwyd valley above it
was in Owain Gwynedd’s territory. Exactly why Archbishop
Theobald had resolved on reviving the diocese at this time was not
quite clear to anyone, perhaps not even the archbishop. Mixed
motives of Church politics and secular manoeuvring apparently
required a firmly English hold on this borderland, for the
appointed man was a Norman. There was not much tenderness towards
Welsh sensitivities in such a preferment, Cadfael reflected
ruefully.
“And after his consecration last year by Archbishop
Theobald, at Lambeth, Bishop Gilbert is finally installed in his
see, and the archbishop wishes him to receive assurance he has the
support of our own bishop, since the pastoral duties in those parts
formerly rested in the diocese of Lichfield. I am the bearer of
letters and gifts to Llanelwy on my lord’s behalf.”
That made sense, if the whole intent of the Church was to gain a
firm foothold well into Welsh land, and demonstrate that it would
be preserved and defended. A marvel, Cadfael considered, that any
bishop had ever contrived to manage so huge a see as the original
bishopric of Mercia, successively shifting its base from Lichfield
to Chester, back again to Lichfield, and now to Coventry, in the
effort to remain in touch with as diverse a flock as ever shepherd
tended. And Roger de Clinton might not be sorry to be quit of those
border parishes, whether or not he approved the strategy which
deprived him of them.
“The errand that brings you back to us, even for a few
days, is dearly welcome,” said Radulfus. “If my time
and experience can be of any avail to you, they are yours, though I
think you are equipped to acquit yourself well without any help
from me or any man.”
“It is a weighty honour to be so trusted,” said Mark
very gravely.
“If the bishop has no doubts,” said Radulfus,
“neither need you. I take him for a man who can judge very
well where to place his trust. If you have ridden from Lichfield
you must be in need of some rest and refreshment, for it’s
plain you set out early. Is your mount being cared for?”
“Yes, Father.” The old address came back
naturally.
“Then come with me to my lodging, and take some ease, and
use my time as you may wish. What wisdom I have is at your
disposal.” He was already acutely aware, as Cadfael was, that
this apparently simple mission to the newly made and alien bishop
at Saint Asaph covered a multitude of other calculated risks and
questionable issues, and might well send this wise innocent feeling
his way foot by foot through a quagmire, with quaking turf on every
hand. All the more impressive, then, that Roger de Clinton had
placed his faith in the youngest and least of his attendant
clerics.
“This chapter is concluded,” said the abbot, and led
the way out. As he passed the visitor by, Brother Mark’s grey
eyes, at liberty at last to sweep the assembly for other old
friends, met Cadfael’s eyes, and returned his smile, before
the young man turned and followed his superior. Let Radulfus have
him for a while, savor him, get all his news from him, and all the
details that might complicate his coming journey, give him the
benefit of long experience and unfailing commonsense. Later on,
when that was done, Mark would find his own way back to the herb
garden.
“The bishop has been very good to me,”
said Mark, shaking off firmly the idea of any special preference
being shown him in his selection for this mission, “but so he
is to all those close about him. There’s more to this than
favor to me. Now that he’s set up Bishop Gilbert in Saint
Asaph, the archbishop knows very well how shaky his position must
be, and wants to make sure his throne is secured by every support
possible. It was his wish—indeed his command—that our
bishop should pay the new man this complimentary visit, seeing
it’s from his diocese most of Gilbert’s new see has
been lopped. Let the world see what harmony there is among
bishops—even bishops who have had a third of their territory
whipped from under their feet. Whatever Bishop Roger may be
thinking of the wisdom of planting a Norman, with not a word of
Welsh, in a see nine-tenths Welsh, he could hardly refuse the
archbishop. But it was left to him how he carried out the order. I
think he chose me because he does not wish to make too lavish and
flattering a show. His letter is formal and beautifully executed,
his gift is more than suitable. But I—I am a judicious
half-measure!”
They were gathered in conference in one of the carrels of the
north walk, where the spring sunshine still reached slanting
fingers of pale gold even in late afternoon, an hour or so before
Vespers. Hugh Beringar had ridden down from his house in the town
as soon as word of Brother Mark’s arrival had reached him,
not because the sheriff had any official business in this clerical
embassage, but for the pleasure of seeing again a young man he held
in affectionate remembrance, and to whom, in this present instance,
he might be able to give some help and advice. Hugh’s
relations with North Wales were good. He had a friendly agreement
with Owain Gwynedd, since neither of them trusted their mutual
neighbour the earl of Chester, and they could accept each
other’s word without question. With Madog ap Meredith of
Powis the sheriff had a more precarious relationship. The
Shropshire border was constantly alert against sporadic and almost
playful raids from beyond the dyke, though at this present time all
was comparatively quiet. What the conditions of travel were likely
to be on this ride to Saint Asaph, Hugh was the most likely man to
know.
“I think you are too modest,” he said seriously.
“I fancy the bishop knows you well enough by now, if
he’s had you constantly about him, to have a very good
opinion of your wit, and trusts you to step gently where a
weightier ambassador might talk too much and listen too little.
Cadfael here will tell you more than I can about Welsh feeling in
Church matters, but I know where politics enter into it. You can be
sure that Owain Gwynedd has a sharp eye on the doings of Archbishop
Theobald in his domain, and Owain is always to be reckoned with.
And only four years ago there was a new bishop consecrated in his
own home diocese of Bangor, which is totally Welsh. There at least
they did sanction a Welshman, one who at first refused to swear
fealty to King Stephen or acknowledge the dominance of Canterbury.
Meurig was no hero, and did finally give way and do both, and it
cost him Owain’s countenance and favour at the time. There
was strong resistance to allowing him to take his seat. But
they’ve come to terms and made up their differences since
then, which means they’ll certainly work together to keep
Gwynedd from being wholly subservient to Theobald’s
influence. To consecrate a Norman now to Saint Asaph is a challenge
to princes as well as prelates, and whoever undertakes a diplomatic
mission there will have to keep a sharp eye on both.”
“And Owain at least,” Cadfael added shrewdly,
“will be keeping a sharp eye on what his people are feeling,
and an ear open to what they are saying. It behoves Gilbert to do
the same. Gwynedd has no mind to give way to Canterbury, they have
saints and customs and rites of their own.”
“I have heard,” said Mark, “that formerly, a
long time ago, St David’s was the metropolitan see of Wales,
with its own archbishop not subject to Canterbury. There are some
Welsh churchmen now who want that rule restored.”
Cadfael shook his head rather dubiously at that. “Better
not to look too closely into the past, we’re hearing more of
that claim the more the writ of Canterbury is urged on us. But
certainly Owain will be casting his shadow over his new bishop, by
way of a reminder he’s in alien territory, and had better
mind his manners. I hope he may be a wise man, and go gently with
his flock.”
“Our bishop is very much in agreement with you,”
said Mark, “and I’m well briefed. I did not tell the
whole of my errand in chapter, though I have told it to Father
Abbot since. I have yet another letter and gift to deliver. I am to
go on to Bangor—oh, no, this is certainly not at Archbishop
Theobald’s orders!—and pay the same courtesy to Bishop
Meurig as to Bishop Gilbert. If Theobald holds that bishops should
stand together, then Roger de Clinton’s text is that the
principle applies to Norman and Welsh alike. And we propose to
treat them alike.”
The “we”, as applying to Mark in common with his
illustrious superior, sounded an echoing chord in Cadfael’s
ears. He recalled just as innocent a presumption of partnership
some years back, when this boy had been gradually emerging from his
well-founded wariness of all men into warmth and affection, and
this impulsive loyalty to those he admired and served. His
“we”, then, had signified himself and Cadfael, as if
they were two venturers keeping each the other’s back against
the world.
“More and more,” said Hugh appreciatively, “I
warm to this bishop of ours. But he’s sending you even on
this longer journey alone?”
“Not quite alone.” Brother Mark’s thin, bright
face flashed for an instant into a slightly mischievous smile, as
though he had still some mysterious surprise up his sleeve.
“But he would not hesitate to ride across Wales
alone, and neither would I. He takes it for granted the Church and
the cloth will be respected. But of course I shall be glad of any
advice you can give me about the best way. You know far better than
I or my bishop what conditions hold good in Wales. I thought to go
directly by Oswestry and Chirk. What do you think?”
“Things are quiet enough up there,” Hugh agreed.
“In any event, Madog, whatever else he may be, is a pious
soul where churchmen are concerned, however he may treat the
English laity. And for the moment he has all the lesser lads of
Powys Fadog on a tight rein. Yes, you’ll be safe enough that
way, and it’s your quickest way, though you’ll find
some rough upland riding between Dee and Clwyd.”
By the brightness and speculation of Mark’s grey eyes he
was looking forward to his adventure. It is a great thing to be
trusted with an important errand when you are the latest and least
of your lord’s servants, and for all his awareness that his
humble status was meant to temper the compliment, he was also aware
how much depended on the address with which he discharged his task.
He was meant not to flatter, not to exalt, but nevertheless to
present in his person the real and formidable solidarity of bishop
with bishop.
“Are there things I should know,” he asked,
“about affairs in Gwynedd? The politics of the Church must
reckon with the politics of state, and I am ignorant about things
Welsh. I need to know on what subjects to keep my mouth shut, and
when to speak, and what it would be wise to say. All the more as I
am to go on to Bangor. What if the court should be there? I may
have to account for myself to Owain’s officers. Even to Owain
himself!”
“True enough,” said Hugh, “for he usually
contrives to know of every stranger who enters his territory.
You’ll find him approachable enough if you do encounter him.
For that matter, you may give him my greetings and compliments. And
Cadfael has met him, twice at least. A large man, every way! Just
say no word of brothers! It may still be a sore point with
him.”
“Brothers have been the ruin of Welsh princedoms through
all ages,” Cadfael observed ruefully. “Welsh princes
should have only one son apiece. The father builds up a sound
principality and a strong rule, and after his death his three or
four or five sons, in and out of wedlock, all demand by right equal
shares, and the law says they should have them. Then one picks off
another, to enlarge his portion, and it would take more than law to
stop the killing. I wonder, sometimes, what will happen when
Owain’s gone. He has sons already, and time enough before him
to get more. Are they, I wonder, going to undo everything
he’s done?”
“Please God,” said Hugh fervently,
“Owain’s going may not be for thirty years or more.
He’s barely past forty. I can deal with Owain, he keeps his
word and he keeps his balance. If Cadwaladr had been the elder and
got the dominance we should have had border war along this frontier
year in, year out.”
“This Cadwaladr is the brother it’s best not to
mention?’ Mark asked. “What has he done that makes him
anathema?”
“A number of things over the years. Owain must love him,
or he would have let someone rid him of the pest long ago. But this
time, murder. Some months ago, in the autumn of last year, a party
of his closest men ambushed the prince of Deheubarth and killed
him. God knows for what mad reason! The young fellow was in close
alliance with him, and betrothed to Owain’s daughter, there
was no manner of sense in such an act. And for all Cadwaladr did
not appear himself in the deed, Owain for one was in no doubt it
was done on his orders. None of them would have dared, not of their
own doing.”
Cadfael recalled the shock of the murder, and the swift and
thorough retribution. Owain Gwynedd in outraged justice had sent
his son Hywel to drive Cadwaladr bodily out of every furlong of
land he held in Ceredigion, and burn his castle of Llanbadarn, and
the young man, barely past twenty, had accomplished his task with
relish and efficiency. Doubtless Cadwaladr had friends and
adherents who would give him at least the shelter of a
roof, but he remained landless and outcast. Cadfael could not but
wonder, not only where the offender was lurking now, but whether he
might not end, like Geoffrey of Mandeville in the Fens, gathering
the scum of North Wales about him, criminals, malcontents, natural
outlaws, and preying on all law-abiding people.
“What became of this Cadwaladr?” asked Mark with
understandable curiosity.
“Dispossession. Owain drove him out of every piece of land
he had to his name. Not a toehold left to him in Wales.”
“But he’s still at large, somewhere,” Cadfael
observed, with some concern, “and by no means the man to take
his penalty tamely. There could be mischief yet to pay. I see
you’re bound into a perilous labyrinth. I think you should
not be going alone.”
Hugh was studying Mark’s face, outwardly impassive, but
with a secretive sparkle of fun in the eyes that watched Cadfael so
assiduously. “As I recall,” said Hugh mildly, “he
said: ‘Not quite alone!’ ”
“So he did!” Cadfael stared into the young face that
confronted him so solemnly, but for that betraying gleam in the
eyes. “What is it, boy, that you have not told us? Out with
it! Who goes with you?”
“But I did tell you,” said Mark, “that I am
going on to Bangor. Bishop Gilbert is Norman, and speaks both
French and English, but Bishop Meurig is Welsh, and he and many of
his people speak no English, and my Latin would serve me only among
the clerics. So I am allowed an interpreter. Bishop Roger has no
competent Welsh speaker close to him or in his confidence. I
offered a name, one he had not forgotten.” The sparkle had
grown into a radiance that lit his face, and reflected not only
light but enlightenment back into Cadfael’s dazzled eyes.
“I have been keeping the best till last,” said Mark,
glowing. “I got leave to win my man, if Abbot Radulfus would
sanction his absence. I have as good as promised him the loan will
be for only ten days or so at the most. So how can I possibly
miscarry,” asked Mark reasonably, “if you are coming
with me?”
It was a matter of principle, or perhaps of honor,
with Brother Cadfael, when a door opened before him suddenly and
unexpectedly, to accept the offer and walk through it. He did so
with even more alacrity if the door opened on a prospect of Wales;
it might even be said that he broke into a trot, in case the door
slammed again on that enchanting view. Not merely a brief sally
over the border into Powis, this time, but several days of riding,
in the very fellowship he would have chosen, right across the
coastal regions of Gwynedd, from Saint Asaph to Carnarvon, past
Aber of the princes, under the tremendous shoulders of Moel Wnion.
Time to talk over every day of the time they had been apart, time
to reach the companionable silences when all that needed to be said
was said. And all this the gift of Brother Mark. Wonderful what
riches a man can bestow who by choice and vocation possesses
nothing! The world is full of small, beneficent miracles.
“Son,” said Cadfael heartily, “for such
refreshment I’ll be your groom along the way, as well as your
interpreter. There’s no way you or any man could have given
me more pleasure. And did Radulfus really say I’m free to
go?”
“He did,” Mark assured him, “and the choice of
a horse from the stables is yours. And you have today and tomorrow
to make your preparations with Edmund and Winfrid for the days
you’re absent, and to keep the hours of the Office so
strictly that even your errant soul shall go protected to Bangor
and back.”
“I am wholly virtuous and regenerate,” said Cadfael
with immense content. “Has not heaven just shown it by
letting me loose into Wales? Do you think I am going to risk
disapprobation now?”
Since at least the first part of Mark’s
mission was meant to be public and demonstrative, there was no
reason why every soul in the enclave should not take an avid
interest in it, and there was no lack of gratuitous advice
available from all sides as to how it could best be performed,
especially from old Brother Dafydd in the infirmary, who had not
seen his native cantref of Duffryn Clwyd for forty years, but was
still convinced he knew it like the palm of his ancient hand. His
pleasure in the revival of the diocese was somewhat soured by the
appointment of a Norman, but the mild excitement had given him a
new interest in life, and he reverted happily to his own language,
and was voluble in counsel when Cadfael visited him. Abbot
Radulfus, by contrast, contributed nothing but his blessing. The
mission belonged to Mark, and must be left scrupulously in his
hands. Prior Robert forebore from comment, though his silence bore
a certain overtone of disapproval. An envoy of his dignity and
presence would have been more appropriate in the courts of
bishops.
Brother Cadfael reviewed his medical supplies, committed his
garden confidently to Brother Winfrid, and paid a precautionary
visit to Saint Giles to ensure that the hospital cupboards were
properly provided, and Brother Oswin in serene command of his
flock, before he repaired to the stables to indulge in the pleasure
of selecting his mount for the journey. It was there that Hugh
found him early in the afternoon, contemplating with pleasure an
elegant light roan with a cream-coloured mane, that leaned
complacently to his caressing hand.
“Too tall for you,” said Hugh over his shoulder.
“You’d need a lift into the saddle, and Mark could
never hoist you.”
“I am not yet grown so heavy nor so shrunken with age that
I cannot scramble on to a horse,” said Cadfael with dignity.
“What brings you here again and looking for me?”
“Why, a good notion Aline had, when I told her what you
and Mark are up to. May is on the doorstep already, and in a week
or two at the most I should be packing her and Giles off to
Maesbury for the summer. He has the run of the manor there, and
it’s better for him out of the town.” It was his usual
custom to leave his family there until after the wool clip had been
taken and the fields gleaned, while he divided his time between
home and the business of the shire. Cadfael was familiar with the
routine. “She says, why should we not hasten the move by a
week, and ride with you tomorrow, to set you on your way as far as
Oswestry? The rest of the household can follow later, and we could
have one day, at least, of your company, and you could bide the
night over with us at Maesbury if you choose. What do you
say?”
Cadfael said yes, very heartily, and so, when it was put to him,
did Mark, though he declined, with regret, the offer of a
night’s lodging. He was bent on reaching Llanelwy in two
days, and arriving at a civilised time, at the latest by
midafternoon, to allow time for the niceties of hospitality before
the evening meal, so he preferred to go beyond Oswestry and well
into Wales before halting for the night, to leave an easy stage for
the second day. If they could reach the valley of the Dee, they
could find lodging with one of the churches there, and cross the
river in the early morning.
So it seemed that everything was already accounted for, and
there remained nothing to be done but go reverently to Vespers and
Compline, and commit this enterprise like all others to the will of
God, but perhaps also with a gentle reminder to Saint Winifred that
they were bound into her country, and if she felt inclined to let
her delicate hand cover them along the way, the gesture would be
very much appreciated.
The morning of departure found a little cavalcade of six horses
and a pack-pony winding its way over the westward bridge and out of
the town, on the road to Oswestry. There was Hugh, on his favorite
self-willed grey, with his son on his saddle-bow, Aline, unruffled
by the haste of her preparations for leaving town, on her white
jennet, her maid and friend Constance pillion behind a groom, a
second groom following with the pack-pony on a leading rein, and
the two pilgrims to Saint Asaph merrily escorted by this family
party. It was the last of April, a morning all green and silver.
Cadfael and Mark had left before Prime, to join Hugh and his party
in the town. A shower, so fine as to be almost imperceptible in the
air, had followed them over the bridge, where the Severn ran full
but peaceful, and before they had assembled in Hugh’s
courtyard the sun had come out fully, sparkling on the leaves and
grasses. The river was gilded in every ripple with capricious,
scintillating light. A good day to be setting out, and no great
matter why or where.
The sun was high, and the pearly mist of morning all dissolved
when they crossed the river at Mont ford. The road was good, some
stretches of it with wide grass verges where the going was
comfortable and fast, and Giles demanded an occasional canter. He
was much too proud to share a mount with anyone but his father.
Once established at Maesbury the little pack-pony, sedate and
good-humored, would become his riding pony for the summer, and the
groom who led it his discreet guardian on his forays, for like most
children who have never seen cause to be afraid, he was fearless on
horseback—Aline said foolhardy, but hesitated to issue
warnings, perhaps for fear of shaking his confidence, or perhaps
out of the certainty that they would not be heeded.
They halted at noon under the hill at Ness, where there was a
tenant of Hugh’s installed, to rest the horses and take
refreshment. Before mid-afternoon they reached Felton, and there
Aline and the escort turned aside to take the nearest way home, but
Hugh elected to ride on with his friends to the outskirts of
Oswestry. Giles was transferred, protesting but obedient, to his
mother’s arms.
“Go safely, and return safely!” said Aline, her
primrose head pale and bright as the child’s, the gloss of
spring on her face and the burnish of sunlight in her smile. And
she signed a little cross on the air between them before she
wheeled her jennet into the lefthand track.
Delivered of the baggage and the womenfolk, they rode on at a
brisker pace the few miles to Whittington, where they halted under
the walls of the small timber keep. Oswestry itself lay to their
left, on Hugh’s route homeward. Mark and Cadfael must go on
northward still, but here they were on the very borderland, country
which had been alternately Welsh and English for centuries before
ever the Normans came, where the names of hamlets and of men were
more likely to be Welsh than English. Hugh lived between the two
great dykes the princes of Mercia had constructed long ago, to mark
where their holding and writ began, so that no force should easily
encroach, and no man who crossed from one side to the other should
be in any doubt under which law he stood. The lower barrier lay
just to the east of the manor, much battered and leveled now; the
greater one had been raised to the west, when Mercian power had
been able to thrust further into Wales.
“Here I must leave you,” said Hugh, looking back
along the way they had come, and westward towards the town and the
castle. “A pity! I could gladly have ridden as far as Saint
Asaph with you in such weather, but the king’s officers had
best stay out of Church business and avoid the crossfire. I should
be loth to tread on Owain’s toes.”
“You have brought us as far as Bishop Gilbert’s
writ, at any rate,” said Brother Mark, smiling. “Both
this church and yours of Saint Oswald are now in the see of Saint
Asaph. Did you realise that? Lichfield has lost a great swathe of
parishes here in the northwest. I think it must be Canterbury
policy to spread the diocese both sides the border, so that the
line between Welsh and English can count for nothing.”
“Owain will have something to say to that, too.”
Hugh saluted them with a raised hand, and began to wheel his horse
towards the road home. “Go with God, and a good journey!
We’ll look to see you again in ten days or so.” And he
was some yards distant when he looked back over his shoulder and
called after them: “Keep him out of mischief! If you
can!” But there was no indication to which of them the plea
was addressed, or to which of them the misgiving applied. They
could share it between them.
Chapter Two
« ^ »
I am too old,” Brother Cadfael observed
complacently, “to embark on such adventures as
this.”
“I notice,” said Mark, eyeing him sidelong,
“you say nothing of the kind until we’re well clear of
Shrewsbury, and there’s no one to take you at your word, poor
aged soul, and bid you stay at home.”
“What a fool I should have been!” Cadfael willingly
agreed.
“Whenever you begin pleading your age, I know what I have
to deal with. A horse full of oats, just let out of his stall, and
with the bit between his teeth. We have to do with bishops and
canons,” said Mark severely, “and they can be trouble
enough. Pray to be spared any worse encounters.” But he did
not sound too convinced. The ride had brought colour to his thin,
pale face and a sparkle to his eyes. Mark had been raised with farm
horses, slaving for the uncle who grudged him house-room and food,
and he still rode farm fashion, inelegant but durable, now that the
bishop’s stable had provided him a fine tall gelding in place
of a plodding farm drudge. The beast was nutbrown, with a lustrous
copper sheen to his coat, and buoyantly lively under such a light
weight.
They had halted at the crest of the ridge overlooking the lush
green valley of the Dee. The sun was westering, and had mellowed
from the noon gold into a softer amber light, gleaming down the
stream, where the coils of the river alternately glimmered and
vanished among its fringes of woodland. Still an upland river here,
dancing over a rocky bed and conjuring rainbows out of its sunlit
spray. Somewhere down there they would find a night’s
lodging.
They set off companionably side by side, down the grassy track
wide enough for two. “For all that,” said Cadfael,
“I never expected, at my age, to be recruited into such an
expedition as this. I owe you more than you know. Shrewsbury is
home, and I would not leave it for any place on earth, beyond a
visit, but every now and then my feet itch. It’s a fine thing
to be heading home, but it’s a fine thing also to be setting
out from home, with both the going and the return to look forward
to. Well for me that Theobald took thought to recruit allies for
his new bishop. And what is it Roger de Clinton’s sending
him, apart from his ceremonial letter?” He had not had time
to feel curiosity on that score until now. Mark’s saddle-roll
was too modest to contain anything of bulk.
“A pectoral cross, blessed at the shrine of Saint Chad.
One of the canons made it, he’s a good
silversmith.”
“And the same to Meurig at Bangor, with his brotherly
prayers and compliments?”
“No, Meurig gets a breviary, a very handsome one. Our best
illuminator had as good as finished it when the archbishop issued
his orders, so he added a special leaf for a picture of Saint
Deiniol, Meurig’s founder and patron. I would rather have the
book,” said Mark, winding his way down a steep woodland ride
and out into the declining sun towards the valley. “But the
cross is meant as the more formal tribute. After all, we had our
orders. But it shows, do you not think, that Theobald knows that
he’s given Gilbert a very awkward place to fill?”
“I should not relish being in his shoes,” Cadfael
admitted. “But who knows, he may delight in the struggle.
There are those who thrive on contention. If he meddles too much
with Welsh custom he’ll get more than enough of
that.”
They emerged into the green, undulating meadows and bushy
coverts along the riverside, the Dee beside them reflecting back
orange gleams from the west. Beyond the water a great grassy hill
soared, crowned with the man-made contours of earthworks raised
ages ago, and under the narrow wooden bridge the Dee dashed and
danced over a stony bed. Here at the church of Saint Collen they
asked and found a lodging for the night with the parish priest.
On the following day they crossed the river, and
climbed over the treeless uplands from the valley of the Dee to the
valley of the Clwyd, and there followed the stream at ease the
length of a bright morning and into an afternoon of soft showers
and willful gleams of sun. Through Ruthin, under the outcrop of red
sandstone crowned with its squat timber fortress, and into the vale
proper, broad, beautiful, and the fresh green of young foliage
everywhere. Before the sun had stooped towards setting they came
down into the narrowing tongue of land between the Clwyd and the
Elwy, before the two rivers met above Rhuddlan, to move on together
into tidal water. And there between lay the town of Llanelwy and
cathedral of Saint Asaph, comfortably nestled in a green, sheltered
valley.
Hardly a town at all, it was so small and compact. The low
wooden houses clustered close, the single track led into the heart
of them, and disclosed the unmistakable long roof and timber
bell-turret of the cathedral at the centre of the village. Modest
though it was, it was the largest building to be seen, and the only
one walled in stone. A range of other low roofs crowded the
precinct, and on most of them some hasty repairs had been done, and
on others men were still busily working, for though the church had
been in use, the diocese had been dormant for seventy years, and if
there were still canons attached to this centre their numbers must
have dwindled and their houses fallen into disrepair long ago. It
had been founded, many centuries past, by Saint Kentigern, on the
monastic principle of the old Celtic clas, a college of canons
under a priest-abbot, and with one other priest or more among the
members. The Normans despised the clas, and were busy disposing all
things religious in Wales to be subject to the Roman rite of
Canterbury. Uphill work, but the Normans were persistent
people.
But what was astonishing about this remote and rural community
was that it seemed to be over-populated to a startling degree. As
soon as they approached the precinct they found themselves
surrounded by a bustle and purpose that belonged to a
prince’s llys rather than a church enclave. Besides the busy
carpenters and builders there were men and women scurrying about
with pitchers of water, armfuls of bedding, folded hangings, trays
of new-baked bread and baskets of food, and one strapping lad
hefting a side of pork on his shoulders.
“This is more than a bishop’s household,” said
Cadfael, staring at all the activity. “They are feeding an
army! Has Gilbert declared war on the valley of Clwyd?”
“I think,” said Mark, gazing beyond the whirlpool of
busy people to the gently rising hillside above, “they are
entertaining more important guests than us.”
Cadfael followed where Mark was staring, and saw in the shadow
of the hills points of colour patterning a high green level above
the little town. Bright pavilions and fluttering pennants spread
across the green, not the rough and ready tents of a military
encampment, but the furnishings of a princely household.
“Not an army,” said Cadfael, “but a court.
We’ve strayed into lofty company. Had we not better go
quickly and find out if two more are welcome? For there may be
business afoot that concerns more than staunch brotherhood among
bishops. Though if the prince’s officers are keeping close at
Gilbert’s elbow, a reminder from Canterbury may not come
amiss. However cool the compliment!”
They moved forward into the precinct and looked about them. The
bishop’s palace was a new timber building, hall and chambers,
and a number of new small dwellings on either side. It was the
better part of a year since Gilbert had been consecrated at
Lambeth, and clearly there had been hasty preparations to restore
some semblance of a cathedral enclave in order to receive him
decently. Cadfael and Mark were dismounting in the court when a
young man threaded a brisk way to them through the bustle, and
beckoned a groom after him to take their horses.
“Brothers, may I be of service?”
He was young, surely not more than twenty, and certainly not one
of Gilbert’s ecclesiastics, rather something of a courtier in
his dress, and wore gemstones about a fine, sturdy throat. He moved
and spoke with an easy confidence and grace, bright of countenance
and fair in colouring, his hair a light, reddish brown. A tall
fellow, with something about him that seemed to Cadfael elusively
familiar, though he had certainly never seen him before. He had
addressed them first in Welsh, but changed easily to English after
studying Mark from head to foot in one brilliant glance.
“Men of your habit are always welcome. Have you ridden
far?”
“From Lichfield,” said Mark, “with a brotherly
letter and gift for Bishop Gilbert from my bishop of Coventry and
Lichfield.”
“He will be heartily glad,” said the young man, with
surprising candor, “for he may be feeling the need of
reinforcements.” His flashing grin was mischievous but
amiable. “Here, let me get someone to bring your saddle-rolls
after us, and I’ll bring you where you can rest and take
refreshment. It will be a while yet to supper.”
A gesture from him brought servants running to unstrap the
pack-rolls and follow hard on the visitors’ heels as the
young man led them across the court to one of the new cells built
out from the hall.
“I am without rights to command here, being a guest
myself, but they have got used to me.” It was said with an
assured and slightly amused confidence, as if he knew good reason
why the bishop’s circle should accommodate him, and was
forbearing enough not to presume upon it too far. “Will this
suffice?”
The lodging was small but adequate, furnished with beds, bench
and table, and full of the scent of seasoned wood freshly tooled.
New brychans were piled on the beds, and the smell of good wool
mingled with the newness of timber.
“I’ll send someone with water,” said their
guide, “and find one of the canons. His lordship has been
selecting where he can, but his demands come high. He’s
having trouble in filling up his chapter. Be at home here,
Brothers, and someone will come to you.”
And he was gone, with his blithe long strides and springing
tread, and they were left to settle and stretch at ease after their
day in the saddle.
“Water?” said Mark, pondering this first and
apparently essential courtesy. “Is that by way of taking
salt, here in Wales?”
“No, lad. A people that goes mostly afoot knows the value
of feet and the dust and aches of travel. They bring water for us
to bathe our feet. It is a graceful way of asking: Are you meaning
to bide overnight? If we refuse it, we intend only a brief visit in
courtesy. If we accept it, we are guests of the house from that
moment.”
“And that young lord? For he’s too fine for a
servant, and certainly no cleric. A guest, he said. What sort of an
assembly have we blundered into, Cadfael?”
They had left the door wide for the pleasure of the evening
light and the animation to be viewed about the court. A girl came
threading her way through the purposeful traffic with a long,
striding grace in her step, bearing before her a pitcher in a bowl.
The water-carrier was tall and vigorous. A braid of glassy
blue-black hair thick as her wrist hung over her shoulder, and
stray curls blew about her temples in the faint breeze. A pleasure
to behold, Cadfael thought, watching her approach. She made them a
deep reverence as she entered, and kept her eyes dutifully lowered
as she served them, pouring water for them, unlatching their
sandals with her own long, shapely hands, no servant but a decorous
hostess, so surely in a position of dominance here that she could
stoop to serve without at any point abasing herself. The touch of
her hands on Mark’s lean ankles and delicate, almost girlish
feet brought a fiery blush rising from his throat to his brow, and
then, as if she had felt it scorch her forehead, she did look
up.
It was the most revealing of glances, though it lasted only a
moment. As soon as she raised her eyes, a face hitherto impassive
and austere was illuminated with a quicksilver sequence of
expressions that came and passed in a flash. She took in Mark in
one sweep of her lashes, and his discomfort amused her, and for an
instant she considered letting him see her laughter, which would
have discomforted him further; but then she relented, indulging an
impulse of sympathy for his youth and apparent fragile innocence,
and restored the gravity of her oval countenance.
Her eyes were so dark a purple as to appear black in shadow. She
could not be more than eighteen years of age. Perhaps less, for her
height and her bearing gave her a woman’s confidence. She had
brought linen towels over her shoulder, and would have made a
deliberate and perhaps mildly teasing grace of drying Mark’s
feet with her own hands, but he would not let her. The authority
that belonged not in his own small person but in the gravity of his
office reached out to take her firmly by the hand and raise her
from her knees. She rose obediently, only a momentary flash of her
dark eyes compromising her solemnity. Young clerics, Cadfael
thought, perceiving that he himself was in no danger, might have
trouble with this one. For that matter, so might elderly clerics,
if in a slightly different way.
“No,” said Mark firmly. “It is not fitting.
Our part in the world is to serve, not to be served. And from all
we have seen, outside there, you have more than enough guests on
your hands, more demanding than we would wish to be.”
At that she suddenly laughed outright, and clearly not at him,
but at whatever thoughts his words had sparked in her mind. Until
then she had spoken no word but her murmured greeting on the
threshold. Now she broke into bubbling speech in Welsh, in a
lilting voice that made dancing poetry of language.
“More than enough for his lordship Bishop Gilbert, and
more than he bargained for! Is it true what Hywel said, that you
are sent with compliments and gifts from the English bishops? Then
you will be the most welcome pair of visitors here in Llanelwy
tonight. Our new bishop feels himself in need of all the
encouragement he can get. A reminder he has an archbishop behind
him will come in very kindly, seeing he’s beset with princes
every other way. He’ll make the most of you. You’ll
surely find yourselves at the high table in hall
tonight.”
“Princes!” Cadfael echoed. “And Hywel? Was
that Hywel who spoke with us when we rode in? Hywel ab
Owain?”
“Did you not recognize him?” she said,
astonished.
“Child, I never saw him before. But his reputation we do
know.” So this was the young fellow who had been sent by his
father to waft an army across the Aeron and drive Cadwaladr
headlong out of North Ceredigion with his castle of Llanbadarn in
flames behind him, and had made a most brisk and workmanlike job of
it, without, apparently, losing his composure or ruffling his
curls. And he looking barely old enough to bear arms at all!
“I thought there was something about him I should know!
Owain I have met, we had dealings three years back, over an
exchange of prisoners. So he’s sent his son to report on how
Bishop Gilbert is setting about his pastoral duties, has he?”
Cadfael wondered. Trusted in both secular and clerical matters, it
seemed, and probably equally thorough in both.
“Better than that,” said the girl, laughing.
“He’s come himself! Did you not see his tents up there
in the meadows? For these few days Llanelwy is Owain’s llys,
and the court of Gwynedd, no less. It’s an honor Bishop
Gilbert could have done without. Not that the prince makes any move
to curb or intimidate him, bar his simply being there, forever in
the corner of the bishop’s eye, and aware of everything he
does or says. The prince of courtesy and consideration! He expects
the bishop to house only himself and his son, and provides for the
rest himself. But tonight they all sup in hall. You will see, you
came very opportunely.”
She had been gathering up the towels over her arm as she talked,
and keeping a sharp eye now and then on the comings and goings in
the courtyard. Following such a glance, Cadfael observed a big man
in a black cassock sailing impressively across the grass towards
their lodging.
“I’ll bring you food and mead,” said the girl,
returning abruptly to the practical; and she picked up bowl and
pitcher, and was out at the door before the tall cleric could reach
it. Cadfael saw them meet and pass, with a word from the man, and a
mute inclination of the head from the girl. It seemed to him that
there was a curious tension between them, constrained on the
man’s part, coldly dutiful on the girl’s. His approach
had hastened her departure, yet the way he had spoken to her as
they met, and in particular the way he halted yet again before
reaching the lodging, and turned to look after her, suggested that
he was in awe of her rather than the other way round, and she had
some grievance she was unwilling to give up. She had not raised her
eyes to look at him, nor broken the vehement rhythm of her gait. He
came on more slowly, perhaps to reassemble his dignity before
entering to the strangers.
“Good day, Brothers, and welcome!” he said from the
threshold. “I trust my daughter has looked after your comfort
well?”
That established at once the relationship between them. It was
stated with considered clarity as if some implied issue was likely
to come up for consideration, and it was as well it should be
properly understood. Which might well be the case, seeing this man
was undoubtedly tonsured, in authority here, and a priest. That,
too, he chose to state plainly: “My name is Meirion, I have
served this church for many years. Under the new dispensation I am
a canon of the chapter. If there is anything wanting, anything we
can provide you, during your stay, you have only to speak, I will
see it remedied.”
He spoke in formal English, a little hesitantly, for he was
obviously Welsh. A burly, muscular man, and handsome in his own
black fashion, with sharply cut features and a very erect presence,
the ring of his cropped hair barely salted with grey. The girl had
her coloring from him, and her dark, brilliant eyes, but in her
eyes the spark was of gaiety, even mischief, and in his it gave an
impression of faint uneasiness behind the commanding brow. A proud,
ambitious man not quite certain of himself and his powers. And
perhaps in a delicate situation now that he had become one of the
canons attendant on a Norman bishop? It was a possibility. If there
was an acknowledged daughter to be accounted for, there must also
be a wife. Canterbury would hardly be pleased. They assured him
that the lodging provided them was in every way satisfactory, even
lavish by monastic principles, and Mark willingly brought out from
his saddle-roll Bishop Roger’s sealed letter, beautifully
inscribed and superscribed, and the little carved wood casket which
held the silver cross. Canon Meirion drew pleased breath, for the
Lichfield silversmith was a skilled artist, and the work was
beautiful.
“He will be pleased and glad, of that you may be sure. I
need not conceal from you, as men of the Church, that his
lordship’s situation here is far from easy, and any gesture
of support is a help to him. If you will let me suggest it, it
would be well if you make your appearance in form, when all are
assembled at table, and there deliver your errand publicly. I will
bring you into the hall as your herald, and have places left for
you at the bishop’s table.” He was quite blunt about
it, the utmost advantage must be made of this ceremonious reminder
not simply from Lichfield, but from Theobald and Canterbury, that
the Roman rite had been accepted and a Norman prelate installed in
Saint Asaph. The prince had brought up his own power and chivalry
on one side, Canon Meirion meant to deploy Brother Mark, inadequate
symbol though he might appear, upon the other.
“And, Brother, although there is no need for translation
for the bishop’s benefit, it would be good if you would
repeat in Welsh what Deacon Mark may say in hall. The prince knows
some English, but few of his chiefs understand it.” And it
was Canon Meirion’s determined intent that they should all,
to the last man of the guard, be well aware of what passed.
“I will tell the bishop beforehand of your coming, but say no
word as yet to any other.”
“Hywel ab Owain already knows,” said Cadfael.
“And doubtless will have told his father. But the
spectacle will not suffer any diminution by that. Indeed,
it’s a happy chance that you came on this of all days, for
tomorrow the royal party is leaving to return to Aber.”
“In that case,” said Mark, choosing to be open with
a host who was certainly being open with them, “we can ride
on among his company, for I am the bearer of a letter also to
Bishop Meurig of Bangor.”
The canon received this with a short pause for reflection, and
then nodded approvingly. He was, after all, a Welshman himself,
even if he was doing his able best to hold on to favour with a
Norman superior. “Good! Your bishop is wise. It puts us on a
like footing, and will please the prince. As it chances, my
daughter Heledd and I will also be of the party. She is to be
betrothed to a gentleman in the prince’s service, who holds
land in Anglesey, and he will come to meet us at Bangor. We shall
be companions along the way.”
“Our pleasure to ride in company,” said Mark.
“I’ll come for you as soon as they take their places
at table,” the canon promised, well content, and left them to
an hour of rest. Not until he was gone did the girl come back,
bearing a dish of honey cakes and a jar of mead. She served them in
silence, but made no move to go. After a moment of sullen thought
she asked abruptly: “What did he tell you?”
“That he and his daughter are bound for Bangor tomorrow,
as we two are. It seems,” said Cadfael equably, and watching
her unrevealing face, “that we shall have a prince’s
escort as far as Aber.”
“So he does still own he is my father,” she said
with a curling lip.
“He does, and why should he not profess it proudly? If you
look in your mirror,” said Cadfael candidly, “you will
see very good reason why he should boast of it.” That coaxed
a reluctant smile out of her. He pursued the small success:
“What is it between you two? Is it some threat from the new
bishop? If he’s bent on ridding himself of all the married
priests in his diocese he has an uphill row to hoe. And your father
seems to me an able man, one a new incumbent can ill afford to
lose.”
“So he is,” she agreed, warming, “and the
bishop wants to keep him. His case would have been much worse, but
my mother was in her last illness when Bishop Gilbert arrived, and
it seemed she could not last long, so they waited! Can you conceive
of it? Waiting for a wife to die, so that he need not part with her
husband, who was useful to him! And die she did, last Christmas,
and ever since then I have kept his house, cooked and cleaned for
him, and thought we could go on so. But no, I am a reminder of a
marriage the bishop says was unlawful and sacrilegious. In his eyes
I never should have been born! Even if my father remains celibate
the rest of his life, I am still here, to call to mind
what he wants forgotten. Yes, he, not only the bishop! I
stand in the way of his advancement.”
“Surely,” said Mark, shocked, “you do him
injustice. I am certain he feels a father’s affection for
you, as I do believe you feel a daughter’s for
him.”
“It never was tested before,” she said simply.
“No one grudged us a proper love. Oh, he wishes me no ill,
neither does the bishop. But very heartily they both wish that I
may go somewhere else to thrive, so far away I shall trouble them
no more.”
“So that is why they’ve planned to match you with a
man of Anglesey. As far away,” said Cadfael ruefully,
“as a man could get and still be in North Wales. Yes, that
would certainly settle the bishop’s mind. But what of yours?
Do you know the man they intend for you?”
“No, that was the prince’s doing, and he meant it
kindly, and indeed I take it kindly. No, the bishop wanted to send
me away to a convent in England, and make a nun of me. Owain
Gwynedd said that would be a wicked waste unless it was my wish,
and asked me there in front of everyone in the hall if I had any
mind to it, and very loudly and clearly I said no. So he proposed
this match for me. His man is looking for a wife, and they tell me
he’s a fine fellow, not so young but barely past thirty,
which is not so old, and good to look at, and well regarded. Better
at least,” she said without great enthusiasm, “than
being shut up behind a grid in an English nunnery.”
“So it is,” agreed Cadfael heartily, “unless
your own heart drives you there, and I doubt that will ever happen
to you. Better, too, surely, than living on here and being made to
feel an outcast and a burden. You are not wholly set against
marriage?”
“No!” she said vehemently.
“And you know of nothing against this man the prince has
in mind?”
“Only that I have not chosen him,” she said, and set
her red lips in a stubborn line.
“When you see him you may approve him. It would not be the
first time,” said Cadfael sagely, “that an intelligent
matchmaker got the balance right.”
“Well or ill,” she said, rising with a sigh,
“I have no choice but to go. My father goes with me to see
that I behave, and Canon Morgant, who is as rigid as the bishop
himself, goes with us to see that we both behave. Any further
scandal now, and goodbye to any advancement under Gilbert. I could
destroy him if I so wished,” she said, dwelling vengefully on
something she knew could never be a possibility, for all her anger
and disdain. And from the evening light in the doorway she looked
back to add: “I can well live without him. Soon or late, I
should have gone to a husband. But do you know what most galls me?
That he should give me up so lightly, and be so thankful to get rid
of me.”
Canon Meirion came for them as he had promised,
just as the bustle in the courtyard was settling into competent
quietness, building work abandoned for the day, all the domestic
preparations for the evening’s feast completed, the small
army of servitors mustered into their places, and the household,
from princes to grooms, assembled in hall. The light was still
bright, but softening into the gilded silence before the sinking of
the sun.
Dressed for ceremony, the canon was brushed and immaculate but
plain, maintaining the austerity of his office, perhaps, all the
more meticulously to smooth away from memory all the years when he
had been married to a wife. Time had been, once, long ago in the
age of the saints, when celibacy had been demanded of all Celtic
priests, just as insistently as it was being demanded now by Bishop
Gilbert, by reason of the simple fact that the entire structure of
the Celtic Church was built on the monastic ideal, and anything
less was a departure from precedent and a decline in sanctity. But
long since even the memory of that time had grown faint to
vanishing, and there would be just as indignant a reaction to the
reimposition of that ideal as there must once have been to its
gradual abandonment. For centuries now priests had lived as decent
married men and raised families like their parishioners. Even in
England, in the more remote country places, there were plenty of
humble married priests, and certainly no one thought the worse of
them. In Wales it was not unknown for son to follow sire in the
cure of a parish, and worse, for the sons of bishops to take it for
granted they should succeed their mitred fathers, as though the
supreme offices of the Church had been turned into heritable fiefs.
Now here came this alien bishop, imposed from without, to denounce
all such practices as abominable sin, and clear his diocese of all
but the celibate clergy.
And this able and impressive man who came to summon them to the
support of his master had no intention of suffering diminution
simply because, though he had buried his wife just in time, the
survival of a daughter continued to accuse him. Nothing against the
girl, and he would see her provided for, but somewhere else, out of
sight and mind.
To do him justice, he made no bones about going straight for
what he wanted, what would work to his most advantage. He meant to
exploit his two visiting monastics and their mission to his
bishop’s pleasure and satisfaction.
“They are just seated. There will be silence until princes
and bishop are settled. I have seen to it there is a clear space
below the high table, where you will be seen and heard by
all.”
Do him justice, too, he was no way disappointed or disparaging
in contemplating Brother Mark’s smallness of stature and
plain Benedictine habit, or the simplicity of his bearing; indeed
he looked him over with a nod of satisfied approval, pleased with a
plainness that would nevertheless carry its own distinction.
Mark took the illuminated scroll of Roger de Clinton’s
letter and the little carved casket that contained the cross in his
hands, and they followed their guide across the courtyard to the
door of the bishop’s hall. Within, the air was full of the
rich scent of seasoned timber and the resiny smoke of torches, and
the subdued murmur of voices among the lower tables fell silent as
the three of them entered, Canon Meirion leading. Behind the high
table at the far end of the hall an array of faces, bright in the
torchlight, fixed attentively upon the small procession advancing
into the cleared space below the dais. The bishop in the midst,
merely a featureless presence at this distance, princes on either
side of him, the rest clerics and Welsh noblemen of Owain’s
court disposed alternately, and all eyes upon Brother Mark’s
small, erect figure, solitary in the open space, for Canon Meirion
had stepped aside to give him the floor alone, and Cadfael had
remained some paces behind him.
“My lord bishop, here is Deacon Mark, of the household of
the bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, asking audience.”
“The messenger of my colleague of Lichfield is very
welcome,” said the formal voice from the high table.
Mark made his brief address in a clear voice, his eyes fixed on
the long, narrow countenance that confronted him. Straight, wiry
steel-grey hair about a domed tonsure, a long, thin blade of a nose
flaring into wide nostrils, and a proud, tight-lipped mouth that
wore its formal smile somewhat unnervingly for lack of
practice.
“My lord, Bishop Roger de Clinton bids me greet you
reverently in his name, as his brother in Christ and his neighbour
in the service of the Church, and wishes you long and fruitful
endeavour in the diocese of Saint Asaph. And by my hand he sends
you in all brotherly love this letter, and this casket, and begs
you accept them in kindness.”
All of which Cadfael took up, after the briefest of pauses for
effect, and turned into ringing Welsh that brought an approving
stir and murmur from his fellow-countrymen among the assembly.
The bishop had risen from his seat, and made his way round the
high table to approach the edge of the dais. Mark went to meet him,
and bent his knee to present letter and casket into the large,
muscular hands that reached down to receive them.
“We accept our brother’s kindness with joy,”
said Bishop Gilbert with considered and gratified grace, for the
secular power of Gwynedd was there within earshot, and missing
nothing that passed. “And we welcome his messengers no less
gladly. Rise, Brother, and make one more honoured guest at our
table. And your comrade also. It was considerate indeed of Bishop
de Clinton to send a Welsh speaker with you into a Welsh
community.”
Cadfael stood well back, and followed only at a distance on to
the dais. Let Mark have all the notice and the attention, and be
led to a place of honour next to Hywel ab Owain, who sat at the
bishop’s left. Was that Canon Meirion’s doing, the
bishop’s own decision to make the most of the visit, or had
Hywel had a hand in it? He might well be interested in learning
more about what other cathedral chapters thought of the
resurrection of Saint Kentigern’s throne, and its bestowal on
an alien prelate. And probing from him might be expected to find a
more guileless response than if it came from his formidable father,
and produce a more innocent and lavish crop. A first occasion, it
might be, for Mark to say little and listen much.
Cadfael’s own allotted place was much further from the
princely centre, near the end of the table, but it gave him an
excellent view of all the faces ranged along the seats of honour.
On the bishop’s right sat Owain Gwynedd, a big man every way,
in body, in breadth of mind, in ability, very tall, exceeding by a
head the average of his own people, and flaxen-fair by contrast
with their darkness, for his grandmother had been a princess of the
Danish kingdom of Dublin, more Norse than Irish, Ragnhild, a
granddaughter of King Sitric Silk-Beard, and his mother Angharad
had been noted for her golden hair among the dark women of
Deheubarth. On the bishop’s left Hywel ab Owain sat at ease,
his face turned towards Brother Mark in amiable welcome. The
likeness was clear to be seen, though the son was of a darker
colouring, and had not the height of the sire. It struck Cadfael as
ironic that one so plainly signed with his father’s image
should be regarded by the cleric who sat beside him as
illegitimate, for he had been born before Owain’s marriage,
and his mother, too, was an Irishwoman. To the Welsh a son
acknowledged was as much a son as those born in marriage, and Hywel
on reaching manhood had been set up honourably in South Ceredigion,
and now, after his uncle’s fall, possessed the whole of it.
And very well capable, by his showing so far, of holding on to his
own. There were three or four more Welshmen of Owain’s party,
all arranged turn for turn with Gilbert’s canons and
chaplains, secular and clerical perforce rubbing shoulders and
exchanging possibly wary conversation, though now they had the open
casket and its filigree silver cross as a safe topic, for Gilbert
had opened it and set it on the board before him to be admired, and
laid de Clinton’s scroll beside it, doubtless to await a
ceremonial reading aloud when the meal was drawing to its
close.
Meantime, mead and wine were oiling the wheels of diplomacy, and
by the rising babel of voices successfully. And Cadfael had better
turn his attention to his own part in this social gathering, and
begin to do his duty by his neighbours.
On his right hand he had a middle-aged cleric, surely a canon of
the cathedral, well-fleshed and portly, but with a countenance of
such uncompromising rectitude that Cadfael judged he might well be
that Morgant whose future errand it was to see that both father and
daughter conducted themselves unexceptionably on the journey to
dispose of Heledd to a husband. Just such a thin, fastidious nose
seemed suitable to the task, and just such chill, sharp eyes. But
his voice when he spoke, and his manner to the guest, were gracious
enough. In every situation he would be equal to events, and strike
the becoming note, but he did not look as if he would be easy on
shortcomings in others.
On Cadfael’s left sat a young man of the prince’s
party, of the true Welsh build, sturdy and compact, very trim in
his dress, and dark of hair and eye. A very black, intense eye,
that focussed on distance, and looked through what lay before his
gaze, men and objects alike, rather than at them. Only when he
looked along the high table, to where Owain and Hywel sat, did the
range of his vision shorten, fix and grow warm in recognition and
acknowledgement, and the set of his long lips soften almost into
smiling. One devoted follower at least the princes of Gwynedd
possessed. Cadfael observed the young man sidewise, with
discretion, for he was worth study, very comely in his black and
brooding fashion, and tended to a contained and private silence.
When he did speak, in courtesy to the new guest, his voice was
quiet but resonant, and moved in cadences that seemed to Cadfael to
belong elsewhere than in Gwynedd. But the most significant thing
about his person did not reveal itself for some time, since he ate
and drank little, and used only the right hand that lay easy on the
board under Cadfael’s eyes. Only when he turned directly
towards his neighbour, and rested his left elbow on the edge of the
table, did it appear that the left forearm terminated only a few
inches below the joint, and a fine linen cloth was drawn over the
stump like a glove, and secured by a thin silver bracelet.
It was impossible not to stare, the revelation came so
unexpectedly; but Cadfael withdrew his gaze at once, and forbore
from any comment, though he could not resist studying the
mutilation covertly when he thought himself unobserved. But his
neighbour had lived with his loss long enough to accustom himself
to its effect on others.
“You may ask, Brother,” he said, with a wry smile.
“I am not ashamed to own where I left it. It was my better
hand once, though I could use both, and can still make shift with
the one I have left.”
Since curiosity was understood and expected of him, Cadfael made
no secret of it, though he was already hazarding a guess at the
possible answers. For this young man was almost certainly from
South Wales, far from his customary kin here in Gwynedd.
“I am in no doubt,” he said cautiously, “that
wherever you may have left it, the occasion did you nothing but
honour. But if you are minded to tell me, you should know that I
have carried arms in my time, and given and taken injury in the
field. Where you admit me, I can follow you, and not as a
stranger.”
“I thought,” said the young man, turning black,
brilliant eyes on him appraisingly, “you had not altogether
the monastic look about you. Follow, then, and welcome. I left my
arm lying over my lord’s body, the sword still in my
hand.”
“Last year,” said Cadfael slowly, pursuing his own
prophetic imaginings,” in Deheubarth.”
“As you have said.”
“Anarawd?”
“My prince and my foster-brother,” said the maimed
man. “The stroke, the final stroke, that took his life from
him took my arm from me.”
Chapter Three
« ^ »
“How many,” asked Cadfael carefully, after
a moment of silence, “were with him then?”
“Three of us. On a simple journey and a short, thinking no
evil. There were eight of them. I am the only one left who rode
with Anarawd that day.” His voice was low and even. He had
forgotten nothing and forgiven nothing, but he was in complete
command of voice and face.
“I marvel,” said Cadfael, “that you lived to
tell the story. It would not take long to bleed to death from such
a wound.”
“And even less time to strike again and finish the
work,” the young man agreed with a twisted smile. “And
so they would have done if some others of our people had not heard
the affray and come in haste. Me they left lying when they rode
away. I was taken up and tended after his murderers had run. And
when Hywel came with his army to avenge the slaying, he brought me
back here with him, and Owain has taken me into his own service. A
one-armed man is still good for something. And he can still
hate.”
“You were close to your prince?”
“I grew up with him. I loved him.” His black eyes
rested steadily upon the lively profile of Hywel ab Owain, who
surely had taken Anarawd’s place in his loyalty, in so far as
one man can ever replace another.
“May I know your name?” asked Cadfael. “And
mine is, or in the world it was, Cadfael ap Meilyr ap Dafydd, a man
of Gwynedd myself, born at Trefriw. And Benedictine though I may
be, I have not forgotten my ancestry.”
“Nor should you, in the world or out of it. And my name is
Cuhelyn ab Einion, a younger son of my father, and a man of my
prince’s guard. In the old days,” he said, darkling,
“it was disgrace for a man of the guard to return alive from
the field on which his lord was slain. But I had and have good
reason for living. Those of the murderers whom I knew I have named
to Hywel, and they have paid. But some I did not know. I keep the
faces in mind, for the day when I see them again and hear the names
that go with the faces.”
“There is also one other, the chief, who has paid only a
blood-price in lands,” said Cadfael. “What of him? Is
it certain he gave the orders for this ambush?”
“Certain! They would never have dared, otherwise. And
Owain Gwynedd has no doubts.”
“And where, do you suppose, is this Cadwaladr now? And has
he resigned himself to the loss of everything he
possessed?”
The young man shook his head. “Where he is no one seems to
know. Nor what mischief he has next in mind. But resigned to his
loss? That I doubt! Hywel took hostages from among the lesser
chiefs who served under Cadwaladr, and brought them north to ensure
there should be no further resistance in Ceredigion. Most of them
have been released now, having sworn not to bear arms against
Hywel’s rule or offer service again to Cadwaladr, unless at
some time to come he should pledge reparation and be restored.
There’s one still left captive in Aber, Gwion. He’s
given his parole not to attempt escape, but he refuses to forswear
his allegiance to Cadwaladr or promise peace to Hywel. A decent
enough fellow,” said Cuhelyn tolerantly, “but still
devoted to his lord. Can I hold that against a man? But such a
lord! He deserves better for his worship.”
“You bear no hatred against him?”
“None, there is no reason. He had no part in the ambush,
he is too young and too clean to be taken into such a villainy.
After a fashion, I like him as he likes me. We are two of a kind.
Could I blame him for holding fast to his allegiance as I hold fast
to mine? If he would kill for Cadwaladr’s sake, so would I
have done, so I did, for Anarawd. But not by stealth, in double
force against light-armed men expecting no danger. Honestly, in
open field, that’s another matter.”
The long meal was almost at its end, only the wine and mead
still circling, and the hum of voices had mellowed into a low,
contented buzzing like a hive of bees drunken and happy among
summer meadows. In the centre of the high table Bishop Gilbert had
taken up the fine scroll of his letter and broken the seal, and was
on his feet with the vellum leaf unrolled in his hands. Roger de
Clinton’s salutation was meant to be declaimed in public for
its full effect, and had been carefully worded to impress the laity
no less than the Celtic clergy, who might be most in need of a
cautionary word. Gilbert’s sonorous voice made the most of
it. Cadfael, listening, thought that Archbishop Theobald would be
highly content with the result of his embassage.
“And now, my lord Owain,” Gilbert pursued, seizing
the mellowed moment for which he must have been waiting throughout
the feast, “I ask your leave to introduce a petitioner, who
comes asking your indulgence for a plea on behalf of another. My
appointment here gives me some right, by virtue of my office, to
speak for peace, between individual men as between peoples. It is
not good that there should be anger between brothers. Just cause
there may have been at the outset, but there should be a term to
every outlawry, every quarrel. I ask an audience for an ambassador
who speaks on behalf of your brother Cadwaladr, that you may be
reconciled with him as is fitting, and restore him to his lost
place in your favour. May I admit Bledri ap Rhys?”
There was a brief, sharp silence, in which every eye turned upon
the prince’s face. Cadfael felt the young man beside him
stiffen and quiver in bitter resentment of such a breach of
hospitality, for clearly this had been planned deliberately without
a word of warning to the prince, without any prior consultation,
taking an unfair advantage of the courtesy such a man would
undoubtedly show towards the host at whose table he was seated.
Even had this audience been sought in private, Cuhelyn would have
found it deeply offensive. To precipitate it thus publicly, in hall
before the entire household, was a breach of courtesy only possible
to an insensitive Norman set up in authority among a people of whom
he had no understanding. But if the liberty was as displeasing to
Owain as it was to Cuhelyn, he did not allow it to appear. He let
the silence lie just long enough to leave the issue in doubt, and
perhaps shake Gilbert’s valiant self-assurance, and then he
said clearly:
“At your wish, my lord bishop, I will certainly hear
Bledri ap Rhys. Every man has the right to ask and to be heard.
Without prejudice to the outcome!”
It was plain, as soon as the bishop’s steward brought the
petitioner into the hall, that he had not come straight from travel
to ask for this audience. Somewhere about the bishop’s
enclave he had been waiting at ease for his entry here, and had
prepared himself carefully, very fine and impressive in his dress
and in his person, every grain of dust from the roads polished
away. A tall, broad-shouldered, powerful man, black-haired and
black-moustached, with an arrogant beak of a nose, and a bearing
truculent rather than conciliatory. He swept with long strides into
the centre of the open space fronting the dais, and made an
elaborate obeisance in the general direction of prince and bishop.
The gesture seemed to Cadfael to tend rather to the
performer’s own aggrandizement than to any particular
reverence for those saluted. He had everyone’s attention, and
meant to retain it.
“My lord prince—my lord bishop, your devout servant!
I come as a petitioner here before you.” He did not look the
part, nor was his full, confident voice expressive of any such
role.
“So I have heard,” said Owain. “You have
something to ask of us. Ask it freely.”
“My lord, I was and am in fealty to your brother
Cadwaladr, and I dare venture to speak for his right, in that he
goes deprived of his lands, and made a stranger and disinherited in
his own country. Whatever you may hold him guilty of, I dare to
plead that such a penalty is more than he has deserved, and such as
brother should not visit upon brother. And I ask of you that
measure of generosity and forgiveness that should restore him his
own again. He has endured this despoiling a year already, let that
be enough, and set him up again in his lands of Ceredigion. The
lord bishop will add his voice to mine for
reconciliation.”
“The lord bishop has been before you,” said Owain
drily, “and equally eloquent. I am not, and never have been,
adamant against my brother, whatever follies he has committed, but
murder is worse than folly, and requires a measure of penitence
before forgiveness is due. The two, separated, are of no value, and
where the one is not, I will not waste the other. Did Cadwaladr
send you on this errand?”
“No, my lord, and knows nothing of my coming. It is he who
suffers deprivation, and I who appeal for his right to be restored.
If he has done ill in the past, is that good reason for shutting
him out from the possibility of doing well in the future? And what
has been done to him is extreme, for he has been made an exile in
his own country, without a toehold on his own soil. Is that fair
dealing?”
“It is less extreme,” said Owain coldly, “than
what was done to Anarawd. Lands can be restored, if restoration is
deserved. Life once lost is past restoration.”
“True, my lord, but even homicide may be compounded for a
blood-price. To be stripped of all, and for life, is another kind
of death.”
“We are not concerned with mere homicide, but with
murder,” said Owain, “as well you know.”
At Cadfael’s left hand Cuhelyn sat stiff and motionless in
his place, his eyes fixed upon Bledri, their glance lengthened to
pierce through him and beyond. His face was white, and his single
hand clenched tightly upon the edge of the board, the knuckles
sharp and pale as ice. He said no word and made no sound, but his
bleak stare never wavered.
“Too harsh a name,” said Bledri fiercely, “for
a deed done in heat. Nor did your lordship wait to hear my
prince’s side of the quarrel.”
“For a deed done in heat,” said Owain with immovable
composure, “this was well planned. Eight men do not lie in
wait in cover for four travellers unsuspecting and unarmed, in hot
blood. You do your lord’s cause no favor by defending his
crime. You said you came to plead. My mind is not closed against
reconciliation, civilly sought. It is proof against
threats.”
“Yet, Owain,” cried Bledri, flaring like a resinous
torch, “it behoves even you to weigh what consequences may
follow if you are obdurate. A wise man would know when to unbend,
before his own brand burns back into his face.”
Cuhelyn started out of his stillness, quivering, and was half
rising to his feet when he regained control, and sank back in his
place, again mute and motionless. Hywel had not moved, nor had his
face changed. He had his father’s formidable composure. And
Owain’s unshaken and unshakable calm subdued in a moment the
uneasy stir and murmur that had passed round the high table and
started louder echoes down in the floor of the hall.
“Am I to take that as threat, or promise, or a forecast of
a doom from heaven?” asked Owain, in the most amiable of
voices, but none the less with a razor edge to the tone that gave
it piercing sweetness, and caused Bledri to draw back his head a
little as if from a possible blow, and for a moment veil the
smouldering fire of his black eyes, and abate the savage tightness
of his lips. Somewhat more cautiously he responded at last:
“I meant only that enmity and hatred between brothers is
unseemly among men, and cannot but be displeasing to God. It cannot
bear any but disastrous fruit. I beg you, restore your brother his
rights.”
“That,” said Owain thoughtfully, and eyeing the
petitioner with a stare that measured and probed beyond the words
offered, “I am not yet ready to concede. But perhaps we
should consider of this matter at more leisure. Tomorrow morning I
and my people set out for Aber and Bangor, together with some of
the lord bishop’s household and these visitors from
Lichfield. It is in my mind, Bledri ap Rhys, that you should ride
with us and be our guest at Aber, and on the way, and there at home
in my llys, you may better develop your argument, and I better
consider on those consequences of which you make mention. I should
not like,” said Owain in tones of honey, “to invite
disaster for want of forethought. Say yes to my hospitality, and
sit down with us at our host’s table.”
It was entirely plain to Cadfael, as to many another within the
hall, that by this time Bledri had small choice in the matter.
Owain’s men of the guard had fully understood the nature of
the invitation. By his tight smile, so had Bledri, though he
accepted it with every evidence of pleasure and satisfaction. No
doubt it suited him to continue in the prince’s company,
whether as guest or prisoner, and to keep his eyes and ears open on
the ride to Aber. All the more if his hint of dire consequences
meant more than the foreshadowing of divine disapproval of enmity
between brothers. He had said a little too much to be taken at his
face value. And as a guest, free or under guard, his own safety was
assured. He took the place that was cleared for him at the
bishop’s table, and drank to the prince with a discreet
countenance and easy smile.
The bishop visibly drew deep breath, relieved that his
well-meaning effort at peace-making had at least survived the first
skirmish. Whether he had understood the vibrating undertones of
what had passed was doubtful. The subtleties of the Welsh were
probably wasted on a forthright and devout Norman, Cadfael
reflected. The better for him, he could speed his departing guests,
thus augmented by one, and console himself that he had done all a
man could do to bring about reconciliation. What followed, whatever
it might be, was no responsibility of his.
The mead went round amicably, and the prince’s harper sang
the greatness and virtues of Owain’s line and the beauty of
Gwynedd. And after him, to Cadfael’s respectful surprise,
Hywel ab Owain rose and took the harp, and improvised mellifluously
on the women of the north. Poet and bard as well as warrior, this
was undoubtedly an admirable shoot from that admirable stem. He
knew what he was doing with his music. All the tensions of the
evening dissolved into amity and song. Or if they survived, at
least the bishop, comforted and relaxed, lost all awareness of
them.
In the privacy of their own lodging, with the
night still drowsily astir outside the half-open door, Brother Mark
sat mute and thoughtful on the edge of his bed for some moments,
pondering all that had passed, until at last he said, with the
conviction of one who has reviewed all circumstances and come to a
firm conclusion: “He meant nothing but good. He is a good
man.”
“But not a wise one,” said Cadfael from the doorway.
The night without was dark, without a moon, but the stars filled it
with a distant, blue glimmer that showed where occasional shadows
crossed from building to building, making for their rest. The babel
of the day was now an almost-silence, now and then quivering to the
murmur of low voices tranquilly exchanging goodnights. Rather a
tremor on the air than an audible sound. There was no wind. Even
the softest of movements vibrated along the cords of the senses,
making silence eloquent.
“He trusts too easily,” Mark agreed with a sigh.
“Integrity expects integrity.”
“And you find it missing in Bledri ap Rhys?” Cadfael
asked respectfully. Brother Mark could still surprise him now and
then.
“I doubt him. He comes too brazenly, knowing once received
he is safe from any harm or affront. And he feels secure enough in
Welsh hospitality to threaten.”
“So he did,” said Cadfael thoughtfully. “And
passed it off as a reminder of heaven’s displeasure. And what
did you make of that?”
“He drew in his horns,” said Mark positively,
“knowing he had gone a step too far. But there was more in
that than a pastoral warning. And truly I wonder where this
Cadwaladr is now, and what he is up to. For I think that was a
plain threat of trouble here and now if Owain refused his
brother’s demands. Something is in the planning, and this
Bledri knows of it.”
“I fancy,” said Cadfael placidly, “that the
prince is of your opinion also, or at least has the possibility
well in mind. You heard him. He has given due notice to all his men
that Bledri ap Rhys is to remain in the royal retinue here, in
Aber, and on the road between. If there’s mischief planned,
Bledri, if he can’t be made to betray it, can be prevented
from playing any part in it, or letting his master know the prince
has taken the warning, and is on his guard. Now I wonder did Bledri
read as much into it, and whether he’ll go to the trouble to
put it to the test?”
“He did not seem to me to be put out of his stride,”
said Mark doubtfully. “If he did understand it so, it did not
disquiet him. Can he have provoked it purposely?”
“Who knows? It may suit him to go along with us to Aber,
and keep his eyes and ears open along the way and within the llys,
if he’s spying out the prince’s dispositions for his
master. Or for himself!” Cadfael conceded thoughtfully,
“Though what’s the advantage to him, unless it’s
to put him safely out of the struggle, I confess I don’t
see.” For a prisoner who enjoys officially the status of a
guest can come to no harm, whatever the issue. If his own lord
wins, he is delivered without reproach, and if his captor is the
victor he is immune just as surely, safe from injury in the battle
or reprisals after it. “But he did not strike me as a
cautious man,” Cadfael owned, rejecting the option, though
with some lingering reluctance.
A few threads of shadow still crossed the gathering darkness of
the precinct, ripples on a nocturnal lake. The open door of the
bishop’s great hall made a rectangle of faint light, most of
the torches within already quenched, the fire turfed down but still
glowing, distant murmurs of movement and voices a slight quiver on
the silence, as the servants cleared away the remnants of the feast
and the tables that had borne it.
A tall, dark figure, wide-shouldered and erect against the pale
light, appeared in the doorway of the hall, paused for a long
moment as though breathing in the cool of the night, and then moved
leisurely down the steps, and began to pace the beaten earth of the
court, slowly and sinuously, like a man flexing his muscles after
being seated a while too long. Cadfael opened the door a little
wider, to have the shadowy movements in view.
“Where are you going?” asked Mark at his back,
anticipating with alert intelligence.
“Not far,” said Cadfael. “Just far enough to
see what rises to our friend Bledri’s bait. And how he takes
it!”
He stood motionless outside the door for a long moment, drawing
the door to behind him, to accustom his eyes to the night, as
doubtless Bledri ap Rhys was also doing as he trailed his coat to
and fro, nearer and nearer to the open gate of the precinct. The
earth was firm enough to make his crisp, deliberate steps audible,
as plainly he meant them to be. But nothing stirred and no one took
note of him, not even the few servants drifting away to their beds,
until he turned deliberately and walked straight towards the open
gate. Cadfael had advanced at leisure along the line of modest
canonical houses and guest lodgings, to keep the event in view.
With admirable aplomb two brisk figures heaved up into the
gateway from the fields without, amiably wreathed together,
collided with Bledri in midpassage, and untwined themselves to
embrace him between them.
“What, my lord Bledri!” boomed one blithe Welsh
voice. “Is it you? Taking a breath of air before sleeping?
And a fine night for it!”
“We’ll bear you company, willingly,” the
second voice offered heartily. “It’s early to go to bed
yet. And we’ll see you safe to your own brychan, if you lose
your way in the dark.”
“I’m none so drunk as to go astray,” Bledri
acknowledged without surprise or concern. “And for all the
good company there is to be had in Saint Asaph tonight, I think
I’ll get to my bed. You gentlemen will be needing your sleep,
too, if we’re off with the morn tomorrow.” The smile in
his voice was clear to be sensed. He had the answer he had looked
for, and it caused him no dismay, rather a measure of amusement,
perhaps even satisfaction. “Goodnight to you!” he said,
and turned to saunter back towards the hall door, still dimly
lighted from within.
Silence hung outside the precinct wall, though the nearest tents
of Owain’s camp were not far away. The wall was not so high
that it could not be climbed, though wherever a man mounted, there
would be someone waiting below on the other side. But in any case
Bledri ap Rhys had no intention of removing himself, he had merely
been confirming his expectation that any attempt to do so would
very simply and neatly be frustrated. Owain’s orders were
readily understood even when obliquely stated, and would be
efficiently carried out. If Bledri had been in any doubt of that,
he knew better now. And as for the two convivial guards, they
withdrew again into the night with an absence of pretence which was
almost insulting.
And that, on the face of it, was the end of the incident. Yet
Cadfael continued immobile and detachedly interested, invisible
against the dark bulk of the timber buildings, as if he expected
some kind of epilogue to round off the night’s
entertainment.
Into the oblong of dim light at the head of the steps came the
girl Heledd, unmistakable even in silhouette by the impetuous grace
of her carriage and her tall slenderness. Even at the end of an
evening of serving the bishop’s guests and the retainers of
his household she moved like a fawn. And if Cadfael observed her
appearance with impersonal pleasure, so did Bledri ap Rhys, from
where he stood just aside from the foot of the steps, with a
startled appreciation somewhat less impersonal, having no monastic
restraints to hold it in check. He had just confirmed that he was
now, willing or otherwise, a member of the prince’s retinue
at least as far as Aber, and in all probability he already knew,
since he was lodged in the bishop’s own house, that this
promising girl was the one who would be riding with the party at
dawn. The prospect offered a hope of mild pleasure along the way,
to pass the time agreeably. At the very least, here was this
moment, to round off an eventful and enjoyable evening. She was
descending, with one of the embroidered drapings of the high table
rolled up in her arms, on her way to the canonical dwellings across
the precinct. Perhaps wine had been spilled on the cloth, or some
of the gilt threads been snagged by a belt buckle or the rough
setting of a dagger hilt or a bracelet, and she was charged with
its repair. He had been about to ascend, but waited aside instead,
for the pleasure of watching her at ever closer view as she came
down, eyes lowered to be sure of stepping securely. He was so still
and she so preoccupied that she had not observed him. And when she
had reached the third step from the ground he suddenly reached out
and took her by the waist between his hands, very neatly, and swung
her round in a half-circle, and so held her suspended, face to face
with him and close, for a long moment before he set her quite
gently on her feet. He did not, however, relinquish his hold of
her.
It was done quite lightly and playfully, and for all Cadfael
could see, which was merely a shadow play, Heledd received it
without much trace of displeasure, and certainly none of alarm,
once the surprise was past. She had uttered one small, startled
gasp as he plucked her aloft, but that was all, and once set down
she stood looking up at him eye to eye, and made no move to break
away. It is not unpleasant to any woman to be admired by a handsome
man. She said something to him, the words indistinguishable but the
tone light and tolerant to Cadfael’s ear, if not downright
encouraging. And something he said in return to her, at the very
least with no sign of discouragement. No doubt Bledri ap Rhys had a
very good opinion of himself and his attractions, but it was in
Cadfael’s mind that Heledd, for all she might enjoy his
attentions, was also quite capable of keeping them within decorous
bounds. Doubtful if she was considering letting him get very far.
But from this pleasurable brush with him she could extricate
herself whenever she chose. They were neither of them taking it
seriously.
In the event she was not to be given the opportunity to conclude
it in her own fashion. For the light from the open doorway above
was suddenly darkened by the bulk of a big man’s body, and
the abrupt eclipse cast the linked pair below into relative
obscurity. Canon Meirion paused for a moment to adjust his vision
to the night, and began to descend the steps with his usual
selfconscious dignity. With the dwindling of his massive shadow
renewed light fell upon Heledd’s glossy hair and the pale
oval of her face, and the broad shoulders and arrogant head of
Bledri ap Rhys, the pair of them closely linked in what fell little
short of an embrace.
It seemed to Brother Cadfael, watching with unashamed interest
from his dark corner, that both of them were very well aware of the
stormcloud bearing down on them, and neither was disposed to do
anything to evade or placate it. Indeed, he perceived that Heledd
softened by a hair the stiffness of her stance, and allowed her
head to tilt towards the descending light and glitter into a bright
and brittle smile, meant rather for her father’s discomfort
than for Bledri’s gratification. Let him sweat for his place
and his desired advancement! She had said that she could destroy
him if she so willed, it was something she would never do, but if
he was so crass, and knew so little of her, as to believe her
capable of bringing about his ruin, he deserved to pay for his
stupidity.
The instant of intense stillness exploded into a flurry of
movement, as Canon Meirion recovered his breath and came seething
down the steps in a turmoil of clerical black, like a sudden
thundercloud, took his daughter by the arm, and wrenched her firmly
away from Bledri’s grasp. As firmly and competently she
withdrew herself from this new compulsion, and brushed the very
touch of his hand from her sleeve. The dagger glances that must
have strained through the dimness between sire and daughter were
blunted by the night. And Bledri suffered his deprivation
gracefully, without stirring a step, and very softly laughed.
“Oh, pardon if I have trespassed on your rights of
warren,” he said, deliberately obtuse. “I had not
reckoned with a rival of your cloth. Not here in Bishop
Gilbert’s household. I see I have undervalued his breadth of
mind.”
He was being provocative deliberately, of course. Even if he had
had no notion that this indignant elder was the girl’s
father, he certainly knew that this intervention could hardly bear
the interpretation he was placing upon it. But had not the impulse
of mischief originated rather with Heledd? It did not please her
that the canon should have so little confidence in her judgement as
to suppose she would need help in dealing with a passing piece of
impudence from this questionably welcome visitor. And Bledri was
quite sufficiently accomplished in the study of women to catch the
drift of her mild malice, and play the accomplice, for her
gratification as readily as for his own amusement.
“Sir,” said Meirion with weighty and forbidding
dignity, curbing his rage, “my daughter is affianced, and
shortly to be married. Here in his lordship’s court you will
treat her and all other women with respect.” And to Heledd he
said brusquely, and with a sharp gesture of his hand towards their
lodging under the far wall of the enclave: “Go in, girl! The
hour is late already, you should be withindoors.”
Heledd, without haste or discomposure, gave them a slight, curt
inclination of her head to share between them, and turned and
walked away. The rear view of her as she went was expressive, and
disdainful of men in general.
“And a very fine girl, too,” said Bledri
approvingly, watching her departure. “You may be proud of
your getting, Father. I hope you are marrying her to a man
who’ll appreciate beauty. The small courtesy of hefting the
lass down the steps to level ground can hardly have blemished his
bargain.” His clear, incisive voice had dwelt fondly on the
word ‘Father’, well aware of the dual sting.
“Well, what the eye has not seen, the heart need not grieve,
and I hear the bridegroom is well away in Anglesey. And no doubt
you can keep a still tongue where this match is concerned.”
The plain implication was there, very sweetly insinuated. No, Canon
Meirion was exceedingly unlikely to make any move that could
jeopardise his cleansed and celibate and promising future. Bledri
ap Rhys was very quick on the uptake, and well informed about the
bishop’s clerical reforms. He had even sensed Heledd’s
resentment at being so ruthlessly disposed of, and her impulse to
take her revenge before departing.
“Sir, you are a guest of prince and bishop, and as such
are expected to observe the standards due to their
hospitality.” Meirion was stiff as a lance, and his voice
thinned and steely as a sword-blade. Within his well-schooled
person there was a ferocious Welsh temper under arduous control.
“If you do not, you will rue it. Whatever my own situation, I
will see to that. Do not approach my daughter, or attempt to have
any further ado with her. Your courtesies are unwelcome.”
“Not, I think, to the lady,” said Bledri, with the
most complacent of smiles implicit in the very tone of his voice.
“She has a tongue, and a palm, and I fancy would have been
ready enough to use both if I had caused her any displeasure. I
like a lass of spirit. If she grants me occasion, I shall tell her
so. Why should she not enjoy the admiration she is entitled to,
these few hours on the road to her marriage?”
The brief silence fell like a stone between them; Cadfael felt
the air quiver with the tension of their stillness. Then Canon
Meirion said, through gritted teeth and from a throat constricted
with the effort to contain his rage: “My lord, do not think
this cloth I wear will prove any protection to you if you affront
my honor, or my daughter’s good name. Be warned, and keep
away from her, or you shall have excellent cause to regret it.
Though perhaps,” he ended, even lower and more malevolently,
“too brief time!”
“Time enough,” said Bledri, not noticeably disturbed
by the palpable threat, “for all the regretting I’m
likely to do. It’s something I’ve had small practice
in. Goodnight to your reverence!” And he passed by Meirion so
close their sleeves brushed, perhaps intentionally, and began to
climb the steps to the hall door. And the canon, wrenching himself
out of his paralysis of rage with an effort, composed his dignity
about him as best he could, and stalked away towards his own
door.
Cadfael returned to his own quarters very
thoughtfully, and recounted the whole of this small incident to
Brother Mark, who was lying wakeful and wide-eyed after his
prayers, by some private and peculiar sensitivity of his own
already aware of turbulent cross-currents trembling on the night
air. He listened, unsurprised.
“How much, would you say, Cadfael, is his concern only for
his own advancement, how much truly for his daughter? For he does
feel guilt towards her. Guilt that he resents her as a burden to
his prospects, guilt at loving her less than she loves him. A guilt
that makes him all the more anxious to put her out of sight, far
away, another man’s charge.”
“Who can decypher any man’s motives?” said
Cadfael resignedly. “Much less a woman’s. But I tell
you this, she would do well not to drive him too far. The man has a
core of violence in him. I would not like to see it let loose. It
could be a killing force.”
“And against which of them,” wondered Mark, staring
into the dark of the roof above him, “would the lightning be
launched, if ever the storm broke?”
Chapter Four
« ^ »
The prince’s cortege mustered in the dawn,
in a morning hesitant between sullenness and smiles. There was the
moisture of a brief shower on the grasses as Cadfael and Mark
crossed to the church for prayer before saddling up, but the sun
was shimmering on the fine drops, and the sky above was the palest
and clearest of blues, but for a few wisps of cloud to eastward,
embracing the rising orb of light with stroking fingers. When they
emerged again into the courtyard it was already full of bustle and
sound, the baggage horses being loaded, the brave city of tents
along the hillside above folded and on the move, and even the frail
feathers of cloud dissolved into moist and scintillating
radiance.
Mark stood gazing before him with pleasure at the preparations
for departure, his face flushed and bright, a child embarking on an
adventure. Until this moment, Cadfael thought, he had not fully
realised the possibilities, the fascinations, even the perils of
the journey he had undertaken. To ride with princes was no more
than half the tale, somewhere there was a lurking threat, a hostile
brother, a prelate bent on reforming a way of life which in the
minds of its population needed no reform. And who could guess what
might happen between here and Bangor, between bishop and bishop,
the stranger and the native?
“I spoke a word in the ear of Saint Winifred,” said
Mark, flushing almost guiltily, as though he had appropriated a
patroness who by rights belonged to Cadfael. “I thought we
must be very close to her here, it seemed only gracious to let her
know of our presence and our hopes, and ask her
blessing.”
“If we deserve!” said Cadfael, though he had small
doubt that so gentle and sensible a saint must look indulgently
upon this wise innocent.
“Indeed! How far is it, Cadfael, from here to her holy
well?”
“A matter of fourteen miles or so, due east of
us.”
“Is it true it never freezes? However hard the
winter?”
“It is true. No one has ever known it stilled, it bubbles
always in the centre.”
“And Gwytherin, where you took her from the
grave?”
“That lies as far south and west of us,” said
Cadfael, and refrained from mentioning that he had also restored
her to her grave in that same place. “Never try to limit
her,” he advised cautiously. “She will be wherever you
may call upon her, and present and listening as soon as you cry out
your need.”
“That I never doubted,” said Mark simply, and went
with a springy and hopeful step to put together his small
belongings and saddle his glossy nutbrown gelding. Cadfael lingered
a few moments to enjoy the bright bustle before him, and then
followed more sedately to the stables. Outside the walls of the
enclave Owain’s guards and noblemen were already marshalling,
their encampment vanished from the greensward, leaving behind only
the paler, flattened patches which would soon spring back into
lively green, and erase even the memory of their visitation. Within
the wall grooms whistled and called, hooves stamped lively, muffled
rhythms in the hard-packed earth, harness jingled, maidservants
shrilled to one another above the general babel of male voices, and
the faint dust of all this vigorous movement rose into the sunlight
and shimmered in gilded mist overhead.
The company gathered as blithely as if they were going maying,
and certainly so bright a morning invited to so pleasant a pastime.
But there were certain graver reminders to be remarked as they
mounted. Heledd made her appearance cloaked and ready, serene and
demure of countenance, but with Canon Meirion keeping close on one
side of her, with tight lips and downdrawn brows, and Canon Morgant
on the other, equally tightlipped but with brows arched into
uncompromising severity, and sharp eyes dwelling alternately on
father and daughter, and with no very assured approval of either.
And for all their precautions, at the last moment Bledri ap Rhys
stepped between them and lifted the girl into the saddle with his
own large and potentially predatory hands, with a courtesy so
elaborate that it glittered into insolence: and, worse, Heledd
accepted the service with as gracious an inclination of her head,
and a cool, reserved smile, ambiguous between chaste reproof and
discreet mischief. To take exception to the behaviour of either
party would have been folly, so well had both preserved the
appearance of propriety, but both canons perceptibly beheld the
incident with raised hackles and darkening frowns if they kept
their mouths shut.
Nor was that the only sudden cloud in this clear sky, for
Cuhelyn, appearing already mounted in the gateway, too late to have
observed any present cause for offence, sat his horse with drawn
brows, while his intent eyes ranged the entire company within until
he found Bledri, and there settled and brooded, a long-memoried man
of intense passions, measuring an enemy. It seemed to Cadfael,
surveying the scene with a thoughtful eye, that there would be a
considerable weight of ill will and not a few grudges among the
rich baggage of this princely party.
The bishop came down into the courtyard to take leave of his
royal guests. This first encounter had passed off successfully
enough, considering the strain he had put upon it by inviting
Cadwaladr’s envoy into conference. He was not so insensitive
that he had not felt the momentary tension and displeasure, and no
doubt he was drawing relieved breath now at having survived the
danger. Whether he had the humility to realize that he owed it to
the prince’s forbearance was another matter, Cadfael
reflected. And here came Owain side by side with his host, and
Hywel at his back. At his coming the whole bright cortege quivered
into expectant life, and as he reached for bridle and stirrup, so
did they all. Too tall for me, eh, Hugh? Cadfael thought, swinging
aloft into the roan’s high saddle, with a buoyancy that set
him up in a very gratifying conceit of himself. I’ll show you
whether I have lost my appetite for travel and forgotten everything
I learned in the east before ever you were born.
And they were away, out of the wide-open gate and heading
westward after the prince’s lofty fair head, uncovered to the
morning sun. The bishop’s household stood to watch them
depart, warily content with one diplomatic encounter successfully
accomplished. Such threats as lingered uneasily from last
night’s exchanges cast their shadows on these departing
guests. Bishop Gilbert, if he had believed in them at all, could
let them withdraw unchallenged, for they were no threat to him.
As those within the enclave emerged into the green track
without, Owain’s officers from the encampment fell into neat
order about them, lining either flank, and Cadfael observed with
interest but without surprise that there were archers among them,
and two keeping their station a few yards behind Bledri ap
Rhys’s left shoulder. Given this particular guest’s
undoubted quickness of perception, he was equally aware of them,
and just as clearly he had no objection to their presence, for in
the first mile he did not let it inhibit him from changing his
position two or three times to speak a civil word in Canon
Morgant’s ear, or exchange courtesies with Hywel ab Owain,
riding close at his father’s back. But he did not make any
move to edge his way through the attendant file of guards. If they
were keeping him in mind of his virtual captivity, so was he bent
on assuring them that he was perfectly content, and had no
intention of attempting to remove himself. Indeed, once or twice he
looked to left and right to take the measure of the prince’s
unobtrusive efficiency, and seemed not unfavorably impressed by
what he saw.
All of which was of considerable interest to an inquisitive man,
even if at this stage it remained undecipherable. Put it away at
the back of the mind, along with everything else of oddity value in
this expedition, and the time would come when its meaning would be
revealed. Meantime, here was Mark, silent and happy at his elbow,
the road westward before him, and the sun bright on Owain’s
pennant of bright hair at the head of the column. What more could
any man ask on a fine May morning?
They did not, as Mark had expected, bear somewhat
northwards towards the sea, but made due west, over softly rolling
hills and through well-treed valleys, by green trails sometimes
clearly marked, sometimes less defined, but markedly keeping a
direct line uphill and down alike, here where the lie of the land
was open and the gradients gentle enough for pleasant riding.
“An old, old road,” said Cadfael. “It starts
from Chester, and makes straight for the head of Conwy’s
tidal water, where once, they say, there was a fort the like of
Chester. At low tide, if you know the sands, you can ford the river
there, but with the tide boats can ply some way beyond.”
“And after the river crossing?” asked Mark,
attentive and glowing.
“Then we climb. To look westward from there, you’d
think no track could possibly pass, but pass it does, up and over
the mountains, and down at last to the sea. Have you ever seen the
sea?”
“No. How could I? Until I joined the bishop’s
household I had never been out of the shire, not even ten miles
from where I was born.” He was straining his eyes ahead as he
rode now, with longing and delight, thirsty for all that he had
never seen. “The sea must be a great wonder,” he said
on a hushed breath.
“A good friend and a bad enemy,” said Cadfael,
beckoned back into old memories. “Respect it, and it will do
well by you, but never take liberties.”
The prince had set a steady, easy pace that could be maintained
mile by mile in this undulating countryside, green and lush,
patterned with hamlets in the valleys, cottages and church snugly
huddled together, the fringe of cultivable fields a woven tapestry
round them, and here and there solitary, scattered throughout the
tref, the households of the free landowners, and no less solitary,
somewhere among them, their parish church.
“These men live lonely,” said Mark, taking in the
distinction with some wonder.
“These are the freeborn men of the tribe. They own their
land, but not to do as they please with it, it descends by strict
law of inheritance within the family. The villein villages till the
soil among them, and pay their communal dues together, though every
man has his dwelling and his cattle and his fair share of the land.
We make sure of that by overseeing the distribution every so often.
As soon as sons grow to be men they have their portion at the next
accounting.”
“So no one there can inherit,” Mark deduced
reasonably.
“None but the youngest son, the last to grow into a
portion of his own. He inherits his father’s portion and
dwelling. His elder brothers by then will have taken wives and
built houses of their own.” It seemed to Cadfael, and
apparently to Mark also, a fair, if rough and ready, means of
assuring every man a living and a place in which to live, a fair
share of the work and a fair share of the profit of the land.
“And you?” asked Mark. “Was this where you
belonged?”
“Belonged and could not belong,” Cadfael
acknowledged, looking back with some surprise at his own origins.
“Yes, I was born in just such a villein tref, and coming up
to my fourteenth birthday and a slip of land of my own. And would
you believe it now?—I did not want it! Good Welsh earth, and
I felt nothing for it. When the wool merchant from Shrewsbury took
a liking to me, and offered me work that would give me license to
see at least a few more miles of the world, I jumped at that open
door as I’ve jumped at most others that ever came my way. I
had a younger brother, better content to sit on one strip of earth
lifelong. I was for off, as far as the road would take me, and it
took me half across the world before I understood. Life goes not in
a straight line, lad, but in a circle. The first half we spend
venturing as far as the world’s end from home and kin and
stillness, and the latter half brings us back by roundabout ways
but surely, to that state from which we set out. So I end bound by
vow to one narrow place, but for the rare chance of going forth on
the business of my house, and laboring at a small patch of earth,
and in the company of my closest kin. And content,” said
Cadfael, drawing satisfied breath.
They came over the crest of a high ridge before noon, and there
below them the valley of the Conwy opened, and beyond, the ground
rose at first gently and suavely, but above these green levels
there towered in the distance the enormous bastions of Eryri,
soaring to polished steel peaks against the pale blue of the sky.
The river was a winding silver thread, twining a tortuous course
through and over shoals of tidal mud and sand on its way northward
to the sea, its waters at this hour so spread and diminished that
it could be forded without difficulty. And after the crossing, as
Cadfael had warned, they climbed.
The first few green and sunny miles gave way to a rising track
that kept company with a little tributary river, mounting steeply
until the trees fell behind, and they emerged gradually into a
lofty world of moorland, furze and heather, open and naked as the
sky. No plough had ever broken the soil here, there was no visible
movement but the ruffling of the sudden wind among the gorse and
low bushes, no inhabitants but the birds that shot up from before
the foremost riders, and the hawks that hung almost motionless,
high in air. And yet across this desolate but beautiful wilderness
marched a perceptible causeway laid with stones and cushioned with
rough grass, raised clear of the occasional marshy places,
straddling the shallow pools of peat-brown water, making straight
for the lofty wall of honed rock that seemed to Brother Mark
utterly impenetrable. In places where the firm rock broke through
the soil and gave solid footing, the raised sarn remained visible
as a trodden pathway needing no ramp of stones, but always
maintained its undeviating line ahead.
“Giants made this,” said Brother Mark in awe.
“Men made it,” said Cadfael. It was wide where it
was clearly to be seen, wide enough for a column of men marching
six abreast, though horsemen had to ride no more than three in
line, and Owain’s archers, who knew this territory well, drew
off on either flank and left the paved way to the company they
guarded. A road, Cadfael thought, made not for pleasure, not for
hawking or hunting, but as a means of moving a great number of men
from one stronghold to another as quickly as possible. It took
small count of gradients, but set its sights straight ahead,
deviating only where that headlong line was rankly impossible to
maintain, and then only until the obstacle was passed.
“But through that sheer wall,” Mark marveled,
staring ahead at the barrier of the mountains, “surely we
cannot go.”
“Yes, you will find there’s a gate through, narrow
but wide enough, at the pass of Bwlch y Ddeufaen. We thread through
those hills, keep this high level three or four more miles, and
after that we begin to descend.”
“Towards the sea?”
“Towards the sea,” said Cadfael.
They came to the first decline, the first
sheltered valley of bushes and trees, and in the heart of it
bubbled a spring that became a lively brook, and accompanied them
downhill gradually towards the coast. They had long left behind the
rivulets that flowed eastward towards the Conwy; here the streams
sprang sparkling into short, precipitous lives, and made headlong
for the sea. And down with this most diminutive of its kind went
the track, raised to a firm level above the water, at the edge of
the cleft of trees. The descent became more gradual, the brook
turned somewhat away from the path, and suddenly the view opened
wide before them, and there indeed was the sea.
Immediately below them a village lay in its patterned fields,
beyond it narrow meadowland melting into salt flats and shingle,
and then the wide expanse of sea, and beyond that again, distant
but clear in the late afternoon light, the coast of Anglesey
stretched out northward, to end in the tiny island of Ynys Lanog.
From the shore towards which they moved the shallow water shimmered
pale gold overlaid with aquamarine, almost as far as the eye could
distinguish color, for Lavan Sands extended the greater part of the
way to the island shore, and only there in the distance did the sea
darken into the pure, greenish blue of the deep channel. At the
sight of this wonder about which he had dreamed and speculated all
day long, Mark checked his horse for a moment, and sat staring with
flushed cheeks and bright eyes, enchanted by the beauty and
diversity of the world.
It happened that Cadfael turned his head to see where someone
else had reined in at the same moment, perhaps in the same rapt
delight. Between her two guardian canons Heledd had checked and sat
staring before her, but her sights were raised beyond the crystal
and gold of the shallows, beyond the cobalt channel to the distant
shore of Anglesey, and her lips were austerely drawn, and her brows
level and unrevealing. She looked towards her bridegroom’s
land, the man against whom she knew nothing, of whom she had heard
nothing but good; she saw marriage advancing upon her all too
rapidly, and there was such a baffled and resentful sadness in her
face, and such an obstinate rejection of her fate, that Cadfael
marveled no one else felt her burning outrage, and turned in alarm
to find the source of this intense disquiet.
Then as suddenly as she had halted she shook the rein, and set
her horse to an impatient trot downhill, leaving her black-habited
escort behind, and threaded a way deeper into the cavalcade to
shake them off at least for a few rebellious moments.
Watching her vehement passage through the ranks of the
prince’s retinue, Cadfael absolved her of any deliberate
intent in drawing close alongside Bledri’s mount. He was
simply there in her way, in a moment she would have passed by him.
But there was intent enough in the opportunist alacrity with which
Bledri reached a hand to her bridle, and checked her passage knee
to knee with him, and in the intimate, assured smile he turned upon
her as she yielded to the persuasion. There was, Cadfael thought,
one instant when she almost shook him off, almost curled her lip
with the tolerant mockery which was all she truly felt for him.
Then with perverse deliberation she smiled at him, and consented to
fall in beside him, in no hurry to free herself of the muscular
hand that detained her. They rode on together in apparent amity,
with matched pace and in easy talk together. The rear view of them
suggested to Cadfael nothing more than a continuation of a somewhat
malicious but enjoyable game on both parts, but when he turned his
head cautiously to see what effect the incident had had upon the
two canons of Saint Asaph it was all too plain that to them it
implied something very different. If Meirion’s drawn brows
and rigid lips threatened storms towards Heledd and rage towards
Bledri ap Rhys, equally they were stiff with apprehension of what
must be going on behind the controlled but ominous rectitude of
Morgant’s fleshy countenance.
Ah, well! Two days more, and it should be over. They would be
safely in Bangor, the bridegroom would cross the strait to meet
them, and Heledd would be rapt away to that mist-blue shore beyond
the faint gold and ice-blue of Lavan Sands. And Canon Meirion could
draw breath in peace at last.
They came down to the rim of the salt flats and
turned westward, with the quivering plane of the shallows
reflecting glittering light on their right hand, and the green of
field and copse on the left, rising terrace beyond terrace into the
hills. Once or twice they plashed through tenuous streams trickling
down through the salt marshes to the sea. And within the hour they
were riding alongside the high stockade of Owain’s royal seat
and tref of Aber, and the porters and guards at the gates had seen
the shimmer of their colors nearing, and cried their coming
within.
From all the buildings that lined the walls of the great court
of Owain’s maenol, from stables and armoury and hall, and the
array of guest dwellings, the household came surging to welcome the
prince home, and make his visitors welcome. Grooms ran to receive
the horses, squires came with pitchers and horns. Hywel ab Owain,
who had distributed his hospitable attentions punctiliously during
the journey, moving from rider to rider with civilities as his
father’s representative, and no doubt taking due note of all
the undercurrents that drew taut between them, with his
father’s interests in mind, was the first out of the saddle,
and went straight to take the prince’s bridle, in an elegant
gesture of filial respect, before ceding the charge to the waiting
groom, and going to kiss the hand of the lady who had come out from
the timber hall to welcome her lord home. Not his own mother! The
two young boys who came leaping down the steps from the hall door
after her were hers, lithe dark imps of about ten and seven years,
shrilling with excitement and with a flurry of dogs wreathing round
their feet. Owain’s wife was daughter to a prince of
Arwystli, in central Wales, and her lively sons had her rich
colouring. But an older youth, perhaps fifteen or sixteen, followed
them more circumspectly down the steps, and came with authority and
confidence straight to Owain, and was embraced with an affection
there was no mistaking. This one had his father’s fair hair
deepened into pure gold, and his father’s impressive male
comeliness refined into a startling beauty. Tall, erect, with an
athlete’s grace of movement, he could not emerge into any
company without being noticed, and even at a distance the brilliant
northern blue of his eyes was as clear as if an inner sun shone
through crystals of sapphire. Brother Mark saw him, and held his
breath.
“His son?” he said in an awed whisper.
“But not hers,” said Cadfael. “Another like
Hywel.”
“There cannot be many such in this world,” said
Mark, staring. Beauty in others he observed with a particular,
ungrudging delight, having always felt himself to be the plainest
and most insignificant of mortals.
“There is but one such, lad, as you know full well, for
there is but one of any man that ever lived, black or fair, And
yet,” owned Cadfael, reconsidering the uniqueness of the
physical envelope if not of the inhabiting soul, “we go close
to duplicating this one, there at home in Shrewsbury. The
boy’s name is Rhun. You might look at our Brother Rhun, since
Saint Winifred perfected him, and think one or the other a
miraculous echo.”
Even to the name! And surely, thought Mark, recalling with
pleasure the youngest of those who had been his brothers in
Shrewsbury, this is how the pattern of a prince, the son of a
prince, should look—and no less, a saint, the protege of a
saint. All radiance and clarity, all openness and serenity in the
face. No wonder his father, recognizing a prodigy, loves him better
than all others.
“I wonder,” said Cadfael half to himself,
unwittingly casting a shadow athwart Mark’s contemplation of
light, “how her two will look upon him, when
they’re all grown.”
“It is impossible,” Mark said firmly, “that
they should ever wish him harm, even if land-greed and power-greed
have sometimes turned brothers into enemies. This youth no one
could hate.”
Close at his shoulder a cool, dry voice observed ruefully:
“Brother, I envy your certainty, but I would not for the
world share it, the fall is too mortal. There is no one who cannot
be hated, against whatever odds. Nor anyone who cannot be loved,
against all reason.”
Cuhelyn had approached them unnoticed, threading a way through
the stir of men and horses, hounds and servants and children. For
all his black intensity, he was a very quiet man, unobtrusive in
all his comings and goings. Cadfael turned in response to the
unexpected observation, just in time to see the intent glance of
the young man’s shrewd eyes, presently fastened with a wry,
indulgent warmth upon the boy Rhun, sharpen and chill as another
figure passed between, and follow the transit with a fixity that
suggested to Cadfael, at first, nothing more than detached
interest, and in a matter of seconds froze into composed but
indubitable hostility. Perhaps even more than hostility, a measure
of restrained but implacable suspicion.
A young man of about Cuhelyn’s years, and by no means
unlike him in build and colouring, though thinner in feature and
somewhat longer in the reach, had been standing a little apart,
watching the bustle all round him, his arms folded and his
shoulders leaned against the wall of the undercroft, as though this
tumultuous arrival concerned him rather less than the rest of the
household. From this detached stance he had moved suddenly,
crossing between Cuhelyn and the linked pair, father and son, and
cutting off the view of Rhun’s radiant face. Something to be
seen here certainly mattered to this young man, after all, someone
had been sighted who meant more to him than clerics from Saint
Asaph or the young noblemen of Owain’s guard. Cadfael
followed his vehement passage through the press, and saw him take
one dismounting horseman by the sleeve. The very touch, the very
encounter, that had drawn taut all the lines of Cuhelyn’s
countenance. Bledri ap Rhys swung about, face to face with the
youth who accosted him, visibly recognized an acquaintance, and
guardedly acknowledged him. No very exuberant welcome, but on both
parts there was one momentary flash of warmth and awareness, before
Bledri made his visage formally blank, and the boy accepted the
suggestion, and began what seemed to be the most current of court
civilities. No need, apparently, to pretend they did not know each
other well enough, but every need to keep the acquaintance on
merely courteous terms.
Cadfael looked along his shoulder, and briefly, at
Cuhelyn’s face, and asked simply: “Gwion?”
“Gwion!”
“They were close? These two?”
“No. No closer than two must be who hold by the same
lord.”
“That might be close enough for mischief,” said
Cadfael bluntly. “As you told me, your man has given his word
not to attempt escape. He has not pledged himself to give up his
allegiance beyond that.”
“Natural enough he should welcome the sight of another
liegeman,” said Cuhelyn steadily. “His word he will
keep. As for Bledri ap Rhys, the terms of his sojourn with us,
I will see kept.” He shook himself briefly, and took
each of them by an arm. The prince and his wife and sons were
climbing the steps into the hall, the closest of their household
following without haste. “Come, Brothers, and let me be your
herald here. I’ll bring you to your lodging, and show you the
chapel. Use it as you find occasion, and the prince’s
chaplain will make himself known to you.”
In the privacy of the lodging allotted to them,
backed into the shelter of the maenol wall, Brother Mark sat
refreshed and thoughtful, looking back with wide grey eyes at all
that had passed during this arrival in Aber. And at length he said:
“What most caused me to watch and wonder, was how like they
were, those two—the young liegemen of Anarawd and of
Cadwaladr. It is no mere matter of the same years, the same manner
of body, the same make of face, it is the same passion within them.
In Wales, Cadfael, this is another fashion of loyalty even than the
bond the Normans hold by, or so it seems to me. They are on
opposing sides, your Cuhelyn and this Gwion, and they could be
brothers.”
“And as brothers should, and by times do not, they respect
and like each other. Which would not prevent them from killing each
other,” Cadfael admitted, “if ever it came to a clash
between their lords in the field.”
“That is what I feel to be so wrong,” said Mark
earnestly. “How could either young man look at the other, and
not see himself? All the more now that they have lived together in
the same court, and admitted affection?”
“They are like twins, the one born left-handed, the other
right-handed, at once doubles and opposites. They could kill
without malice, and die without malice. God forbid,” said
Cadfael, “it should ever come to that. But one thing is
certain. Cuhelyn will be watching every moment his mirror image
brushes sleeves with Bledri ap Rhys, and marking every word that
passes between them, and every glance. For I think he knows
somewhat more of Cadwaladr’s chosen envoy than he has yet
told us.”
At supper in Owain’s hall there was good
food and plenteous mead and ale, and harp music of the best. Hywel
ab Owain sang, improvising upon the beauty of Gwynedd and the
splendour of her history, and Cadfael’s recalcitrant heart
shed its habit for a half-hour, and followed the verses far into
the mountains inland of Aber, and across the pale mirror of Lavan
Sands to the royal burial-place of Llanfaes on Anglesey. In youth
his adventurings had all looked eastward, now in his elder years
eyes and heart turned westward. All heavens, all sanctuaries of the
blessed lie to westward, in every legend and every imagination, at
least for men of Celtic stock; a suitable meditation for old men.
Yet here in the royal llys of Gwynedd Cadfael did not feel old.
Nor did it seem that his senses were in the least dulled or
blunted, even as he rejoiced in his dreams, for he was sharp enough
to detect the moment when Bledri ap Rhys slid an arm about
Heledd’s waist as she served him with mead. Nor did he miss
the icy rigidity of Canon Meirion’s face at the sight, or the
deliberation with which Heledd, well aware of the same maledictory
stare, forbore from freeing herself immediately, and said a smiling
word in Bledri’s ear, which might as well have been a curse
as a compliment, though there was no doubt how her father
interpreted it. Well, if the girl was playing with fire, whose
fault was that? She had lived with her sire many loyal, loving
years, he should have known her better, well enough to trust her.
For Bledri ap Rhys she had no use at all but to take out her
grievance on the father who was in such haste to get rid of
her.
Nor did it appear, on reflection, that Bledri ap Rhys was
seriously interested in Heledd. He made the gesture of admiration
and courtship almost absentmindedly, as though by custom it was
expected of him, and though he accompanied it with a smiling
compliment, he let her go the moment she drew away, and his gaze
went back to a certain young man sitting among the noblemen of the
guard at a lower table. Gwion, the last obstinate hostage, who
would not forswear his absolute fealty to Cadwaladr, sat silent
among his peers, and enemies, some of whom, like Cuhelyn, had
become his friends. Throughout the feast he kept his own counsel,
and guarded his thoughts, and even his eyes. But whenever he looked
up at the high table, it was upon Bledri ap Rhys that his glance
rested, and twice at least Cadfael saw them exchange a brief and
brilliant stare, such as allies might venture to convey worlds of
meaning where open speech was impossible.
Those two will somehow get together in private, Cadfael thought,
before this night is out. And for what purpose? It is not Bledri
who so passionately seeks a meeting, though he has been at liberty
and is suspect of having some secret matter to impart. No, it is
Gwion who wants, demands, relies upon reaching Bledri’s ear.
It is Gwion who has some deep and urgent purpose that needs an ally
to reach fulfilment. Gwion who has given his word not to leave
Owain’s easy captivity. As Bledri ap Rhys has not done.
Well, Cuhelyn had vouched for Gwion’s good faith, and
pledged a constant watch upon Bledri. But it seemed to Cadfael that
the llys was large enough and complex enough to provide him with a
difficult watch, if those two were resolved to elude him.
The lady had remained with her children in private, and had not
dined in hall, and the prince also withdrew to his own apartments
early, having been some days absent from his family. He took his
most beloved son with him, and left Hywel to preside until his
guests chose to retire. With every man now free to change his
place, or go out to walk in the fresh air of the late evening,
there was considerable movement in the hall, and in the noise of
many conversations and the music of the harpers, in the smoke of
the torches and the obscurity of the shadowy corners, who was to
keep a steady eye upon one man among so many? Cadfael marked the
departure of Gwion from among the young men of the household, but
still Bledri ap Rhys sat in his modest place towards the foot of
the high table, serenely enjoying his mead—but in moderation,
Cadfael noted—and narrowly observing everything that passed
about him. He appeared to be cautiously impressed by the strength
and strict order of the royal household, and the numbers,
discipline and confidence of the young men of the guard.
“I think,” said Brother Mark softly into
Cadfael’s ear, “we might have the chapel to ourselves
if we go now.”
It was about the hour of Compline. Brother Mark would not rest
if he neglected the office. Cadfael rose and went with him, out
from the doorway of the great hall into the cool and freshness of
the night, and across the inner ward to the timber chapel against
the outer wall. It was not yet fully dark nor very late, the
determined drinkers still in hall would not end their gathering
yet, but in the shadowy passages between the buildings of the
maenol those who had duties about the place moved without haste,
and quietly, going about their usual tasks in the easy languor of
the end of a long and satisfactory day.
They were still some yards from the door of the chapel when a
man emerged from it, and turned along the row of lodgings that
lined the wall of the ward, to disappear into one of the narrow
passages behind the great hall. He did not pass them close, and he
might have been any one of the taller and elder of the frequenters
of Owain’s court. He was in no haste, but going tranquilly
and a little wearily to his night’s rest, yet Cadfael’s
mind was so persistently running upon Bledri ap Rhys that he was
virtually certain of the man’s identity, even in the
deepening dusk.
He was quite certain when they entered the chapel, dimly lit by
the rosy eye of the constant lamp on the altar, and beheld the
shadowy outline of a man kneeling a little aside from the small
pool of light. He was not immediately aware of them, or at least
seemed not to be, though they had entered without any great care to
preserve silence; and when they checked and hung back in stillness
to avoid interrupting his prayers he gave no sign, but continued
bowed and preoccupied, his face in shadow. At length he stirred,
sighed and rose to his feet, and passing them by on his way out,
without surprise, he gave them: “Goodnight, Brothers!”
in a low voice. The small red eye of the altar lamp drew his
profile on the air clearly, but only for a moment; long enough,
however, to show plainly the young, intense, brooding features of
Gwion.
Compline was long over, and midnight past, and
they were peacefully asleep in their small, shared lodging, when
the alarm came. The first signs, sudden clamour at the main gate of
the maenol, the muted thudding of hooves entering, the agitated
exchange of voices between rider and guard, passed dreamlike and
distant through Cadfael’s senses without breaking his sleep,
but Mark’s younger ear, and mind hypersensitive to the
excitement of the day, started him awake even before the murmur of
voices rose into loud orders, and the men of the household began to
gather in the ward, prompt but drowsy from the rushes of the hall
and the many lodgings of the maenol. Then what was left of the
night’s repose was shattered brazenly by the blasting of a
horn, and Cadfael rolled from his brychan on to his feet,
wide-awake and braced for action.
“What’s afoot?”
“Someone rode in. In a hurry! Only one
horseman!”
“They would not rouse the court for a little thing,”
said Cadfael, clawing on his sandals and making for the door. The
horn blared again, echoes ricocheting between the buildings of the
prince’s llys, and blunting their sharp edges against walls.
In the open ward the young men came thronging in arms to the call,
and the hum of many voices, still pitched low in awe of the night,
swelled into a wordless, muted bellowing like a stormy tide
flowing. From every open doorway a thread of light from hastily
kindled lamps and candles spilled into the dark, conjuring here and
there a recognizable face out of the crowd. A jaded horse,
hard-ridden, was being led with drooping head towards the stables,
and his rider, heedless of the many hands that reached to arrest
him and the many voices that questioned, was thrusting a way
through the press towards the great hall. He had barely reached the
foot of the steps when the door above him opened, and Owain in his
furred bed-gown came out, large and dark against the light from
within, the squire who had run to arouse him with news of the
coming close at his shoulder.
“Here am I,” said the prince, loud and clear and
wide awake. “Who’s come wanting me?” As he moved
forward to the edge of the steps the light from within fell upon
the messenger’s face, and Owain knew him. “You, is it,
Goronwy? From Bangor? What’s your news?”
The messenger scarcely took time to bend his knee. He was known
and trusted, and ceremony was waste of precious moments. “My
lord, early this evening one came with word from Carnarvon, and I
have brought that word here to you as fast as horse can go. About
Vespers they sighted ships westward off Abermenai, a great fleet in
war order. The seamen say they are Danish ships from the kingdom of
Dublin, come to raid Gwynedd and force your hand. And that
Cadwaladr, your brother, is with them! He has brought them over to
avenge and restore him, in your despite. The fealty he could not
keep for love he has bought with promised gold.”
Chapter Five
« ^ »
Within Owain’s writ the invasion of
disorder might bring about momentary consternation, but could not
hope to create disorder in its turn. His mind was too quick and
resolute ever to entertain chaos. Before the muted roar of anger
and resentment had circled the ward the captain of the
prince’s guard was at his elbow, awaiting his orders. They
understood each other too well to need many words.
This report is certain?” Owain asked.
“Certain, my lord. The messenger I had it from saw them
himself from the dunes. Too distant then to be sure how many ships,
but no question whence they come, and small doubt why. It was known
he had fled to them. Why come back in such force but for a
reckoning?”
“He shall have one,” said Owain composedly.
“How long before they come to land?”
“My lord, before morning surely. They were under sail, and
the wind is steady from the west.”
For the length of a deep breath Owain considered. Perhaps a
quarter of the horses in his stables had been ridden far, though
not hard, the previous day, and as many of his armed men had made
that journey, and sat merry in hall late into the night. And the
ride that faced them now would be urgent and fast.
“Short time,” he said, musing, “to raise even
the half of Gwynedd, but we’ll make sure of reserves, and
collect every man available between here and Carnarvon as we go.
Six couriers I want, one to go before us now, the others to carry
my summons through the rest of Arlechwedd and Arfon. Call them to
Carnarvon. We may not need them, but no harm in making
certain.” His clerks accepted the expected word, and vanished
with commendable calm to prepare the sealed writs the couriers
would bear to the chieftains of two cantrefs before the night was
over. “Now, every man who bears arms,” said Owain,
raising his voice to carry to the containing walls and echo back
from them, “get to your beds and take what rest you can. We
muster at first light.”
Cadfael, listening on the edge of the crowd, approved. Let the
couriers, by all means, ride out by night, but to move the
disciplined host across country in the dark was waste of time that
could better be used in conserving their energy. The fighting men
of the household dispersed, if reluctantly; only the captain of
Owain’s bodyguard, having assured himself of his men’s
strict obedience, returned to his lord’s side.
“Get the women out of our way,” said Owain over his
shoulder. His wife and her ladies had remained above in the open
doorway of the hall, silent but for an agitated whispering among
the younger maids. They departed uneasily and with many a glance
behind, rather curious and excited than alarmed, but they departed.
The princess had as firm a hold over her own household as Owain
over his fighting men. There remained the stewards and elder
counsellors, and such menservants as might be needed for any
service, from armory, stables, stores, brewhouse and bakehouse.
Armed men also had needs, beyond their brands and bows, and the
addition of some hundreds to a garrison meant a supply train
following.
Among the smaller group now gathered about the prince Cadfael
noted Cuhelyn, by the look of him fresh from his bed, if not from
sleep, for he had thrown on his clothes in haste, he who was wont
to appear rather elegantly presented. And there was Hywel, alert
and quiet at his father’s side. And Gwion, attentive and
still, standing a little apart, as Cadfael had first seen him, as
though he held himself always aloof from the concerns of Owain and
Gwynedd, however honorably he acknowledged them. And Canon Meirion
and Canon Morgant, for once drawn together in contemplating a
crisis which had nothing to do with Heledd, and held no direct
threat against either of them. They were onlookers, too, not
participators. Their business was to get the reluctant bride safely
to Bangor and her bridegroom’s arms, and there were no Danish
ships as near as Bangor, nor likely to be. Heledd had been safely
disposed of for the night with the princess’s women, and no
doubt was gossiping excitedly with them now over what might well
seem to her an almost welcome diversion.
“So this,” said Owain into the comparative silence
that waited on his decree, “is the dire consequence Bledri ap
Rhys had in mind. He knew, none so well, what my brother had
planned. He gave me fair warning. Well, let him wait his turn, we
have other work to do before morning. If he’s secure in his
bed, he’ll keep.”
The chosen couriers to his vassal princes were reappearing
cloaked for the night ride, and up from the stables the grooms came
leading the horses saddled and ready for them. The leader came
almost at a trot, led by the head groom, and the man was in some
measured excitement, poured out in a breath before ever he came to
a halt.
“My lord, there’s a horse gone from the stables, and
harness and gear with him! We checked again, wanting to provide you
the best for the morning. A good, young roan, no white on him, and
saddle-cloth, saddle, bridle and all belonging to him.”
“And the horse he rode here—Bledri ap Rhys? His own
horse that he brought to Saint Asaph with him?” Hywel
demanded sharply. “A deep grey, dappled lighter down his
flanks? Is he still there?”
“I know the one, my lord. No match for this roan. Still
jaded from yesterday. He’s still there. Whoever the thief
was, he knew how to choose.”
“And meant good speed!” said Hywel, burning.
“He’s gone, surely. He’s gone to join Cadwaladr
and his Irish Danes at Abermenai. How the devil did he ever get out
of the gates? And with a horse!”
“Go, some of you, and question the watch,” Owain
ordered, but without any great concern, and without turning to see
who ran to do his bidding. The guards on all the gates of his
maenol were men he could trust, as witness the fact that not one of
them had come running here from his post, however acute the
curiosity he might be feeling about the audible turmoil continuing
out of his sight. Only here at the main gate, where the messenger
from Bangor had entered, had any man stirred from his duty, and
then only the officer of the guard. “There’s no way of
locking a man in,” reflected Owain philosophically, “if
he has his vigor and is determined to get out. Any wall ever built
can be climbed, for a high enough cause. And he is to the last
degree my brother’s man.” He turned again to the tired
messenger. “In the dark a wise traveler would keep to the
roads. Did you meet with any man riding west as you rode east here
to us?”
“No, my lord, never a one. Not since I crossed the Cegin,
and those were men of our own, known to me, and in no
hurry.”
“He’ll be far out of reach now, but let’s at
least start Einion off on his tracks with my writ. Who knows? A
horse can fall lame, ridden hard in the dark, a man can lose his
way in lands not his own. We may halt him yet,” said Owain,
and turned to meet the steward who had run to see how watch was
kept on the postern gates of the llys. “Well?”
“No man challenged, no man passed. They know him now by
sight, stranger though he may be. However he broke loose, it was
not by the gates.”
“I never thought it,” the prince agreed sombrely.
“They never yet kept any but a thorough watch. Well, send out
the couriers, Hywel, and then come to me within, to my private
chamber. Cuhelyn, come with us.” He looked round briefly as
his messengers mounted. “Gwion, this is no fault nor concern
of yours. Go to your bed. And keep your parole in mind still. Or
take it back,” he added drily, “and bide under lock and
key while we’re absent.”
“I have given it,” said Gwion haughtily, “I
shall keep it.”
“And I accepted it,” said the prince, relenting,
“and trust to it. There, go, what is there for you to do
here?”
What, indeed, Cadfael thought wryly, except grudge us all the
freedom he has denied himself? And the instant thought came, that
Bledri ap Rhys, that fiery advocate so forward to excuse his lord
and threaten in his name, had given no parole, and had, almost
certainly, had very private and urgent conference with Gwion in the
chapel of the llys only a matter of hours ago, and was now away to
rejoin Cadwaladr at Abermenai, with much knowledge of Owain’s
movements and forces and defences. Gwion had never promised
anything except not to escape. Within the walls he might move at
will, perhaps his freedom extended even to the tref that lay
outside the gate. For that he had pledged his own consent to
detention. No one had promised as much for Bledri ap Rhys. And
Gwion had made no pretence of his steely loyalty to Cadwaladr.
Could he be blamed as recreant if he had helped his unexpected ally
to break out and return to his prince? A nice point! Knowing, if
only at second hand from Cuhelyn, Gwion’s stubborn and
ferocious loyalty, he might well have warned his captors over and
over of the limits he set on his parole, and the fervor with which
he would seize any opportunity of serving the master he so
obstinately loved, even at this remove.
Gwion had turned, slowly and hesitantly, to accept his
dismissal, but then halted, stood with bent head and irresolute
step, and in a moment gathered himself abruptly, and strode away
instead towards the chapel; from the open door the faint red spark
drew him like a lodestone. And what had Gwion to pray for now? A
successful landing for Cadwaladr’s Danish mercenaries, and a
rapid and bloodless accommodation between brothers rather than a
disastrous war? Or some repair to his own peace of mind? Fiercely
upright, he might consider even his loyalty a sin where some
unavoidable infringement of his oath was concerned. A complicated
mind, sensitive to any self-reproach, however venial the sin.
Cuhelyn, who perhaps understood him best, and most resembled
him, had watched him go with a thoughtful frown, and even taken a
couple of impulsive steps to follow him before thinking better of
the notion, and turning back to Owain’s side. Prince and
captains and counselors mounted the steps to the great hall and the
private apartments, and vanished purposefully within. Cuhelyn
followed without another glance behind, and Cadfael and Mark, and a
few hovering servants and retainers, were left in an almost empty
ward, and the silence came down after clamour, and the dark
stillness after a turmoil of movement. Everything was known and
understood, everything was in hand, and would be dealt with
competently.
“And there is no part in it for us,” Brother Mark
said quietly at Cadfael’s shoulder.
“None, except to saddle up tomorrow and ride on to
Bangor.”
“Yes, that I must,” Mark agreed. There was a curious
note of unease and regret in his voice, as if he found it almost a
dereliction of his humanity to remove himself at this crisis in
pursuit of his own errand, and leave all things here confounded and
incomplete. “I wonder, Cadfael… The watch on the
gates, all the gates, were they thought enough? Do you suppose a
watch was set on the man himself, even here within, or was it
enough that the walls held him? No man stood guard over the door of
his lodging, or followed him from hall to his bed?”
“From the chapel to his bed,” Cadfael amended,
“if any man had that charge. No, Mark, we watched him go.
There was no one treading on his heels.” He looked across the
ward, to the alley into which Bledri had vanished when he came from
the chapel. “Are we not taking too much for granted, all of
us? The prince has more urgent matters on his hands, true, but
should not someone confirm what we have all leaped to
believe?”
Gwion emerged slowly and silently from the open doorway of the
chapel, drawing the door to after him, so that the tiny gleam of
red vanished. He came somewhat wearily across the ward, seemingly
unaware of the two who stood motionless and mute in the shadows,
until Cadfael stepped forward to intercept him, mildly seeking
information from one who might be expected to be able to supply it:
“A moment! Do you know in which of the many lodgings here
this Bledri ap Rhys slept overnight?” And as the young man
halted abruptly, turning on him a startled and wary face: “I
saw you greet him yesterday when we rode in, I thought you might
know. You must have been glad to have some talk with an old
acquaintance while he was here.”
For some reason the protracted interval of silence was more
eloquent than what was finally said in reply. It would have been
natural enough to answer at once: “Why do you want to know?
What does it matter now?” seeing that lodging must be empty,
if the man who had slept there had fled in the night. The pause
made it plain that Gwion knew well enough who had walked in upon
him in the chapel, and was well aware that they must have seen
Bledri departing. He had time to think before he spoke, and what he
said was: “I was glad, to set eyes on a man of my
own tribe. I have been here hostage more than half a year. They
will have told you as much. The steward had given him one of the
lodgings against the north wall. I can show you. But what
difference does it make now? He’s gone. Others may blame
him,” he said haughtily, “but not I. If I had been
free, I would have done as he did. I never made secret of where my
fealty lay. And lies still!”
“God forbid anyone should condemn a man for keeping
faith,” agreed Cadfael equably. “Did Bledri have his
chamber to himself?”
“He did.” Gwion hoisted his shoulders, shrugging off
an interest it seemed he did not understand, but accepted as
meaning something to these wandering Benedictines if it meant
nothing to him. “There was none sharing it with him, to
prevent his going, if that is what you mean.”
“I was wondering, rather,” said Cadfael
deprecatingly, “whether we are not assuming too much, just
because a horse is missing. If his lodging was in a remote corner
of the wards, with many a wall between, may he not have slept
through this whole uproar, and be still snoring in all innocence?
Since he lay alone, there was no one to wake him, if he proved so
sound a sleeper.”
Gwion stood staring, eye to eye with him, his thick dark brows
raised. “Well, true enough, but for the horn call a man with
enough drink in him might have slept through it all. I doubt it,
but if you feel the need to see for yourself… It’s not
on my way, but I’ll show you.” And without more words
he set off into the passage between the rear of the great hall and
the long timber range of the storehouse and armory. They followed
his brisk figure, shadowy in the dimness, through towards the long
line of buildings in the shelter of the outer wall.
“The third door was his.” It stood just ajar, no
gleam of light showing in the crack. “Go in, Brothers, and
see for yourselves. But by the look of it you’ll find him
gone, and all his gear with him.”
The range of small rooms was built in beneath the watch-platform
along the outer wall, and shadowed deeply by its overhang. Cadfael
had seen only one stairway to the platform, broad and easy of
access but in full view of the main gate. Moreover, it would not be
easy to descend on the outer side, unless with a long rope, for the
fighting gallery projected outward from the wall, and there was a
ditch below. Cadfael set a hand to the door and pushed it open upon
darkness. His eyes, by this time accustomed to the night and such
light as the clear but moonless sky provided, were at once blind
again. There was no movement, and no sound within. He set the door
wide, and advanced a step or two into the small chamber.
“We should have brought a torch,” said Mark, at his
shoulder.
No need for that, it seemed, to show that the room was empty of
life. But Gwion, tolerant of these exigent visitors, offered from
the threshold: “The brazier will be burning in the
guardhouse. I’ll bring a light.”
Cadfael had made another step within, and all but stumbled as
his foot tangled soundlessly with some shifting fold of soft
material, as though a rumpled brychan had been swept from bed to
floor. He stooped and felt forward into the rough weave of cloth,
and found something of firmer texture within it. A fistful of
sleeve rose to his grip, the warmth and odor of wool stirred on the
air, and an articulated weight dangled and swung as he lifted it,
solid within the cloth. He let it rest back again gently, and felt
down the length of it to a thick hem, and beyond that, the smooth,
lax touch of human flesh, cooling but not yet cold. A sleeve
indeed, and an arm within it, and a large, sinewy hand at the end
of the arm.
“Do that,” he said over his shoulder. “Bring a
light. We are going to need all the light we can get.”
“What is it?” asked Mark, intent and still behind
him.
“A dead man, by all the signs. A few hours dead. And
unless he has grappled with someone who stood in the way of his
flight, and left him here to tell the tale, who can this be but
Bledri ap Rhys?”
Gwion came running with a torch, and set it in the
sconce on the wall, meant only to hold a small lantern. In such
confined rooms a torch would never normally be permitted, but this
was crisis. The sparse contents of the chamber sprang sharply
outlined from the dark, a rumpled bench bed against the rear wall,
the brychans spilled over and dangling to the floor, the impression
of a long body still discernible indenting the cover of the straw
mattress. On a shelf beside the bed-head, convenient to the
guest’s hand, a small saucer-lamp stood. Not quenched, for it
had burned out and left only a smear of oil and the charred wick.
Beneath the shelf, half-unfolded, lay a leather saddle-roll, and
dropped carelessly upon it a man’s cotte and chausses and
shirt, and the rolled cloak he had not needed on the journey. And
in the corner his riding-boots, one overturned and displaced, as if
a foot had kicked it aside.
And between the bed and the doorway, sprawled on his back at
Cadfael’s feet, arms and legs flung wide, head propped
against the timber wall, as though a great blow had lifted and
hurled him backwards, Bledri ap Rhys lay with eyes half-open, and
lips drawn back from his large, even teeth in a contorted grin. The
skirts of his gown billowed about him in disorder, the breast had
fallen open wide as he fell, and beneath it he was naked. In the
flickering of the torch it was hard to tell whether the darkened
blotch on his left jaw and cheek was shadow or bruise, but there
was no mistaking the gash over his heart, and the blood that had
flowed from it down into the folds of cloth under his side. The
dagger that had inflicted the wound had been as quickly withdrawn,
and drawn out the life after it.
Cadfael went down on his knees beside the body, and gently
turned back the breast of the woollen gown to reveal the wound more
clearly to the quivering light. Gwion, behind him in the doorway
and hesitant to enter, drew deep breath, and let it out in a gusty
sob that caused the flame to flicker wildly, and what seemed a
living shudder passed over the dead face.
“Be easy,” said Cadfael tolerantly, and leaned to
close the half-open eyes. “For he is easy enough now. Well I
know, he was of your allegiance. And I am sorry!”
Mark stood quiet and still, staring down in undismayed
compassion. “I wonder had he wife and children,” he
said at last. Cadfael marked the first focus of one fledgling
priest’s concern, and approved it. Christ’s first
instinct might have been much the same. Not: “Unshriven, and
in peril!” not even: “When did he last confess and find
absolution?” but: “Who will care for his little
ones?”
“Both!” said Gwion, very low. “Wife and
children he has. I know. I will deal.”
“The prince will give you leave freely,” said
Cadfael. He rose from his knees, a little stiffly. “We must
go, all, and tell him what has befallen. We are within his writ and
guests in his house, all, not least this man, and this is murder.
Take the torch, Gwion, and go before, and I will close the
door.”
Gwion obeyed this alien voice without question, though it had no
authority over him but what he gave of his own free will. On the
threshold he stumbled, for all he was holding the light. Mark took
his arm until he had his balance again, and as courteously released
him as soon as his step was secure. Gwion said no word, made no
acknowledgement, as Mark needed none. He went before like a herald,
torch in hand, straight to the steps of the great hall, and lit
them steadily within.
“We were all in error, my lord,” said
Cadfael, “in supposing that Bledri ap Rhys had fled your
hospitality. He did not go far, nor did he need a horse for the
journey, though it is the longest a man can undertake. He is lying
dead in the lodging where your steward housed him. From all we see
there, he never intended flight. I will not say he had slept. But
he had certainly lain in his bed, and certainly put on his gown
over his nakedness when he rose from it, to encounter whoever it
may have been who walked in upon his rest. These two with me here
have seen what I have seen, and will bear it out.”
“It is so,” said Brother Mark.
“It is so,” said Gwion.
Round Owain’s council table in his private apartment,
austerely furnished, the silence lasted long, every man among his
captains frozen into stillness, waiting for the prince’s
reaction. Hywel, standing at his father’s shoulder, in the
act of laying a parchment before him, had halted with the leaf
half-unrolled in his hands, his eyes wide and intent upon
Cadfael’s face.
Owain said consideringly, rather digesting than questioning the
news thus suddenly laid before him: “Dead. Well!” And
in a moment more: “And how did this man die?”
“By a dagger in the heart,” said Cadfael with
certainty.
“From before? Face to face?”
“We have left him as we found him, my lord. Your own
physician may see him just as we saw him. As I think,” said
Cadfael, “he was struck a great blow that hurled him back
against the wall, so that he fell stunned. Certainly whoever struck
him down faced him, this was confrontation, no assault from behind.
And no weapon, not then. Someone lashed out with a fist, in great
anger. But then he was stabbed as he lay. His blood has run down
and gathered in the folds of his gown under his left side. There
was no movement. He was out of his senses when he was stabbed. By
someone!”
“The same someone?” wondered Owain.
“Who can tell? It is probable. It is not certain. But I
doubt he would have lain helpless more than a matter of
moments.”
Owain spread his hands upon the table before him, pushing aside
the parchments scattered there. “You are saying that Bledri
ap Rhys has been murdered. Under my roof. In my charge, however he
may have come there, friend or enemy, to all intent he was a guest
in my house. This I will not abide.” He looked beyond
Cadfael, at Gwion’s sombre face. “You need not fear
that I will value my honest enemy’s life at less than any man
of my own,” he said in generous reassurance.
“My lord,” said Gwion, very low, “that I never
doubted.”
“If I must go after other matters now,” said Owain,
“yet he shall have justice, if by any means I can ensure it.
Who last saw the man, living?”
“I saw him leave the chapel, late,” said Cadfael,
“and cross towards his own lodging. So did Brother Mark, who
was with me. Beyond that I cannot say.”
“At that time,” said Gwion, his voice a little
hoarse with constraint, “I was in the chapel. I talked with
him. I was glad to see a face I knew. But when he left I did not
follow.”
“Enquiry shall be made,” said Owain, “of all
the servants of the house, who would be the last wakeful about the
maenol. See to it, Hywel. If any had occasion to pass there, and
saw either Bledri ap Rhys, or any man going or coming late about
his door, bring the witness here. We muster at first light, but we
have yet a few hours before dawn. If this thing can be resolved
before I go to deal with my brother and his Danes, so much the
better.”
Hywel departed on the word, laying his leaf of vellum down on
the table, and plucking a couple of men out of the council to speed
the search. There was to be no rest that night for the menservants,
stewards and maids of Owain’s court, none for the members of
his bodyguard, or the young men who followed him in arms. Bledri ap
Rhys had come to Saint Asaph intending mischief, threatening
mischief, and the cost had fallen on his own head, but the echoes
would spread outward like ripples from a stone flung into a pool,
and scarify the lives of all here until murder was paid for.
“The dagger that was used,” said Owain, returning to
his quest like a hawk stooping. “It was not left in the
wound?”
“It was not. Nor have I examined the wound so closely that
I dare guess what manner of blade it had. Your own men, my lord,
will be able to hazard that as well as I. Better,” said
Cadfael, “since even daggers change with years, and I am long
out of the practice of arms.”
“And the bed, you say, had been slept in. At least lain
in. And the man had made no preparation for riding, and left no
sign he ever intended flight. It was not so vital a matter that I
should set a man to watch him through the night. But there is yet
another mystery here,” said the prince. “For if he did
not make away with one of our horses, who did? There is no question
but the beast is gone.”
It was a point that Cadfael, in his preoccupation with
Bledri’s death, had not even considered. Somewhere at the
back of his mind he had felt the nagging and elusive misgiving that
something else would have to be investigated before the night was
over, but in the brief instants when he ventured to turn and
attempt to see it clearly, it had vanished from the corner of his
eye. Suddenly confronted with the puzzle that had eluded him, he
foresaw a lengthy and careful numbering of every soul in the maenol
to find the one, the only one, lost without trace. Someone else
would have to undertake that, for there could be no delay in the
prince’s dawn departure.
“It is in your hands, my lord,” he said, “as
are we all.”
Owain flattened a large and shapely hand upon the table before
him. “My course is set, and cannot be changed until
Cadwaladr’s Dublin Danes are sent back to their own land with
clipped ears, if it comes to that. And you, Brothers, have your own
way to go, in less haste than my way, but not to be delayed,
either. Your bishop is entitled to as strict service as princes
expect. Let us by all means consider, in what time we have left,
which among us may have done murder. Then, if it must be left
behind for another time, yet it shall not be forgotten. Come,
I’ll see for myself how this ill matter looks, and then
we’ll have the dead cared for, and see due reparation made to
his kin. He was no man of mine, but he did me no wrong, and such
right as I may I’ll do to him.”
They rejoined the gathering in the council chamber
the better part of an hour later. By then the body of Bledri ap
Rhys was decently bestowed in the chapel, in the charge of the
prince’s chaplain, and there was no more to be learned from
the sparse furnishings of the room where he had died. No weapon
remained to speak, even the flow of his blood was meagre, and left
small trace behind, the stab wound being neat, narrow and precise.
It is not difficult to make a clean and exact job of stabbing to
the heart a man already laid senseless to your hand. Bledri could
scarcely have felt death remove him from the world.
“He was not a man to be greatly loved, I fancy,”
Owain said as they crossed once more to the hall. “Many here
must have resented him, for he came arrogantly enough. It might
take no more than a quarrelsome encounter, after that, to make a
man lash out on impulse. But to kill? Would any man of mine take it
so far, when I had made him my guest?”
“It would need a very angry man,” Cadfael owned,
“to go so far in your despite. But it takes only an instant
to strike, and less than an instant to forget all caution. He had
made himself a number of enemies, even in the short time we all
rode together.” Names were to be suppressed at all cost, but
he was thinking of the blackly murderous glare of Canon Meirion,
beholding Bledri’s familiarity with his daughter, and the
consequent threat to a career the good canon had no intention of
risking.
“An open quarrel would be no mystery,” said Owain.
“That I could have resolved. Even if it came to a death, a
blood price would have paid it, the blame would not have been all
one way. He did provoke hatred. But to follow him to his bedchamber
and hale him out of his bed? It is a very different
matter.”
They passed through the hall and entered the council chamber.
Every eye turned upon them as they came in. Mark and Gwion had
waited with the rest. They stood close together, silent, as though
the very fact of discovering a death together had linked them in a
continuing fellowship that set them apart from the captains round
the council table. Hywel was back before his father, and had
brought with him one of the kitchen servants, a shaggy dark boy a
little puffy with sleep, but bright-eyed again with reviving
wakefulness now that he knew of a sudden death, and had something,
however small, to impart concerning it.
“My lord,” said Hywel, “Meurig here is the
latest I could find to pass by the lodgings where Bledri ap Rhys
was housed. He will tell you what he saw. He has not yet told it,
we waited for you.”
The boy spoke up boldly enough. It seemed to Cadfael that he was
not altogether convinced of the importance of what he had to say,
though it pleased him well enough to be here declaring it. Its
significance he was content to leave to the Princes.
“My lord, it was past midnight before I finished my work,
and went through the passage there to my bed. There was no one
about then, I was among the last. I did not see a soul until I came
by the third door in that range, where they tell me now this Bledri
ap Rhys was lodged. There was a man standing in the doorway,
looking into the room, with the latch in his hand. When he heard me
coming he closed the door, and went away along the
alley.”
“In haste?” asked Owain sharply. “Furtively?
In the dark he could well slip away unrecognized.”
“No, my lord, no such matter. Simply, he drew the door to,
and walked away. I thought nothing of it. And he took no care not
to be seen. He said a goodnight to me as he went. As though he had
been seeing a guest safe to his bed—one none too steady on
his feet, or too sure of his way, it might be.”
“And you answered him?”
“Surely, my lord.”
“Now name him,” said Owain, “for I think you
knew him well enough to call him by name then.”
“My lord, I did. Every man in your court of Aber has got
to know him and value him by now, though he came as a stranger when
first the lord Hywel brought him from Deheubarth. It was
Cuhelyn.”
A sharp, indrawn breath hissed round the table.
All heads turned, and all eyes fixed upon Cuhelyn, who sat
apparently unmoved at finding himself suddenly the centre of marked
and loaded attention. His thick dark brows had risen in mild
surprise, even a trace of amusement.
“That is true,” he said simply. “That I could
have told you, but for all I knew or know now there could have been
others there after me. As certainly there was one. The last to see
him, living, no question. But that was not I.”
“Yet you offered us no word of this,” the prince
pointed out quietly. “Why not?”
“True, I did none too well there. It came a little too
close home for comfort,” said Cuhelyn. “I opened my
mouth once to say it, and shut it again with nothing said. For
sober truth is that I did have the man’s death in mind, and
for all I never touched him nor went in to him, when Brother
Cadfael told us he lay dead, I felt the finger of guilt cold on my
neck. But for solitude, and chance, and this lad coming along when
most he was needed, yes, I might have been Bledri’s murderer.
But I am not, thanks be to God!”
“Why did you go there, and at that hour?” asked
Owain, giving no sign whether he believed or disbelieved.
“I went there to confront him. To kill him in single
combat. Why at that hour? Because the hatred had taken hours to
come to the boil within me, and only then had I reached the length
of killing. Also, I think, because I wished to make it clear past
doubt that no other man was drawn into my quarrel, and no other
could be accused even of knowing what I did.” Cuhelyn’s
level voice remained quiet and composed still, but his face had
tightened until pale lines stood clear over the cheekbones and
round the lean, strong angle of his jaw.
Hywel said softly, filling and easing the pause: “A
one-armed man against a seasoned warrior with two?”
Cuhelyn looked down indifferently at the silver circlet that
secured the linen cover over the stump of his left arm. “One
arm or two, the end would have been the same. But when I opened his
door, there he lay fast asleep. I heard his breathing, long and
placid. Is it fair dealing to startle a man out of his sleep and
challenge him to the death? And while I stood there in the doorway,
Meurig here came along. And I drew the door closed again, and went
away, and left Bledri sleeping.
“Not that I gave up my purpose,” he said, rearing
his head fiercely. “Had he been living when the morning came,
my lord, I meant to challenge him openly of his mortal offence, and
call him to battle for his life. And if you gave me countenance, to
kill him.”
Owain was staring upon him steadily, and visibly probing the
mind that fashioned this bitter speech and gave it such passionate
force. With unshaken calm he said: “So far as is known to me,
the man had done me no grave offence.”
“Not to you, my lord, beyond his arrogance. But to me, the
worst possible. He made one among the eight that set upon us from
ambush, and killed my prince at my side. When Anarawd was murdered,
and this hand was lopped, Bledri ap Rhys was there in arms. Until
he came into the bishop’s hall I did not know his name. His
face I have never forgotten. Nor never could have forgotten, until
I had got Anarawd’s price out of him in blood. But someone
else has done that for me. And I am free of him.”
“Say to me again,” Owain commanded, when Cuhelyn had
made an end of this declaration, “that you left the man
living, and have no guilt in his death.”
“I did so leave him. I never touched him, his death is no
guilt of mine. If you bid me, I will swear it on the
altar.”
“For this while,” said the prince gravely, “I
am forced to leave this matter unresolved until I come back from
Abermenai with a more urgent matter settled and done. But I still
need to know who did the thing you did not do, for not all here
have your true quarrel against Bledri ap Rhys. And as I for my part
take your word, there may be many who still doubt you. If you give
your word to return with me, and abide what further may be found
out, till all are satisfied, then come with me. I need you as I may
need every good man.”
“As God sees me,” said Cuhelyn. “I will not
leave you, for any reason, until you bid me go. And the happier, if
you never do so bid me.”
The last and most unexpected word of a night of
the unexpected lay with Owain’s steward, who entered the
council chamber just as the prince was rising to dismiss his
officers, sufficiently briefed for the dawn departure. Provision
was already made for the rites due to the dead. Gwion would remain
at Aber, according to his oath, and had pledged his services to
send word to Bledri’s wife in Ceredigion, and conduct such
necessary duties for the dead man as she demanded. A melancholy
duty, but better from a man of the same allegiance. The morning
muster was planned with precision, and order given for the proper
provision due to the bishop of Lichfield’s envoy on his way
to Bangor, while the prince’s force pursued the more direct
road to Carnarvon, the old road that had linked the great forts by
which an alien people had kept their footing in Wales, long ago.
Latin names still clung to the places they had inhabited, though
only priests and scholars used them now; the Welsh knew them by
other names. It was all prepared, to the last detail. Except that
somehow the missing horse had been lost yet again, slipping through
the cracks between greater concerns into limbo. Until Goronwy ab
Einion came in with the result of a long and devious enquiry into
the total household within the llys.
“My lord, the lord Hywel set me a puzzle, to find the one
person who should be here, and is not. Our own household of
retainers and servants I thought well to leave aside, why should
any among them take to his heels? My lord, the princess’s
waiting woman knows the roll of her maids perfectly, and any guests
who are women are her charge. There is one girl who came in your
train yesterday, my lord, who is gone from the place allotted to
her. She came here with her father, a canon of Saint Asaph, and a
second canon of that diocese travelled with them. We have not
disturbed the father as yet. I waited for your word. But there is
no question, the young woman is gone. No one has seen her since the
gates were closed.”
“God’s wounds!” swore Owain, between laughter
and exasperation. “It was true what they told me! The dark
lass that would not be a nun in England—God keep her, why
should she, a black Welshwoman as ever was!—and said yes to
Ieuan ab Ifor as a blessed relief by comparison—do you tell
me she has stolen a horse and made off into the night before the
guard shut us in? The devil!” he said, snapping his fingers.
“What is the child’s name?”
“Her name is Heledd,” said Brother Cadfael.
Chapter Six
« ^ »
No question, Heledd was gone. No hostess here,
with duties and status, but perhaps the least among the arriving
guests, she had held herself aloof from the princess’s
waiting-woman, keeping her own counsel and, as it seemed, waiting
her own chance. No more reconciled to the prospect of marriage with
the unknown bridegroom from Anglesey than to a conventual cell
among strangers in England, Heledd had slipped through the gates of
Aber before they closed at night, and gone to look for some future
of her own choosing. But how had she abstracted also a horse,
saddled and bridled, and a choice and fleet horse into the
bargain?
The last that anyone had seen of her was when she left the hall
with an empty pitcher, barely halfway through the prince’s
feast, leaving all the nobility busy at table, and her father still
blackly scowling after her as she swung the screen curtain closed
behind her. Perhaps she had truly intended to refill the pitcher
and return to resume replenishing the Welsh drinking horns, if only
to vex Canon Meirion. But no one had seen her since that moment.
And when the first light came, and the prince’s force began
to muster in the wards, and the bustle and clamour, however
purposeful and moderate, would certainly bring out all the
household, who was to tell the good canon that his daughter had
taken flight in the darkness from the cloister, from marriage, and
from her sire’s very imperfect love and care for her?
Such an unavoidable task Owain chose not to delegate. When the
light from the east tipped the outer wall of the maenol, and the
ward began to fill with horse and groom and man-at-arms and archer
roused and ready, he sent to summon the two canons of Saint Asaph
to the gatehouse, where he waited with one shrewd eye on the ranks
mustering and mounting, and one on a sky and light that promised
good weather for riding. No one had forestalled him with the bad
news; so much was plain from Canon Meirion’s serene, assured
face as he strode across the ward with a civil good-morning already
forming on his lips, and a gracious benediction ready to follow it
as soon as the prince should mount and ride. At his back,
shorter-legged and more portly and selfconscious of bearing, Canon
Morgant hugged his ponderous dignity about him, and kept a
noncommittal countenance.
It was not Owain’s way to beat about bushes. Time was
short, business urgent, and what mattered was to make such
provision as was now possible to repair what had gone awry, both
with threats from an obdurate brother and peril to a lost
daughter.
“There is news in the night,” said the prince
briskly, as soon as the two clerics drew close, “that will
not please your reverences, and does not please me.”
Cadfael, watching from beside the gate, could detect no disquiet
in Canon Meirion’s face at this opening. No doubt he thought
it referred only to the threat of the Danish fleet, and possibly
the flight of Bledri ap Rhys, for the two clerics had gone to their
beds before that supposed flight changed to a death. But either
would come rather as a relief and satisfaction to him, seeing that
Bledri and Heledd between them had given him cause to tremble for
his future career, with Canon Morgant storing up behind his austere
forehead every unbecoming look and wanton word to report back to
his bishop. By his present bearing, Meirion knew of nothing worse,
nothing in the world to disturb his complacency now, if Bledri was
either fled or dead. “My lord,” he began benignly,
“we were present to hear of the threat to your coast. It will
surely be put off without harm…”
“Not that!” said Owain bluntly. “This concerns
yourself. Sir, your daughter has fled in the night. Sorry I am to
say it, and to leave you to deal with the case in my absence, but
there’s no help. I have given orders to the captain of my
garrison here to give you every aid in searching for her. Stay as
long as you need to stay, make use of my men and my stables as best
serves. I and all who ride with me will be keeping a watch and
asking news of her westward direct to Carnarvon. So, I trust, will
Deacon Mark and Brother Cadfael on their ride to Bangor. Between us
we should cover the country to westward. You ask and search round
Aber and eastward, and south if need be, though I think she would
not venture the mountains alone. I will return to the search as
soon as I may.”
He had proceeded thus far uninterrupted only because Canon
Meirion had been struck mute and amazed at the very first
utterance, and stood staring with round eyes and parted lips,
paling until the peaks of his sharp cheekbones stood out white
under the straining skin. Utter consternation stopped the breath in
his throat.
“My daughter!” he repeated slowly at last, the words
shaped almost without sound. And then in a hoarse wheeze:
“Gone? My daughter loose alone, and these sea-raiders abroad
in the land?”
At least, thought brother Cadfael approvingly, if she could be
here to hear it, she would know that he has some real care for her.
His first outcry is for her safety, for once his own advancement is
forgotten. If only for a moment!
“Half the width of Wales from here,” said Owain
stoutly, “and I’ll see to it they come no nearer. She
heard the messenger, she knows better than to ride into their arms.
This girl you bred is no fool.”
“But headstrong!” Meirion lamented, his voice
recovered and loud with anguish. “Who knows what risk she
might not venture? And if she has fled me now, she will still hide
from me. This I never foresaw, that she could feel so driven and so
beset.”
“I say again,” said Owain firmly, “use my
garrison, my stables, my men as you will, send out after news of
her, for surely she cannot be far. As for the ways to westward, we
will watch for her as we go. But go we must. You well know the
need.”
Meirion drew himself back a little, erect at his tallest, and
shook his broad shoulders.
“Go with God, my lord, you can do no other. My
girl’s life is but one, and many depend upon you. She shall
be my care. I dread I have not served her turn lately as well as I
have served my own, or she would never have left me so.”
And he turned, with a hasty reverence, and strode away towards
the hall, so precipitately that Cadfael could see him clambering
fiercely into his boots and marching down to the stable to saddle
his horse, and away to question everyone in the village outside the
walls, in search of the dark daughter he had gone to some pains to
dispatch into distance, and now was all afire to recover. And after
him, still silent, stonily expressionless, potentially
disapproving, went Canon Morgant, a black recording angel.
They were more than a mile along the coastal track
towards Bangor before Brother Mark broke his deep and thoughtful
silence. They had parted from the prince’s force on leaving
Aber, Owain bearing south-west to take the most direct road to
Carnarvon, while Cadfael and Mark kept to the shore, with the
shining, pallid plain of the shallows over Lavan Sands reflecting
the morning light on their right hand, and the peaks of Fryri
soaring one above another on their left, beyond the narrow green
lowlands of the coast. Over the deep channel beyond the sands, the
shores of Anglesey were bright in sunlight.
“Did he know,” Mark wondered aloud suddenly,
“that the man was dead?”
“He? Meirion? Who can tell? He was there among the rest of
us when the groom cried out that a horse was missing, and Bledri
was held to have taken him and made off to his master. So much he
knew. He was not with us when we looked for and found the man dead,
nor present in the prince’s counsel. If the pair of them were
safe in their beds they cannot have heard the news until this
morning. Does it signify? Dead or fled, the man was out of
Meirion’s way, and could scandalize Morgant no longer. Small
wonder he took it so calmly.”
“That is not what I meant,” said Mark. “Did he
know of his own knowledge? Before ever another soul knew it?”
And as Cadfael was silent, he pursued hesitantly: “You had
not considered it?”
“It had crossed my mind,” Cadfael admitted.
“You think him capable of killing?”
“Not in cool blood, not by stealth. But his blood is not
cool, but all too readily heated. There are some who bluster and
bellow, and rid their bile that way. Not he! He contains it, and it
boils within him. It is likelier far to burst forth in action than
in noise. Yes, I think him capable of killing. And if he did
confront Bledri ap Rhys, he would meet only with provocation and
disdain there. Enough to make for a violent end.”
“And could he go from that ending straight to his bed, in
such unnerving company, and keep his countenance? Even
sleep?”
“Who says that he slept? He had only to be still and
quiet. There was nothing to keep Canon Morgant wakeful.”
“I return you another question,” said Cadfael.
“Would Cuhelyn lie? He was not ashamed of his purpose. Why,
then, should he lie about it when it came to light?”
“The prince believes him,” said Mark, thoughtfully
frowning.
“And you?”
“Any man may lie, not even for very grave reason. Even
Cuhelyn may. But I do not think he would lie to Owain. Or to Hywel.
He has given his second fealty, as absolute as the first. But there
is another question to be asked concerning Cuhelyn. No, there are
two. Had he told anyone what he knew about Bledri ap Rhys? And if
he would not lie to Hywel, who had salved him and brought him to an
honorable service, would he lie for him? For if he did
tell anyone that he recognized Bledri as one among his
prince’s murderers, it would be Hywel. Who had no better
reason to love the perpetrators of that ambush than had Cuhelyn
himself.”
“Or any man who went with Hywel to drive Cadwaladr out of
Ceredigion for Anarawd’s sake,” agreed Cadfael
resignedly, “or any who took bitter offence at hearing Bledri
so insolent on Cadwaladr’s behalf in hall that night,
spitting his threats into Owain’s face. True, a man is dead
who was well-hated, living, and took no keep to be anything better
than hated. In a crowded court where his very presence was an
affront, is it any wonder if he came by a short ending? But the
prince will not let it rest.”
“And we can do nothing,” said Mark, and sighed.
“We cannot even look for the girl until I have discharged my
errand.”
“We can ask,” said Cadfael.
And ask they did, at every hamlet and dwelling along the way,
whether a young woman had not ridden past by this road, a dark
Welsh girl on a young roan, all of one colour. A horse from the
prince’s stables would not go unremarked, especially with a
lone girl in the saddle. But the day wore on, and the sky clouded
gently and cleared again, and they drew into Bangor by
mid-afternoon; but no one could give them word of Heledd,
Meirion’s daughter.
Bishop Meurig of Bangor received them as soon as
they had threaded their way through the streets of the town to his
cathedral enclave, and announced themselves to his archdeacon. It
seemed that here everything was to be done briskly and briefly,
with small respect to the planned and public ceremony Bishop
Gilbert had preferred. For here they were by many miles nearer to
the threat of Danish raiders, and very sensibly taking such
precautions as were possible to cope with them if they should
penetrate so far. Moreover, Meurig was native Welsh, at home here,
and had no need of the cautious dispositions Gilbert felt necessary
to secure his position. It might be true that he had proved at
first a disappointment to his prince, by succumbing to Norman
pressure and submitting to Canterbury, but stoutly Welsh he
remained, and his resistance, if diverted, must still be proceeding
by more subtle ways. At least he did not seem to Cadfael, when they
were admitted to his presence in private, the kind of man to
compromise his Welshness and his adherence to the ways of the
Celtic Church without a long and doughty rearguard action.
The bishop was not at all like his fellow of Saint Asaph.
Instead of the tall, dignified Gilbert, self-consciously patrician
and austere without, and uneasily insecure within, here was a
small, round, bustling cleric in his forties, voluble of speech but
very much to the point, rapid of movement and a little disheveled
and shaggy, with a sharp eye and a cheerfully bouncing manner, like
a boisterous but businesslike hound on a scent. His pleasure in the
very fact of their coming on such an errand was made very plain,
and outweighed even his delight in the breviary Mark had brought
him, though clearly he had an eye for a handsome script, and turned
the leaves with lovingly delicate movements of thick, strong
fingers.
“You will have heard already, Brothers, of the threat to
our shores, so you will understand that here we are looking to our
defenses. God grant the Norsemen never get ashore, or no further
than the shore, but if they should, we have a town to keep, and
churchmen must turn to like the rest. For that reason we observe at
present little state or ceremony, but I trust you will be my guests
for a day or two before you need return with my letters and
compliments to your bishop.”
It was for Mark to respond to this invitation, which was offered
warmly enough, but with a vaguely preoccupied look in the
bishop’s shrewd eyes. At least a part of his mind was away
scanning the waterfront of his town, where the brief mudflat
between the tides gave place to the narrowing neck of the strait.
Fifteen miles or more to the western end at Abermenai, but the
smaller shallow-draught ships, oared by twenty rowers, could cover
that distance rapidly. A pity the Welsh had never really taken to
the seas! And Bishop Meurig had his flock to consider, and no
amenable temper to let them suffer anything his vigor could
prevent. He would not be sorry to pack his visitors from England
off back to Lichfield, and have his hands free. Hands that looked
quite capable of turning to the sword or the bow whenever the need
arose.
“My lord,” said Brother Mark, after a brief
thoughtful hesitation, “I think we should leave tomorrow, if
that does not cause you too much inconvenience. Much as I would
like to linger, I have pledged myself to a prompt return. And even
beyond that, the party with which we rode from Saint Asaph included
a young woman who should have come here to Bangor with us, under
Owain Gwynedd’s protection, but now, bereft of that
protection, since the prince perforce has hurried on to Carnarvon,
she has unwisely ridden out from Aber alone, and somewhere has lost
her way. They are seeking for her from Aber. But since we have come
as far as Bangor, if I may justify the delay even of one day, or
two, I should like to spend them searching for her in these parts
also. If you will grant me leave to make use of so short a delay,
we will spend it for the lady’s benefit, and you, I know,
will be making use of every moment for the better keep of your own
people.”
A good speech, Cadfael approved, one that gives nothing away of
what lies behind Heledd’s flight, thereby sparing her
reputation and this good prelate’s very proper concern. He
interpreted it carefully, improvising a little where memory
faltered, since Mark had allowed him no pause between the lines.
The bishop nodded instant comprehension, and demanded practically:
“Did the lady know of this threat from Dublin?”
“No,” said Mark, “the messenger from Carnarvon
came only later. She cannot have known.”
“And she is somewhere abroad between Aber and here, and
alone? I wish I had more men to send out after her,” said
Meurig, frowning, “but we have already sent on to Carnarvon
all the fighting men who can be spared, to join the prince there.
Such as are left we may need here.”
“We do not know,” Cadfael said, “which way she
rode. She may be well behind us to the east, for all we know, and
safe enough. But if we can do no more, we can divide on the ride
back, and enquire everywhere after her.”
“And if she has by now heard of the peril,” Mark
added eagerly, “and very wisely looks for safe shelter, are
there in these regions any houses of religious women, where she
might take refuge?”
This also Cadfael translated, though he could have given a
general answer to it himself, without troubling the bishop. The
Church in Wales had never run to nunneries, as even conventual life
for men had never been on the same monastic pattern as in England.
Instead of the orderly, well-regulated house of sisters, with a
recognized authority and a rule, here there might arise, in the
most remote and solitary wilderness, a small wattled oratory, with
a single, simple saint living within it, a saint in the old
dispensation, without benefit of Pope or canonization, who grew a
few vegetables and herbs for her food, and gathered berries and
wild fruit, and came to loving terms with the small beasts of the
warren, so that they ran to hide in her skirts when they were
hunted, and neither huntsmen nor horn could urge on the hounds to
do the lady affront, or her little visitors harm. Though Cadfael
had to admit, on reflection, that the Dublin Danes might not
observe a proper respect to such unaccustomed evidences of
sanctity.
The bishop shook his head. “Our holy women do not gather
in communities, like yours, but set up their cells in the wilds,
alone. Such anchoresses would not settle near a town. More likely
far to withdraw into the mountains. There is one we know of here,
who has her hermitage by this same Menai water, some miles west
from here, beyond the narrows. But as soon as we heard of this
threat from the sea I sent to warn her, and bring her in here to
shelter. And she had the good sense to come, and make no demur
about it. God is the first and best defense of lone women, but I
see no virtue in leaving all to him. I want no martyrs within my
domain, and sanctity is small protection.”
“Then her cell is left empty,” said Mark, and
sighed. “But if this girl should have ridden so far, and
failed to find a friend at need, where next might she
turn?”
“Inland, surely, into the cover of woodland. I know of no
defensible holding close by, but these raiders, if they land, would
not go far from their ships. Any house in Arfon would take a girl
in. Though the nearest and themselves most at risk,” he added
simply, “may well have drawn off into the hills themselves.
Your fellow here knows how lightly we can vanish at
need.”
“I doubt she can have gone far ahead of us,” said
Cadfael, pondering possibilities. “And for all we know she
may have her own plans, and know very well where to run. At least
we can ask wherever we touch on the way back.” There was
always the chance, too, that Canon Meirion had already found his
daughter, closer to the royal seat at Aber.
“I can have prayers said for her safety,” said the
bishop briskly, “but I have sheep of my own to fold, and
cannot, however willingly I would, go searching after one stray. At
least, Brothers, rest this night over, before you take to the roads
again, and may you ride safely and get good word of the young woman
you seek.”
Bishop Meurig might be preoccupied with guarding
his extended household, but he did not let that interfere with his
hospitality. His table was well-supplied, his meat and mead ample
and well-prepared, and he did not let his guests depart next
morning without rising at dawn to see them off. It was a limpid,
moist morning, after some fitful showers in the night, and the sun
came up glistening and radiant, gilding the shallows to
eastward.
“Go with God!” said the bishop, solid and square in
the gateway of his precinct, as though he would hold it
single-handed against all comers. His complimentary letters were
already bestowed in Mark’s saddle-roll, together with a small
flask of gilded glass filled with the cordial he made from his own
honey, and Cadfael carried before him a basket with a day’s
supply of food for six men rather than two. “Come safely back
to your bishop, on whom be God’s blessing, and to your
convent, Brother Cadfael, where his grace surely prevails. I trust
some day we may meet again.”
Of the peril now threatening he certainly went in no awe. When
they looked back from the street he was bustling purposefully
across the open court, head foremost and lowered, like a small,
determined bull not yet belligerent but certainly not to be trifled
with.
They had emerged from the edges of the town on to
the highroad, when Mark reined in, and sat his horse mute and
thoughtful, looking first back along the road towards Aber, and
then westward towards the invisible sinuous curves of the narrow
strait that separated Anglesey from Arfon. Cadfael drew in beside
him, and waited, knowing what was on his friend’s mind.
“Could she have passed beyond this point? Ought we not to
go on westward? She left Aber hours before us. How long, I wonder,
before she got word of the coming of the Danes?”
“If she rode through the night,” said Cadfael,
“she was not likely to hear of it until morning, there would
be no one abroad to warn her. By morning she could be well to the
west, and if she intended by her flight to evade her marriage, she
would not come near Bangor, for there she was to meet her husband.
Yes, you are right, she might by this be well to westward, and into
danger. Nor am I sure she would turn back even if she knew of
it.”
“Then what are we waiting for?” demanded Mark
simply, and turned his horse towards the west.
At the church of Saint Deiniol, several miles south-west from
Bangor and perhaps two miles from the strait, they got word of her
at last. She must have kept to the old, direct road, the same Owain
and his host would take, but hours ahead of them. The only puzzle
was why it had taken her so long to reach that point, for when they
enquired of the priest there was no hesitation, but yes, she had
lighted down here to ask directions only late the previous evening,
about Vespers.
“A young woman on a light roan, and all alone. She asked
her way to the cell of Nonna. Due west from here it lies, in the
trees near the water. I offered her shelter for the night, but she
said she would go to the holy woman.”
“She would find the cell deserted,” said Cadfael.
“Bishop Meurig feared for the anchoress, and sent to bring
her into Bangor. From which direction did the girl ride
in?”
“Down out of the forests, from the south. I did not
know,” said the priest, distressed, “that she would
find the place empty. I wonder, poor child, what she would do?
There would still be time enough for her to find refuge in
Bangor.”
“That I doubt she would do,” said Cadfael. “If
she came to the cell only so late, she might well bide the night
over there, rather than risk moving by darkness.” He looked
at Mark, in no doubt already what that young man would be thinking.
On this journey Mark had the governance, not for the world would
Cadfael have robbed him of it by word or act.
“We will go and look for her at the hermitage,” said
Mark firmly, “and if she is not there, we will separate and
try whatever tracks seem most likely to offer her refuge. In these
lowland pastures there must be homesteads she may have
tried.”
“Many will have taken advice,” the priest suggested,
shaking his head dubiously. “In a few weeks they would have
been moving their herds and flocks into the uplands, even without
this threat. Some may have moved early, rather than risk being
plundered.”
“We can but make the assay,” said Mark stoutly.
“If need be, we’ll take to the hills ourselves in
search of her.”
And forthwith he made a brisk reverence to their informant, and
wheeled his horse and set off due west, straight as an arrow. The
priest of Saint Deiniol looked after him with raised brows and an
expression half amused and half solicitous, and shook his head
doubtfully.
“Would that young man be seeking the girl out of the
goodness of his heart? Or for himself?”
“Even for that young man,” Cadfael said cautiously,
“I would not presume to say anything is impossible. But it
comes as near as makes no matter. Any creature in peril of death or
harm, be it man, woman, plough horse, or Saint Melangell’s
hare, could draw him through moss or quicksand. I knew I should
never get him back to Shrewsbury while Heledd was
astray.”
“You are turning back here yourself?” the priest
demanded drily.
“Small chance! If he is bound to her, fellow-voyager to
his fellow, so am I to him. I’ll get him home!”
“Well, even if his concern for her is purer than
dew,” said the priest with conviction, “he had best
take heed to his vows when he does find her. For she’s a
bonny black maid as ever I saw. I was glad of my evening years when
I dared bid her shelter the night over in my house. And thankful
when she would not. And that lad is at the best of the morning,
tonsure or no tonsure.”
“The more reason I should go after him,” agreed
Cadfael. “And my thanks to you for the good word. For all the
good words! I’ll see them strictly delivered when I overtake
him.”
“Saint Nonna,” said Cadfael didactically, threading
the woodland belt that spread more than a mile inland from the
strait, “was the mother of Saint David. She has many sacred
wells about the country, that give healing, especially to the eyes,
even to curing blindness. This holy woman must have chosen to name
herself after the saint.”
Brother Mark pursued his determined way along the narrow ride,
and said nothing. On either hand the trees glittered in moist
sunlight after the early morning showers, mixed woodland
sufficiently open to let in the radiance of early afternoon,
sufficiently close to be ridden in single file, and all just coming
into the first full leaf, young and fresh and full of birds. Every
spring is the only spring, a perpetual astonishment. It bursts upon
a man every year, thought Cadfael, contemplating it with delight in
spite of all anxieties, as though it had never happened before, but
had just been shown by God how to do it, and tried, and found the
impossible possible.
Ahead of him in the worn grass of the ride Mark had halted,
staring ahead. Between the trees, here thinning, open light shone
before them, at a little distance still, but now not very far, and
shimmering with reflected gleams from water. They were nearing the
strait. And on Mark’s left hand a narrow footway twined in
among the trees to a low-roofed hut some yards aside from the
path.
“This is the place.”
“And she was here,” said Cadfael. The wet grass,
unshaken on either side by any wind, had retained the soft dew of
rain that dimmed its new green to a silver grey, but through it a
horse had certainly passed, leaving his darker trail, and brushing
before him the tips of new growth, for the passage to the cell was
very narrow. The ride in which they had halted was in regular use,
they had not thought to examine it as they rode. But here between
the encroaching bushes a horse had certainly passed since the rain.
And not inward, but outward. A few young shoots had been broken at
the tip, leaning towards the open ride, and the longer grasses
darkened by hooves clearly showed the direction in which they had
been brushed in passing. “And is gone,” said Cadfael,
“since the morning.”
They dismounted, and approached the cell on foot. Built little
and low, and one room only, for a woman who had almost no needs at
all, beyond her small stone-built altar against one wall, and her
plain straw pallet against another, and her small cleared space of
garden behind for vegetables and herbs. Her door was drawn to, but
had no lock to be seen without, and no bar within, only a latch
that any wayfarer could lift and enter. The place was empty now.
Nonna had obeyed the bishop’s expressed wish, and allowed
herself to be escorted into shelter in Bangor, how willingly there
was no knowing. If she had had a guest here in her absence, the
guest too was gone. But in a patch of clear turf between the trees
the grass had been grazed, and hooves had ranged on a long tether,
leaving their traces before the rain fell, for drops still hung on
the grasses, unshaken. And in one place the beast had left his
droppings, fresh and moist still, but already cold.
“She passed the night here,” said Cadfael,
“and with the morning she left. After the rain she left.
Which way, who knows! She came to Llandeiniolen from inland, out of
the hills and through the forest, so the priest said. Had she some
place of refuge in mind up there, some kinsman of Meirion’s
who might take her in? And did she find that place, too, already
deserted, and think of the anchoress as her next hope? It would
account for why it took her so long to get here. But as for where
she is gone now, how can we tell?”
“She knows by now of the danger from the sea,” said
Mark. “Surely she would not go on westward into such a peril?
But back towards Bangor and her marriage? She has already risked
much to evade it. Would she make her way back to Aber, and her
father? That would not deliver her from this marriage, if she is so
set against it.”
“She would not do it,” said Cadfael, “in any
case. Strange as it may be, she loves her father as much as she
hates him. The one is the reflection of the other. She hates him
because her love is far stronger than any love he has for her,
because he is so ready and willing to give her up, to put her away
by any means possible, so that she may no longer cast a cloud over
his reputation and his advancement. Very clearly she declared
herself once, as I remember.”
“As I remember also,” said Mark.
“Nevertheless, she will do nothing to harm him. The veil
she refused. This marriage she accepted only for his sake, as the
lesser evil. But when chance offered, she fled that, too, and chose
rather to remove herself from blocking his light than to let others
scheme to remove her. She has taken her own life into her own
hands, prepared to face her own risks and pay her own debts,
leaving him free. She will not now go back on that
resolve.”
“But he is not free,” said Mark, putting a finger
regretfully on the centre of the convoluted core of pain in this
seemingly simple relationship of sire and daughter. “He is
aware of her now in absence as he never was when she waited on him
dutifully every day, present and visible. He will have no peace
until he knows she is safe.”
“So,” said Cadfael, “we had better set about
finding her.”
Out on the ride, Cadfael looked back through the
screen of trees towards the sparks of quivering water beyond which
lay the Anglesey shore. A slight breeze had arisen, and fluttered
the bright green leaves into a scintillating curtain, but still the
fleeting reflections of water flashed brighter still through the
folds. And something else, something that appeared and vanished as
the branches revealed and hid it again, but remained constant in
the same place, only seeming to rock up and down as if afloat and
undulating with a tide. A fragment of bright colour, vermilion,
changing shape with the movement of its frame of leaves.
“Wait!” said Cadfael, halting. “What is
that?” Not a red that was to be found in nature, certainly
not in the late spring, when the earth indulges itself only with
delicate tones of pale gold and faint purple and white against the
virgin green. This red had a hard, impenetrable solidity about it.
Cadfael dismounted, and turned back towards it, threading the trees
in cover until he came to a raised spot where he could lie warily
invisible himself, but see clear through the edge of the woodland
three hundred paces or more down to the strait. A green level of
pasture and a few fields, one dwelling, no doubt forsaken now, and
then the silver-blue glitter of the water, here almost at its
narrowest, but still half a mile wide. And beyond, the rich,
fertile plain of Anglesey, the cornfield of Wales. The tide was
flowing, the stretch of shingle and sand under the opposite coast
half exposed. And riding to anchor, close inshore below the bank of
trees in which Cadfael stood, a long, lean boat, dragon-headed fore
and aft, dipped and rose gently on the tide, central sail lowered,
oars shipped, a cluster of vermilion shields draped along its low
flank. A lithe serpent of a ship, its mast lowered aft from its
steppings, clearing the gaunt body for action, while it swayed
gently to its mooring like a sleeping lizard, graceful and
harmless. Two of its crew, big, fair-headed, one with plaited
braids either side his neck, idled on its narrow rear deck, above
the oarsmen’s benches. One, naked, swam lazily in mid-strait.
But Cadfael counted what he took to be oar-ports in the third
strake of the hull, twelve of them in this steerboard side. Twelve
pairs of oars, twenty-four rowers, and more crew beside these three
left on guard. The rest could not be far.
Brother Mark had tethered the horses, and made his way down to
Cadfael’s shoulder. He saw what Cadfael had seen, and asked
no questions.
“That,” said Cadfael, low-voiced, “is a Danish
keel from Dublin!”
Chapter Seven
« ^ »
There was not a word more said between them. By
consent they turned and made their way back in haste to the horses,
and led them away inland by the woodland track, until they were far
enough from the shore to mount and ride. If Heledd, after her night
in the hermitage, had seen the coming of this foraging boat with
its formidable complement of warriors, small wonder she had made
haste to remove herself from their vicinity. And small doubt but
she would withdraw inland as quickly and as far as she could, and
once at a sufficient distance she would make for the shelter of a
town. That, at least, was what any girl in her right senses would
do. Here she was midway between Bangor and Carnarvon. Which way
would she take?
“One ship alone,” said Mark at last, where the path
widened and made it possible for two to ride abreast. “Is
that good sense? Might they not be opposed, even
captured?”
“So they might at this moment,” Cadfael agreed,
“but there’s no one here to attempt it. They came by
night past Carnarvon, be sure, and by night they’ll slip out
again. This will be one of the smallest and the fastest in their
fleet; with more than twenty armed rowers aboard there’s
nothing we have could keep them in sight. You saw the building of
her, she can be rowed either way, and turn in a flash. The only
risk they take is while the most of the company are ashore,
foraging, and that they’ll do by rushes, fast ashore and fast
afloat again.”
“But why send one small ship out alone? As I have heard
tell,” said Mark, “they raid in force, and take slaves
as well as plunder. That they cannot do by risking a single
vessel.”
“This time,” said Cadfael, considering,
“it’s no such matter. If Cadwaladr has brought them
over, then he’s promised them a fat fee for their services.
They’re here to persuade Owain he would be wise to restore
his brother to his lands, and they expect to get well paid for
doing it, and if it can be done cheaply by the threat of their
presence, without the loss of a man in battle, that’s what
they’ll prefer, and Cadwaladr will have no objection,
provided the result is the same. Say he gets his way and returns to
his lands, he has still to live beside his brother for the future,
why make relations between them blacker than they need be? No,
there’ll be no random burning and killing, and no call to
take bondmen, not unless the bargain turns sour.”
“Then why this foray by a single ship so far along the
strait?” Mark demanded reasonably.
“The Danes have to feed their force, and it’s not
their way to carry their own provisions when they’re heading
for a land they can just as well live off at no cost. They know the
Welsh well enough by now to know we live light and travel light,
and can shift our families and our stock into the mountains at a
few hours’ notice. Yonder little ship has wasted no time in
making inland from Abermenai as soon as it touched shore, to reach
such hamlets as were late in hearing the news, or slow in rounding
up their cattle. They’ll be off back to their fellows tonight
with a load of good carcases amidships, and whatever store of flour
and grain they’ve been able to lay their hands on. And
somewhere along these woods and fields they’re about that
very business this moment.”
“And if they meet with a solitary girl?” Mark
challenged. “Would they refrain from doing unnecessary
offence even then?”
“I would not speak for any man, Dane or Welsh or Norman,
in such a case,” Cadfael admitted. “If she were a
princess of Gwynedd, why, she’d be worth far more intact and
well treated than violated or misused. And if Heledd was not born
royal, yet she has a tongue of her own, and can very well make it
plain that she is under Owain’s protection, and they’ll
be answerable to him if they do her offence. But even
so…”
They had reached a place where the woodland track divided, one
branch bearing still inland but inclining to the west, the other
bearing more directly east.
“We are nearer Carnarvon than Bangor,” Cadfael
reckoned, halting where the roads divided. “But would she
know it? What now, Mark? East or west?”
“We had best separate,” Mark said, frowning over so
blind a decision. “She cannot be very far. She would have to
keep in cover. If the ship must return this night, she might find a
place to hide safely until they are gone. Do you take one way, and
I the other.”
“We cannot afford to lose touch,” Cadfael warned
seriously. “If we part here it must be only for some hours,
and here we must meet again. We are not free to do altogether as we
choose. Go towards Carnarvon, and if you find her, see her safely
there. But if not, make your way back here by dusk, and so will I.
And if I find her by this lefthand way, I’ll get her into
shelter wherever I may, if it means turning back to Bangor. And at
Bangor I’ll wait for you, if you fail of meeting me here by
sunset. And if I fail you, follow and find me there.” A
makeshift affair, but the best they could do, with so limited a
time, and an inescapable duty waiting. She had left the cell by the
shore only that morning, she would have had to observe caution and
keep within the woodland ways, where a horse must go slowly. No,
she could not be far. And at this distance from the strait, surely
she would keep to a used path, and not wind a laborious way deep in
cover. They might yet find and bring her here by nightfall, or
conduct her into safety somewhere, rendezvous here free of her, and
be off thankfully back to England.
Mark looked at the light and the slight decline of the sun from
the zenith. “We have four hours or more,” he said, and
turned his horse westward briskly, and was off.
Cadfael’s track turned east on a level
traverse for perhaps half a mile, occasionally emerging from
woodland into open pasture, and affording glimpses of the strait
through the scattered trees below. Then it turned inland and began
to climb, though the gradient here was not great, for this belt of
land on the mainland side partook to some extent of the rich
fertility of the island before it reared aloft into the mountains.
He went softly, listening, and halting now and again to listen more
intently, but there was no sign of life but for the birds, very
busy about their spring occupations and undisturbed by the turmoil
among men. The cattle and sheep had been driven up higher into the
hills, into guarded folds; the raiders would find only the few
stragglers here, and perhaps would venture no further along the
strait. The news must be ahead of them now wherever they touched,
they would have made their most profitable captures already. If
Heledd had turned this way, she might be safe enough from any
further danger.
He had crossed an open meadow and entered a higher belt of
woodland, bushy and dappled with sunbeams on his left hand,
deepening into forest on his right, when a grass snake, like a
small flash of silver-green lightning, shot across the path almost
under his horse’s hooves to vanish in deeper grass on the
other side, and the beast shied for an instant, and let out a muted
bellow of alarm. Somewhere off to the right, among the trees, and
at no great distance, another horse replied, raising an excited
whinny of recognition. Cadfael halted to listen intently, hoping
for another call to allow him to take a more precise reading of the
direction, but the sound was not repeated. Probably whoever was in
refuge there, well aside from the path, had rushed to soothe and
cajole his beast into silence. A horse’s neighing could carry
all too far along this rising hillside.
Cadfael dismounted, and led his beast in among the trees, taking
a winding line towards where he thought the other voyager must be,
and halting at every turn to listen again, and presently, when he
was already deep among thick growth, he caught the sudden rustling
of shaken boughs ahead, quickly stilled. His own movements, however
cautious, had certainly been heard. Someone there in close
concealment was waiting for him in ambush.
“Heledd!” said Cadfael clearly.
Silence seemed to become even more silent.
“Heledd? Here am I, Brother Cadfael. You can be easy, here
are no Dublin Danes. Come forth and show yourself.”
And forth she came, thrusting through the bushes to meet him,
Heledd indeed, with a naked dagger ready in her hand, though for
the moment she might well have forgotten that she held it. Her gown
was creased and soiled a little with the debris of bushes, one
cheek was lightly smeared with green from bedding down in moss and
grasses, and the mane of her hair was loose round her shoulders,
here in shadow quite black, a midnight cloud. But her clear oval
face was fiercely composed, just easing from its roused readiness
to do battle, and her eyes, enormous in shade, were purple-black.
Behind her among the trees he heard her horse shift and stamp,
uneasy here in these unknown solitudes.
“It is you,” she said, and let the hand
that held the knife slip down to her side with a great, gusty sigh.
“How did you find me? And where is Deacon Mark? I thought you
would be off home before now.”
“So we would,” agreed Cadfael, highly relieved to
find her in such positive possession of herself, “but for you
running off into the night. Mark is a mile or more from us on the
road to Carnarvon, looking for you. We parted where the roads
forked. It was guesswork which way you would take. We came seeking
you at Nonna’s cell. The priest told us he’d directed
you there.”
“Then you’ve seen the ship,” said Heledd, and
hoisted her shoulders in resignation at the unavoidable. “I
should have been well aloft into the hills by now to look for my
mother’s cousins up among the sheep-huts, the ones I hoped to
find still in their lowland homestead, if my horse had not fallen a
little lame. I thought best to get into cover and rest him until
nightfall. And now we are two,” she said, and her smile
flashed in shadow with recovering confidence, “three if we
can find your little deacon. And now which way should we make? Come
with me over the hills, and you can find a safe way back to the
Dee. For I am not going back to my father,” she warned, with
a formidable flash of her dark eyes. “He’s rid of me,
as he wanted. I mean him no ill, but I have not escaped them all
only to go back and be married off to some man I have never seen,
nor to dwindle away in a nunnery. You may tell him, or leave word
with someone else to let him know, that I am safe with my
mother’s kinsmen, and he can be content.”
“You are going into the first safe shelter we can
find,” said Cadfael firmly, moved to a degree of indignation
he could not have felt if he had found her distressed and in fear.
“Afterwards, once this trouble is over, you may have your
life and do what you will with it.” It seemed to him, even as
he said it, that she was capable of doing with it something
original and even admirable, and if it had to be in the
world’s despite, that would not stop her. “Can your
beast go?”
“I can lead him, and we shall see.”
Cadfael took thought for a moment. They were midway between
Bangor and Carnarvon here, but once returned to the westward track
by which Mark had set out, the road was more direct to Carnarvon,
and by taking it they would eventually rejoin Mark. Whether he had
gone on into the town, or turned back to return to the crossroads
meeting place by dusk, along that pathway they would meet him. And
in a city filled with Owain’s fighting men there would be no
danger. A force hired to threaten would not be so mad as to provoke
the entire armies of Gwynedd. A little looting, perhaps, pleasant
sport carrying off a few stray cattle and a few stray villagers,
but they were not such fools as to bring out Owain’s total
strength against them in anger.
“Bring him out to the path,” said Cadfael.
“You may ride mine, and I’ll walk yours.”
There was nothing in the glittering look she gave him to
reassure him that she would do as he said, and nothing to disquiet
him with doubts. She hesitated only an instant, in which the
silence of the windless afternoon seemed phenomenally intense, then
she turned and parted the branches behind her, and vanished,
shattering the silence with the rustling and thrashing of her
passage through deep cover. In a few moments he heard the horse
whinny softly, and then the stirring of the bushes as girl and
horse turned to thread a more open course back to him. And then,
astonishingly high, wild and outraged, he heard her scream.
The instinctive leap forward he made to go to her never gained
him so much as a couple of paces. From either side the bushes
thrashed, and hands reached to clutch him by cowl and habit, pin
his arms and bring him up erect but helpless, straining against a
grip he could not break, but which, curiously, made no move to do
him any harm beyond holding him prisoner. Suddenly the tiny open
glade was boiling with large, bare-armed, fair-haired, leather-girt
men, and out of the thicket facing him erupted an even larger man,
a young giant, head and shoulders above Cadfael’s sturdy
middle height, laughing so loudly that the hitherto silent woods
rang and re-echoed with his mirth, and clutching in his arms a
raging Heledd, kicking and struggling with all her might, but
making small impression. The one hand she had free had already
scored its nails down her captor’s cheek, and was tugging and
tearing in his long flaxen hair, until he turned and stooped his
head and took her wrist in his teeth and held it. Large, even,
white teeth that had shone as he laughed, and now barely dented
Heledd’s smooth skin. It was astonishment, neither fear nor
pain, that caused her suddenly to lie still in his arms, crooked
fingers gradually unfolding in bewilderment. But when he released
her to laugh again, she recovered her rage, and struck out at him
furiously, pounding her fist vainly against his broad breast.
Behind him came a grinning boy about fifteen years old, leading
Heledd’s horse, which went a little tenderly on one foreleg.
At sight of a second such prize tethered and shifting uneasily in
the fringe of the trees, the boy let out a whoop of pleasure.
Indeed, the entire mood of the marauding company seemed
good-humoured and ebullient rather than menacing. There were not so
many of them as at first they had seemed, by reason of their size
and their exuberantly animal presence. Two, barrel-chested and
moustached, with hair in straw-coloured braids down either cheek,
held Cadfael pinioned by the arms. A third had taken the
roan’s bridle, and was fondling the long blazed brow and
creamy mane. But somewhere out on the open ride there were others,
Cadfael heard them moving and talking as they waited. The marvel
was that men so massive could move so softly to close round their
quarry. The horses, calling to each other, had alerted the
returning foragers, and led them to this unexpected gain. A
monastic, a girl, by her mount and dress a girl of quality, and two
good horses.
The young giant was surveying his gains very practically over
Heledd’s unavailing struggles, and Cadfael noted that though
he was casually rough with his captive, he was not brutal. And it
seemed that Heledd had realized as much, and gradually abandoned
her resistance, knowing it vain, and surprised into quietness by
the fact that there was no retaliation.
“Saeson? demanded the giant, eyeing Cadfael with
curiosity. He already knew that Heledd was Welsh enough, she had
been reviling him in the language until she ran out of breath.
“Welsh!” said Cadfael. “Like the lady. She is
daughter to a canon of Saint Asaph, and under the protection of
Owain Gwynedd.”
“He keeps wildcats?” said the young man, and laughed
again, and set her down on her feet in one lithe movement, but kept
a fast hold on the girdle of her gown, twisted in his large fist to
tighten and secure it. “And he’ll want this one back
without a hair missing? But the lady slipped her leash, seemingly,
or what’s she doing here with no bodyguard but a monk of the
Benedictines?” He spoke a loose mixture of Erse, Danish and
Welsh, very well able to make himself understood in these parts.
Not all the centuries of fitful contact between Dublin and Wales
had been by way of invasion and rapine, a good many marriages had
been made between the princedoms, and a fair measure of honest
commerce been profitable to both parties. Probably this youth had a
measure of Norman French in his tongue, no less. Even Latin, for
very likely Irish monks had had him in school. He was plainly a
young man of consequence. Also, happily, of a very open and
cheerful humour, by no means inclined to waste what might turn out
a valuable asset. “Bring the man,” said the young
fellow, returning briskly to business, “and keep him fast.
Owain has a respect for the black habit, even if the Celtic clas
suits him best. If it comes to bargaining, holiness fetches a good
price. I’ll see to the girl.”
They sprang to obey him, as light of heart, it seemed, as their
leader, and all in high content with their foraging. When they
emerged with their captives into the open ride, the two horses led
along behind them, it was easy to see what reason they had for
being in high feather. There were four more of them waiting there,
all afoot, and burdened with two long poles loaded down with
slaughtered carcases and slung sacks, the plunder of scattered
folds, stray corners of grazing, and even the forest itself, for
there was venison among the booty. A fifth man had improvised a
wooden yoke for his shoulders, to carry two balanced wineskins.
This must be one of at least two shore parties, Cadfael judged, for
the little ship carried twelve pairs of oars aside from other crew.
It was guesswork how many the Danish force would muster in full,
but they would not go short for a day or so.
He went where he was propelled, not entirely out of the sensible
realization that he was no match at all for one of the brawny
warriors who held him, let alone two, not even because, though he
might break away himself, he could do nothing to take Heledd with
him. Wherever they were bound, useful hostages, he might still be
able to afford her some protection and companionship. He had
already given up any idea that she was likely to come to any great
harm. He had done no more than confirm something already understood
when he urged that she was valuable; and this was not total war,
but a commercial expedition, to achieve the highest profit at the
least expenditure.
There was some redistribution of the booty they had amassed,
Heledd’s lame horse being called into service to carry a part
of the load. They were notably brisk and neat in their movements,
balancing the weight and halting short of overburdening a valuable
beast. Among themselves they fell back into their own Norse tongue,
though the likelihood was that all these young, vigorous warriors
had been born in the kingdom of Dublin, and their fathers before
them, and had a broad understanding of the Celtic languages that
surrounded their enclave, and dealt freely with them in war and
peace. At the end of this day of raiding they had an eye to the
sun, and but for this foray after the alarm the horses had sounded,
they were losing no time.
Cadfael had wondered how their leader would dispose of the one
sound horse, and fully expected he would claim the privilege of
riding for himself. Instead, the young man ordered the boy into the
saddle, the lightest weight among them, and swung Heledd up before
him and into arms even at fifteen years brawny enough to make her
struggles ineffective once her hands were securely bound by her own
girdle. But she had understood by this time that resistance would
be both useless and undignified, and suffered herself to be settled
against the boy’s broad chest without deigning to struggle.
By the set of her face she would be waiting for the first chance of
escape, and keeping all her wits and strength in reserve until the
moment offered. She had fallen silent, shutting lips and teeth upon
anger or fear, and keeping a taut, brooding dignity, but what was
brewing behind that still face there was no knowing.
“Brother,” said the young man, turning briskly upon
Cadfael, still pinned between his guards, “if you value the
lass, you may walk beside her without a hand on you. But I warn
you, Torsten will be close behind, and he can throw a lance to
split a sapling at fifty paces, so best keep station.” He was
grinning as he issued the warning, already assured that Cadfael had
no intention of making off and leaving the girl in captivity.
“Forward now, and fast,” he said cheerfully, and set
the pace, and the entire party fell into file down the ride, and so
did Cadfael, close alongside his own roan horse, with a hand at the
rider’s stirrup-leather. If Heledd needed the fragile
reassurance of his presence, she had it; but Cadfael doubted the
need. She had made no move since she was hoisted aloft, except to
stir and settle more comfortably on her perch, and the very tension
of her face had softened into a thoughtful stillness. Every time
Cadfael raised his eyes to take a fresh look at her he found her
more at ease in this unforeseen situation. And every time, her eyes
were dwelling in speculation upon the fair head that topped all the
rest, stalking before them with erected crest and long blond locks
stirring in the light breeze.
Downhill at a brisk pace, through woodland and pasture, until
the first silvery glints of water winked at them through the last
belt of trees. The sun was dipping gently towards the west, gilding
the ripples drawn by the breeze along the surface, when they
emerged upon the shore of the strait, and the crewmen left on guard
launched a shout of welcome, and brought the dragon-ship inshore to
take them aboard.
Brother Mark, returning empty-handed from his
foray westward to keep the rendezvous at the crossroads before
sunset, heard the passing of a company of men, swift and quiet
though they were, crossing his track some little way ahead, going
downhill towards the shore. He halted in cover until they had
passed, and then followed cautiously in the same direction,
intending only to make sure they were safely out of sight and
earshot before he pushed on to the meeting place. It so happened
that the line he followed downhill among the trees inclined towards
the course of their open ride, and brought him rapidly closer, so
that he drew back and halted again, this time catching glimpses of
them between the branches of bushes now almost in full summer leaf.
A tall youth, flaxen fair, his head floating past like a blown
primrose but high as a three-year spruce, a led horse, loaded, two
men with a pole slung on their shoulders, and animal carcases
swinging to their stride. Then, unmistakably, he saw Heledd and the
boy pass by, a pair entwined and afloat six feet from the ground,
the horse beneath them only implied by the rhythm of their passing,
for the branches swung impenetrable between at that moment, leaving
to view only a trudging tonsure beside them, russet brown almost
wholly salted with grey. A very small clue to the man who wore it,
but all Mark needed to know Brother Cadfael.
So he had found her, and these much less welcome strangers had
found them both, before they could slip away thankfully into some
safe refuge. And there was nothing Mark could do about it but
follow them, far enough at least to see where they were taken, and
how they were handled, and then make sure that the news was carried
where there were those who could take their loss into account, and
make plans for their recovery.
He dismounted and left his horse tethered, the better to move
swiftly and silently among the trees. But the shout that presently
came echoing up from the ship caused him to discard caution and
emerge into the open, hurrying downhill to find a spot from which
he could see the waters of the strait, and the steersman bringing
his craft close in beneath the grassy bank, at a spot where it was
child’s play to leap aboard over the low rim into the
rowers’ benches in the waist of the vessel. Mark saw the tide
of fierce, fair men flow inboard, coaxing the loaded packhorse
after them, and stowing their booty under the tiny foredeck and in
the well between the benches. In with them went Cadfael, perforce,
and yet it seemed to Mark that he went blithely where he was
persuaded. Small chance to avoid, but another man would have been a
shade less apt and adroit about it.
The boy on horseback had kept his firm hold of Heledd until the
flaxen-haired young giant, having seen his men embarked, reached up
and hoisted her in his arms, as lightly as if she had been a child,
and leaped down with her between the rowers’ benches, and
setting her down there on her feet, stretched up again to the
bridle of Cadfael’s horse, and coaxed him aboard with a
soft-spoken cajolery that came up strangely to Mark’s ears.
The boy followed, and instantly the steersman pushed off strongly
from the bank, the knot of men busy bestowing their plunder
dissolved into expert order at the oars, and the lean little
dragon-ship surged out into midstream. She was in lunging motion
before Mark had recovered his wits, sliding like a snake
southwestward towards Carnarvon and Abermenai, where doubtless her
companions were now in harbour or moored in the roads outside the
dunes. She did not have to turn, even, being double-ended. Her
speed could get her out of trouble in any direction; even if she
was sighted off the town Owain had nothing that could catch her.
The rapidity with which she dwindled silently into a thin, dark
fleck upon the water left Mark breathless and amazed.
He turned to make his way back to where his horse was tethered,
and set out in resolute haste westward towards Carnarvon.
Plumped aboard into the narrow well between the
benches, and there as briskly abandoned, Cadfael took a moment to
lean back against the boards of the narrow after-deck and consider
their situation. Relations between captors and captives seemed
already to have found a viable level, at surprisingly little cost
in time or passion. Resistance was impracticable. Discretion
recommended acceptance to the prisoners, and made it possible for
their keepers to be about the more immediate business of getting
their booty safely back to camp, without any stricter enforcement
than a rapidly moving vessel and a mile or so of water on either
side provided. No one laid hand on Cadfael once they were embarked.
No one paid any further attention to Heledd, braced back
defensively into the stern-post, where the young Dane had hoisted
her, with knees drawn up and skirts hugged about her in embracing
arms. No one feared that she would leap overboard and strike out
for Anglesey; the Welsh were not known as notable swimmers. No one
had any interest in doing either of them affront or injury; they
were simple assets to be retained intact for future use.
To test it further, Cadfael made his way the length of the well
amidships, between the stowed loot of flesh and provisions, paying
curious attention to the details of the lithe, long craft, and not
one oarsman checked in the steady heave and stretch of his stroke,
or turned a glance to note the movement at his shoulder. A vessel
shaped for speed, lean as a greyhound, perhaps eighteen paces long
and no more than three or four wide. Cadfael reckoned ten strakes a
side, six feet deep amidships, the single mast lowered aft. He
noted the clenched rivets that held the strakes together.
Clincher-built, shallow of draught, light of weight for its
strength and speed, the two ends identical for instant maneuvering,
an ideal craft for beaching close inshore in the dunes of
Abermenai. No use for shipping more bulky freight; they would have
brought cargo hulls for that, slower, more dependent on sail, and
shipping only a few rowers to get them out of trouble in a calm.
Square-rigged, as all craft still were in these northern waters.
The two-masted, lateen-rigged ships of the unforgotten midland sea
were still unknown to these Norse seafarers.
He had been too deeply absorbed in these observations to realize
that he himself was being observed just as shrewdly and curiously
by a pair of brilliant ice-blue eyes, from under thick golden brows
quizzically cocked. The young captain of this raiding party had
missed nothing, and clearly knew how to read this appraisal of his
craft. He dropped suddenly from the steersman’s side to meet
Cadfael in the well.
“You know ships?” he demanded, interested and
surprised at so unlikely a preoccupation in a Benedictine
brother.
“I did once. It’s a long time now since I ventured
on water.”
“You know the sea?” the young man pursued, shining
with pleased curiosity.
“Not this sea. Time was when I knew the middle sea and the
eastern shores well enough. I came late to the cloister,” he
explained, beholding the blue eyes dilate and glitter in delighted
astonishment, a deeper spark of pleasure and recognition warming
within them.
“Brother, you put up your own price,” said the young
Dane heartily. “I would keep you to know better. Seafaring
monks are rare beasts, I never came by one before. How do they call
you?”
“My name is Cadfael, a Welsh-born brother of the abbey of
Shrewsbury.”
“A name for a name is fair dealing. I am Turcaill, son of
Turcaill, kinsman to Otir, who leads this venture.”
“And you know what’s in dispute here? Between two
Welsh princes? Why put your own breast between their blades?”
Cadfael reasoned mildly.
“For pay,” said Turcaill cheerfully. “But even
unpaid I would not stay behind when Otir puts to sea. It grows dull
ashore. I’m no landsman, to squat on a farm year after year,
and be content to watch the crops grow.”
No, that he certainly was not, nor of a temper to turn to
cloister and cowl even when the adventures of his youth were over.
Splendidly fleshed, glittering with animal energy, this was a man
for marriage and sons, and the raising of yet more generations of
adventurers, restless as the sea itself, and ready to cleave their
way into any man’s quarrel for gain, at the fair cost of
staking their own lives.
He was away now, with a valedictory clap on Cadfael’s
shoulder, steady of stride along the lunging keel, to swing himself
up beside Heledd on the after-deck. The light, beginning to fade
into twilight now, still showed Cadfael the disdainful set of
Heledd’s lips and the chill arching of her brows as she drew
the hem of her skirt aside from the contamination even of an enemy
touch, and turned her head away, refusing him the acknowledgement
of a glance.
Turcaill laughed, no way displeased, sat down beside her, and
took out bread from a pouch at his belt. He broke it in his big,
smooth young hands, and offered her the half, and she refused it.
Unoffended, still laughing, he took her right hand by force, folded
his offering into the palm, and shut her left hand hard over it.
She could not prevent, and would not compromise her mute disdain by
a vain struggle. But when he forthwith got up and left her so,
without a glance behind, to do as she pleased with his gift, she
neither hurled it into the darkening water of the strait nor bit
into its crust by way of acceptance, but sat as he had left her,
cradling it between her palms and gazing after his oblivious flaxen
head with a narrow and calculating stare, the significance of which
Cadfael could not read, but which at once intrigued and disquieted
him.
In the onset of night, in a dusk through which
they slid silently and swiftly in midstream, only faint glimmers of
phosphorescence gilding the dip of the oars, they passed by the
shore-lights of Owain’s Carnarvon, and emerged into a broad
basin shut off from the open sea only by twin rolling spits of
sand-dunes, capped with a close growth of bushes and a scattering
of trees. Along the water the shadowy shapes of ships loomed, some
with stepped masts, some lean and low like Turcaill’s little
serpent. Spaced along the shore, the torches of the Danish outposts
burned steadily in a still air, and higher towards the crest glowed
the fires of an established camp.
Turcaill’s rowers leaned to their last long stroke and
shipped their oars, as the steersman brought the ship round in a
smooth sweep to beach in the shallows. Over the side went the
Danes, hoisting their plunder clear, and plashing up from the water
to solid ground, to be met by their fellows on guard at the rim of
the tide. And over the side went Heledd, plucked up lightly in
Turcaill’s arms, and this time making no resistance, since it
would in any case have been unavailing, and she was chiefly
concerned with preserving her dignity at this pass.
As for Cadfael himself, he had small choice but to follow, even
if two of the rowers had not urged him over the side between them,
and waded ashore with a firm grip on his shoulders. Whatever
chances opened before him, there was no way he could break loose
from this captivity until he could take Heledd with him. He plodded
philosophically up the dunes and into the guarded perimeter of the
camp, and went where he was led, well assured that the guardian
circle had closed snugly behind him.
Chapter Eight
« ^ »
Cadfael awoke to the pearl-grey light of
earliest dawn, the immense sweep of open sky above him, still
sprinkled at the zenith with paling stars, and the instant
recollection of his present situation. Everything that had passed
had confirmed that they had little to fear from their captors, at
least while they retained their bargaining value, and nothing to
hope for in the way of escape, since the Danes were clearly sure of
the efficiency of their precautions. The shore was well watched,
the rim of the camp securely guarded. There was no need, within
that pale, to keep a constant surveillance on a young girl and an
elderly monastic. Let them wander at will, it would not get them
out of the circle, and within it they could do no harm.
Cadfael recalled clearly that he had been fed, as generously as
the young men of the guard who moved about him, and he was certain
that Heledd, however casually housed here, had also been fed, and
once left to her own devices, unobserved, would have had the good
sense to eat what was provided. She was no such fool as to throw
away her assets for spite when she had a fight on her hands.
He was lying, snugly enough, in the lee of a windbreak of
hurdles, in a hollow of thick grass, his own cloak wrapped about
him. He remembered Turcaill tossing it to him as it was unrolled
from his small belongings as the horse was unloaded. Round him a
dozen of the young Danish seamen snored at ease. Cadfael arose and
stretched, and shook the sand from his habit. No one made any move
to intercept him as he made for the higher ground to look about
him. The camp was alive, the fires already lit, and the few horses,
including his own, watered and turned on to the greener sheltered
levels to landward, where there was better pasture. Cadfael looked
in that direction, towards the familiar solidity of Wales, and made
his way unhindered through the midst of the camp to find a high
spot from which he could see beyond the perimeter of Otir’s
base. From the south, and after a lengthy march round the tidal bay
that bit deep to southward, Owain must come if he was ever to
attack this strongpoint by land. By sea he would be at a
disadvantage, having nothing to match the Norse longships. And
Carnarvon seemed a long, long way from this armed camp.
The few sturdy tents that housed the leaders of the expedition
had been pitched in the centre of the camp. Cadfael passed by them
closely, and halted to mark the men who moved about them. Two in
particular bore the unmistakable marks of authority, though
curiously the pair of them together struck a discordant note, as if
their twin authorities might somehow be at cross-purposes. The one
was a man of fifty years or more, thickset, barrel-chested, built
like the bole of a tree, and burned by the sun and the spray and
the wind to a reddish brown darker than the two braids of
straw-coloured hair that framed his broad countenance, and the long
moustaches that hung lower than his jaw. He was bare-armed to the
shoulder but for leather bands about his forearms and thick gold
bracelets at his wrists.
“Otir!” said Heledd’s voice softly in
Cadfael’s ear. She had come up behind him unnoticed, her
steps silent in the drifting sand, her tone wary and intent. She
had more here to contend with than a good-humored youngster whose
tolerant attitude might not always serve her turn. Turcaill was a
mere subordinate here; this formidable man before them could
overrule all other authorities. Or was it possible that even his
power might suffer checks? Here was this second personage beside
him, lofty of glance and imperious of gesture, by the look of him
not a man to take orders tamely from any other being.
“And the other?” asked Cadfael, without turning his
head.
“That is Cadwaladr. It was no lie, he has brought these
long-haired barbarians into Wales to wrest back his rights from the
Lord Owain. I know him, I have seen him before. The Dane I heard
called by his name.”
A handsome man, this Cadwaladr, Cadfael reflected, approving the
comeliness of the shape, if doubtful of the mind within. This man
was not so tall as his brother, but tall enough to carry his firm
and graceful flesh well, and he moved with a beautiful ease and
power beside the squat and muscular Dane. His coloring was darker
than Owain’s, thick russet hair clustered in curls over a
shapely head, and dark, haughty eyes well set beneath brows that
almost met, and were a darker brown than his hair. He was shaven
clean, but had acquired some of the clothing and adornments of his
Dublin hosts during his stay with them, so that it would not have
been immediately discernible that here was the Welsh prince who had
brought this entire expedition across the sea to his own
country’s hurt. He had the reputation of being hasty, rash,
wildly generous to friends, irreconcilably bitter against enemies.
His face bore out everything that was said of him.
Nor was it hard to imagine how Owain could still love his
troublesome brother, after many offences and repeated
reconciliations.
“A fine figure of a man,” said Cadfael,
contemplating this perilous presence warily.
“If he did as handsomely,” said Heledd.
The chieftains had withdrawn eastward towards the strait, the
circle of their captains surrounding them. Cadfael turned his
steps, instead, still southward, to get a view of the land approach
by which Owain must come if he intended to shut the invaders into
their sandy beachhead. Heledd fell in beside him, not, he judged,
because she was in need of the comfort of his or any other company,
but because she, too, was curious about the circumstances of their
captivity, and felt that two minds might make more sense of them
than one alone.
“How have you fared?” asked Cadfael, eyeing her
closely as she walked beside him, and finding her composed,
self-contained and resolute of lip and eye. “Have they used
you well, here where there are no women?”
She curled a tolerant lip and smiled. “I needed none. If
there’s cause I can fend for myself, but as yet there’s
no cause. I have a tent to shelter me, the boy brings me food, and
what else I want they let me go abroad and get for myself. Only if
I go too near the eastern shore they turn me back. I have tried. I
think they know I can swim.”
“You made no attempt when we were no more than a hundred
yards offshore,” said Cadfael, with no implication of
approval or disapproval.
“No,” she agreed, with a small, dark smile, and
added not a word more.
“And even if we could steal back our horses,” he
reflected philosophically, “we could not get out of this
armed ring with them.”
“And mine is lame,” she agreed again, smiling her
private smile.
He had had no opportunity, until now, to ask her how she had
come by that horse in the first place, somehow stealing him away
out of the prince’s stables while the feast was at its
height, and before any word was brought from Bangor to alert Owain
to the threat from Ireland. He asked her now. “How came it
that you ever came into possession of this horse you call yours so
briskly?”
“I found him,” said Heledd simply. “Saddled,
bridled, tethered among the trees not far from the gatehouse.
Better than ever I expected, I took it for a good omen and was
thankful I had not to go wandering through the night afoot. But I
would have done it. I had no thought of it when I went out to
refill the pitcher, but out in the courtyard I thought, why go
back? There was nothing left in Llanelwy I could keep, and nothing
in Bangor or Anglesey that I wanted. But there must be something
for me, somewhere in the world. Why should I not go and find it, if
no one else would get it for me? And while I was standing there in
shadow by the wall, the guards on the gate were not marking me, and
I slipped out behind their backs. I had nothing, I took nothing, I
would have walked away so, and never complained. It was my choice.
But in the trees I found this horse, saddled and bridled and ready
for me, a gift from God that I could not refuse. If I have lost him
now,” she said very solemnly, “it may be he has brought
me where I was meant to be.”
“A stage on your journey, it may be,” said Cadfael,
concerned, “but surely not the end. For here are you and I,
hostages in a very questionable situation, and you I take to be a
lass who values her freedom highly. We have yet to get ourselves
out of captivity, or wait here for Owain to do it for us.” He
was revolving in some wonder what she had told him, and harking
back to all that had happened in Aber. “So there was this
beast, made ready for riding and hidden away outside the enclave.
And if heaven meant him for you, there was someone else who
intended a very different outcome when he saddled him and led him
out into the woods. Now it seems to me that Bledri ap Rhys did
indeed mean to escape to his lord with word of all the
prince’s muster and strength. The means of flight was ready
outside the gate for him. And yet he was found naked in his
bedchamber, no way prepared for riding. You have set us a riddle.
Did he go to his bed to wait until the llys was well asleep? And
was killed before the favorable hour? And how did he purpose to
leave the maenol, when every gate was guarded?”
Heledd was studying him intently along her shoulder, brows
knitted together, only partially understanding, but hazarding very
alert and intelligent guesses at what was still obscure to her.
“Do you tell me Bledri ap Rhys is dead? Killed, you said.
That same night? The night I left the llys?”
“You did not know? It was after you were gone, so was the
news that came from Bangor. No one has told you since?”
“I heard of the coming of the Danes, yes, that news was
everywhere from the next morning. But I heard nothing of any death,
never a word.”
No, it would not be news of crucial importance, like the
invasion from Ireland, tref would not spread it to tref and maenol
to maenol as Owain’s couriers had spread word of the muster
to Carnarvon. Heledd was frowning over the belated news, saddened
by any man’s death, especially one she had known briefly,
even made use of, in her own fashion, to plague a father who
wronged her affection.
“I am sorry,” she said. “He had such life in
him. A waste! Killed, you think, to prevent his going? One more
warrior for Cadwaladr, and with knowledge of the prince’s
plans to make him even more welcome? Then who? Who could
have found out, and made such dreadful shift to stop
him?”
“That there’s no knowing, nor will I hazard guesses
where they serve no purpose. But soon or late, the prince will find
him out. The man was in a sense his guest, he will not let the
death go unavenged.”
“You foretell another death,” said Heledd, with
forceful bitterness. “What does that amend?”
And to that there was no answer that would not raise yet further
questions, probing all the obscure corners of right and wrong. They
walked on together, to a higher point near the southern rim of the
armed camp, unhindered, though they were observed with brief,
curious interest by many of the Danish warriors through whose lines
they passed. On the hillock, clear of the sparse trees, they halted
to survey the ground all about them.
Otir had chosen to make his landfall not on the sands to the
north of the strait, where the coast of Anglesey extended into a
broad expanse of dune and warren, none too safe in high tides, and
terminating in a long bar of shifting sand and shingle, but to the
south, where the enclosing peninsula of land stood higher and
dryer, sheltered a deeper anchorage, and afforded a more defensible
campsite, as well as more rapid access to the open sea in case of
need. That it fronted more directly the strong base of Carnarvon,
where Owain’s forces were mustered in strength, had not
deterred the invader. The shores of his chosen encampment were well
manned, the landward approach compact enough to afford a formidable
defence under assault, and a broad bay of tidal water separated it
from the town. Several rivers drained into this bight, Cadfael
recalled, but at low tide they would be mere meandering streaks of
silver in a treacherous waste of sand, not lightly to be braved by
an army. Owain would have to bring his forces far round to the
south to approach his enemy on safe ground. With some six or seven
miles of marching between himself and Owain, and with a secure
ground base already gained, no doubt Cadwaladr felt himself almost
invulnerable.
Except that the six or seven miles seemed to have shrunk to a
single mile during the night. For when Cadfael topped the ridge of
bushes, and emerged with a clear view well beyond the rim of the
camp to southward, the open sea just glimmering with morning light
on his right hand, the pallid shallow waters and naked sands of the
bay to his left, he caught in the distance, spaced across the
expanse of dune and field and scrubland, an unmistakable shimmer of
arms and faint sparkle of colored tents, a wall ensconced
overnight. The early light picked out traces of movement like the
quiver of a passing wind rippling a cornfield, as men passed
purposefully to and fro about their unhurried business of
fortifying their chosen position. Out of range of lance or bow,
Owain had brought up his army under cover of darkness to seal off
the top of this peninsula, and pen the Danish force within it.
There was to be no time wasted. Thus forehead to forehead, like two
rival rams measuring each other, one party or the other must open
the business in hand without delay.
It was Owain who opened dealings, and before the
morning was out, while the Danish chiefs were still debating the
appearance of his host so close to their boundaries, and what
action he might have in mind now that he was there. It was unlikely
that they had any qualms about their own security, having swift
access to the open sea at need, and ships the Welsh could not
match, and doubtless, thought Cadfael, discreetly, drawn back from
the knot of armed men gathered now on the knoll, they were also
speculating as to how strong a garrison he had left to hold
Carnarvon, and whether it would be worth staging a raid by water
upon the town if the prince attempted any direct assault here. As
yet they were not persuaded that he would risk any such costly
action. They stood watching the distant lines narrowly, and waited.
Let him speak first. If he was already minded to receive his
brother into favor again, as he had done several times before, why
make any move to frustrate so desirable a resolution?
It was mid-morning, and a pale sun high, when two horsemen were
seen emerging from a slight dip in the sandy levels between the two
hosts. Mere moving specks as yet, sometimes lost in hollows, then
breasting the next rise, making steadily for the Danish lines.
There were barely half a dozen dwellings in all that stretch of
dune and warren, since there was little usable pasture and no good
ploughland, and doubtless those few settlements had been evacuated
in the night. Those two solitary figures were the sole inhabitants
of a no-man’s-land between armies, and as it appeared,
charged with opening negotiations to prevent a pointless and costly
collision. Otir waited for their nearer approach with a face wary
but content, Cadwaladr with braced body and tense countenance, but
foreseeing a victory. It was in the arrogant spread of his feet
bestriding Welsh ground, and the lofty lift of his head and
narrowing of his eyes to view the prince’s envoys.
Still at the limit of the range of lance or arrow, the second
rider halted and waited, screened by a thin belt of trees. The
other rode forward to within hailing distance, and there sat his
horse, looking up at the watchful group on the hillock above
him.
“My lords,” the hail came up to them clearly,
“Owain Gwynedd sends his envoy to deal with you on his
behalf. A man of peace, unarmed, accredited by the prince. Will you
receive him?”
“Let him come in,” said Otir. “He shall be
honourably received.”
The herald withdrew to a respectful distance. The second rider
spurred forward towards the rim of the camp. As he drew near it
became apparent that he was a small man, slender and young, and
rode with more purpose than grace, as if he had dealt rather with
farm horses than elegant mounts for princes and their ambassadors.
Nearer still, and Cadfael, watching as ardently as any from the
crest of the dunes, drew deep breath and let it out again in a
great sigh. The rider wore the rusty black habit of the
Benedictines, and showed the composed and intent young face of
Brother Mark. A man of peace indeed, messenger of bishops and now
of princes. No doubt in the world but he had begged this office for
himself, none that he had urged upon the prince the practicality of
making use of one whose motives could hardly be suspected, who had
nothing to gain or lose but his own freedom, life and peace of
mind, no axe to grind, no profit to make, no lord to placate in
this world, Welsh, Danish, Irish or any other. A man whose humility
could move like a charmed barrier between the excesses of other
men’s pride.
Brother Mark reached the edge of the camp, and the guards stood
aside to let him pass. It was the young man Turcaill, twice
Mark’s modest size, who stepped forward hospitably to take
his bridle, as he lighted down and set out briskly to climb the
slight slope to where Otir and Cadwaladr waited to greet him.
In Otir’s tent, crammed to the entrance with
the chief among his forces, and every other man who could get a
toehold close to the threshold, Brother Mark delivered himself of
what he had come to say, partly on his own behalf, partly on behalf
of Owain Gwynedd. Aware by instinct of the common assumption among
these freebooters that they had rights in the counsels of their
leaders, he let his voice ring out to reach the listeners crowding
close outside the tent. Cadfael had made it his business to secure
a foothold near enough to hear what passed, and no one had raised
any objection to his presence. He was a hostage here, concerned
after his own fashion as they were after theirs. Every man with a
stake in the venture exercised his free right to guard his
position.
“My lords,” said Brother Mark, taking his time to
find the right words and give them their due emphasis, “I
have asked to undertake this embassage because I am not involved
upon any part in this quarrel which brings you into Wales. I bear
no arms, and I have nothing to gain, but you and I and every man
here have much, all too much, to lose if this dispute ends in
needless bloodshed. If I have heard many words of blame upon either
side, here I use none. I say only that I deplore enmity and hatred
between brothers as between peoples, and hold that all disputes
should be resolved without the shedding of blood. And for the
prince of Gwynedd, Owain ap Griffith ap Cynan, I say what he has
instructed me to say. This quarrel holds good between two men only,
and all others should hold back from a cause which is not theirs.
Owain Gwynedd bids me say that if Cadwaladr his brother has a
grievance, let him come and discuss it face to face, in guaranteed
safety to come and to return.”
“And I am to take his word for that, without
security?” Cadwaladr demanded. But by the guarded gleam in
his eyes he was not displeased with this approach.
“As you know very well that you can,” said Mark
simply.
Yes, he knew it. Every man there knew it. Ireland had had
dealings with Owain Gwynedd many times before this, and not always
by way of contention. He had kin over there who knew his value as
well as it was known in Wales. Cadwaladr’s face had a glossy
look of contained pleasure, as though he found this first exchange
more than encouraging. Owain had taken warning, seeing the strength
of the invading force, and was preparing to be conciliatory.
“My brother is known for a man of his word,” he
conceded graciously. “He must not think that I am afraid to
meet him face to face. Certainly I will go.”
“Wait a little, wait a little!” Otir shifted his
formidable bulk on the bench where he sat listening. “Not so
fast! This issue may well have arisen between two men, but there
are more of us in it now, invited in upon terms to which I hold,
and to which I will hold you, my friend. If you are content to let
go your assets on any man’s word, without security, I am not
willing to let go mine. If you leave here to enter Owain’s
camp and submit yourself to Owain’s persuasion or
Owain’s compulsion, then I require a hostage for your safe
return, not a hollow promise.”
“Keep me,” said Brother Mark simply. “I am
willing to remain as surety that Cadwaladr shall go and come
without hindrance.”
“Were you so charged?” Otir demanded, with some
suspicion of the efficacy of such an exchange.
“No. But I offer it. It is your right, if you fear
treachery. The prince would not deny you.”
Otir eyed the slight figure before him with a cautious degree of
approval, but remained skeptical. “And does the prince place
on you, Brother, an equal value with his own kinsman and enemy? I
think I might be tempted to secure the one bird in hand, and let
the other fly or founder.”
“I am in some sort Owain’s guest,” said Mark
steadily, “and in some sort his courier. The value he sets on
me is the value of his writ and his honor. I shall never be worth
more than I am as you see me here.”
Otir let loose a great bellow of laughter, and struck his palms
together. “As good an answer as I need. Stay, then, Brother,
and be welcome! You have a brother here already. Be free of my
camp, as he is, but I warn you, never venture too near the rim. My
guards have their orders. What I have taken I keep, until it is
fairly redeemed. When the lord Cadwaladr returns, you have due
leave to go back to Owain, and give him such answer as we two here
see fit.”
It was, Cadfael thought, a deliberate warning to Cadwaladr, as
well as to Mark. There was no great trust between these two. If
Otir required a surety that Cadwaladr would come back unmolested,
it was certainly not simply out of concern for Cadwaladr’s
safety, but rather taking care of Otir’s own bargain. The man
was his investment, to be guarded with care, but never, never, to
be wholly trusted. Once out of sight, who knew what use so rash a
princeling would make of whatever advantage circumstances offered
him?
Cadwaladr rose and stretched his admirable body with sleek,
pleasurable assurance. Whatever reservations others might have, he
had interpreted his brother’s approach as wholly encouraging.
The threat to the peace of Gwynedd had been shrewdly assessed, and
Owain was ready to give ground, by mere inches it might be, but
sufficient to buy off chaos. And now all he, Cadwaladr, had to do
was go to the meeting, behave himself seemly before other eyes, as
he knew well how to do with grace, and in private surrender not one
whit of his demands, and he would regain all, every yardland that
had been taken from him, every man of his former following. There
could be no other ending, when Owain spoke so softly and reasonably
at the first advance.
“I go to my brother,” he said, grimly smiling,
“and what I bring back with me shall be to your gain as well
as mine.”
Brother Mark sat with Cadfael in a hollow of the
sand dunes overlooking the open sea, in the clear, almost
shadowless light of afternoon. Before them the swathes of saud,
sculptured by sea winds, went rolling down in waves of barren gold
and coarse, tenacious grass to the water’s edge. At a safe
depth offshore seven of Otir’s ships rode at anchor, four of
them cargo hulls, squat and sturdy, capacious enough to accommodate
a wealth of plunder if it came to wresting their price out of
Gwynedd by force, the other three the largest of his longships. The
smaller and faster vessels all lay within the mouth of the bay,
where there was safe anchorage at need, and comfortable beaching
inshore. Beyond the ships to westward the open, silvery water
extended, mirroring a pallid, featureless blue sky, but dappled in
several places by the veiled gold of shoals.
“I knew,” said Mark, “that I should find you
here. But I would have come, even without that inducement. I was on
my way back to the meeting-place when they passed by. I saw you
prisoners, you and the girl. The best I could do was make for
Carnarvon, and carry that tale to Owain. He has your case well in
mind. But what else he has in his mind, with this meeting he has
sought, I do not know. It seems you have not fared so badly with
these Danes. I find you in very good heart. I confess I feared for
Heledd.”
“There was no need,” Cadfael said. “It was
plain we had our value for the prince, and he would not suffer us
to go unransomed, one way or another. They do not waste their
hostages. They have a reward promised, they are bent on earning it
as cheaply as possible, they’ll do nothing to bring out the
whole of Gwynedd angry and in arms, not unless the whole venture
turns sour on them. Heledd has been offered no affront.”
“And has she told you what possessed her to run from us at
Aber, and how she contrived to leave the llys? And the horse she
rode—for I saw it led along with the raiders, and that was
good harness and gear from the prince’s stable—how did
she come by her horse?”
“She found it,” said Cadfael simply, “saddled
and bridled and tethered among the trees outside the walls, when
she slipped out at the gate behind the backs of the guards. She
says she would have fled afoot, if need had been, but there was the
beast ready and waiting for her. And what do you make of that? For
I am sure she speaks truth.”
Mark gave his mind to the question very gravely for some
minutes. “Bledri ap Rhys?” he hazarded dubiously.
“Did he indeed intend flight, and make certain of a mount
while the gates were open, during the day? And some other,
suspicious of his stubborn adherence to his lord, prevented the
departure? But there was nothing to show that he ever thought of
leaving. It seemed to me that the man was well content to be
Owain’s guest, and have Owain’s hand cover him from
harm.”
“There is but one man who knows the truth,” said
Cadfael, “and he has good reason to keep his mouth shut. But
for all that, truth will out, or the prince will never let it rest.
So I said to Heledd, and the girl says in reply: ‘You
foretell another death. How does that amend anything?’
”
“She says well,” agreed Mark somberly. “She
has better sense than most princes and many priests. I have not yet
seen her, here within the camp. Is she free to move as she pleases,
within limits, like you?”
“You may see her this moment,” said Cadfael,
“if you please to turn your head, and look down to the right
there, where the spit of sand juts out into the shallows
yonder.”
Brother Mark turned his head obediently to follow where Cadfael
pointed. The tongue of sand, tipped with a ridge of coarse blond
grass to show that it was not quite submerged even at a normal high
tide, thrust out into the shallows on their right like a thin wrist
and hand, straining towards the longer arm that reached southward
from the shores of Anglesey. There was soil enough on its highest
point to support a few scrub bushes, and there a minute outcrop of
rock stood up through the soft sand. Heledd was walking without
haste along the stretched wrist towards this stony knuckle, at one
point plashing ankle-deep through shallow water to reach it; and
there she sat down on the rock, gazing out to sea, towards the
invisible and unknown coast of Ireland. At this distance she
appeared very fragile, very vulnerable, a small, slender, solitary
figure. It might have been thought that she was withdrawing herself
as far as possible from her captors, in a hapless defense against a
fate she had no means of escaping in the body. Alone by the sea,
with empty sky above her, and empty ocean before her, at least her
mind sought a kind of freedom. Brother Cadfael found the picture
deceptively appealing. Heledd was shrewdly aware of the strength,
as well as the weakness, of her situation, and knew very well that
she had little to fear, even had she been inclined to fear, which
decidedly she was not. She knew, also, how far she could go in
asserting her freedom of movement. She could not have approached
the shores of the enclosed bay without being intercepted long
before this. They knew she could swim. But this outer beach offered
her no possibility of escape. Here she could wade through the
shallows, and no one would lift a finger to prevent. She was hardly
likely to strike out for Ireland, even if there had not been a
flotilla of Danish ships offshore. She sat very still, her bare
arms wreathed about her knees, gazing westward, but with head so
alertly erect that even at this distance she seemed to be listening
intently. Gulls wheeled and cried above her. The sea lay placid,
sunlit, for the moment complacent as a cat. And Heledd waited and
listened.
“Did ever creature seem more forlorn!” Brother Mark
wondered, half aloud. “Cadfael, I must speak with her as soon
as may be. In Carnarvon I have seen her bridegroom. He came hotfoot
from the island to join Owain, she should know that she is not
forsaken. This Ieuan is a decent, stalwart man, and will put up a
good fight for his bride. Even if Owain could be tempted to leave
the girl to her fate here—and that is impossible!—Ieuan
would never suffer it. If he had to venture for her with no forces
but his own small following, I am sure he would never give up.
Church and prince have offered her to him, and he is afire for
her.”
“I do believe,” Cadfael said, “that they have
found her a good man, with all the advantages but one. A fatal
lack! He is not of her choosing.”
“She might do very much worse. When she meets him, she may
be wholly glad of him. And in this world,” Mark reflected
ruefully, “women, like men, must make the best of what they
can get.”
“With thirty years and more behind her,” said
Cadfael, “she might be willing to settle for that. At
eighteen—I doubt it!”
“If he comes in arms to carry her away—at eighteen
that might weigh with her,” Mark observed, but not with
entire conviction in his tone.
Cadfael had turned his head and was looking back towards the
crest of the dunes, where a man’s figure had just breasted
the rise and was descending towards the beach. The long, generous
stride, the exuberant thrust of the broad shoulders, the joyous
carriage of the flaxen head, bright in the sun, would have given
him a name even at a greater distance.
“I would not wager on the issue,” said Cadfael
cautiously. “And even so, he comes a little late, for someone
else has already come in arms and carried her away. That issue,
too, is still in doubt.”
The young man Turcaill erupted into Brother Mark’s view
only as he drew towards the spit of sand, and scorning to go the
whole way to walk it dryshod, waded cheerfully through the shallows
directly to where Heledd sat. Her back remained turned towards him,
but doubtless her ears were pricked.
“Who is that?” demanded Mark, stiffening at the
sight.
“That is one Turcaill, son of Turcaill, and if you saw us
marched away to his ship, you must have seen that lofty head go by.
It can hardly be missed, he tops the rest of us by the length of
it.”
“That is the man who made her prisoner?” Mark was
frowning down at Heledd’s minute island, where still she
maintained her pretence at being unaware of any intruder into her
solitude.
“It was you said it. He came in arms and carried her
away.”
“What does he want with her now?” Mark wondered,
staring.
“No harm. He’s subject to authority here, but even
aside from that, no harm.” The young man had emerged in a
brief flurry of spray beside Heledd’s rock, and dropped with
large, easy grace into the sand at her feet. She gave him no
acknowledgement, unless it could be considered an acknowledgement
that she turned a little away from him. Whatever they may have said
to each other could not be heard at such a distance, and it was
strange that Cadfael should suddenly feel certain that this was not
the first time Heledd had sat there, nor the first time that
Turcaill had coiled his long legs comfortably into the sand beside
her.
“They have a small private war going on,” he said
placidly. “They both take pleasure in it. He loves to make
her spit fire, and she delights in flouting him.”
A children’s game, he thought, a lively battle that passes
the time pleasantly for both of them, all the more pleasantly
because neither of them need take it seriously. By the same token,
neither need we take it seriously.
It occurred to him afterwards that he was breaking his own rule,
and wagering on an issue that was still in doubt.
Chapter Nine
« ^ »
In the abandoned farmstead where Owain had set
up his headquarters, a mile from the edge of Otir’s camp,
Cadwaladr set forth the full tale of his grievances, with some
discretion because he spoke in the presence not only of his
brother, but of Hywel, against whom he felt perhaps the greatest
and most bitter animosity, and of half a dozen of Owain’s
captains besides, men he did not want to alienate if he could keep
their sympathy. But he was incapable of damping down his
indignation throughout the lengthy tale, and the very reserve and
tolerance with which they listened to him aggravated his burning
resentment. By the end of it he was afire with his wrongs, and
ready to proceed to what had been implied in every word, the threat
of open warfare if his lands were not restored to him.
Owain sat for some minutes silent, contemplating his brother
with a countenance Cadwaladr could not read. At length he stirred,
without haste, and said calmly: “You are under some
misapprehension concerning the state of the case, and you have
conveniently forgotten a small matter of a man’s death, for
which a price was exacted. You have brought here these Danes of
Dublin as a means of forcing my hand. Not even by a brother is my
hand so easily forced. Now let me show you the reality. The boot is
on the other foot now. It is no longer a matter of you saying to
me: give me back all my lands, or I will let loose these barbarians
on Gwynedd until you do. Now hear me saying to you: You brought
this host here, now you get rid of them, and then you may—I
say may!—be given back what was formerly
yours.”
It was by no means what Cadwaladr had hoped for, but he was so
sure of his fortune with such allies that he could not refrain from
putting the best construction upon it. Owain meant more and better
than he was yet prepared to say. Often before he had proved pliant
towards his younger brother’s offences, so he would again. In
his own way he was already declaring an alliance to defy and expel
the foreign invaders. It could not be otherwise.
“If you are ready to receive and join with
me…” he had begun, for his high temper mildly and
civilly, but Owain cut him off without mercy.
“I have declared no such intent. I tell you again, get rid
of them, and only then shall I consider restoring you to your right
in Ceredigion. Have I even said that I promise you anything? It
rests with you, and not solely upon this present ground, whether
you ever rule in Wales again. I promise you nothing, no help in
sending these Danes back across the sea, no payment of any kind, no
truce unless or until I choose to make truce with them.
They are your problem, not mine. I may have, and reserve, my own
quarrel with them for daring to invade my realm. But now any such
consideration is in abeyance. Your quarrel with them, if you
dismiss their help now, is your problem.”
Cadwaladr had flushed into angry crimson, his eyes hot with
incredulous rage. “What is this you are demanding of me? How
do you expect me to deal with such a force? Unaided? What do you
want me to do?”
“There is nothing simpler,” said Owain
imperturbably. “Keep the bargain you made with them. Pay them
the fee you promised, or take the consequences.”
“And that is all you have to say to me?”
“That is all I have to say. But you may have time to think
what further may be said between us if you show sense. Stay here
overnight by all means,” said Owain, “or return when
you will. But you will get no more from me while there’s a
Dane uninvited on Welsh ground.”
It was so plainly a dismissal, and Owain so unremittingly the
prince rather than the brother, that Cadwaladr rose tamely and went
out from the presence shocked and silent. But it was not in his
nature to accept the possibility that his endeavors had all come to
nothing. Within his brother’s compact and well-planned camp
he was received and acknowledged as both guest and kin, sacred and
entitled to the ultimate in courtesy on the one ground, treated
with easy familiarity on the other. Such usage only confirmed his
native optimism and reassured his arrogant self-confidence. What he
had heard was the surface that covered a very different reality.
There were many among Owain’s chiefs who kept a certain
affection for this troublesome prince, however sorely that
affection had been tried in the past, and however forthrightly they
condemned the excesses to which his lofty temper drove him. How
much greater, he reflected, at Owain’s campaign table and in
Owain’s tent overnight, was the love his brother bore him.
Time and again he had flouted it, and been chastened, even cast out
of all grace, but only for a while. Time and again Owain had
softened towards him, and taken him back brotherly into the former
inescapable affection. So he would again. Why should this time be
different?
He rose in the morning certain that he could manipulate his
brother as surely as he had always done before. The blood that held
them together could not be washed away by however monstrous a
misdeed. For the sake of that blood, once the die was cast, Owain
would do better than he had said, and stand by his brother to the
hilt, against whatever odds.
All Cadwaladr had to do was cast the die that would force
Owain’s hand. The result was never in doubt. Once deeply
embroiled, his brother would not desert him. A less sanguine man
might have seen these calculations as providing only a somewhat
suspect wager. Cadwaladr saw the end result as certainty.
There were some in the camp who had been his men before Hywel
drove him out of Ceredigion. He reckoned their numbers, and felt a
phalanx at his back. He would not be without advocates. But he used
none of them at this juncture. In the middle of the morning he had
his horse saddled, and rode out of Owain’s encampment without
taking any formal leave, as though to return to the Danes, and take
up his bargaining with them with as little loss of cattle or gold
or face as possible. Many saw him go with some half-reluctant
sympathy. So, probably, did Owain himself, watching the solitary
horseman withdraw across open country, until he vanished into one
of the rolling hollows, to reappear on the further slope already
shrunken to a tiny, anonymous figure alone in the encroaching waste
of blown sand. It was something new in Cadwaladr to accept reproof,
shoulder the burden laid on him, and go back without complaint to
do the best he could with it. If he maintained this unexpected
grace, it would be well worth a brother’s while to salvage
him, even now.
The reappearance of Cadwaladr, sighted before noon
from the guard-lines covering Otir’s landward approach,
excited no surprise. He had been promised freedom to go and to
return. The watch, captained by the man Torsten, he who was reputed
to be able to split a sapling at fifty paces, sent word inward to
Otir that his ally was returning, alone and unmolested, as he had
been promised. No one had expected any other development; they
waited only to hear what reception he had had, and what terms he
was bringing back from the prince of Gwynedd.
Cadfael had been keeping a watchful eye on the approaches since
morning, from a higher spot well within the lines, and at the news
that Cadwaladr had been sighted across the dunes Heledd came
curiously to see for herself, and Brother Mark with her.
“If his crest is high,” Cadfael said judicially,
“when he gets near enough for us to take note, then Owain has
in some degree given way to him. Or else he believes he can prevail
on him to give way with a little more persuasion. If there is one
deadly sin this Cadwaladr will never fall by, it is surely
despair.”
The lone horseman came on without haste into the sparse veil of
trees on a ridge at some distance from the rim of the camp.
Cadwaladr was as good a judge of the range of arrow or lance as
most other men, for there he halted, and sat his horse in silence
for some minutes. The first ripple of mild surprise passed through
the ranks of Otir’s warriors at this delay.
“What ails him?” wondered Mark at Cadfael’s
shoulder. “He has his freedom to come and go. Owain has made
no move to hold him, his Danes want him back. Whatever he brings
with him. But it seems to me his crest is high enough. He may as
well come in and deliver his news, if he has no cause to be ashamed
of it.”
Instead, the distant rider sent a loud hail echoing over the
folds of the dunes to those listening at the stockade. “Send
for Otir! I have a message to him from Gwynedd.”
“What can this be?” asked Heledd, puzzled. “So
he might well have, why else did he go to parley? Why deliver it in
a bull’s bellow from a hundred paces distance?”
Otir came surging over the ridge of the camp with a dozen of his
chiefs at his heels, Turcaill among them. From the mouth of the
stockade he sent back an answering shout: “Here am I, Otir.
Bring your message in with you, and welcome.” But if he was
not by this time mulling over many misgivings and doubts in his own
mind, Cadfael thought, he must be the only man present still sure
of his grip on the expedition. And if he was, he chose for the
moment to dissemble them, and wait for enlightenment.
“This is the message I bring you from Gwynedd,”
Cadwaladr called, his voice deliberate, high and clear, to be heard
by every man within the Danish lines. “Be off back to Dublin,
with all your host and all your ships! For Owain and Cadwaladr have
made their peace, Cadwaladr will have his lands back, and has no
more need of you. Take your dismissal, and go!”
And on the instant he wheeled his horse, and spurred back into
the hollows of the dunes at a gallop, back towards the Welsh camp.
A great howl of rage pursued him, and two or three opportunist
arrows, fitted on uneasy suspicion, fell harmlessly into the sand
behind him. Further pursuit was impossible, he had the wings of any
horse the Danes could provide, and he was off back to his brother
in all haste, to make good what he had dared to cry aloud. They
watched him vanish and reappear twice in his flight, dipping and
rising with the waves of the dunes, until he was a mere speck in
the far distance.
“Is this possible?” marvelled Brother Mark, shocked
and incredulous. “Can he have turned the trick so lightly and
easily? Would Owain countenance it?”
The clamour of anger and disbelief that had convulsed the Danish
freebooters sank with ominous suddenness into the contained and far
more formidable murmur of understanding and acceptance. Otir
gathered his chiefs about him, turned his back on the act of
treachery, and went striding solidly up the dunes to his tent, to
take counsel what should follow. There was no wasting time on
denunciation or threat, and there was nothing in his broad brown
countenance to give away what was going on behind the copper
forehead. Otir beheld things as they were, not as he would have
wished them. He would never be hesitant in confronting
realities.
“If there’s one thing certain,” said Cadfael,
watching him pass by, massive, self-contained and perilous,
“it is that there goes one who keeps his own bargains, bad or
good, and will demand as much from those who deal with him. With or
without Owain, Cadwaladr had better watch his every step, for Otir
will have his price out of him, in goods or in blood.”
No such forebodings troubled Cadwaladr on his ride
back to his brother’s camp. When he was challenged at the
outer guard he drew rein long enough to reassure the watch
blithely: “Let me by, for I am as Welsh as you, and this is
where I belong. We have common cause now. I will be answerable to
the prince for what I have done.”
To the prince they admitted, and indeed escorted him, unsure of
what lay behind this return, and resolute that he should indeed
make good his purpose to Owain before he spoke with any other.
There were enough of his old associates among the muster, and he
had a way of retaining devotion long after it was proven he
deserved none. If he had brought the Danes here to threaten
Gwynedd, he might now have conspired with them in some new and
subtle measure to get his way. And Cadwaladr stalked into the
presence in their midst with a slight, disdainful smile for their
implied distrust, as always convinced by the arguments of his own
sanguine mind, and sure of his dominance.
Owain swung about from the section of the stockade that his
engineers were reinforcing, to stare and frown at sight of his
brother, so unexpectedly returned. A frown as yet only of surprise
and wonder, even concern that something unforeseen might have
prevented Cadwaladr’s freedom of movement.
“You back again? What new thing is this?”
“I am come to myself,” said Cadwaladr with
assurance, “and have returned where I belong. I am as Welsh
as you, and as royal.”
“It is high time you remembered it,” said Owain
shortly. “And now you are here, what is it you
intend?”
“I intend to see this land freed of Irishman and Dane, as
I am instructed is your wish also. I am your brother. Your forces
and mine are one force, must be one force. We have the same
interests, the same needs, the same aims…”
Owain’s frown had gathered and darkened on his brow into a
thundercloud, as yet mute, but threatening. “Speak
plainly,” he said, “I am in no mood to go roundabout.
What have you done?”
“I have flung defiance at Otir and all his Danes!”
Cadwaladr was proud of his act, and assured he could make it
acceptable, and fuse into one the powers that would enforce it.
“I have bidden them board and up sail and be off home to
Dublin, for you and I together are resolute to drive them from our
soil, and they had best accept their dismissal and spare themselves
a bloody encounter. I was at fault ever to bring them here. If you
will, yes, I repent of it. Between you and me there is no need of
such harsh argument. Now I have dismissed and spurned their bought
services. We will rid ourselves of every last man of them. If we
are at one, they will not dare stand against us…”
He had progressed thus far in an ever-hastening torrent of
words, as if desperate to convince rather himself than Owain.
Misgivings had made their stealthy way into his mind almost without
his knowledge, by reason of the chill stillness of his
brother’s face, and the grimly silent set of his mouth below
the unrelenting frown. Now the flow of eloquence flagged and
faltered, and though Cadwaladr drew deep breath and took up the
thread again, he could no longer recover the former conviction.
“I have still a following, I will do my part. We cannot fail,
they have no firm foothold, they will be caged in their own
defenses, and swept into the sea that brought them here.”
This time he let fall the very effort of speech. There was even
a silence, very eloquent to the several of Owain’s men who
had ceased their work on the defenses to listen with a free
tribesman’s interest, and without any dissembling. There was
never born a Welshman who would not speak his mind bluntly even to
his prince.
“What is there,” Owain wondered aloud, to the sky
above him and the soil below, “persuades this man still that
my words do not mean what they seem to mean in sane men’s
ears? Did I not say you get no more from me? Not a coin spent, not
a man put at risk! This devilment of your own making, my brother,
it was for you to unmake. So I said, so I meant and
mean.”
“And I have gone far to do it!” Cadwaladr flared,
flushing red to the brows. “If you will do your part as
heartily we are done with them. And who is put at risk? They dare
not put it to the test of battle. They will withdraw while
there’s time.”
“And you believe I would have any part in such a betrayal?
You made an agreement with these freebooters, now you break it as
lightly as blown thistledown, and look to me to praise you for it?
If your word and troth is so light, at least let me weight it with
my black displeasure. If it were for that alone,” said Owain,
abruptly blazing, “I would not lift a finger to save you from
your folly. But there is worse. Who is put at risk, indeed! Have
you forgotten, or did you never condescend to understand, that your
Danes hold two men of the Benedictine habit, one of them willing
hostage for your good faith, which now all men see was not worth a
bean, let alone a good man’s liberty and life. Yet more, they
also hold a girl, one who was in my retinue and in my care, even if
she chose to venture to leave it and make shift alone. For all
these three I stand responsible. And all these three you have
abandoned to whatever fate your Otir may determine for his
hostages, now that you have spited, cheated and imperiled him at
the cost of your own honor. This is what you have done! Now I will
undo such part of it as I can, and you may make such terms as you
can with the allies you have cheated and discarded.”
And without pause for any rejoinder, even had his brother
retained breath enough to speak, Owain flung away from him to call
to the nearest of his men: “Send and saddle me my horse! Now,
and hasten!”
Cadwaladr came to his senses with a violent convulsion, and
sprang after him to catch him by the arm. “What will you do?
Are you mad? There’s no choice now, you are committed as deep
as I. You cannot let me fall!”
Owain plucked himself away from the unwelcome hold, thrusting
his brother to arm’s length in brief and bitter detestation.
“Leave me! Go or stay, do as you please, but keep out of my
sight until I can bear the very look and touch of you. You have not
spoken for me. If you have so represented the matter, you lied. If
a hair of the young deacon’s head has been harmed, you shall
answer for it. If the girl has suffered any insult or hurt, you
shall pay the price of it. Go, hide yourself, think on your own
hard case, for you are no brother nor ally of mine; you must carry
your own follies to their deserved ending.”
It was not more than two hours past noon when
another solitary horseman was sighted from the camp on the dunes,
riding fast and heading directly for the Danish perimeter. One man
alone, coming with manifest purpose, and making no cautious halt
out of range of weapons, but posting vehemently towards the guards,
who stood watching his approach with eyes narrowed to weigh up his
bearing and accoutrements, and guess at his intent. He wore no
mail, and bore no visible arms.
“No harm in him,” said Torsten. “What he wants
he’ll tell us, by the cut of him. Go tell Otir we have yet
another visitor coming.”
It was Turcaill who carried the message, and delivered it as he
interpreted it. “A man of note by his beast and his harness.
Fairer-headed then I am, he could be a man of our own, and big
enough. My match, if I’m a judge. He might even top me. By
this he’s close. Shall we bring him in?”
Otir gave no more than a moment to considering it. “Yes,
let him come. A man who spurs straight in to me man to man is worth
hearing.”
Turcaill went back jauntily to the guardpost, in time to see the
horseman rein in at the gate, and light down empty-handed to speak
for himself. “Go tell Otir and his peers that Owain ap
Griffith ap Cynan, prince of Gwynedd, asks admittance to speech
with them.”
There had been very serious and very composed and deliberate
consultation in Otir’s inner circle of chieftains since
Cadwaladr’s defiance. They were not men of a temper to accept
such treachery, and make the best of their way tamely out of the
trap in which it had left them. But whatever they had discussed and
contemplated in retaliation suddenly hung in abeyance when
Turcaill, grinning and glowing with his astonishing embassage,
walked in upon their counsels to announce:
“My lords, here on the threshold is Owain Gwynedd in his
own royal person, asking speech with you.”
Otir had a sense of occasion that needed no prompting. The
astonishment of this arrival he put by in an instant, and rose to
stride to the open flap of his tent and bring in the guest with his
own hand to the trestle table round which his captains were
gathered.
“My lord prince, whatever your word, your self is welcome.
Your line and your reputation are known to us, your forebears on
your grandmother’s side are close kin to kin of ours. If we
have our dissensions, and have fought on opposing sides before now,
and may again, that is no bar but we may meet in fair and open
parley.”
“I expect no less,” said Owain. “You I have no
cause otherwise to love, since you are here upon my ground
uninvited, and for no good purpose towards me. I am not come to
exchange compliments with you, nor to complain of you, but to set
right what may be misunderstood between us.”
“Is there such misunderstanding?” asked Otir with
dry good humor. “I had thought our situation must be clear
enough, for here I am, and here are you acknowledging freely that
here I have no right to be.”
“That, as at this moment,” said Owain, “we may
leave to be resolved at another time. What may have misled you is
the visit my brother Cadwaladr paid you this morning.”
“Ah, that!” said Otir, and smiled. “He is back
in your encampment, then?”
“He is back. He is back, and I am here, to tell
you—I could even say, to warn you—that he did not speak
for me. I knew nothing of his intent. I thought he had come back to
you just as he left you, still your ally, still hostile to me,
still a man of his word and bound to you. It was not with my will
or leave that he discarded you, and with you the sacred worth of
his word. I have not made peace with him, nor will I make war with
him against you. He has not won back the lands I took from him, for
good reason. The bargain he made with you he must abide as best he
may.”
They were steadily gazing at him, and from him to one another,
about the table, waiting to be enlightened, and withholding
judgment until the mists cleared.
“I am slow to see, then, the purpose of this visit,”
said Otir civilly, “however much pleasure the company of
Owain Gwynedd gives me.”
“It is very simple,” said Owain. “I am here to
lay claim to three hostages you hold in your camp. One of them, the
young deacon Mark, willingly remained to ensure the safe return of
my brother, who has now made that return impossible, and left the
boy to answer for it. The other two, the girl Heledd, a daughter of
a canon of Saint Asaph, and the Benedictine Brother Cadfael of the
abbey of Shrewsbury, were captured by this young warrior who
conducted me in to you, when he raided for provisions far up the
Menai. I came to ensure that no harm should come to any of these,
by reason of Cadwaladr’s abandonment of his agreement. They
are no concern of his. They are all three under my protection. I am
here to offer a fair ransom for them, no matter what may follow
between your people and mine. My own responsibilities I will
discharge honorably. Cadwaladr’s are nothing to do with me.
Exact from him what he owes you, not from any of these three
innocent people.”
Otir did not openly say: “So I intend!” but he
smiled a tight and relishing smile that spoke just as clearly for
him. “You may well interest me,” he said, “and I
make no doubt we could agree upon a fair ransom, between us. But
for this while you must hold me excused if I reserve all my assets.
When I have given consideration to all things, then you shall know
whether, and at what price, I am willing to sell your guests back
to you.”
“At least, then,” said Owain, “give me your
pledge that they shall come back to me unharmed when I do recover
them—whether by purchase or by capture.”
“I do not spoil what I may wish to sell,” agreed
Otir. “And when I collect what is due to me, it will be from
the debtor. That I promise you.”
“And I take your word,” said Owain. “Send to
me when you will.”
“And there is no more to be said between us
two?”
“As yet,” said Owain, “there is nothing more.
All your choices you have reserved. So do I reserve
mine.”
Cadfael left the place where he had stood motionless and quiet,
in the lee of the tent, and followed down through the mute ranks of
the Danes as they drew aside to give the prince of Gwynedd clear
passage back to his waiting horse. Owain mounted and rode, without
haste now, more certain of his enemy than ever he had been since
boyhood of his brother. When the fair head, uncovered to the sun,
had twice dipped from sight and reappeared again, and was dwindling
into a distant speck of pale gold in the distance, Cadfael turned
back along the fold of the dunes, and went to look for Heledd and
Mark. They would be together. Mark had taken upon himself, somewhat
diffidently, the duty of keeping a guardian eye upon the
girl’s privacy. She might shake him off at will when she did
not want him; when if ever she did want him, he would be within
call. Cadfael had found it oddly touching how Heledd bore with this
shy but resolute attendance, for she used Mark as an elder sister
might, considerate of his dignity and careful never to open upon
him the perilous weaponry she had at her disposal in dealing with
other men, and sometimes had been known to indulge for her own
pleasure no less than in hurt retaliation against her father. For
there was no question but this Heledd, with her gown frayed at the
sleeve and crumpled by sleeping in a scooped hollow of sand lined
with grass, and her hair unbraided and loose about her shoulders in
a mane of darkness burnished into blue highlights by the sun, and
her feet as often as not bare in the warm sand and the cool
shallows along the seaward shore, was perceptibly closer to pure
beauty than she had ever been before, and could have wreaked havoc
in most young men’s lives here had she been so minded. Nor
was it wholly in her own defense that she went about the camp so
discreetly, suppressing her radiance, and avoided contact with her
captors but for the young boy who waited on her needs and Turcaill,
to whose teasing company she had become accustomed, and whose
shafts she took passing pleasure in returning.
There was a bloom upon Heledd in these days of captivity, a
summer gloss that was more than the sheen of the sun on her face.
It seemed that now that she was a prisoner, however easy was her
captivity within its strict limits, and had accepted her own
helplessness, now that all action and all decisions were denied her
she had abandoned all anxiety with them, and was content to live in
the passing day and look no further. More content than she had
been, Cadfael thought, since Bishop Gilbert came to Llanelwy, and
set about reforming his clergy while her mother was on her
deathbed. She might even have suffered the extreme bitterness of
wondering whether her father was not looking forward to the death
that would secure him his tenure. There was no such cloud upon her
now, she radiated a warmth that seemed to have no cares left in the
world. What she could not influence she had settled down to
experience and survive, even to enjoy.
They were standing among the thin screen of trees on the ridge
when Cadfael found them. They had seen Owain arrive, and they had
climbed up here to watch him depart. Heledd was still staring
wide-eyed and silent after the last glimpse of the prince’s
bright head, lost now in distance. Mark stood always a little apart
from her, avoiding touch. She might treat him sisterly, but Cadfael
wondered at times whether Mark felt himself in danger, and kept
always a space between them. Who could ensure that his own feelings
should always remain brotherly? The very concern he felt for her,
thus suspended between an uncertain past and a still more
questionable future, was a perilous pitfall.
“Owain will have none of it,” Cadfael announced
practically. “Cadwaladr lied, Owain has set the matter
straight. His brother must work out his own salvation or damnation
unaided.”
“How do you know so much?” asked Mark mildly.
“I took care to be close. Do you think a good Welshman
would neglect his interests where the contrivances of his betters
are concerned?”
“I had thought a good Welshman never acknowledged any
betters,” said Mark, and smiled. “You had your ear to
the leather of the tent?”
“For your benefit no less. Owain has offered to buy us all
three out of Otir’s hold. And Otir, if he has held back from
coming to terms at once, has promised us life and limb and this
degree of freedom until he comes to a decision. We have nothing
worse to fear.”
“I was not in any fear,” said Heledd, still gazing
thoughtfully southward. “Then what comes next, if Owain has
left his brother to his fate?”
“Why, we sit back and wait, here where we are, until
either Otir decides to accept his price for us, or Cadwaladr
somehow scrapes together whatever fool sum in money and stock he
promised his Danes.”
“And if Otir cannot wait, and decides to cut his fee by
force out of Gwynedd?” Mark wondered.
“That he will not do, unless some fool starts the killing
and forces his hand. I exact my dues, he said, from the debtor who
owes them. And he means it, not now simply out of self-interest,
but out of a very deep grudge against Cadwaladr, who has cheated
him. He will not bring Owain and all his power into combat if by
any means he can avoid it and still get his profit. And he is as
able to make his own dispositions,” said Cadfael shrewdly,
“as any other man, and for all I can see, better than most.
Not only Owain and his brother are calling the shots here, Otir may
well have a trick or two of his own up his sleeve.”
“I want no killing,” said Heledd peremptorily, as
though she gave orders by right to all men presently in arms.
“Not for us, not for them. I would rather continue here
prisoner than have any man brought to his death. And yet,”
she said grieving, “I know it cannot go on thus deadlocked,
it must end somehow.”
It would end, Cadfael reflected, unless some unforeseen disaster
intervened, in Otir’s acceptance of Owain’s ransom for
his captives, most probably after Otir had dealt, in whatever
fashion he saw fit, with Cadwaladr. That score would rank first in
his mind, and be tackled first. He had no obligation now to his
sometime ally, that compact had been broken once for all. Cadwaladr
might go into exile, once he had paid his dues, or go on his knees
to his brother and beg back his lands. Otir owed him nothing. And
since he had all his following to pay, he would not refuse the
additional profit of Owain’s ransom. Heledd would go free,
back to Owain’s charge. And there was a man now in
Owain’s muster who was waiting to claim her on her return. A
good man, so Mark said, presentable to the eye, well-thought of, a
man of respectable lands, in good odor with the prince. She might
do very much worse.
“There is no cause in the world,” said Mark,
“why it should not end for you in a life well worth the
cherishing. This Ieuan whom you have never seen is wholly disposed
to receive and love you, and he is worth your
acceptance.”
“I do believe you,” she said, for her almost
submissively. But her eyes were steady upon a far distance over the
sea, where the light of air and the light of water melted into a
shimmering mist, indissoluble and mysterious, everything beyond
hidden in radiance. And Cadfael wondered suddenly if he was not,
after all, imagining the conviction in Brother Mark’s voice,
and the womanly grace of resignation in Heledd’s.
Chapter Ten
« ^ »
Turcaill came down from conference in
Otir’s tent towards the shore of the sheltered bay, where his
lithe little dragon-ship lay close inshore, its low sides mirrored
in the still water of the shallows. The anchorage at the mouth of
the Menai was separated from the broad sandy reaches of the bay to
southward by a long spit of shingle, beyond which the water of two
rivers and their tributaries wound its way to the strait and the
open sea, in a winding course through the waste of sands. Turcaill
stood to view the whole sweep of land and water, the long stretch
of the bay extending more than two miles to the south, pale gold
shoals and sinuous silver water, the green shore of Arfon beyond,
rolling back into the distant hills. The tide was flowing, but it
would be two hours or more yet before it reached its highest, and
covered all but a narrow belt of salt marsh fringing the shore of
the bay. By midnight it would be on the turn again, but full enough
to float the little ship with its shallow draught close inshore.
Inland of the saltings there would, if luck held, be scrub growth
that would give cover to a few skilled and silent men moving
inland. Nor would they have far to go. Owain’s encampment
must span the waist of the peninsula. Even at its narrowest point
it might be as much as a mile across, but he would have pickets on
either shore. Fewer and less watchful, perhaps, on the bay shore,
since attack by ship was unlikely that way. Otir’s larger
vessels would not attempt to thread the shoals. The Welsh would be
concentrating their watch on the sea to westward.
Turcaill was whistling to himself, very softly and contentedly,
as he scanned a sky just deepening into dusk. Two hours yet before
they could set out, and with the evening clouds had gathered
lightly over the heavens, a grey veil, not threatening rain, but
promising cover against too bright a night. From his outer
anchorage he would have to make a detour round the bar of shingle
to the mouth of the river to reach the clear channel, but that
would add only some quarter of an hour to the journey. Well before
midnight, he decided blithely, we can embark.
He was still happily whistling when he turned back to return to
the heart of the camp and consider on the details of his
expedition. And there confronting him was Heledd, coming down from
the ridge with her long, springy stride, the dark mane of her hair
swaying about her shoulders in the breeze that had quickened with
evening, bringing the covering of cloud. Every encounter between
them was in some sense a confrontation, bringing with it a racing
of the blood on both sides, curiously pleasurable.
“What are you doing here?” he asked, the whistle
breaking off short. “Were you thinking of escaping across the
sands?” He was mocking her, as always.
“I followed you,” she said simply. “Straight
from Otir’s tent, and off with you this way, and eyeing the
sky and the tide and that snake-ship of yours. I was
curious.”
“The first time ever you were curious about me or anything
I did,” he said cheerfully. “Why now?”
“Because suddenly I see you head-down on a hunt, and I
cannot but wonder what mischief you’re about this
time.”
“No mischief,” said Turcaill. “Why should
there be?” He was regarding her, as they walked back slowly
together, with somewhat narrower attention than he gave to their
usual easy skirmishing, for it seemed to him that she was at least
half serious in her probing, even in some way anxious. Here in her
captivity, between two armed camps, a solitary woman might well
scent mischief, the killing kind, in every move, and fear for her
own people.
“I am not a fool,” said Heledd impatiently. “I
know as well as you do that Otir is not going to let
Cadwaladr’s treason go unavenged, nor let his fee slip
through his fingers. He’s no such man! All this day he and
all his chiefs have had their heads together over the next move,
and now suddenly you come bursting out shining with the awful
delight you fool men feel in plunging headfirst into a fight, and
you try to tell me there’s nothing in the wind. No
mischief!”
“None that need trouble you,” he assured her.
“Otir has no quarrel with Owain or any of Owain’s host,
they have cast off Cadwaladr to untie his own knots and pay his own
debts, why should we want to provoke worse? If the promised price
is paid, we shall be off to sea and trouble you no more.”
“A good riddance that will be,” said Heledd sharply.
“But why should I trust you and your fellows to manage things
so well? It needs only one chance wounding or killing, and
there’ll be blazing warfare, and a great
slaughter.”
“And since you are so sure I’m deep in this mischief
you foresee…”
“The very instrument of it,” she said
vehemently.
“Then can you not trust me to bring it to a good
end?” He was laughing at her again, but with a degree of
almost apprehensive delicacy.
“You least of all,” she said with vicious certainty.
“I know you, you have a lust after danger, there’s
nothing so foolhardy but you would dare it, and bring down
everything in a bloody battle on all of us.”
“And you, being a good Welshwoman,” said Turcaill,
wryly smiling, “fear for your Gwynedd, and all those men of
Owain’s host camped there barely a mile from us.”
“I have a bridegroom among them,” she reminded him
smartly, and set her teeth with a snap.
“So you have. I will not forget your bridegroom,”
Turcaill promised, grinning. “At every step I take, I will
think on your Ieuan ab Ifor, and draw in my hand from any stroke
that may bring him into peril of battle. There’s no other
consideration could so surely curb any rashness of mine as the need
to see you married to a good, solid uchelwr from Anglesey.
Will that content you?”
She had turned to look at him intently, her great eyes
purple-black and unwaveringly earnest. “So you are indeed
bound on some mad foray for Otir! You have as good as said
so.” And as he did not make any protest or attempt to deny it
further: “Make good what you have promised me, then. Take
good care! Come back without hurt to any. I would not have even you
come to harm.” And meeting the somewhat too bright
intelligence of the blue eyes, she added with a toss of her head,
but with a little too much haste for the disdainful dignity at
which she aimed: “Let alone my own countrymen.”
“And foremost of all your countrymen, Ieuan ab
Ifor,” Turcaill agreed with a solemn face: but she had
already turned her back on him and set off with erected head and
vehement stride towards the sheltered hollow where her own small
tent was placed.
Cadfael arose from his chosen nest in the lee of
the squat salt bushes wakeful and restless for no good reason, left
Mark already sleeping, and dropped his cloak beside his friend, for
the night was warm. It was at Mark’s insistence that they lay
always within call of Heledd’s tent, though not so close as
to offend her independent spirit. Cadfael had small doubt by this
time of her safety within the Danish enclave. Otir had given his
orders, and no man of his following was likely to take them
lightly, even if their minds had not been firmly fixed upon more
profitable plunder than one Welsh girl, however tempting.
Adventurers, Cadfael had noted throughout his own early life of
adventure, were eminently practical people, and knew the value of
gold and possessions. Women came much lower down in the scale of
desirable loot.
He looked towards where her low windbreak lay, and all was dark
and silent there. She must be asleep. For no comprehensible reason,
sleep eluded him. The sky bore a light covering of cloud, through
which only a star here and there showed faintly. There was no wind,
and tonight there would be no moon. The cloud might well thicken by
morning, even bring rain. At this midnight hour the stillness was
profound, even oppressive, the darkness over the dunes shading away
both east and west into a very faint impression of lambent light
from the sea, now almost at its fullest tide. Cadfael turned
eastward, where the line of guards was more lightly manned, and he
was less likely to excite any challenge by being up and about in
the dead of night. There were no fires, except those turfed down in
the heart of the camp to burn slowly till morning, and no torches
to prick through the darkness. Otir’s watchmen relied on
their night eyes. So did Brother Cadfael. Shapes grew out of
shapelessness gradually, even the curves and slopes of the dunes
were dimly perceptible. It was strange how a man could be so
solitary in the midst of thousands, as if solitude could be
achieved at will, and how one to all intents and purposes a
prisoner could feel himself freer than his captors, who went
hampered by their numbers and chained by their discipline.
He had reached the crest of the ridge above the anchorage, where
the lighter and faster Danish ships lay snugly between the open sea
and the strait. A wavering line of elusive light, appearing and
vanishing as he watched, lipped the shore, and there within its
curve they lay, so many lean, long fishes just perceptible as
darker flecks briefly outlined by the stroking of the tide. They
quivered, but did not stir from their places. Except for one, the
leanest and smallest. He saw it creep out from its anchorage so
softly that for a moment he thought he was imagining the forward
surge. Then he caught the dip of the oars, pinpricks of fire, gone
almost before he could realize what they were. No sound came up to
him from the distance, even in this nocturnal stillness and
silence. The least and probably fastest of the dragon-ships was
snaking out into the mouth of the Menai, heading eastward into the
channel.
Another foraging expedition? If that was the intent, it would
make good sense to take to the strait by night, and lie up
somewhere well past Carnarvon to begin their forays ashore before
dawn. The town would certainly have been left well garrisoned, but
the shores beyond were still open to raiding, even if most of the
inhabitants had removed their stock and all their portable goods
into the hills. And what was there among the belongings of a good
Welshman that was not portable? With ease they could abandon their
homesteads if need arose, and rear them again when the danger was
over. They had been doing it for centuries, and were good at it.
Yet these nearest fields and settlements had already been looted
once, and could not be expected to go on providing food for a small
army. Cadfael would have expected rather that they would prefer
combing the soft coast southward from the open sea, Owain’s
muster notwithstanding. Yet this small hunter set off silently into
the strait. In that direction lay only the long passage of the
Menai, or, alternatively, she could be meaning to round the bar of
shingle and turn south into the bay by favour of this high tide.
Unlikely, on the face of it, though so small a fish could find
ample draught for some hours yet, until the tide was again well on
the ebb towards its lowest. A larger craft, Cadfael reflected
thoughtfully, would never venture there. Could that in itself be
the reason why this one was chosen, and dispatched alone? Then for
what nocturnal purpose?”
“So they’re gone,” said Heledd’s voice
behind him, very softly and somberly.
She had come up at his shoulder soundlessly, barefoot in the
sand still warm from the day’s sunlight. She was looking down
to the shore as he was, and her gaze followed the faintly luminous
single stroke of the longship’s wake, withdrawing rapidly
eastward. Cadfael turned to look at her, where she stood composed
and still, the cloud of her long hair about her.
“So they’re gone! Had you wind of it
beforehand? It does not surprise you!”
“No,” she said, “it does not surprise me. Not
that I know anything of what is in their minds, but there has been
something brewing all day since Cadwaladr so spited them as he did.
What they are planning for him I do not know, and what it may well
mean for all the rest of us I dare not guess, but surely nothing
good.”
“That is Turcaill’s ship,” said Cadfael. It
was already so far lost in the darkness that they could follow it
now only with the mind’s eye. But it would not yet have
reached the end of the shingle bar.
“So it would be,” she said. “If there’s
mischief afoot, he must be in it. There’s nothing Otir could
demand of him, however mad, but he would plunge into it headfirst,
joyfully, with never a thought for the consequences.”
“And you have thought of the possible consequences,”
Cadfael deduced reasonably, “and do not like them.”
“No,” she said vehemently, “I do not like
them! There could be battle and slaughter if by some foul chance he
kills a man of Owain’s. It needs no more to start such a
blaze.”
“And what makes you think he is going anywhere near
Owain’s men, to risk such a chance?”
“How should I know what the fool has in mind?” she
said impatiently. “What troubles me is what he may bring down
on the rest of us.”
“I would not so readily score him down as a fool,”
said Cadfael mildly. “I would have reckoned him as shrewd in
the wits as he is an able man of his hands. Whatever he’s
about, judge it when he returns, for it’s my belief
he’ll come back successful.” He was careful not to add:
“So leave fretting over him!” She would have denied any
such concern, though now with less ferocity than once she would
have attempted. Best leave well alone. However she might hope to
deceive others, Heledd was not the girl to be able to deceive
herself.
And away there to the south in Owain’s camp was the man
she had never yet seen, Ieuan ab Ifor, not much past thirty, which
is not all that old, well thought of by his prince, holder of good
lands, and personable to the beholder’s eye, possessed of
every asset but one, and invisible and negligible without it. He
was not the man she had chosen.
“Tomorrow will show,” said Heledd, with relentless
practicality. “We had best go get our sleep, and be ready for
it.”
They had rounded the tip of the shingle bar, and
kept well out in the main channel as they turned southward into the
bay. Once well within, they could draw inshore and keep a watch on
the coastline for the first outlying pickets of Owain’s camp.
Turcaill’s boy Leif kneeled on the tiny foredeck, narrowing
his eyes attentively upon the shore. He was fifteen years old, and
spoke the Welsh of Gwynedd, for his mother had been snatched from
this same north-western coast at twelve years old, on a passing
Danish raid, and had married a Dane of the Dublin kingdom. But she
had never forgotten her language, and had spoken it always with her
son, from the time that he learned to speak at all. A half-naked
boy in the high summer, Leif could go among the Welsh trefs and the
fishing villages here and pass for one of their own, and his talent
for acquiring information had brought in beforehand a useful
harvest.
“Cadwaladr has kept touch always with those who hold by
him,” Leif had reported cheerfully, “and there are some
among his brother’s muster now would go with him if he
attempted some act of his own. And I hear them say he has sent word
south from Owain’s camp to his men in Ceredigion. What word
nobody knows, whether to come and join him in arms, or whether to
be ready to put together money and cattle if he is forced to pay
what he promised us. But if a messenger comes asking for him
he’ll think it no harm, rather to his gain.”
And there was more to be told, the fruit of much attentive
listening. “Owain will not have him close to him. He keeps a
few of his own about him now, and has made his base at the southern
edge of the camp, in the corner nearest the bay. There if news
comes for him from his old lands, he can let the messenger in and
Owain need not know. For he’ll play one hand against the
other however his vantage lies,” said Leif knowingly.
There was no arguing with that. Everyone who knew Cadwaladr knew
it for truth. If the Danes had been slow to realise it, they knew
it now. And Leif could be the messenger as well as any other. At
fourteen a Welsh boy becomes a man, and is acknowledged as a
man.
The ship drew in cautiously closer to shore. Outlines of dune
and shingle and scattered bushes showed as denser or paler bulks in
the dark, slipping by on their right hand. And presently the outer
fringe of the Welsh camp became perceptible rather by the lingering
intimations of humanity, the smoke of fires, the resinous odors of
newly split wood in the lengths of stockade, even the mingled,
murmurous sounds of such activity as persisted into the night, than
by anything seen or clearly heard. The steersman brought his barque
still closer, wary of the undulations of marsh grass beneath the
placid surface of the shallows, until they should have passed the
main body of the camp, and drawn alongside that southern corner
where Cadwaladr was reputed to have set up his camp within the
camp, drawing about him men of his old following, whose adherence
to his brother remained less reliable than to their former prince.
More than one fashion of messenger could make contact with him
there, and other tidings reach him besides the gratifying news that
his lavish generosity was still remembered by some, and himself
still held in respect as lord and prince, to whom old fealty was
due. He could still be reminded, not only of privileges, but of
responsibilities owing, and debts unpaid.
The line of the shore receded from them, dipping westward, and
closed with them again gradually as they slid past. The faint
warmth and stir that was not quite sound, but only some primitive
sensitivity to the presence of other human creatures, unseen,
unheard, watchful and potentially hostile, fell behind then into
the empty silence of the night.
“We are past,” said Turcaill softly into the
steersman’s ear. “Lay us inshore.”
The oars dipped softly. The lithe little ship slid smoothly in
among the tufted grasses, and touched bottom as gently as a feather
lighting. Leif swung his legs over the side, and dropped into the
shallows. There was firm sand under his bare feet, and the water
reached barely halfway to his knee. He looked back along the line
of the shore where they had passed, and even over the darkened camp
there still hung a faint glow left over from the day.
“We’re close. Wait till I bring word.”
He was gone, winding his way in through the salt grasses and the
straggle of scrub to the lift of the dunes beyond, narrow here, and
soon rising into rough pasture, and then into good fields. His
slight shape melted into the soft, dense darkness.
He was back within a quarter of an hour, sliding out of the
night as silently as a wisp of mist before they were prepared for
his return, though they had waited without impatience, with ears
pricked for any alien sound. Leif waded through the salt bush and
the shallow water cold round his legs, and reached to hold by the
ship’s side and whisper in an excited hiss: “I have
found him! And close! He has a man of his own on the guard-post.
Nothing simpler than to come to him in secret from this side. Here
they expect no attack by land, he can go and come as he pleases,
and so can some who would liefer do his bidding than
Owain’s.”
“You have not been within?” demanded Turcaill.
“Past the guard?”
“No need! Someone else found the way there not a moment
ahead of me, coming from the south. I was in the bushes, close
enough to hear him challenged. He had but to open his mouth,
whoever he is, and he was welcome within. And I saw where he was
led. He’s fast within Cadwaladr’s tent with him now,
and even the guard sent back to his watch. There’s none
inside there now but Cadwaladr and his visitor, and only one guard
between us and the pair of them.”
“Are you sure Cadwaladr is there?” demanded Torsten,
low-voiced. “You cannot have seen him.”
“I heard his voice. I waited on the man from the time we
left Dublin,” said the boy firmly. “Do you think I do
not know the sound of him by now?”
“And you heard what was said? This other—did he name
him?”
“No name! ‘You!’ he said, loud and clear, but
no name. But he was surprised and glad, more than glad of him. You
may take the pair of them, once the guard is silenced, and let the
man himself tell you his name.”
“We came for one,” said Turcaill, “and with
one we’ll go back. And no killing! Owain is out of this
quarrel, but he’ll be in fast enough if we do murder on one
of his men.”
“But won’t stir for his brother?” marvelled
Leif, half under his breath.
“What should he fear for his brother? Not a scratch upon
Cadwaladr, bear in mind! If he pays his proper ransom he gets his
leave to go, as whole as when he hired us. Owain knows it better
than any. No need to have it said. Over with you, then, and
we’ll be out with the tide.”
Their plans had been made beforehand; and if they had taken no
count of this unexpected traveller from the south, they could very
simply be adapted to accommodate him. Two men alone together in a
tent conveniently close to the rim of the camp offered an easy
target, once the guard was put out of action. Cadwaladr’s own
man, in his confidence and in whatever schemes he had in mind, must
take his chance of rough handling, but need come to no permanent
harm.
“I will take care of the guard,” said Torsten, first
to slip over the side to where Leif waited. Five more of
Turcaill’s oarsmen followed their leader into the salt marsh
and across the sandy beach. The night received them silently and
indifferently, and Leif went before, retracing his own path from
cover to sparse cover towards the perimeter of the camp. In the
shelter of a straggling cluster of low trees he halted, peering
ahead between the branches. The line of the defenses was
perceptible ahead merely as a more solid and rigid darkness where
every other shadow was sinuous and elusive. But Cadwaladr’s
liegeman could be seen against the gap which was the gate he
guarded, as he paced back and forth across it, head and shoulders
clear against the sky. A big man, and armed, but casual in his
movements, expecting no alarm. Torsten watched the leisurely patrol
for some minutes, marked its extent, and slipped sidelong among the
trees to be behind its furthest eastward point, where bushes
approached to within a few yards of the stockade, and a man could
draw close without being heard or seen.
The guard was whistling softly to himself as he turned in the
soft sand, and Torsten’s sinewy left arm took him hard around
body and arms, and the right clamped a palm hard over his mouth and
cut off the whistle abruptly. He groped frantically upward to try
and grip the arm that was gagging him, but could not reach high
enough, and his struggles to kick viciously backward cost him his
balance and did no harm to Torsten, who swung him off his feet and
dropped bodily over him into the sand, holding him face-down. By
that time Turcaill was beside them, ready to thrust a fold of
woollen cloth into the man’s mouth as soon as he was allowed
to raise himself, and empty it splutteringly of sand and grass.
They wound him head and shoulders in his own cloak, and bound him
fast hand and foot. There they bestowed him safely enough, if none
too comfortably, among the bushes, and turned their attention to
the rim of the camp. There had been no outcry, and there was no
stirring within the fences. Somewhere about the prince’s
tents there would be men wakeful and alert, but here at the
remotest corner, deliberately chosen by Cadwaladr for his own
purposes, there was no one at hand to turn back retribution from
him.
Only Turcaill and Torsten and two others followed Leif as he
padded softly in through the unguarded gate, and along the stockade
towards the remembered spot where he had caught the unmistakable,
authoritative tones of Cadwaladr’s voice, raised in
astonished pleasure as he recognised his midnight visitor. The
lines of the camp ended here, in stillness and silence, the
invaders moved as shadows among shadows. Leif pointed, and said no
word. There was no need. Even in a military camp Cadwaladr would
have his rank heeded and his comforts attended to. The tent was
ample, proof against wind and weather, and no doubt as well
supplied within. At the edges of the flap that shielded its
entrance fine lines of light showed, and on the still air of the
night lowered voices made a level, confidential murmur, too soft
for words. The messenger from the south was still there with his
prince, their heads together over tidings brought and plans to be
hatched.
Turcaill set his hand to the tent-flap, and waited until
Torsten, with his drawn dagger in his hand, had circled the tent to
find a rear seam where the skins were sewn together. Thin leather
thongs or greased cord, either could be cut with a sharp enough
blade. The light within, by the steady way it burned and its low
source, must be a simple wick in a small dish of oil, set perhaps
on a stool or a trestle. Bodies moving outside would show no
outline, while Torsten as he selected his place, could sense rather
than see the vague bulks of the two within. Close indeed,
attentive, absorbed, expecting no interruption.
Turcaill whipped aside the tent-flap and plunged within so fast,
and with two others so hard on his heels, that Cadwaladr had no
time to do more than leap to his feet in indignant alarm, his mouth
open to vent his outrage, before there was a drawn dagger at his
throat, and princely anger at being rudely interrupted changed
instantly into frozen understanding and devout and quivering
stillness. He was a foolhardy man, but of excellently quick
perceptions, and his foolhardiness did not extend so far as to
argue with a naked blade when his own hands were empty. It was the
man who sat beside him on the well-furnished brychan who sprang to
the attack, lunging upward at Turcaill’s throat. But behind
him Torsten’s knife had sliced down the leather thongs that
bound the skins of the tent together, and a great hand took the
stranger by the hair, and dragged him backwards. Before he could
rise again he was swathed in the coverings of the bed and held fast
by Turcaill’s men.
Cadwaladr stood motionless and silent, well aware of the steel
just pricking his throat. His fine black eyes were glittering with
fury, his teeth set with the effort of restraint, but he made no
move as the companion he had welcomed with pleasure was trussed
into helplessness, in spite of his struggles, and disposed of
almost tenderly on his lord’s bed.
“Make no sound,” said Turcaill, “and come to
no harm. Cry out, and my hand may slip. There is a little matter of
business Otir wishes to discuss with you.”
“This you will rue!” said Cadwaladr though his
teeth.
“So I may,” Turcaill agreed accommodatingly,
“but not yet. I would offer you the choice between walking or
being dragged, but there’s no putting any trust in
you.” And to his two oarsmen he said: “Secure
him!” and drew back his hand to sheathe the dagger he
held.
Cadwaladr was not quick enough to seize the one instant when he
might have cried out loudly and raised a dozen men to his aid. As
the steel was withdrawn he did open his mouth to call on his own,
but a rug from the brychan was flung over his head, and a broad
hand clamped it smotheringly into his open mouth. The only sound
that emerged was a strangled moan, instantly crushed. He lashed out
then with fists and feet, but the harsh woollen cloth was wound
tightly about him, and bound fast.
Outside the tent Leif stood sentinel with pricked ears, and wide
eyes sweeping the dark spaces of the camp for any movement that
might threaten their enterprise, but all was still. If Cadwaladr
had desired and ordered private and undisturbed converse with his
visitor, he had done Turcaill’s work for him very thoroughly.
No one stirred. In the copse where they had left the guard the last
of their party came looming out of the dark to join them, and
laughed softly at sight of the burden they carried between them,
slung by the ropes that pinioned him.
The guard?” asked Turcaill in a whisper.
“Well alive, and muttering curses. And we’d best be
aboard before they find he’s missing and come looking for
him.”
“And the other one?” Leif ventured to ask softly, as
they wound their way back from cover to cover towards the beach and
the saltings. “What have you done with him?”
“Left him to his rest,” said Turcaill.
“You said no killing!”
“And there’s been none. Not a scratch on him, you
can be easy. Owain has no cause for feud against us more than he
had from the moment we set foot on his soil.”
“And we still don’t know,” marvelled Leif,
padding steadily along beside him into the moist fringe left by the
receding tide, “who the other one was, and what he was doing
there. You may yet wish you’d secured him while you
could.”
“We came for one, and we’re taking back one. All we
wanted and needed,” said Turcaill.
The crew left aboard reached to hoist Cadwaladr over into the
well between the benches, and help their fellows after. The
steersman leaned upon his heavy steer board, the inshore rowers
thrust off with their oars, poling the little ship quite lightly
and smoothly back along the furrow she had ploughed in the sand,
until she rode clear and lifted joyously into the ebb of the
tide.
Before dawn they delivered their prize, with some
pride, to an Otir who had just roused from sleep, but came
bright-eyed and content to the encounter. Cadwaladr emerged from
his stifling wrappings flushed and tousled and viciously enraged,
but containing his bitter fury within an embattled silence.
“Had you trouble by the way?” asked Otir, eyeing his
prisoner with shrewd satisfaction. Unmarked, unblooded, extracted
from among his followers without trampling his formidable
brother’s toes, or harming any other soul. A mission very
neatly accomplished, and one that should be made to show a
profit.
“None,” said Turcaill. “The man had prepared
his own fall, withdrawing himself so to the very rim, and planting
a man of his own on guard. Not for nothing! I fancy he has been
looking for word from his old lands, and made shift to keep a door
open. For I doubt he’ll get any sympathy from Owain, or
expects any.”
At that Cadwaladr did open his mouth, unlocking his set teeth
with an effort, for it was doubtful if he himself quite believed
what he was about to say. “You misread the strength of the
Welsh blood-tie. Brother will hold by brother. You have brought
Owain down on you with all his host, and so you will
discover.”
“As brother held by brother when you came hiring Dublin
men to threaten your brother with warfare,” said
Otir, and laughed briefly and harshly.
“You will see,” said Cadwaladr hotly, “what
Owain will venture for my sake.”
“So we shall, and so will you. I doubt you’ll find
less comfort in it than we shall. He has given both you and me fair
notice that your quarrel is not his quarrel, and you must pay your
own score. And so you shall,” said Otir with glossy
satisfaction, “before you set foot again outside this camp. I
have you, and I’ll keep you until you pay me what you
promised. Every coin, every calf, or the equal in goods we will
have out of you. That done, you may go free, back to your lands or
beggarly into the world again, as Owain pleases. And I warn you,
never again look to Dublin for help, we know now the worth of your
word. And that being so,” he said, thoughtfully plying his
massive jowls in a muscular fist, “we’ll make sure of
you, now that we have you!” He turned upon Turcaill, who
stood by watching this encounter with detached interest, his own
part already done. “Give him in charge to Torsten to keep,
but see him tethered. We know all too well his word and oath are no
bond to him, so we may rightly use other means. Put chains on him,
and see him watched and kept close.”
“You dare not!” Cadwaladr spat on a hissing breath,
and made a convulsive movement to launch himself against his judge,
but ready hands plucked him back with insulting ease, and held him
writhing and sweating between his grinning guards. In the face of
such casual and indifferent usage his boiling rage seemed hardly
more than a turbulent child’s tantrum, and burned itself out
inevitably into the cold realization that he was helpless, and must
resign himself to the reversion of his fortunes, for he could do
nothing to change it.
“Pay what you owe us, and go,” said Otir with bleak
simplicity. And to Torsten: “Take him away!”
Chapter Eleven
« ^ »
Two men of Cuhelyn’s company, making the
complete rounds of the southern rim of the encampment, found the
remotest gate unguarded in the early hours of the morning, and
reported as much to their captain. If he had been any other than
Cuhelyn this early check upon the defenses would not have been
ordered in the first place. To him the presence within
Owain’s camp of Cadwaladr, tolerated if not accepted, was
deep offence, not only for the sake of Anarawd dead, but also for
the sake of Owain living. Nor had Cadwaladr’s proceedings
within the camp been any alleviation of the suspicion and
detestation in which Cuhelyn bore him. Retirement into this remote
corner might have been interpreted by others as showing a certain
sensitivity to the vexation the sight of him must cause his
brother. Cuhelyn knew him better, an arrogant creature blind to
other men’s needs and feelings. And never to be trusted,
since all his acts were reckless and unpredictable. So Cuhelyn had
made it his business, with nothing said to any other, to keep a
close eye upon Cadwaladr’s movements, and the behavior of
those who gathered about him. Where they mustered, there was need
of vigilance. The defection of a guard brought Cuhelyn to the gate
in haste, before the lines were astir. They found the missing man
lying unhurt but wound up like a roll of woolen cloth among the
bushes not far from the fence. He had contrived to loosen the cord
that bound his hands, though not yet enough to free them, and had
worked the folds of cloth partly loose from his mouth. The muffled
grunts that were all he could utter were enough to locate him as
soon as the searchers reached the trees. Released, he came stiffly
to his feet, and reported from swollen lips what had befallen him
in the night.
“Danes—five at least—They came up from the
bay. There was a boy could be Welsh showed them the
way…”
“Danes!” Cuhelyn echoed, between wonder and
enlightenment. He had expected devilment of some kind from
Cadwaladr, was it now possible that this meant devilment aimed
against Cadwaladr, instead? The thought gave him some sour
amusement, but he did not yet quite believe in it. This could still
be mischief of another kind, Dane and Welshman regretting their
severance and compounding their differences secretly to act
together in Owain’s despite.
He set off in haste to Cadwaladr’s tent, and walked in
without ceremony. A rising breeze blew in his face, flapping the
severed skins behind the brychan. The swaddled figure on the bed
heaved and strained, uttering small animal sounds. This second
bound victim confounded all possible notions that might account for
the first. Why should a party of Danes, having made its way
clandestinely here to Cadwaladr, next proceed to bind and silence
him, and then leave him here to be found and set free as inevitably
as the sun rises? If they came to enter into renewed conspiracy
with him, if they came to secure him hostage for what he owed them,
either way it made no sense. So Cuhelyn was reflecting bewilderedly
as he untied the ropes that pinioned arms and legs, plucking the
knots loose with grim patience with his single hand, and unwound
the twisted rugs from about the heaving body. A hand scored by the
rope came up gropingly as it was freed, and plucked back the last
folds from a shock head of disordered dark hair, and a face Cuhelyn
knew well.
Not Cadwaladr’s imperious countenance, but the younger,
thinner, more intense and sensitive face of Cuhelyn’s mirror
twin, Gwion, the last hostage from Ceredigion.
They came to Owain’s headquarters together,
the one not so much shepherding the other as deigning to walk
behind him, the other stalking ahead to make it plain to all
viewers that he was not being driven, but going in vehement earnest
where he wished to go. The air between them vibrated with the
animosity that had never existed between them until this moment,
and by its very intensity and pain could not endure long. Owain saw
it in the stiff set of their bodies and the arduous blankness of
their faces when they entered his presence and stood side by side
before him, awaiting his judgment.
Two dark, stern, passionate young men, the one a shade taller
and leaner, the other a shade sturdier and with coloring of a less
vivid darkness, but seen thus shoulder to shoulder, quivering with
tension, they might indeed have been twin brothers. The glaring
difference was that one of them was lopped of half a limb, and that
by an act of blazing treachery on the part of the lord the other
served and worshipped. But that was not what held them
counterpoised in this intensity of anger and hostility, so strange
to both of them, and causing them both such indignant pain.
Owain looked from the one grim face to the other, and asked
neutrally of both: “What does this mean?”
“It means,” said Cuhelyn, unlocking his set teeth,
“that this man’s word is worth no more than his
master’s. I found him trussed up and gagged in
Cadwaladr’s tent. The why and how he must tell you, for I
know nothing more. But Cadwaladr is gone, and this man left, and
the guard who kept the lines there says that Danes came up from the
bay in the night, and left him, too, bound among the bushes to open
a way within. If all this to-do has a meaning, he must deliver it,
not I. But I know, and so do you, my lord, better than any, that he
gave his oath not to attempt flight from Aber, and he has broken
his oath and befouled his bond.”
“Scarcely to his own gain,” said Owain, and forbore
to smile, eyeing Gwion’s face marked by the harsh folds of
the brychan, his black hair tangled and erected, and the swollen
lips bruised by the gag. And to the young man so grimly silent and
defiantly braced he said mildly: “And how do you say, Gwion?
Are you forsworn? Dishonoured, with your oath in the
mire?”
The misshapen lips parted, and shook for a moment with the
recoil from tension. So low as to be barely audible, Gwion said
remorselessly: “Yes.”
It was Cuhelyn who twisted a little aside, and averted his eyes.
Gwion fixed his black gaze on Owain’s face, and drew deeper
breath, having freely owned to the worst.
“And why did you so, Gwion? I have known you some while
now. Read me your riddle. Truly I left you work to do in Aber, in
the matter of Bledri ap Rhys dead. Truly I had your parole. So much
we all know. Now tell me how it came that you so belied yourself as
to abandon your troth.”
“Let it lie!” said Gwion, quivering. “I did
it! Let me pay for it.”
“Nevertheless, tell it!” said Owain with formidable
quietness. “For I will know!”
“You think I will use excuses in my own defense,”
said Gwion. His voice had steadied and firmed into a calm of utter
detachment, indifferent to whatever might happen to him. He began
gropingly, as if he himself had never until now probed the
complexities of his own behavior, and was afraid of what he might
find. “No, what I have done I have done, I do not excuse it,
it is shameful. But I saw shame every way, and no choice
but to accept and bear the lesser shame. No, wait. This is not for
me to say. Let me tell it as I did it. You left it to me to send
back Bledri’s body to his wife for burial, and to convey to
her the news of how he died. I thought I might without offence do
her the grace of facing her, and bringing him to her myself,
intending a return to my captivity—if I can so call that easy
condition I had with you, my lord. So I went to her in Ceredigion,
and there we buried Bledri. And there we talked of what Cadwaladr
your brother had done, bringing a Danish fleet to enforce his
right, and I came to see that both for you and for him, and for all
Gwynedd and Wales, the best that could be was that you two should
be brought together, and together send the Danes empty-handed back
to Dublin. The thought did not come from me,” he said
meticulously. “It came from the old, wise men who have
outlived wars and come to reason. I was, I am, Cadwaladr’s
man, I can be no other. But when they had shown me that for his
very sake there must be peace made between you two brothers, then I
saw as they saw. And I made cause with such of his old captains as
I could in such haste, and gathered a force loyal to him, but
intent on the reconciliation I also desired to see. And I broke my
oath,” said Gwion with brutal vehemence. “Whether our
fine plans had succeeded or failed, I tell you openly, I would have
fought for him. Against the Danes, joyfully. What business had they
making such a bargain?
Against you, my lord Owain, with a very heavy heart, but if it
came to it, I would have done it. For he is my lord, and I serve no
other. So I did not go back to Aber. I brought a hundred good
fighting men of my own mind to deliver to Cadwaladr, whatever use
it might be his intent to make of them.”
“And you found him in my camp,” said Owain, and
smiled. “And half of your design seemed to be already done
for you, and our peace made.”
“So I thought and hoped.”
“And did you find it so? For you have talked with him,
have you not, Gwion? Before the Danes came up from the bay, and
took him with them a prisoner, and left you behind? Was he of your
mind?
A brief contortion shook Gwion’s dark face. “They
came, and they have taken him. I know no more than that. Now I have
told you, and I am in your hands. He is my lord, and if you will
have me to fight under you I will yet be of service to him, but if
you deny me that, you have the right. I thought on him beleaguered,
and my heart could not stand it. Nevertheless, as I have given him
my fealty, so now I have given for him even my honor, and I know
all too well I am utterly the worse by its loss. Do as you see
fit.”
“Do you tell me,” said Owain, studying him narrowly,
“that he had no time to tell you how things stand between us
two? If I will have you to fight under me, you say! Why, so I
might, and not the worst man ever I had under my banner, if I had
fighting in mind, but while I can get what I aim at without
fighting, I have no such matter in mind. What makes you think I may
be about to sound the onset?”
“The Danes have taken your brother!” protested
Gwion, stammering and suddenly at a loss. “Surely you mean to
rescue him?”
“I have no such intent,” said Owain bluntly.
“I will not lift a finger to pluck him out of their
hands.”
“What, when they have snatched him hostage because he has
made his peace with you?”
“They have snatched him hostage,” said Owain,
“for the two thousand marks he promised them if they would
come and hammer me into giving him back the lands he
forfeited.”
“No matter, no matter what it is they hold against him,
though that cannot be the whole! He is your brother, and in enemy
hands, he is in peril of his life! You cannot leave him
so!”
“He is in no peril at all of the least harm,” said
Owain, “if he pays what he owes. As he will. They will keep
him as tenderly as their own babes, and turn him loose without a
scratch on him when they have loaded his cattle and goods and gear
to the worth he promised them. They do not want outright war any
more than I do, provided they get their dues. And they know that if
they maim or kill my brother, then they will have to deal
with me. We understand each other, the Danes and I. But put my men
into the field to pull him out of the mire he chose for himself?
No! Not a man, not a blade, not a bow!”
“This I cannot believe!” said Gwion, staring
wide-eyed.
“Tell him, Cuhelyn, how this contention stands,”
said Owain, leaning back with a sigh from such irreconcilable and
innocent loyalty.
“My lord Owain offered his brother parley, without
prejudice,” said Cuhelyn shortly, “and told him he must
get rid of his Danes before there could be any question of his
lands being given back to him. And there was but one way to send
them home, and that was to pay what he had promised. The quarrel
was his, and he must resolve it. But Cadwaladr believed he knew
better, and if he forced my lord’s hand, my lord would have
to join with him, to drive the Danes out by battle. And he would
have to pay nothing! So he delivered defiance to Otir, and bade him
be off back to Dublin, for that Owain and Cadwaladr had made their
peace, and would drive them into the sea if they did not up anchor
and go. In which,” said Cuhelyn through his teeth, and with
his eyes fierce and steady and defiant upon Owain, who after all
was brother to this devious man, and might recoil from too plain
speaking, “he lied. There was no such peace, and no such
alliance. He lied, and he broke a solemn compact, and looked to be
praised and approved for it! Worse, by such a cheat he left in
peril three hostages, two monks and a girl taken by the Danes. Over
them my lord has spread his hand, offering a fair price for their
ransom. But for Cadwaladr he will not lift a finger. And now you
know,” he said fiercely, “why the Danes have sent by
night to fetch him away, and why they have dealt fairly by you, who
have committed no offence against them. They have shed no blood,
harmed no man of my lord’s following. From Cadwaladr they
have a debt to collect. For even to Danes a prince of the Welsh
people should keep his word.”
All this he delivered in a steady, deliberate voice, and yet at
a white heat of outrage that kept Gwion silent to the end.
“All that Cuhelyn tells you is truth,” said
Owain.
Gwion opened stiff lips to say hollowly: “I do believe it.
Nevertheless, he is still your brother and my lord. I know him rash
and impulsive. He acts without thought. I cannot therefore abjure
my fealty, if you can renounce your blood.”
“That,” said Owain with princely patience, “I
have not done. Let him keep his word to those he brought in to
recover his right for him, and deliver my Welsh soil from an
unwanted invader, and he is my brother as before. But I would have
him clean of malice and false dealing, and I will not put my seal
to those things he has done which dishonor him.”
“I can make no such stipulation,” said Gwion with a
wry and painful smile, “nor set any such limit to my
allegiance. I am forsworn myself, even in this his fellow. I go
with him wherever he goes, even into hell.”
“You are in my mercy,” said Owain, “and I have
not hell in mind for you or him.”
“Yet you will not help him now! Oh, my lord,”
pleaded Gwion hotly, “consider what men will say of you, if
you leave a brother in the hands of his enemies.”
“Barely a week ago,” said Owain with arduous
patience, “these Danes were his friends and comrades in arms.
If he had not mistaken me and cheated them out of their price they
would be so still. If I pass over his treachery to them, I will not
pass over his gross and foolish misreading of me. I do not like
being taken for a man who will look kindly on oath-breakers, and
men who go back shamefully on bargains freely made.”
“You condemn me no less than him,” said Gwion,
writhing.
“You at least I understand. Your treason comes of too
immovable a loyalty. It does you no credit,” said Owain,
wearying of forbearance, “but it will not turn away your
friends from you.”
“I am in your mercy, then. What will you do with
me?”
“Nothing,” said the prince. “Stay or go, as
you please. We will feed and house you as we did at Aber, if you
want to stay, and wait out his fortune. If not, go when and where
you please. You are his man, not mine. No one will hinder
you.”
“And you no longer ask for my submission?”
“I no longer value it,” said Owain, and rose with a
motion of his hand to dismiss them both from his presence.
They went out together, as they had entered, but
once out of the farmstead Cuhelyn turned away, and would have
departed brusquely and without a word, if Gwion had not caught him
by the arm.
“He damns me with his mercy! He could have had my life, or
loaded me with the chains I have earned. Do you, too, avert your
eyes from me? Had it been otherwise, had it been Owain himself, or
Hywel, beleaguered among enemies, would not you have set your
fealty to him above even your word, and gone to him forsworn if
need were?”
Cuhelyn had pulled up as abruptly as he had turned away. His
face was set. “No. I have never given my fealty but to lords
absolute in honor themselves, and demanding as much of those who
serve them. Had I done as you have done, and brought the dishonor
as a gift to Hywel, he would have struck me down and cast me out.
Cadwaladr, I make no doubt, welcomed and was glad of
you.”
“It was a hard thing to do,” said Gwion with the
solemnity of despair. “Harder than dying.”
But Cuhelyn had already plucked himself free, with fastidious
care, and was striding away through the camp just stirring into
life with the morning light.
Among Owain’s men Gwion felt himself an exile and an
outcast, even though they accepted his presence in their midst
without demur, and took no pains to avoid or exclude him. Here he
had no function. His hands and skills did not belong to this lord,
and to his own lord he could not come. He passed through the lines
withdrawn and mute, and from a hillock within the northern
perimeter of the encampment he stood for a long time peering
towards the distant dunes where Cadwaladr was a prisoner, a hostage
for two thousand marks’ worth in stock and money and goods,
the hire of a Danish fleet.
Within his vision the fields in the distance gave way to the
first undulations of sand, and the scattered trees dwindled into
clusters of bushes and scrub. Somewhere beyond, perhaps even in
chains after his recapture, Cadwaladr brooded and waited for help
which his brother coldly withheld. No matter what the offence, not
the breaking of his pledged word, not even the murder of Anarawd,
if indeed such guilt touched him, nothing could justify for Gwion
Owain’s abandonment of his brother. His own breach of faith
in leaving Aber Gwion saw as unforgivable, and had no blame for
those who condemned it, but there was nothing Cadwaladr had done or
could do that would have turned his devout vassal from revering and
following him. Once given and accepted, fealty was for life.
And he could do nothing! True, he had leave to depart if he so
wished, and also true, he had a company of a hundred good fighting
men bivouacked not many miles away, but what was that against the
numbers the Danes must have, and the defenses they had secured? An
ill-considered attempt to storm their camp and free Cadwaladr might
only cost him his life, or, more likely, cause the Danes to up
anchor and put to sea, where they could not be matched, and take
their prisoner away with them, back to Ireland, out of reach of any
rescue.
The distant prospect afforded him no enlightenment, and no
glimmer of a way forward towards the liberation of his lord. It
grieved him that Cadwaladr, who had already lost so much, should be
forced to pay out what remained to him in treasury and stock to buy
his liberty, without even the certainty that he might recover his
lost lands, for which the sum demanded of him had been promised in
the first place. Even if Owain was right, and the Danes intended
him no harm provided the debt was paid, the humiliation of
captivity and submission would gnaw like an ulcer in that proud
spirit. Gwion grudged Otir and his men every mark of their fee. It
might be said that Cadwaladr should never have invoked alien aid
against a brother, but such impetuous and flawed impulses had
always threatened Cadwaladr’s wisdom, and men who loved him
had borne with them as with the perilous cantrips of a valiant and
foolhardy child, and made the best of the resultant chaos. It was
not kind or just to withdraw now, when most it was needed, the
indulgence which had never before failed him.
Gwion moved on along the ridge, still straining his eyes towards
the north. A fringe of trees crowned the crest, squat and warped by
the salt air, and leaning inland from the prevailing wind. And
there beyond their uneven line, still and sturdy and himself rooted
as a tree, a man stood and stared towards the unseen Danish force
as Gwion was staring. A man perhaps in his middle thirties,
square-built and muscular, the first fine salting of grey in his
brown hair, his eyes, over-shadowed beneath thick black brows,
fixed darkly upon the sand-molded curves of the naked horizon. He
went unarmed, and bare of breast and arms in the sunlight of the
morning, a powerful body formidably still in his concentration on
distance. Though he heard Gwion’s step in the dry grass
beneath the trees, and it was plain that he must have heard it, he
did not turn his head or stir from his fixed surveillance for some
moments, until Gwion stood within touch of him. Even then he
stirred and turned about only slowly and indifferently.
“I know,” he said, as though they had been aware of
each other for a long time. “Gazing will bring it no
nearer.”
It was Gwion’s own thought, worded very aptly, and it took
the breath out of him for a moment. Warily he asked: “You,
too? What stake have you over there among the Danes?”
“A wife,” said the other man, with a brief, dry
force that needed no more words to express the enormity of his
deprivation.
“A wife!” echoed Gwion uncomprehendingly. “By
what strange chance…” What was it Cuhelyn had said, of
three hostages left in peril after Cadwaladr’s defection and
defiance, two monks and a girl taken by the Danes? Two monks and a
girl had set out from Aber in Owain’s retinue. To fall victim
in the first place to Cadwaladr’s mercenaries, and then to be
left to pay the price of Cadwaladr’s betrayal, if the minds
of the Danes ran to vengeance? Oh, the account was growing long,
and Owain’s obduracy became ever easier to understand. But
Cadwaladr had not thought, he never thought before, he acted first
and regretted afterwards, as by now he must be regretting
everything he had done since he made the first fatal mistake of
fleeing to the kingdom of Dublin for redress.
Yes, the girl—Gwion remembered the girl. A black-browed
beauty, tall, slender, and mute, serving wine and mead about the
prince’s table without a smile, except occasionally the
malicious and grieving smile with which she plagued the cleric they
said was her father, reminding him on what thin ice he walked, and
how she could shatter it under him if she so pleased. That story
had been whispered around the llys from ostler to maid to armorer
to page, and come early to the ears of the last hostage from
Ceredigion, who alone could observe all these goings-on with an
indifferent eye, since Gwynedd was not home to him, and Owain was
not his lord, nor Gilbert of Saint Asaph his bishop. The same girl?
She had been on her way, he recalled, to match with a man of
Anglesey in Owain’s service.
“You are that Ieuan ab Ifor,” he said, “who
was to marry the canon’s daughter.”
“I am that same,” said Ieuan, bending thick black
brows at him. “And who are you, who know my name and what
I’m doing here? I have not seen you among the prince’s
liegemen until now.”
“For reason enough. I am not his liegeman. I am Gwion, the
last of the hostages he brought from Ceredigion. My allegiance was
and is to Cadwaladr,” said Gwion starkly, and watched the
slow fire kindle and glow in the sharp eyes that watched him.
“For good or ill, I am his man, but I would far rather it
should be for good.”
“It is his doing,” said Ieuan, smoldering,
“that Meirion’s daughter is left captive among these
sea-pirates. Such good as ever came from him you may measure within
the cup of an acorn, and like an acorn feed it to the pigs. He
brings barbarian raiders into Gwynedd, and then goes back on his
bargain, and takes to his heels into safety, leaving innocent
hostages to bear the brunt of Otir’s rage. He has been as
dire a curse to his own best kin as he was to Anarawd, whom he had
done to death.”
“Take heed not to go too far in his dispraise,” said
Gwion, but in weariness and grief rather than indignation,
“for I may not hear him miscalled.”
“Oh, be easy! God knows I cannot hold it against any man
that he stands by his prince, but God send you a better prince to
stand by. You may forgive him all, no matter how he shames you, but
do not ask me to forgive him for abandoning my bride to whatever
fate the Danes keep for her.”
“The prince has declared her in his protection,”
said Gwion, “as I have heard only an hour ago. He has offered
fair ransom for her and for the two monks who came from England,
and warned to the value he sets on her safe-keeping.”
“The prince is here,” said Ieuan grimly, “and
she is there, and they have lost their grip on the one they would
liefer have in hold. Other captives may find themselves serving in
his place.”
“No,” said Gwion, “you mistake. Whatever
rancor you may have against him, be content! This past night they
have sent a ship into the bay, and put men ashore to break their
way into the camp to his tent. They have taken Cadwaladr prisoner
back with them, to pay his own ransom or suffer his own fate. No
need for another victim, they have the chosen one fast in their
hands.”
Ieuan’s rough brows, the most expressive thing about him,
knotted abruptly into a ruled line of suspicion and disbelief, and
then, confronted by Gwion’s unwavering gaze, released their
black tension into open bewilderment and wonder.
“You are deceived, that cannot be…”
“It is truth.”
“How do you know it? Who has told you?”
“There was no need for any man to tell me,” said
Gwion. “I was there with him when they came. I saw it. Four
of Otir’s Danes burst in by night. Him they took, me they
left bound and muted, as they had left the guard who kept the gate.
Here I have still the grazes of the cords with which they tied me.
See!”
They had scored his wrist deep in his efforts to break free;
there was no mistaking rope-burns. Ieuan beheld them with a long,
silent stare, assessing and accepting.
“So that is why you said to me: “You, too?”
Now I know without asking what stake you have over there
among the Danes. Hold me excused if I say plainly that your grief
is no grief to me. What may fall upon him he has brought down on
his own head. But what has my girl done to deserve the peril in
which he left her? If his capture delivers her, I am right glad of
it.”
Since there was no arguing with that, Gwion was silent.
“If I had but a dozen of my own mind,” Ieuan
pursued, rather to himself than to any other, “I would bring
her off myself, against every Dane Dublin can ship over into
Gwynedd. She is mine, and I will have her.”
“And you have not even seen her yet,” said Gwion,
shaken by the sudden convulsion of passion in a man so contained
and still.
“Ah, but I have seen her. I have been within a stone-throw
of their stockade undetected, and can do as much again. I saw her
within there, on a crest of the dunes, looking south, looking for
the deliverance no one sends her. She is more than they told me. As
lissome and bright as steel, and moves like a fawn. I would venture
for her alone, but that I dread to be her death before ever I could
break through to her.”
“I would as much for my lord,” said Gwion, grown
quiet and intent, for this bold and fervent lover had started a
vein of hope within him. “If Cadwaladr is nothing to you, and
your Heledd hardly more to me, yet if we put our heads and our
forces together we may both benefit. Two is better than one
alone.”
“But still no more than two,” said Ieuan. But he was
listening.
“Two is but the beginning. Two now may be more in a few
days. Even if they break my lord into paying his ransom, it will
take some days to bring in and load his cattle, and put together
what remains in silver coin.” He drew closer, his voice
lowered to be heard only by Ieuan, if any other should pass by.
“I did not come here alone. From Ceredigion I have collected
and led some hundred men who still hold by Cadwaladr. Oh, not for
the purpose we have in mind at this moment. I was certain that
there would be peace made between brothers, and they would combine
to drive out the Danes, and I brought my lord at least a fair
following to fight for him side by side with those who fight for
Owain. I would not have him go free and living only by his
brother’s grace, but at the head of a company of his own men.
I came ahead of them to carry him the news, only to find that Owain
has abandoned him. And now the Danes have taken him.”
Ieuan’s face had resumed its impassive calm, but behind
the wide brow and distant gaze a sharp mind was busy with the
calculation of chances hitherto unforeseen. “How far distant
are your hundred men?”
“Two days’ march. I left my horse, and a groom who
rode with me, a mile south and came alone to find Cadwaladr. Now
Owain has cast me free of him into the world to stay or go, I can
return within the hour to where I left my man, and send him to
bring the company as fast as men afoot can march.”
“There are some within here,” said Ieuan,
“would welcome a venture. A few I can persuade, some will
need no persuasion.” He rubbed large, powerful hands together
softly, and shut the fingers hard on an invisible weapon.
“You and I, Gwion, will talk further of this. And before this
day is out, should you not be on your way?”
Chapter Twelve
« ^ »
It was well past noon when Torsten again
produced his prisoner, chained and humbled and choked with spleen,
before Otir. Cadwaladr’s handsome lips were grimly set, and
his black eyes burning with rage all the more bitter for being
under iron control. For all his protestations, he knew as well as
any that Owain would not now relent from the position he had taken
up. The time for empty hopes was past, and reality had engulfed him
and brought him to bay. There was no point in holding out, since
eventual submission was inevitable.
“He has a word for you,” said Torsten, grinning.
“He has no appetite for living in chains.”
“Let him speak for himself,” said Otir. “I
will pay you your two thousand marks,” said Cadwaladr. His
voice came thinly through gritted teeth, but he had himself well in
hand. “You leave me no choice, since my brother uses me
unbrotherly.” And he added, testing such shallows as were
left to him in this flood of misfortune: “You will have to
allow me a few days at liberty to have such a mass of goods and
gear collected together, for it cannot all be in silver.”
That brought a gust of throaty laughter from Torsten, and an
emphatic jerk of the head from Otir. “Oh, no, my friend! I am
not such a fool as to trust you yet again. You do not stir one step
out of here, nor shed your fetters, until my ships are loading and
ready for sea.”
“How, then, do you propose I should effect this matter of
ransom?” demanded Cadwaladr with a savage snarl. “Do
you expect my stewards to render up my cattle to you, and my purse,
simply at your orders?”
“I will use an agent I can trust,” said Otir,
unperturbed now by any flash of anger or defiance from a man so
completely in his power. “If, that is, he will act for you
even in this affair. That he approves it we already know, you
better than any of us. What you will do, before I let you loose
even within my guard, is to render up your small seal—I know
you have it about you, you would not stir without it—and give
me a message so worded that your brother will know it could come
only from you. I will deal with a man I can trust, no matter how
things stand between us, friend or enemy. Owain Gwynedd, if he will
not buy you out of bondage, will not stint to welcome the news that
you intend to pay your debts honorably, nor refuse you his aid to
see due reparation made. Owain Gwynedd shall do the accounting
between you and me.”
“He will not do it!” flared Cadwaladr, stung.
“Why should he believe that I have given you my seal of my
own will, when you could as well have stripped me and taken it from
me? No matter what message I might send, how can he trust, how can
he be sure that I send it of my own free will, and not wrung from
me with your dagger at my throat, under the threat of
death?”
“He knows me by now well enough,” said Otir drily,
“to know that I am not so foolish as to destroy what can and
shall be profitable to me. But if you doubt it, very well, we will
send him one he will trust, and the man shall take due orders from
you in your very person, and bear witness to Owain that he has so
taken them, and that he saw you whole and in your right mind. Owain
will know truth by the bearer of it. I doubt he can take pleasure
in the sight of you, not yet. But he’ll so far prove your
brother as to put together your price in haste, once he knows
you’ve chosen to honor your debts. He wants me gone, and go I
will when I have what I came for, and he may have you back and
welcome.”
“You have not such a man in your muster,” said
Cadwaladr with a curling lip. “Why should he trust any man of
yours?”
“Ah, but I have! No man of mine, nor of Owain’s, nor
of yours, his service falls within quite another writ. One that
offered himself freely as guarantor for your safe return when you
left here to go and parley with your brother. Yes, and one that you
left to his fate and my better sense when you tossed your defiance
in my face and turned tail for your life back to a brother who
despised you for it.” Otir watched the prince’s dark
face flame into scarlet, and took dour satisfaction in having stung
him.
“Hostage for you he was, out of goodwill, and now you are
returned indeed, though in every manner of ill will, and I have no
longer any claim to keep him here. And he’s the man shall go
as your envoy to Owain, and in your name bid him plunder such means
and valuables as you have left, and bring your ransom here.”
He turned to Torsten, who had stood waiting in high and obvious
content through these exchanges. “Go and find that young
deacon from Lichfield, the bishop’s lad, Mark, and ask him to
come here to me.”
Mark was with Brother Cadfael when the word
reached him, gathering dry and fallen twigs for their fire from
among the stunted trees along the ridge. He straightened up with
his load gathered into the fold of a wide sleeve, and stared at the
messenger in mild surprise, but without any trace of alarm. In
these few days of nominal captivity he had never felt himself a
captive, or in any danger or distress, but neither had he ever
supposed that he was of any particular interest or consequence to
his captors beyond what bargaining value his small body might
have.
Like a curious child he asked, wide-eyed: “What can your
captain want with me?”
“No harm,” said Cadfael. “For all I can see,
these Irish Danes have more of the Irish than the Dane in them
after all this time. Otir strikes me as Christian as most that
habit in England or Wales, and a good deal more Christian than
some.”
“He has a thing for you to do,” said Torsten,
goodnaturedly grinning, “that comes as a benefit to us all.
Come and hear it for yourself.”
Mark piled his gathered fuel close to the hearth they had made
for themselves of stones in their sheltered hollow of sand, and
followed Torsten curiously to Otir’s open tent. At the sight
of Cadwaladr, rigidly erect in his chains and taut as a bowstring,
Mark checked and drew breath, astonished. It was the first
intimation he had had that the turbulent fugitive was back within
the encampment, and to see him here fettered and at bay was
baffling. He looked from captive to captor, and saw Otir grimly
smiling and obviously in high content. Fortune was busy overturning
all things for sport.
“You sent for me,” said Mark simply. “I am
here.”
Otir surveyed with an indulgent eye and some surprisingly gentle
amusement this slight youth, who spoke here for a Church that Welsh
and Irish and the Danes of Dublin all alike acknowledged. Some day,
when a few more years had passed, he might even have to call this
boy ‘Father’! ‘Brother’ he might call him
already.
“As you see,” said Otir, “the lord Cadwaladr,
for whom you stood guarantor that he should go and come again
without hindrance, has come back to us. His return sets you free to
leave us. If you will do an errand for him to his brother Owain
Gwynedd, you will be doing a good deed for him and for us
all.”
“You must tell me what that is,” said Mark.
“But I have not felt myself deprived of my freedom here. I
have no complaint.”
“The lord Cadwaladr will tell you himself,” said
Otir, and his satisfied smile broadened. “He has declared
himself ready to pay the two thousand marks he promised to us for
coming to Abermenai with him. He desires to send word to his
brother how this is to be done. He will tell you.”
Mark regarded with some doubt Cadwaladr’s set face and
darkly smoldering eyes. “Is this true?”
“It is.” The voice was strong and clear, if it
grated a little. Since there was no help for it, Cadwaladr accepted
necessity, if not with grace, at least with the recovered remnant
of his dignity. “I am required to pay for my freedom. Very
well, I choose to pay.”
“It is truly your own choice?” Mark wondered
doubtfully.
“It is. Beyond what you see, I am not threatened. But I am
not free until the ransom is paid, and the ships loaded for sea,
and therefore I cannot go myself to see my cattle rounded up and
driven, nor draw on my treasury for the balance. I want my brother
to manage all for me, and as quickly as may be. I will send him my
authority by you, and my seal by way of proof.”
“If it is what you wish,” said Mark, “yes, I
will bear your message.”
“It is what I wish. If you tell him you had it from my own
lips, he will believe you.” His lips at that moment were
drawn thin with the hard-learned effort to keep the bitterness and
fury caged within, but his mind was made up. There could be
revenges later, there could be another repayment to be made in
requital of this one, but now what he needed was his freedom. He
slid out his private seal from a pocket in his sleeve, and held it
out, not to Otir, who sat watching with a glittering grin, but to
Mark. “Take my brother this, tell him you had it from my
hand, and ask him to hasten what I need.”
“I will, faithfully,” said Mark.
“Then ask him for my sake to send to Llanbadarn, to Rhodri
Fychan, who was my steward, and will be my steward again if ever I
regain what is mine. What is left of my treasury he will know where
to find, and at my orders, witnessed by my seal, he will deliver it
over. If the sum is not enough, what is lacking must be made up in
cattle. Rhodri knows where my stock are bestowed in safe charge.
There are still herds kept for me, more than enough. Two thousand
marks is the sum. Ask my brother to make haste.”
“I will,” said Mark simply, and began by himself
making all haste. It was he who took an ambassador’s leave of
them, rather than acknowledging his own dismissal from Otir’s
presence. A brisk reverence and a brief farewell, and he was
already on his way, and for some reason the space within the tent
and about it looked curiously empty by the removal of his small,
slight figure.
He went on foot; the distance was barely more than a mile.
Within the half hour he would be delivering his message to Owain
Gwynedd, and setting in motion the events which were to restore
Cadwaladr his freedom, if not his lands, and remove from Gwynedd
the threat of war, and the oppressive presence of an alien
army.
The only pause he made before leaving was to impart to Cadfael
the errand on which he was sent.
Brother Cadfael came very thoughtfully to where
Heledd was stirring the sleeping fire in the stone hearth, to
prepare food for the evening meal. His mind was full of what he had
just learned, but he could not help remarking how well this vagrant
life in a military camp suited her. She had taken the sun
graciously, her skin was a golden bronze, with an olive bloom upon
it, suave and infinitely becoming to her dark hair and eyes, and
the rich red of her mouth. She had never in her life been so free
as she was now in her captivity. The gloss of it was about her like
cloth of gold, and it mattered not at all that her sleeve was torn,
and the hem of her gown soiled and frayed.
There’s news that could be good for us all,” said
Cadfael, watching her neat movements with pleasure. “Not only
did Turcaill come back safely from his midnight foray, it seems he
brought back Cadwaladr with him.”
“I know,” said Heledd, and stilled her busy hands
for a moment, and stared into the fire and smiled. “I saw
them come back, before dawn.”
“And you never said word?” But no, she would not,
not yet, not to anyone. That would be to reveal more than she was
yet ready to reveal. How could she say that she had risen before
the sun, to watch for the little ship’s safe return?
“I’ve scarcely seen you today. No harm had come of
whatever they were up to, that was all that mattered. Why, what
follows? How is it so good for us all?”
“Why, the man has come to his senses, and agreed to pay
these Danes what he promised them. Mark has just been sent off to
commission Owain, in his brother’s name, and with his
brother’s seal for surety, to collect and pay his ransom.
Otir will take it and go, and leave Gwynedd in peace.”
Now she had indeed turned to pay due attention to what he was
saying, with raised brows and sharply arrested hands. “He has
given in? Already? He will pay?”
“I have it from Mark, and Mark is already on his way.
Nothing could be surer.”
“And they will go!” she said, a mere murmur within
her still lips. She drew up her knees and folded her arms about
them, and sat gazing before her, neither smiling nor frowning, only
coolly and resolutely assessing these changed prospects for good
and evil. “How long, do you think, Cadfael, it will take to
bring cattle up here by the drove roads from Ceredigion?”
“Three days at the least,” said Cadfael, and watched
her put away that factor in the methodical recesses of her mind, to
be kept in the reckoning.
“Three days at the most, then,” she said, “for
Owain will make all haste to be rid of them.”
“And you will be glad to be free,” said Cadfael,
probing gently into regions where truth had at least two faces, and
he could not be sure which one was turned towards him, and which
was turned away.
“Yes,” she said, “I shall be glad!” And
she looked beyond him into the grey-blue, shifting surface of the
sea, and smiled.
Gwion had reached the guard-post, the same by
which his lord had been abducted, without hindrance, and was in the
very act of stepping over the threshold when the guard barred his
way with a braced lance, and challenged him sharply: “Are not
you Gwion, Cadwaladr’s liegeman?”
Gwion owned to it, bewildered rather than alarmed. No doubt they
were keeping a closer watch on this gate, after last night’s
incursion, and this sentry did not know Owain’s mind, and had
no intention of incurring blame by allowing either entry or exit
unquestioned. “I am. The prince has given me leave to stay or
go, as I choose. Ask Cuhelyn. He will tell you so.”
“I have later news for you,” said the guard,
unmoving. “For the prince has only a short while since asked
that you be sought, if you were still within the pale, and sent
back to him.”
“I never knew him change his mind in such a
fashion,” protested Gwion distrustfully. “He made it
plain he set no store on me, and did not care a pin whether I
stayed or departed. Nor whether I lived or died, for that
matter.”
“Nevertheless, it seems he has a use for you yet. No harm,
if he never threatened any. Go and see. He wants you. I know no
more than that.”
There was no help for it. Gwion turned back towards the squat
roof of the farmstead, his mind a turmoil of unprofitable
speculations. Owain could not possibly have got wind of what was
still at best only a vague intent, hardly a plan at all, though he
had spent a long time with Ieuan ab Ifor over the detail of numbers
and means, and all that Ieuan had gathered concerning the layout of
the Danish camp. Too long a time, as it now appeared. He should
have left at once, before there could be any question of detaining
him. By this time he could have dispatched his groom south to bring
up the promised force, and been back within the stockade here
before ever he was missed. Planning could have waited. Now it was
too late, he was trapped. Yet nothing was quite lost. Owain could
not know. No one knew but Gwion himself and Ieuan, and Ieuan had
not yet spoken a word to any of those stalwarts he knew of who
would welcome a venture. That recruitment was still to come. Then
what Owain wanted of him could have nothing to do with their
half-formed enterprise.
He was still feverishly recording and discarding possibilities
when he entered the low-beamed hall of the farm, and made his stiff
and wary reverence to the prince across the rough trestle
table.
Hywel was there, close at his father’s shoulder, and two
more of the prince’s trusted captains stood a little apart,
witnesses in some business which remained inexplicable to Gwion.
For the only other person in the room was the meager little deacon
from Lichfield, in his rusty black habit, his spiky ring of
straw-colored hair growing stubbornly every way, his grey eyes as
always wide, direct and tranquil. They looked at Gwion, and Gwion
turned his head away, as though he feared they might see too deeply
into his mind if he met them fully. He found even the benevolent
regard of such eyes unnerving. But what could this little cleric
have to do with any matter between Owain and Cadwaladr and the
Danish interlopers? Yet if the business in hand here was something
entirely different, what could it have to do with him, and what
need to recall him?
“It’s well that you have not left us, Gwion,”
said Owain, “for after all there is a thing you can do for
me, and therewith also for your lord.”
“That I would certainly do, and gladly,” said Gwion,
but as yet withholding belief.
“Deacon Mark here is newly come from Otir the Dane,”
said the prince, “who holds my brother and your lord
prisoner. He has brought word from Cadwaladr that he has agreed to
pay the sum he promised, and buy himself out of debt and out of
bondage.”
“I cannot believe it!” said Gwion, blanched to the
lips with shock. “I will not believe it, unless I hear him
say so, freely and openly.”
“Then you and I are of one mind,” said Owain drily,
“for I also had hardly expected him to see sense so soon. You
have good cause to know my mind in this matter. I would rather my
brother should be a man of his word, and pay what he promises. But
neither would I accept from another mouth the instruction that will
beggar him. Otir deals fairly. From my brother’s mouth you
cannot hear his will made plain, he will not be free until his debt
is paid. But you may hear it from Brother Mark, who received it in
trust from him, and will testify that he spoke it firmly and with
intent, being whole of his body and in his right mind.”
“I do so testify,” said Mark. “He has been
prisoner only this one day. He is fettered, but further than that
no hand has been laid on him, and no threat made against his body
or his life. He says so, and I believe it, as no violence has ever
been offered to me or to those others hostage with the Danes. He
told me what was to be done. And he delivered to me with his own
hand his seal, as authority for the deed, and I have delivered it
to the prince, according to Cadwaladr’s orders.”
“And the purport of his message? Be kind enough to repeat
it,” the prince requested courteously. “I would not
have Gwion fear that I have in any degree prompted you, or put
twisted words into your mouth.”
“Cadwaladr entreats the lord Owain, his brother,”
said Mark, fixing his dauntingly clear eyes upon Gwion’s
face, “to send with all haste into Llanbadarn, to Rhodri
Fychan, who was his steward, and who knows where his remaining
treasury is bestowed, and to tell him that his lord requires the
dispatch to Abermenai of money and stock to the value of two
thousand marks, to be delivered to the Danish force under Otir, as
promised to them at the agreement in Dublin. And to that end he has
sent his seal for guarantee.”
There was a long silence after the clear, mild voice ended this
recital, while Gwion stood motionless and mute, struggling with the
fury of denial and despair and anger within him. It was not
possible that so proud and intolerant a soul as Cadwaladr should
have submitted, and so quickly. And yet men, even the most arrogant
and hot-headed of men, do value their lives and liberty high, and
will buy them back even with humiliation and shame when the threat
comes close, and congeals from imagination into reality. But first
to dare defy and discard his Danes, and then to grovel to them and
scrape together their price in undignified haste—that was
unworthy. Had he but waited a few days, there should have been
another ending. His own men were so near, and would not have let
him lie in chains for long, even if brother and all had deserted
him. God, let me have two days yet, prayed Gwion behind his dark,
closed face, and I will fetch him off by force, and he shall call
off his bailiffs and take back his property, and be Cadwaladr
again, erect as he always was.
“This charge,” Owain was saying, somewhere at the
extreme edge of Gwion’s consciousness, a voice from the
distance, or from deep within, “I intend to fulfill with all
haste, as he asks, the quicker to redeem his person together with
his good name. My son Hywel rides south at once. But since you are
here, Gwion, and all your heart’s concern is his service, you
shall ride with Hywel’s escort, and your presence will be a
further guarantee to Rhodri Fychan that this is indeed
Cadwaladr’s voice speaking, and those who serve him are bound
to obey. Will you go?”
“I will go.”
What else could he say? It was already decreed. It was another
way of discarding him, but with a sop to his implacable loyalty. In
the name of that loyalty he must now assist in stripping his lord
of a great part of what possessions remained to him, when only a
short while ago he had been in high heart, setting out to bring an
army to Cadwaladr’s rescue, without this ignominy and loss.
But: “I will go,” said Gwion, swallowing necessity
whole. There might still be an opportunity to make contact with his
waiting muster, before ever the Danish ships loaded and raised
anchor with their booty, and sailed in triumph for Dublin.
They set out within the hour, Hywel ab Owain, Gwion, and an
escort of ten men-at-arms, well-mounted, and with authority to
commandeer fresh remounts along the way. Whatever Owain’s
feelings now towards his brother, he did not intend him to remain
long a prisoner—or, perhaps a defaulting debtor. There was no
knowing which of the two mattered more.
The three days predicted by Cadfael passed in
brisk activity elsewhere, but in the two opposed camps they dragged
and were drawn out long, like a held breath. Even the watch kept
upon the stockades grew a shade lax, expecting no attack now that
the issue was near its resolution without the need of fighting.
Only Ieuan ab Ifor still fretted at the waiting, and bore in mind
always that such negotiations might collapse in failure, prisoners
remain prisoners, debts unpaid, marriages delayed beyond bearing.
And as the hours passed he spoke privately to this one and that one
among his younger and more headstrong friends, rehearsed for them
the safe passage he had made twice by night at low tide along the
shingle and sand to spy out the Danish defences, and how there was
a place where approach from the sea was possible in reasonable
cover of scrub and trees. Cadwaladr might have submitted, but these
young hot-heads of Wales had not. Bitterly they resented it that
invaders from Ireland should not only sail home without losses, but
even with a very substantial profit to show for their incursion.
But was it not already too late, now that it was known Hywel had
gone south with orders to bring back and pay over the sum Otir
demanded and Cadwaladr had conceded?
By no means, said Ieuan. For Gwion was gone with them, and
somewhere between here and Ceredigion Gwion had brought up a
hundred men who would fight for Cadwaladr. None of these had
consented to let his lord be plundered of two thousand marks, or be
made to grovel before the Dane. They would not stomach it, even if
Cadwaladr had been brought so low as to submit to it. Ieuan had
spoken with Gwion before he left in Hywel’s party. On the way
south, if chance offered, he would break away from his companions
and go to join his waiting warriors. On the way north again, if he
was watched too suspiciously on the way south, even Hywel would be
content with him for his part in dealing with Rhodri Fychan at
Llanbadarn, and no one would be paying too much heed to what he
did. Somewhere along the drove roads he could break away and ride
ahead. One dark night was all they would need, with the tide out
and their numbers thus reinforced, and Heledd and Cadwaladr would
be snatched out of bondage, and Otir could take to the seas for his
life, and go back empty-handed to Dublin.
There were not wanting a number of wild young men in
Owain’s following whose instincts leaned rather to fighting
out every issue to a bloody conclusion than to manipulating a way
out of impasse without loss of life. There were a few who said
openly that Owain was wrong to abandon his brother to pay his dues
alone. Oaths were meant to be kept, yes, but the tensions of blood
and kinship could put even oaths out of mind. So they listened, and
the thought of bursting in through the Danish fences, sweeping Otir
and his men into their ships at the edge of the sword and driving
them out to sea began to have a powerful appeal. They were weary of
sitting here inactive day after day. Where was the glory in
bargaining a way out of danger with money and compromise?
The image of Heledd burned in Ieuan’s memory, the dark
girl poised against the sky on a hillock of the dunes. Twice he had
seen her there, watched the long, lissome stride and the proudly
carried head. She had a fiery grace even in stillness. And he could
not believe, he could not convince himself, that such a woman, one
alone in a camp full of men, could continue to the end unviolated,
uncoveted. It was against mortal nature. Whatever Otir’s
authority, someone would defy it. And now his most haunting fear
was that when they had loaded their plunder, so tamely surrendered
, and were raising anchor to sail for home, they would carry Heledd
away with them, as they had carried many a Welsh woman in the past,
to be slave to some Dublin Dane for the rest of her life.
He would not have bestirred himself as he did for Cadwaladr, to
whom he owed nothing but ill. But for sheer hostility to the
invaders, and for the recovery of Heledd, he would have dared the
assault with only his own small band of like-minded heroes, if need
arose. But better far if Gwion could return in time with his
hundred. So for the first day, and the second, Ieuan waited with
arduous patience, and kept watch southward for any sign.
In Otir’s camp the days of waiting passed slowly but
confidently, perhaps too confidently, for there was certainly some
relaxation of the strict watch they had kept. The square-rigged
cargo ships, with their central wells ready for loading, were
brought inshore, to be easily beached when the time came, and only
the small, fast dragon-boats remained within the enclosed
harborage. Otir had no reason to doubt Owain’s good faith,
and as an earnest of his own had removed Cadwaladr’s chains,
though Torsten stayed attentive at the prisoner’s elbow,
ready for any rash move. Cadwaladr they did not trust, they knew
him now too well.
Cadfael watched the passing of the hours and kept an open mind.
There was still room for things to go wrong, though there seemed no
particular reason why they should do so. It was simply that when
two armed bands were brought together so closely in confrontation,
it needed only a spark to set light to the otherwise dormant
hostility between them. Waiting could make even the stillness seem
ominous, and he missed Mark’s serene company. What engaged
his attention most during this interlude was the behavior of
Heledd. She went about the simple routine she had devised here for
her living without apparent impatience or anticipation, as if
everything was predetermined, and already accepted, and there was
nothing for her to do about any part of it, and nothing in it
either to delight or trouble her. She was, perhaps, more silent
than usual, but with no implication of tension or distress, rather
as if words would be wasted on matters already assured. It might
have suggested nothing better than resignation to a fate she could
not influence, but there was no change in the summer gloss that had
turned her comeliness into beauty, or the deep, burnished luster of
her iris eyes as they surveyed the ribbon of the shingle beach, and
the swaying of the ships offshore under the urging of the changing
tides. Cadfael did not follow her too assiduously, nor watch her
too closely. If she had secrets, he did not want to know them. If
she wanted to confide, she would. If there was anything she needed
from him, she would demand it. And of her safety here he was
assured. All these restless young men wanted now was to load their
ships and take their profits home to Dublin, well out of an
engagement that might have ended in disaster, given so
doubled-edged a partner. Thus in either camp the second day drew to
a close.
Faced with the authority of Hywel ab Owain, the
grudging and stiff-necked testimony, of Gwion, who so clearly hated
having to admit his lord’s capitulation, and holding
Cadwaladr’s seal in his hand, Rhodri Fychan on his own lands
in Ceredigion found no reason to question further the instructions
he was given. He accepted with a shrug the necessity, and delivered
to Hywel the greater part of the two thousand marks in coin. It
made some heavy loads for a number of sumpter horses which were
likewise contributed as part of the ransom price. And the rest, he
said resignedly, could be rounded up from grazing land close to the
northern border of Ceredigion, near the crossing into Gwynedd, in
Cadwaladr’s swart, sturdy cattle, moved there when this same
Hywel drove him out of his castle and fired it after him, more than
a year ago. His own herdsmen had grazed them there on his behalf
ever since he had been driven out.
It was at Gwion’s own suggestion that he was commissioned
to ride northward again ahead of his companions, and get this herd
of cattle, slow-moving as they would be, in motion towards
Abermenai at once. The horsemen would easily overtake them after
they had loaded the silver, and no time would be wasted on the
return journey. A groom of Rhodri’s household rode with him,
glad of the outing, to bear witness that they had the authority of
Cadwaladr himself, through his steward, to cut out some three
hundred head of cattle from his herds and drive them northward.
It was all and more than he could have hoped for. Travelling
south he had had no opportunity to withdraw himself or make any
preparation for his escape. Now with his face to the north again
everything fell into his hand. Once he had set out across the
border of Gwynedd, with herd and drovers in brisk motion behind
him, nothing could have been easier than to detach himself and ride
ahead, on the pretext of giving due notice to Otir to prepare his
ships to receive them, and leave them to follow to Abermenai at the
best speed they could make.
It was the morning of the second day, very early, when he set
forth, and evening when he reached the camp where he had left his
hundred like-minded companions living off the country about them,
and by this little more popular with their neighbors than such
roving armies usually are, and themselves glad to be on the move
again.
It seemed wise to wait until morning before marching. They lay
in a sheltered place in open woodland, aside from the roads. One
more night spent here, and they could be on their way with the
first light, for from now on they could move only at a fast foot
pace, and even by forced marches foot soldiers cannot outpace the
horsemen. Cadwaladr’s drovers must rest their traveling herd
overnight, there was no fear of being overtaken by them. Gwion
slept his few hours with a mind content that he had done all a man
could do.
In the night, on the highroad half a mile from their camp, Hywel
and his mounted escort passed by.
Chapter Thirteen
« ^ »
Brother Cadfael walked the crest of the dunes in
the early evening of the third day, and saw the Danish cargo ships
beached in the shallows below him, and the line of men, stripped
half-naked to wade from shore to ships, ferrying the barrels of
silver pence aboard, and stowing them under foredeck and afterdeck.
Two thousand marks within those small, heavy containers. No,
somewhat less, for by all accounts the sumpter horses and certain
cattle were to go with them as part of Otir’s fee. For Hywel
was back from Llanbadarn before noon, and by all accounts the
drovers would not be far behind.
Tomorrow it would all be over. The Danes would raise anchor and
sail for home, Owain’s force would see them off Welsh soil,
and then return to Carnarvon, and from there disperse to their
homes. Heledd would be restored to her bridegroom, Cadfael and Mark
to their duties left behind and almost forgotten in England. And
Cadwaladr? By this time Cadfael was sure that Cadwaladr would be
restored to some degree of power and certain of his old lands, once
this matter was put by. Owain could not for ever hold out against
his blood. Moreover, after every dismay and exasperation his
brother had cost him, always Owain hoped and believed that there
would be a change, a lesson learned, a folly or a crime regretted.
So there was, but briefly. Cadwaladr would never change.
Down on the steel-grey shingle Hywel ab Owain stood to watch the
loading of the treasure he had brought from Llanbadarn. There was
no haste, doubtful if they could put the beasts aboard until the
morrow, even if they reached here before night. Down there on
neutral ground Dane and Welshman brushed shoulders amicably,
content to part with debts paid and no blood shed. The affair had
almost become a matter of marketing. That would not suit the
wildest of Owain’s clansmen. It was to be hoped he had them
all well in hand, or there might be fighting yet. They did not like
to see silver being bled away from Wales into Dublin, even if it
was silver pledged, a debt of honor. But steadily the small barrels
passed from man to man, the sunbrowned backs bending and swaying,
the muscular arms extending the chain from beach to hold. About
their bared legs the shallow water plashed in palest blues and
greens over the gold of sand, and the sky above them was blue
almost to whiteness, with a scatter of whiter clouds diaphanous as
feathers. A radiant day in a fine, settled summer.
From the stockade Cadwaladr was also watching the shipment of
his ransom, with his stolid shadow Torsten at his shoulder. Cadfael
had observed them, withdrawn a little to his right, Torsten
placidly content, Cadwaladr stormy-browed and grim, but resigned to
his loss. Turcaill was down there aboard the nearest of the ships,
hoisting the barrels in under the after deck, and Otir stood with
Hywel, surveying the scene benignly.
Heledd came over the crest, and made her way down through the
scrub and the salt grasses to stand at Cadfael’s side. She
looked down at the activities stretching out from beach to ship,
and her face was calm and almost indifferent. “There are
still the cattle to get aboard,” she said. “A rough
voyage it will be for them. They tell me that crossing can be
terrible.”
“In such fine weather,” said Cadfael, matching her
tone, “they’ll have an easy passage.” No need to
ask from which of them she had that information.
“By tomorrow night,” she said, “they’ll
be gone. A good deliverance for us all.” And her voice was
serene and even fervent, and her eyes followed the movements of the
last of the porters as he waded ashore, bright water flashing about
his ankles. Turcaill stood on the after-deck for some moments,
surveying the result of their labors, before he swung himself over
the side and came surging through the shallows, driving blue of
water and white of spray before him, and looking up, saw Heledd as
blithely looking down from her high place, and flung back his lofty
flaxen head to smile at her with a dazzle of white teeth, and wave
a hand in salute.
Among the men-at-arms who stood at Hywel’s back to see the
money safely bestowed Cadfael had observed one, thickset and
powerful and darkly comely, who was also looking up towards the
ridge. His head was and remained tilted back, and his eyes seemed
to Cadfael to be fixed upon Heledd. True, one woman among a camp of
Danish invaders might well draw the eye and the interest of any
man, but there was something about the taut stillness and the
intent and sustained pose that made him wonder. He plucked at
Heledd’s sleeve.
“Girl, there’s one below there, among the lads who
brought the silver—you see him? On Hywel’s
left!—who is staring upon you very particularly. Do you know
him? By the cut of him he knows you.”
She turned to look where he indicated, gave a moment to
considering the face so assiduously raised to her, and shook her
head indifferently.
“I never saw him before. How can he know me?” And
she turned back to watch Turcaill cross the beach and pause to
exchange civilities with Hywel ab Owain and his escort, before
marshalling his own men back up the slope of the dunes towards the
stockade. He passed before Ieuan ab Ifor without a glance, and
Ieuan merely shifted his stance a little to recover the sight of
Heledd on the dunes above him, as Turcaill’s fair head cut
her off from him in passing.
During those vital night watches, Ieuan ab Ifor
had taken care to be captain of the guard on the westward gate of
Owain’s camp, and to have a man of his own on watch through
the night hours. Towards midnight of that third night Gwion had
brought his muster by forced marches to within sight of
Owain’s stockade, and there diverted them to the narrow belt
of shingle exposed by the low tide, to pass by undetected. He
himself made his way silently to the guard-post, and from its
shadow Ieuan slid out to meet him.
“We are come,” said Gwion in a whisper. “They
are down on the shore.”
“You come late,” hissed Ieuan. “Hywel is here
before you. The silver is already loaded aboard their ships, they
are waiting only for the cattle.”
“How can that be?” demanded Gwion, dismayed.
“I rode ahead from Llanbadarn. The only halt I made was the
few hours of sleep we took last night. We marched before dawn this
morning.”
“And in those few hours of the night Hywel overtook and
passed you by, for he was here by mid-morning. And come tomorrow
morning the herd will be here and loading. Late to save anything
but a beggarly life for Cadwaladr as Owain’s almsman instead
of Otir’s prisoner.” For Cadwaladr he did not grieve
overmuch, except as his plight had strengthened the case for a
rescue which could at the same time deliver Heledd.
“Not too late,” said Gwion, burning up like a
stirred fire. “Bring your few, and make haste! The tide is
low and still ebbing. We have time enough!”
They had been ready every night for the signal, and they came
singly, silently and eagerly, evading notice and question.
Glissading down the suave slopes of the dunes, and across the belt
of shingle to the moist, firm sand beyond, where their feet made no
sound. More than a mile to go between the camps, but an hour left
before the tide would be at its lowest, and ample time to return.
There was a lambent light from the water, a shifting but gentle
light that was enough for their purposes, the white edges of every
ripple showing the extent of the uncovered sand. Ieuan led, and
they followed him in a long line, silent and furtive under the
dykes of Owain’s defences, and on into the
no-man’s-land beyond. Before them, anchored offshore after
their loading, the Danish cargo ships rode darkly swaying against
the faint luminosity of the waves, and the comparative pallor of
the sky. Gwion checked at sight of them.
“These have the silver already stored? We could reclaim
it,” he said in a whisper. “They’ll have only
holding crews aboard overnight.”
“Tomorrow!” said Ieuan with brusque authority.
“A long swim, they lie in deep water. They could pick us off
one by one before ever we touched. Tomorrow they’ll lay them
inshore again to load the beasts. There are enough among
Owain’s muster who grudge so much as a penny to the pirates;
if we start the onset they’ll follow, the prince will have no
choice but to fight. Tonight we take back my woman and your lord.
Tomorrow the silver!”
In the small hours of the morning Cadfael awoke to
a sudden clamour of voices bellowing and lurs blaring, and started
up from his nest in the sand still dazed between reality and
dreaming, old battles jerked back into mind with startling
vividness, so that he reached blindly for a sword before ever he
was steady on his feet, and aware of the starry night above and the
cool rippling of the sand under his bare feet. He groped about him
to pluck Mark awake before he recalled that Mark was no longer
beside him, but back in Owain’s retinue, out of reach of
whatever this sudden threat might be. Over to his right, from the
side where the open sea stretched away westward to Ireland, the
acid clashing of steel added a thin, ferocious note to the baying
of fighting men. Confused movements of struggle and alarm shook the
still air in convulsive turmoil between sand and sky, as though a
great storm-wind had risen to sweep away men without so much as
stirring the grasses they trod. The earth lay still, cool and
indifferent, the sky hung silent and calm, but force and violence
had come up from the sea to put an end to humanity’s
precarious peace. Cadfael ran in the direction from which the
uproar drifted fitfully to his ears. Others, starting out of their
beds on the landward side of the encampment, were running with him,
drawing steel as they ran, all converging on the seaward fences,
where the clamor of battle had moved inward upon them, as though
the stockade had been breached. In the thick of the tangle of
sounds rose Otir’s thunderous voice, marshalling his men. And
I am no man of his, thought Cadfael, astounded but still running
headlong towards the cry, why should I go looking for trouble? He
could have been holding off at a safe distance, waiting to see who
had staged what was plainly a determined attack, and how it
prospered for Dane or Welshman, before assessing its import for his
own wellbeing, but instead he was making for the heart of the
battle as fast as he could, and cursing whoever had chosen to tear
apart what could have been an orderly resolution of a dangerous
business.
Not Owain! Of that he was certain. Owain had brought about a
just and sensible ending, he would neither have originated nor
countenanced a move calculated to destroy his achievement. Some
hot-blooded youngsters envenomed with hatred of the Dane, or
panting for the glory of warfare! Owain might reserve his quarrel
with the alien fleet that invaded his land uninvited, he might even
choose to exert himself to thrust them out when all other
outstanding business was settled, but he would never have thrown
away his own patient work in procuring the clearing of the ground.
Owain’s battle, had it ever come to it, as it yet might,
would have been direct, neat and workmanlike, with no needless
killing.
He was near to the heave and strain of close infighting now, he
could see the line of the stockade broken here and there by the
heads and shoulders of struggling men, and a great gap torn in the
barrier where the attackers had forced their way in unobserved,
between guard-posts. They had not penetrated far, and Otir already
had a formidable ring of steel drawn about them, but on the
fringes, in the darkness and in such confusion, there was no
knowing friend from enemy, and a few of the first through the gap
might well be loose within the camp.
He was rubbing shoulders with the outer ring of Danes, who were
thrusting hard to shift the whole intruding mass back through the
stockade and down to the sea, when someone came running behind him,
light and fast, and a hand clutched at his arm, and there was
Heledd, her face a pale, startled oval, starry in the dark, lit by
wide, blazing eyes.
“What is it? Who are they? They are mad, mad… What
can have set them on?”
Cadfael halted abruptly, drawing her back out of the press and
clear of random steel. “Fool girl, get back out of here! Are
you crazed? Get well away until this is over. Do you want to be
killed?”
She clung to him, but held her ground sturdily, more excited
than afraid. “But why? Why should any of Owain’s do
such mischief, when all was going so well?”
The struggling mass of men, too closely entangled to allow play
to steel, reeled their way, and some among them losing balance and
footing, the mass broke apart, several fell, and one at least was
trampled, and let out breath in a wheezing groan. Heledd was torn
away from Cadfael’s grasp, and uttered a brief and angry
scream. It cut through the din on a piercing, clear note, and even
in the stress of battle turned heads in abrupt astonishment to
stare in her direction. She had been flung aside so sharply that
she would have fallen, if an arm had not taken her about the waist
and dragged her clear as the shift of fighting surged towards her.
Cadfael was borne the opposite way for a moment, and then
Otir’s rallying cry drew the Danish circle taut, and their
driving weight bore the attackers backwards, and compressed them
into the breach they had made in the stockade, cramming them
through it in disorder. A dozen lances were hurled after them, and
they broke and drew off down the slope of the dunes towards the
shore.
A handful of the young Danes, roused and eager, would have
pursued the retreating attackers down the dunes, but Otir called
them sharply to order. There were wounded already, if none dead,
why risk more? They came reluctantly, but they came. There might be
a time to take revenge for an act virtually of treachery, when
agreement, if not sworn and sealed, had amounted almost to truce.
But this was the time rather to salvage what was damaged, and
sharpen once again a watchfulness grown slack as the need seemed to
diminish.
In the comparative stillness and quiet they set about picking up
the fallen, salving minor wounds, repairing the breach in the
stockade, all in grim silence but for the few words needed. Under
the broken fence three men lay dead, the foremost of the defenders
overwhelmed by numbers before help could reach them. A fourth they
picked up bleeding from a lance-thrust meant for his heart, but
diverted through the shoulder. He would live, but he might lack the
muscular power of his left arm for the rest of his life. Of minor
gashes and grazes there were many, and the man who had been
trampled spat blood from injuries within. Cadfael put by all other
considerations, and went to work with the rest in the nearest
shelter by torchlight, with whatever linen and medicines they could
provide. They had experience of wounds, and were knowledgeable in
treating them, if their treatment was rough and ready. The boy Leif
fetched and carried, awed and excited by this burst of violence by
night. When all was done that could be done Cadfael sat back with a
sigh, and looked round at his nearest neighbor. He was looking into
the ice-blue eyes and unwontedly somber face of Turcaill. The young
man had blood on his cheek from a graze, and blood on his hands
from the wounds of his friends.
“Why?” said Turcaill. “What was there to gain?
It was as good as finished. Now they have their dead or wounded,
too,
I saw men being carried or dragged when they broke and ran. What
was it made it worth their while to break in here?”
“I think,” said Cadfael, rubbing a hand resignedly
over his tired eyes, “they came for Cadwaladr. He still has a
following, as rash as the man himself. They may well have thought
to pluck him out of your keeping even in Owain’s despite.
What else do you hold of such value to them that they should risk
their lives for it?”
“Why, the silver he’s already paid,” said
Turcaill practically. “Would they not have made for
that?”
“So they well may,” Cadfael admitted. “If they
have made a bid for the one, they may do as much for the
other.”
“When we lay the ships inshore again tomorrow,”
Turcaill’s brilliant eyes opened wide in thought. “I
will say so to Otir: the man they can have, and good riddance, but
the ransom is fairly ours, and we’ll keep it.”
“If they are in good earnest,” said Cadfael,
“they have still to do battle for both. For I take it
Cadwaladr is still safely in Torsten’s keeping?”
“And in chains again. And sat out this foray with a knife
at his throat. Oh, they went away empty-handed,” said
Turcaill with dour satisfaction. And he rose, and went to join his
leader, in conference over his three dead. And Cadfael went to look
for Heledd, but did not find her.
“These we take back with us for
funeral,” said Otir, brooding darkly over the bodies of his
men. “You say that these who came by night were not sent by
Owain. It is possible, but how can we tell? Certainly I had
believed him a man of his word. But what is rightfully ours we will
make shift to keep, against Owain or any other. If you are right,
and they came for Cadwaladr, then they have but one chance left to
win away both the man and his price. And we will be before them,
with the ships and the sea at our backs, with masts stepped and
ready for sail. The sea is no friend to them as it is to us.
We’ll stand armed between them and the shore, and we shall
see if they will dare in daylight what they attempted in the
night.”
He gave his orders clearly and briefly. By morning the
encampment would be evacuated, the Danish ranks drawn up in battle
array on the beach, the ships maneuvered close to take the cattle
aboard. If they came, said Otir, then Owain was in good faith, and
the raiders were not acting on his orders. If they did not come,
then all compacts were broken, and he and his force would put to
sea and raid ashore at some unguarded coast to take for themselves
the balance of the debt, and somewhat over for three lives
lost.
“They will come,” said Turcaill. “By its folly
alone, this was not Owain’s work. And he delivered you the
silver by his own son’s hand. And so he will the cattle. And
what of the monk and the girl? There was a fair price offered for
them, but that deal you never accepted. Brother Cadfael has earned
his freedom tonight, and it’s late now to haggle over his
worth.”
“We will leave supplies for him and for the girl, they may
stay safe here until we are gone. Owain may have them back as whole
as when they came.”
“I will tell them so,” said Turcaill, and
smiled.
Brother Cadfael was making his way towards them through the
disrupted camp at that moment, between the lines soon to be
abandoned. He came without haste, since there was nothing to be
done about the news he carried, it was a thing accomplished. He
looked from the three bodies laid decently straight beneath their
shrouding cloaks to Otir’s dour face, and thence full at
Turcaill.
“We spoke too soon. They did not go away empty-handed.
They have taken Heledd.”
Turcaill, whose movements in general were constant and flowed
like quicksilver, was abruptly and utterly still. His face did not
change, only his startling eyes narrowed a little, as if to look
far into distance, beyond this present time and place. The last
trace of his very private smile lingered on his lips.
“How came it,” he said, “that she ever drew
near such a fray? No matter, she would be sure to run towards what
was forbidden or perilous, not away from it. You are sure,
Brother?”
“I am sure. I have been looking for her everywhere. Leif
saw her plucked out of the melee, but cannot say by whom. But gone
she is. I had her beside me until we were flung apart, shortly
before you drove them back through the stockade. Whoever he was who
had her by the waist, he has taken her with him.”
“It was for her they came!” said Turcaill with
conviction.
“It was for her one at least came. For I think,”
said Cadfael, “this must be the man to whom Owain had
promised her. There was one close to Hywel, yesterday when you were
loading the silver, could not take his eyes off her. But I did not
know the man, and I thought no more of it.”
“She is safe enough, then, and free already,” said
Otir, and made no more of it. “And so are you, Brother, if
you so please, but I would remain apart until we are gone, if I
were you. For none of us knows what more may be intended for the
morning. No need for you to put yourself between Dane and Welshman
in arms.”
Cadfael heard him without hearing, though the words and their
import came back to him later. He was watching Turcaill so closely
that he had no thought to spare for whatever his own next moves
should be. The young man had stirred easily and naturally out of
his momentary stillness. He drew breath smoothly as ever, and the
last of the smile lingered as a spark in his light, bright eyes
after it had left his lips. There was nothing to be read in that
face, beyond the open, appreciative amusement which was his
constant approach to Heledd, and that vanished instantly when he
looked down again at the night’s losses.
“It’s well she should be out of today’s
work,” he said simply. “There’s no knowing how it
will end.”
And that was all. He went about the business of striking camp
and arming for action like all the rest. In the darkness they
stripped such tents and shelters as they had, and moved the lighter
longships from the harbor in the mouth of the bay round into the
open sea to join the larger vessels and provide an alert and mobile
guard for their crews and cargo. The sea was their element, and
fought on their side, even to the fresh breeze that quivered
through the stillness before dawn. With sails up and filled, even
the slower ships could put out to sea rapidly, safe from attack.
But not without the cattle! Otir would not go without the last
penny of his due.
And now there was nothing for Cadfael to do, except walk the
crest of the dunes among the deserted fires and discarded debris of
occupation, and watch the Danish force pack, muster and move
methodically down through the scrub grass towards the ships rocking
at anchor.
And they will go! Heledd had said, serious but neither elated
nor dismayed. They were as good as gone already, and glad to be on
their way home. Now if it was indeed Ieuan ab Ifor who had inspired
that nocturnal attack, perhaps after all there was no man exerting
himself on behalf of Cadwaladr, neither for his person and prestige
nor for his possessions, and there would be no further
confrontation, on the beach or in the sea, but only an orderly
departure, perhaps even with a cool exchange of civilities between
Welsh and Danish by way of leave-taking. Ieuan had come for his
promised wife, and had what he wanted. No need for him to stir
again. But how had he persuaded so many to follow him? Men who had
nothing to gain, and had gained nothing. Some, perhaps, who had
lost their lives to help him to a marriage.
The lithe little dragon-ship stole round silently into the open
sea, and took station, riding well inshore. Cadfael went down a
little way towards the strip of shingle, and saw the beach now half
dry, half glistening under the lapping of the waves, and empty
until the head of the Danish line reached it, and turned southward
along the strand, a darker line in a darkness now lightening slowly
towards the dove-grey of predawn. The withdrawing raiders had made
haste away to the deserted fields and sparse woodland between the
camps, into some measure of cover. There were places where the
shore route would be too dangerous now, with the tide flowing,
though Cadfael felt certain they had come that way. Better and
faster to move inland with their wounded and their prize, to reach
their own camp dryshod.
Cadfael put a ridge of salt-stunted bushes between himself and
the wind, which was freshening, scooped a comfortable hole in the
sand, and sat down to wait.
In the soft light of the morning, just after
sun-up, Gwion arrayed his hundred men, and the few of Ieuan’s
raising who remained with them, in a hollow between the dunes, out
of sight of the shore, with a sentry keeping watch on the crest
above. There was mist rising from the sea, a diaphanous swirl of
faint blue over the shore, which lay in shadow, while westward the
surface of the water was already bright, flecked with the white
shimmer of spray in the steady breeze. The Danes, drawn up in open
ranks, lined the edge of the sea, waiting immovably and without
impatience for Owain’s herdsmen to bring them
Cadwaladr’s cattle. Behind them the cargo ships had been
brought in to beach lightly in the shallows. And there, in the
midst of the Danes, was Cadwaladr himself, no longer shackled but
still prisoner, defenseless among his armed enemies. Gwion had gone
himself to the top of the ridge to look upon him, and the very
sight was like a knife in his belly.
He had failed miserably in all that he had tried to do. Nothing
had been gained, there stood his lord, humbled at the hands of the
Danes, exposed to the scorn of his brother, not even assured of
regaining a single foot of land at that brother’s hands after
all this bitter undertaking. Gwion gnawed ceaselessly at his own
frustration, and found it sour in his mouth. He should not have
trusted Ieuan ab Ifor. The man had been concerned only with his
woman, and with that prize in his arms he had not stayed, as Gwion
had wanted to stay, to attempt a second achievement. No, he was
away with her, stifling her cries with a hand over her mouth, until
he could hiss in her ear, well away from the Danes in their broken
stockade, that she should not be afraid, for he meant her only
good, for he was her man, her husband, come at risk to fetch her
out of danger, and with him she was safe, and would be safe for
ever… Gwion had heard him, totally taken up with his gains,
and with no care at all for other men’s losses. So the girl
was out of bondage, but Cadwaladr, sick with humiliation and rage,
must come under guard to be handed over for a price to the brother
who discarded and misprized him.
It was not to be borne. There was still time to cut him out
clean from the alien array before Owain could come to savor the
sight of him a prisoner. Even without Ieuan, gone with his bruised
and bewildered woman and the dozen or so of his recruits who had
preferred to steal back into camp and lick their wounds, there were
enough stout fighting men here to do it. Wait, though, wait until
the herd and their escort came. For surely once the attack was
launched, others would see the right of it, and follow. Not even
Hywel, if Hywel was again the prince’s envoy, would be able
to call off his warriors once they had seen Danish blood flow. And
after Cadwaladr, the ships. Once the gage was cast down, the Welsh
would go on to the end, take back the silver, drive Otir and his
pirates into the sea.
The waiting was long, and seemed longer, but Otir never moved
from his station before his lines. They had lowered their guard
once, they would not do so again. That was the missed opportunity,
for now there could be no second surprise. Even in Hywel, even in
Owain himself, they would not again feel absolute trust.
The lookout on the crest reported back regularly and
monotonously, no change, no movement, no sign yet of the dust of
the herd along the sandy track. It was more than an hour past
sunrise when he called at last: “They are coming!” And
then they heard the lowing of the cattle, fitful and sleepy on the
air. By the sound of them, fed and watered, and on the move again
after at least a few hours of the night for rest.
“I see them. A good half-company, advancing aside and
before the drovers, out of the dust. Hywel has come in force. They
have sighted the Danes…” That sight might well give
them pause, they would not have expected to see the full force of
the invaders drawn up in battle array for the loading of a few
hundred head of stock. But they came on steadily, at the pace of
the beasts. And now the foremost rider could be seen clearly, very
tall in the saddle, bare-headed, fair as flax. “It is not
Hywel, it is Owain Gwynedd himself!”
On his hillock above the deserted camp Cadfael had seen the sun
shine on that fair head, and even at that distance knew that the
prince of Gwynedd had come in person to see the Norseman leave his
land. He made his way slowly closer, looking down towards the
impending meeting on the shore.
In the hollow between the dunes Gwion drew up his lines, and
moved them a little forward, still screened by the curving waves of
sand the wind had made and the tenacious grasses and bushes had
partially clothed and secured in place.
“How close now?” Even in Owain’s despite he
would venture. And those clansmen who were approaching at
Owain’s heels, who could not all be tame even to their
prince’s leash, must see the attack, and be close enough to
take fire from it in time, and drive the onslaught home with their
added numbers.
“Not yet within call, but close. A short while
yet!”
Otir stood like a rock in the edge of the surf, solid legs well
braced, watching the advance of the swart, stocky cattle and their
escort of armed men. Light-armed, as a man would normally go about
his business. No need to expect any treachery there. Nor did it
seem likely that Owain had had any part in that ill-managed raid in
the night, or had any knowledge of it. If he had taken action, it
would have been better done.
“Now!” said the lookout sharply from above.
“Now, while they are all watching Owain. You have them on the
flank.”
“Forward now!” Gwion echoed, and burst out of the
sheltering slopes with a great roar of release and resolve, almost
of exultation. After him the ranks of his companions surged
headlong, with swords drawn and short lances raised aloft, a sudden
glitter of steel as they emerged from shadow into sun.
Out into clear view, and streaming down the last slope of sand
into the shingle of the beach, straight for the Danish muster. Otir
swung about, bellowing an alarm that brought every head round to
confront the assault. Shields went up to ward off the first flung
javelins, and the hiss of swords being drawn as one was flung into
the air like a great indrawn breath. Then the first wave of
Gwion’s force hurtled into the Danish ranks and bore them
backwards into their fellows by sheer weight, so that the whole
battle lurched knee-deep into the surf.
Cadfael saw it from his high place, the impact and the clashing
recoil as the ranks collided in a quivering shock, and heard the
sudden clamor of voices shouting, and startled cattle bellowing.
The Danes had so spaced their array that every man had room to use
his right arm freely, and was quick to draw steel. One or two were
borne down by the first impetuous collision, and took their
attackers down into the sea with them in a confusion of spray, but
most braced themselves and stood firm. Gwion had flung himself
straight at Otir. There was no way to Cadwaladr now but over
Otir’s body. But the Dane had twice Gwion’s weight, and
three times his experience in arms. The thrusting sword clanged
harshly on a raised and twisted shield, and was almost wrenched out
of the attacker’s grasp. Then all Cadfael could see was one
struggling, heaving mass of Welshman and Dane, wreathed in
shimmering spray. He began to make his way rapidly down on to the
beach, with what intent he himself could hardly have said.
Echoing shouts arose from among the clansmen who marched at
Owain’s back, and a few started out of their ranks and began
to run towards the melee in the shallows, hands on hilts in an
instant, their intent all too plain. Cadfael could not wonder at
it. Welshmen were already battling against an alien invader, there
in full view. Welsh blood could not endure to stand aside, all
other rights and wrongs went for nothing. They hallooed their
partisan approval, and plunged into the boiling shallows. The
reeling mass of entangled bodies heaved and strained, so closely
locked together that on neither side could they find free room to
do one another any great hurt. Not until the ranks opened would
there be deaths.
A loud, commanding voice soared above the din of snarling voices
and clanging steel, as Owain Gwynedd set spurs to his horse and
rode into the edge of the sea, striking at his own too impetuous
men with the flat of his sheathed sword.
“Back! Stand off! Get back to your ranks, and put up your
weapons!”
His voice, seldom raised, could split the quaking air like
thunder hard on the heels of lightning when he was roused. It was
that raging trumpet-call rather than the battering blows that
caused the truants to shrink and cower before him, and lean aside
out of his path, plashing ashore in reluctant haste. Even
Cadwaladr’s former liegemen wavered, falling back from their
hand-to-hand struggles. The two sides fell apart, and thrusts and
sword-strokes that might have been smothered in the encroaching
weight of wrestling bodies found room to wound before they could be
restrained or parried.
It was over. They fell back to the solid shingle, swords and
axes and javelins lowered, in awe of the icy glare of Owain’s
eyes, and the angry circling of his horse’s stamping hooves
in the surf, trampling out a zone of stillness between the
combatants. The Danes held their ranks, some of them bloodied, none
of them fallen. Of the attackers, two lay groping feebly out of the
waves to lie limp in the sand. Then there was a silence.
Owain sat his horse, quieted now by a calming hand but still
quivering, and looked down at Otir, eye to eye, for a long moment.
Otir held his ground, and gave him back penetrating stare for
stare. There was no need for explanation or protestation between
them. With his own eyes Owain had seen.
“This,” he said at length, “was not by my
contrivance. Now I will know, and hear from his own mouth, who has
usurped my rule and cast doubt on my good faith. Come forth and
show yourself.”
There was no question but he already knew, for he had seen the
charge launched out of hiding. It was, in some measure, generous to
let a man stand fast by what he had done, and declare himself
defiantly of his own will, in the teeth of whatever might follow.
Gwion let fall the arm still raised, sword in hand, and waded
forward from among his fellows. Very slowly he came, but not from
any reluctance, for his head was erected proudly, and his eyes
fixed on Owain, He plashed waveringly out of the surf, as little
wave on following wave lapped at his feet and drew back. He reached
the edge of the shingle, and a sudden rivulet of blood ran from his
clenched lips and spattered his breast, and a small blot of red
grew out of the padded linen of his tunic, and expanded into a
great sodden star. He stood a moment erect before Owain, and parted
his lips to speak, and blood gushed out of his mouth in a dark
crimson stream. He fell on his face at the feet of the
prince’s horse, and the startled beast edged back from him,
and blew a great lamenting breath over his body.
Chapter Fourteen
« ^
See to him!” said Owain, looking down
impassively at the fallen man. Gwion’s hands stirred and
groped feebly in the polished pebbles, faintly conscious of touch
and texture. “He is not dead, have him away and tend him. I
want no deaths, more than are already past saving.”
They made haste to do his bidding. Three of the front rank, and
Cuhelyn the first of them, ran to turn Gwion gently on his back, to
free his mouth and nostrils from the churned-up sand. They made a
litter from lances and shields, and muffled him in cloaks to carry
him aside. And Brother Cadfael turned from the shore unnoticed, and
followed the litter into the shelter of the dunes. What he had on
him by way of linen or salves was little enough, but better than
nothing until they could get their wounded man to a bed and less
rough and ready care.
Owain looked down at the pool of blackening blood in the shingle
at his feet, and up into Otir’s intent face.
“He is Cadwaladr’s man, sworn and loyal.
Nevertheless, he did wrong. If he has cost you men, you have paid
him.” There were two of those who had followed Gwion lying in
the edge of the tide, lightly rocked by the advancing waves.
A third had got to his knees, and those beside him helped him to
his feet. He trailed blood from a gashed shoulder and arm, but he
was in no danger of death. Nor did Otir trouble to add to the toll
the three he had already put on board ship, to sail home for
burial. Why waste breath in complaint to this prince who
acknowledged and deserved no blame for an act of folly?
“I hold you to terms,” he said, “such as we
understood between us. No more, and no less. This is none of your
doing, nor any choice of mine. They chose it, and what came of it
has been between them and me.”
“So be it!” said Owain. “And now, put up your
weapons and load your cattle, and go, more freely than you came,
for you came without my knowledge or leave. And to your face I tell
you that if ever you touch here on my land again uninvited I will
sweep you back into the sea. As for this time, take your fee and go
in peace.”
“Then here I deliver your brother Cadwaladr,” said
Otir as coldly. “Into his own hands, not yours, for that was
not in any bargain between you and me. He may go where he will, or
stay, and make his own terms with you, my lord.” He turned
about, to those of his men who still held Cadwaladr sick with gall
between them. He had been made nothing, a useless stock, in a
matter conducted all between other men, though he was at the heart
and core of the whole conflict. He had been silent while other men
disposed of his person, his means and his honor, and that with
manifest distaste. He had no word to say now, but bit back the
bitterness and anger that rose in his throat and seared his tongue,
as his captors loosed him and stood well aside, opening the way
clear for him to depart. Stiffly he walked forward on to the shore,
towards where his brother waited.
“Load your ships!” said Owain. “You have this
one day to leave my land.”
And he wheeled his horse and turned his back, pacing at a
deliberate walk back towards his own camp. The ranks of his men
closed in orderly march and followed him, and the bruised and
draggled survivors of Gwion’s unblessed army took up their
dead and straggled after, leaving the trampled and bloodied beach
clear of all but the drovers and their cattle, and Cadwaladr alone,
aloof from all men, stalking in a black, forbidding cloud of
disgust and humiliation after his brother.
In the nest of thick grass where they had laid him, Gwion opened
his eyes, and said in a fine thread of a voice, but quite clearly:
“There is something I must tell Owain Gwynedd. I must go to
him.”
Cadfael was on his knees beside him, staunching with what linen
he had to hand, padded beneath thick folds of brychans, the blood
that flowed irresistibly from a great wound in the young
man’s side, under the heart. Cuhelyn, kneeling with
Gwion’s head in his lap, had wiped away the foam of blood
from the open mouth and the sweat from the forehead already chill
and livid with the unhurried approach of death. He looked up at
Cadfael, and said almost silently: “We must carry him back to
the camp. He is in earnest. He must go.”
“He is going nowhere in this world,” said Cadfael as
quietly. “If we lift him, he will die between our
hands.”
Something resembling the palest and briefest of smiles, yet
unquestionably a smile, touched Gwion’s parted lips. He said,
in the muted tones they had used over him: “Then Owain must
come to me. He has more time to spare than I have. He will come. It
is a thing he will wish to know, and no one else can tell
him.”
Cuhelyn drew back the tangle of black hair that lay damp on
Gwion’s brow, for fear it should discomfort him now, when all
comfort was being rapt away all too quickly. His hand was steady
and gentle. There was no hostility left. There was room for none.
And in their opposed fashion they had been friends. The likeness
was still there, each of them peered into a mirror, a darkening
mirror and a marred image.
“I’ll ride after him. Be patient. He will
come.”
“Ride fast!” said Gwion, and shut his mouth upon the
distortion of the smile.
On his feet already, and with a hand stretched to his
horse’s bridle, Cuhelyn hesitated. “Not Cadwaladr?
Should he come?”
“No,” said Gwion, and turned his face away in a
sharp convulsion of pain. Otir’s last defensive parry, never
meant to kill, had struck out just as Owain thundered his
displeasure and split the ranks apart, and Gwion had dropped his
leveled sword and his guard, and opened his flank to the steel. No
help for it now, it was done and could not be undone.
Cuhelyn was gone, in faithful haste, sending the sand spraying
from his horse’s hooves until he reached the upland meadow
grass and left the dunes behind. There was no one more likely to
make passionate haste to do Gwion’s errand than Cuhelyn, who
for a brief time had lost the ability to see in his opposite his
own face. That also was past.
Gwion lay with closed eyes, containing whatever pain he felt.
Cadfael did not think it was great, he had already almost slipped
out of its reach. Together they waited. Gwion lay very still, for
stillness seemed to slow the bleeding and conserve the life in him,
and life he needed for a while yet. Cadfael had water beside him in
Cuhelyn’s helmet, and bathed away the beads of sweat that
gathered on his patient’s forehead and lip, cold as dew.
From the shore there was no more clamor, only the brisk
exchanges of voices, and the stir of men moving about their
business unhindered now and intent, and the lowing and occasional
bellowing of cattle as they were urged through the shallows and up
the ramps into the ships. A rough, uncomfortable voyage for them in
the deep wells amidships, but a few hours and they would be on
green turf again, good grazing and sweet water.
“Will he come?” wondered Gwion, suddenly
anxious.
“He will come.”
He was coming already, in a moment more they heard the soft
thudding of hooves, and in from the shore came Owain Gwynedd, with
Cuhelyn at his back. They dismounted in silence, and Owain came to
look down at the young, spoiled body, not too closely yet, for fear
even dulling ears should be sharp enough to overhear what was not
meant to be overheard.
“Can he live?”
Cadfael shook his head and made no other reply.
Owain dropped into the sand and leaned close.
“Gwion… I am here. Spare to make many words, there is
no need.”
Gwion’s black eyes, a little dazzled by the mounting sun,
opened wide and knew him. Cadfael moistened the lips that opened
wryly, and labored to articulate. “Yes, there is need. I have
a thing I must say.”
“For peace between us two,” said Owain, “I say
again, there is no need of words. But if you must, I am
listening.”
“Bledri ap Rhys…’ began Gwion, and paused to
draw breath. “You require to know who killed him. Do not hold
it against any other. I killed him.”
He waited, with resigned patience, for disbelief
rather than outcry, but neither came. Only a considering and
accepting silence that seemed to last a long while, and then
Owain’s voice, level and composed as ever, saying:
“Why? He was of your own allegiance, my brother’s
man.”
“So he had been,” said Gwion, and was shaken by a
laugh that contorted his mouth and sent a thin trickle of blood
running down his jaw. Cadfael leaned and wiped it away. “I
was glad when he came to Aber. I knew what my lord was about. I
longed to join him, and I could and would have told him all I knew
of your forces and movements. It was fair. I had told you I was
wholly and for ever your brother’s man, you knew my mind. But
I could not go, I had given my word not to leave.”
“And had kept your word,” said Owain. “So
far!”
“But Bledri had given no such word. He could go, as I
could not. So I told him all that I had learned in Aber, what
strength you could raise, how soon you could be in Carnarvon,
everything my lord Cadwaladr had to know for his defence. And I
took a horse from the stables before dark, while the gates were
open, and tethered it among the trees for him. And like a fool I
never doubted but Bledri would be true to his salt. And he listened
to all, and never said word, letting me believe he was of my
mind!”
“How did you hope to get him out of the llys, once the
gates were closed?” asked Owain, as mildly as if he
questioned of some ordinary daily duty.
“There are ways… I was in Aber a long time. Not
everyone is always careful with keys. But in the waiting time he
was noting all things within your court, and he could count as well
as I, and weigh chances as sharply, while he so carried himself as
to put all suspicion of his intent out of mind. What I thought was
his intent!” Gwion said bitterly. His voice failed him for a
moment, but he gathered his strength and resumed doggedly:
“When I went to tell him it was time to go, and see him
safely away, he was naked in his bed. Without shame he told me he
was going nowhere, he was no such fool, having seen for himself
your power and your numbers. He would lie safe in Aber and watch
which way the wind blew, and if it blew for Owain Gwynedd, then he
was Owain’s man. I called to mind his fealty, and he laughed
at me. And I struck him down,” said Gwion through bared
teeth. “And then, since he would not, I knew if I was to keep
faith with Cadwaladr I must break faith with you, and go in
Bledri’s place. And since he had so turned his coat, I knew
that I must kill him, for to make his way with you he would
certainly betray me. And before he had his wits again I stabbed him
to the heart.”
Some quivering tension in his body relaxed, and he drew and
breathed out a great sigh. He had done already almost all that
truth required of him. The rest was very little burden.
“I went to find the horse, and the horse was gone. And
then the messenger came, and there was no more I could do.
Everything was in vain. I had done murder for nothing! What it was
entrusted to me to do for Bledri ap Rhys, whom I killed, that I
did, for penance. And what came of it you know already. But it is
just!” he said, rather to himself than to any other, but they
heard it: “He died unshriven, and so must I.”
“That need not be,” said Owain with detached
compassion.
“Bear with this world a little while longer, and my priest
will be here, for I sent word for him to come.”
“He will come late,” said Gwion, and closed his
eyes.
Nevertheless, he was still living when Owain’s chaplain
came in obedient haste to take a dying man’s last confession
and guide his failing tongue through his last act of contrition.
Cadfael, in attendance to the end, doubted if the penitent heard
the words of the absolution, for after it was spoken there was no
response, no quiver of the drained face or the arched lids that
veiled the black, intense eyes. Gwion had said his last word to the
world, and of what might come to pass in the world he was entering
he had no great fear. He had lived long enough to rest assured of
the absolution he most needed, Owain’s forbearance and
forgiveness, never formally spoken, but freely given.
“Tomorrow,” said Brother Mark,
“we must be on our way home. We have outstayed our
time.”
They were standing together at the edge of the fields outside
Owain’s camp, looking out over the open sea. Here the dunes
were only a narrow fringe of gold above the descent to the shore,
and in subdued afternoon sunlight the sea stretched in cloudy
blues, deepening far out into a clear green, and the long, drowned
peninsula of shoals shone pale through the water. In the deep
channels between, the Danish cargo ships were gradually dwindling
into toy boats, dark upon the brightness, bearing out on a steady
breeze under sail, for their own Dublin shore. And beyond, the
lighter longships, smaller still, drove eagerly for home.
The peril was past, Gwynedd delivered, debts paid, brothers
brought together again, if not yet reconciled. The affair might
have turned out hugely bloodier and more destructive. Nevertheless,
men had died.
Tomorrow, too, the camp at their backs would be dismantled of
its improvised defenses, the husbandman would come back to his
farmhouse, bringing his beasts with him, and return imperturbably
to the care of his land and his stock, as his forebears had done
time after time, giving ground pliably for a while to marauding
enemies they knew they could outwait, outrun and outlast. The
Welsh, who left their expendable homesteads for the hills at the
approach of an enemy, left them only to return and rebuild.
The prince would take his muster back to Carnarvon, and thence
dismiss those whose lands lay here in Arfon and Anglesey, before
going on to Aber. Rumor said he would suffer Cadwaladr to return
with him, and those who knew them best added that Cadwaladr would
soon be restored to possession of some part, at least, of his
lands. For in spite of all, Owain loved his younger brother, and
could not shut him out of his grace much longer.
“And Otir has his fee,” said Mark, pondering gains
and losses.
“It was promised.”
“I don’t grudge it. It might have cost far
more.”
And so it might, though two thousand marks could not buy back
the lives of Otir’s three young men, now being borne back to
Dublin for burial, nor those few of Gwion’s following picked
up dead from the surf, nor Bledri ap Rhys in his chill, calculating
faithlessness, nor Gwion himself in his stark, destructive loyalty,
the one as fatal as the other. Nor could all these lost this year
call into life again Anarawd, dead last year in the south, at
Cadwaladr’s instigation, if not at his hands.
“Owain has sent a courier to Canon Meirion in Aber,”
said Mark, “to put his mind at rest for his daughter. By this
he knows she is here safe enough, with her bridegroom. The prince
sent as soon as Ieuan brought her into camp last night.”
His tone, Cadfael thought, was carefully neutral, as though he
stood aside and withheld judgement, viewing with equal detachment
two sides of a complex problem, and one that was not his to
solve.
“And how has she conducted herself here in these few
hours?” asked Cadfael. Mark might study to absent himself
from all participation in these events, but he could not choose but
observe.
“She is altogether dutiful and quiet. She pleases Ieuan.
She pleases the prince, for she is as a bride should be, submissive
and obedient. She was in terror, says Ieuan, when he snatched her
away out of the Danish camp. She is in no fear now.”
“I wonder,” said Cadfael, “if submissive and
obedient is as Heledd should be. Have we ever known her to be so,
since she came from Saint Asaph with us?”
“Much has happened since then,” said Mark,
thoughtfully smiling. “It may be she has had enough of
venturing, and is not sorry to be settling down to a sensible
marriage with a decent man. You have seen her. Have you seen any
cause to doubt that she is content?”
And in truth Cadfael could not say that he had observed in her
bearing any trace of discontent. Indeed, she went smilingly about
the work she found for herself, waited upon Ieuan serenely and
deftly, and continued to distil about her a kind of luster that
could not come from an unhappy woman. Whatever was in her mind, and
held in reserve there with deep and glossy satisfaction, it
certainly did not disquiet or distress her. Heledd viewed the path
opening before her with unmistakable pleasure.
“Have you spoken with her?” asked Mark.
“There has been no occasion yet.”
“You may essay now, if you wish. She is coming this
way.”
Cadfael turned his head, and saw Heledd coming striding lightly
along the crest of the ridge towards them, with purpose in her
step, and her face towards the north. Even when she halted beside
them, it was only for a moment, checked in flight like a bird
hovering.
“Brother Cadfael, I’m glad to see you safe. The last
I knew of you was when they swept us apart, by the breach in the
stockade.” She looked out across the sea, where the ships had
shrunk into black splinters upon scintillating water. All along the
line of them her glance followed. She might have been counting
them. “They got off unhindered, then, with their silver and
their cattle. Were you there to see?”
“I was,” said Cadfael.
They never did me offence,” she said, looking after their
departing fleet with a slight, remembering smile. “I would
have waved them away home, but Ieuan did not think it safe for
me.”
“As well,” said Cadfael seriously, “for it was
not entirely a peaceful departure. And where are you going
now?”
She turned and looked at them full, and her eyes were wide and
innocent and the deep purple of irises. “I left something of
mine up there in the Danish camp,” she said. “I am
going to find it.”
“And Ieuan lets you go?”
“I have leave,” she said. “They are all gone
now.”
They were all gone, and it was safe now to let his hard-won
bride return to the deserted dunes where she had been a prisoner
for a while, but never felt herself in bondage. They watched her
resume her purposeful passage along the edge of the fields. There
was barely a mile to go.
“You did not offer to go with her,” said Mark with a
solemn face.
“I would not be so crass. But give her a fair
start,” said Cadfael reflectively, “and I think you and
I might very well go after her.”
“You think,” said Mark, “we might be more
welcome company on the way back?”
“I doubt,” Cadfael admitted, “whether she is
coming back.”
Mark nodded his head by way of acknowledgement, unsurprised.
“I had been wondering myself,” he said.
The tide was on the ebb, but not yet so low as to
expose the long, slender tongue of sand that stretched out like a
reaching hand and wrist towards the coast of Anglesey. It showed
pale gold beneath the shallows, here and there a tuft of tenacious
grass and soil breaking the surface. At the end of it, where the
knuckles of the hand jutted in an outcrop of rock, the stunted salt
bushes stood up like rough, crisp hair, their roots fringed with
the yellow of sand. Cadfael and Mark stood on the ridge above, and
looked down as they had looked once before, and upon the same
revelation. Repeated, it made clear all the times, all the
evenings, when it had been repeated without witnesses. They even
drew back a little, so that the shape of them might be less
obtrusive on the skyline, if she should look up. But she did not
look up. She looked down into the clear water, palest green in the
evening light, that reached almost to her knees, as she trod the
narrow golden path towards the seagirt throne of rock. She had her
skirts, still frayed and soiled from travel and from living wild,
gathered up in her hands, and she leaned to watch the cold, sweet
water quivering about her legs, and breaking their lissome outlines
into a disembodied tremor, as though she floated rather than waded.
She had pulled all the pins from her hair; it hung in a black,
undulating cloud about her shoulders, hiding the oval face stooped
to watch her steps. She moved like a dancer, slowly, with
languorous grace. For whatever tryst she had here she came early,
and she knew it. But because there was no uncertainty, time was a
grace, even waiting would be pleasure anticipated.
Here and there she halted, to be still, to let the water settle
and be still around her feet, and then she would lean to watch the
tremulous ardor of her face shimmering as each wave ebbed back into
the sea. A very gentle tide, with hardly any wind now. But
Otir’s ships under sail were more than halfway to Dublin by
this hour.
On the throne of rock she sat down, wringing the water from the
hem of her gown, and looked across the sea, and waited, without
impatience, without doubts. Once, in this place, she had looked
immeasurably lonely and forsaken, but that had been illusion, even
then. Now she looked like one in serene possession of all that lay
about her, dear companion to the sea and the sky. The orb of the
sun was declining before her, due west, gilding her face and
body.
The little ship, lean and dark and sudden, came darting down
from the north, surging out of the concealment of the rising
shoreline beyond the sandy warrens across the strait. Somewhere
up-coast it had lain waiting off Anglesey until the sunset hour.
There had been, thought Cadfael, watching intently, no compact, no
spoken tryst at all. They had had no time to exchange so much as a
word when she was snatched away. There had been only the inward
assurance to keep them constant, that the ship would come, and that
she would be there waiting. Body and blood, they had been superbly
sure, each of the other. No sooner had Heledd recovered her breath
and accepted the fact of her innocent abduction than she had come
to terms with events, knowing how they must and would end. Why else
had she gone so serenely about passing the waiting time, disarming
suspicion, even putting herself out, who knows how ruefully, to
give Ieuan ab Ifor some brief pleasure before he was to pay for it
with perpetual loss. In the end Canon Meirion’s daughter knew
what she wanted, and was ruthless in pursuing it, since no one
among her menfolk and masters showed any sign of helping her to her
desire.
Small, serpentine and unbelievably swift, oars driving as one,
Turcaill’s dragon-ship swooped inshore, but held clear of
beaching. It hung for a moment still, oars trailed, like a bird
hovering, and Turcaill leaped over the side and came wading
waist-deep towards the tiny island of rock. His flaxen hair shone
almost red in the crimson descent of the sun, a match for Owain
Gwynedd’s, as dominant and as fair. And Heledd, when they
turned their eyes again on her, had risen and walked into the sea.
The tension of the ebbing tide drew her with it, skirts floating.
Turcaill came up glistening out of the deeper water. They met
midway, and she walked into his arms, and was swung aloft against
his heart. There was no great show, only a distant, brief peal of
mingled laughter rising on the air to the two who stood watching.
No need for more, there had never been any doubt in either of these
sea creatures as to the inevitable ending.
Turcaill had turned his back, and was striding through the surf
back to his ship, with Heledd in his arms, and the tide, receding
more rapidly as the sun declined, gave back before him in
iridescent fountains of spray, minor rainbows wreathing his naked
feet. Lightly he hoisted the girl over the low side of his dragon,
and swung himself after. And she, as soon as she had her footing,
turned to him and embraced him. They heard her laughter, high and
wild and sweet, thinner than a bird’s song at this distance,
but piercing and clear as a carillon of bells.
All the long, sinuous bank of oars, suspended in air, dipped
together. The little serpent heeled and sped, creaming spray, round
into the clear passage between the sandy shoals, already showing
golden levels beneath the blue, but more than deep enough yet for
this speedy voyager. She sped away end-on, small and ever smaller,
a leaf carried on an impetuous current, borne away to Ireland, to
Dublin of the Danish kings and the restless seafarers. And a
fitting mate Turcaill had carried away with him, and formidable
progeny they would breed between them to master these uneasy oceans
in generations to come.
Canon Meirion need not fret that his daughter would ever
reappear to imperil his status with his bishop, his reputation or
his advancement. Love her as he might, and wish her well as he
probably did, he had desired heartily that she should enjoy her
good fortune elsewhere, out of sight if not out of mind. He had his
wish. Nor need he agonize, thought Cadfael, watching that
resplendent departure, over her happiness. She had what she wanted,
a man of her own choosing. By that she would abide, wise or unwise
by her father’s measure. She measured by other means, and was
not likely to suffer any regrets.
The small black speck, racing home, was barely visible as a dot
of darkness upon a bright and glittering sea.
“They are gone,” said Brother Mark, and turned and
smiled. “And we may go, too.”
They had overstayed their time. Ten days at the
most, Mark had said, and Brother Cadfael would be returned safe and
sound to his herb garden and his proper work among the sick. But
perhaps Abbot Radulfus and Bishop de Clinton would regard the
truant days as well spent, considering the outcome. Even Bishop
Gilbert might be highly content to keep his able and energetic
canon, and have Meirion’s inconvenient daughter safely
oversea, and his scandalous marriage forgotten. Everyone else
appeared well content to have so satisfactory a settlement of what
might well have been a bloody business. What mattered now was to
return to the level sanity of daily living, and allow old grudges
and animosities to fade gradually into the obscurity of the past.
Yes, Cadwaladr would be restored, on probation, Owain could not
totally discard him. But not wholly restored, and not yet. Gwion,
who by any measure had been the loser, would be decently buried,
with no very great acknowledgement of his loyalty from the lord who
had bitterly disappointed him. Cuhelyn would remain here in
Gwynedd, and in time surely be glad that he had not had to do
murder with his own hands to see Anarawd avenged, at least upon
Bledri ap Rhys. Princes, who can depute other hands to do their
less savory work for them, commonly escape all temporary judgments,
but not the last.
And Ieuan ab Ifor would simply have to resign himself to losing
a delusory image of a submissive wife, a creature Heledd could
never become. He had barely seen or spoken with her, his heart
could scarcely be broken at losing her, however his dignity might
be bruised. There were pleasant women in Anglesey who could console
him, if he did but look about him here at home.
And she… she had what she wanted, and she was where she
wanted to be, and not where others had found it convenient to place
her. Owain had laughed when he heard of it, though considerately he
had kept a grave face in Ieuan’s presence. And there was one
more waiting in Aber who would have the last word in the story of
Heledd.
The last word, when Canon Meirion had heard and digested the
tale of his daughter’s choice, came after a deep-drawn breath
of relief for her safety at least—or was it for his own
deliverance?
“Well, well!” said Meirion, knotting and unknotting
his long hands. “There is a sea between.” True, and
there was relief for both of them in that. But then he continued:
“I shall never see her again!” and there was as much of
grief in it as of satisfaction. Cadfael was always to be in two
minds about Canon Meirion.
They came to the border of the shire in the early
evening of the second day, and on the principle that it was as well
to be hanged for a sheep as a lamb, turned aside to pass the night
with Hugh at Maesbury. The horses would be grateful for the rest,
and Hugh would be glad to hear at first hand what had passed in
Gwynedd, and how the Norman bishop was rubbing along with his Welsh
flock. There was also the pleasure of spending a few placid hours
with Aline and Giles, in a domesticity all the more delightful to
contemplate because they had forsworn it for themselves, along with
the world outside the Order. Some such unguarded remark Cadfael
made, sitting contentedly by Hugh’s hearth with Giles on his
knees. And Hugh laughed at him.
“You, forswear the world? And you just back from
gallivanting to the farthest western edge of Wales? If they manage
to keep you within the pale for more than a month or two, even
after this jaunt, it will be a marvel. I’ve known you
restless after a week of strict observance. Now and again
I’ve wondered if some day you wouldn’t set out for
Saint Giles, and end up in Jerusalem.”
“Oh, no, not that!” said Cadfael, with serene
certainty. “It’s true, now and again my feet itch for
the road.” He was looking deep into himself, where old
memories survived, and remained, after their fashion, warming and
satisfying, but of the past, never to be repeated, no longer
desirable. “But when it comes down to it,” said
Cadfael, with profound content, “as roads go, the road home
is as good as any.”
The End
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