Read Daughter of Albion Online
Authors: Ilka Tampke
He glanced at me. âHas plantcraft claimed all your knowledge?'
I looked away, fighting a wave of shame.
âI can eat it beyond my skin home. To strengthen my skin.'
âPerhaps if you told me your skin homeâ' I stiffened, ââI'd be less ignorant of that at least.'
âBeyond your travels, I am sure.' He shifted as he sat.
âBut where?' I pressed. Why had he cause to hide this?
His face clouded with irritation. âDoes my skin home determine your opinion of me?'
âOf course not.'
âThen why do you pursue knowledge of no consequence?'
I was silent, caught again by his prickly logic.
He laughed softly. âWhat would you say if I told you that I do nothing but swim up the river and down again, resting a moment here or there. Taking my food where I can find it. Harming no one.'
âI would say that you mock me. And if not that, then you do not earn your place in your tribe. Though there is something sweet in the freedom of it.'
He nodded. âWell answered.'
And I felt ripe with pride that I had pleased him.
He fondled the bone whistle around his hips, carved with symbols I did not understand. I fought the urge to ask of them, and then it dawned upon me that I was with someone who believed I had skin, someone who did not know that I was forbidden to learn. âTell me what the patterns mean.'
âThese?' he said, lifting the whistle.
I nodded.
âClose your eyes.' He picked up my hand and rubbed my fingers over the nubs of bone. âThese are the marks of my ancestors.'
My eyes opened. âWhat does it feel like,' I asked quietly. âYour skin?' My heart was thumping.
He frowned. âAs yoursâ'
âBut I mean yours,' I said quickly. âTell me how it feels to possess the salmon's skin.'
The afternoon was very still. No breeze or bird cry broke the silence that had fallen around us. When he answered, I knew from the music in his voice that he spoke from his core. âThe salmon is my story.' He gave a light, desolate laugh. âIt is the mirror of what little is perfect in me.'
I yearned to assure him there was much that was perfect in him. But I was beginning to see the bruises beneath the pride he held like a shield before him. âTell me more,' I whispered.
âWhat should I say?' He shrugged. âWe all understand our totem.'
âIs it not something different for each of us?'
His eyebrows lifted. âPerhaps. For me it is survival. The salmon song will always exist. My body dies, but my skin never will.'
I nodded, choked with the truth of it. I was bound to nothing that would endure.
âWould you like to hear a story?' he asked.
âYes.'
He gouged ruts in the ground with a twig as he spoke. âIn the time of the Singing there were shapes in the water. No eyes, no fins, no soul. They could not swim. They just drifted in the river. One night a Mother of fire threw a burning log into the water and the sparks ignited the shapes and turned them into red salmon that darted around.
âThe Mothers of sky were angry that the Mother of fire had made something so beautiful, and said that they would cast them away to the four corners of the oceans. But before they did this, the fire Mother put a little of the soil from the riverbank into the salmons' noses, so they would never forget the smell of their birthplace. They would swim until they found the smell that matched the one they carried within them. And even if the journey killed them, they would die at home.' Taliesin looked up. âI should not have told you this.'
âWhy did you tell it?'
âBecause you asked of my skin. And my stories are my skin. As are yours.' He drew his knees to his chest. âIf I fail this life, my skin stories will take me to another.'
âYou will not fail this lifeâ'
âHow would you know?'
I reached out to touch his forearm wrapped around his legs. His muscles were as taut as wood, but his skin was softer than a horse's muzzle.
He smiled, before pulling his arm away.
We sat together until evening coloured the western sky. I learned nothing of his tribe or history, only of his favourite season (late summer) and companion dogs (hut-reared wolves), his love of prey birds and dislike of combat arts. But the lightness of his words could not mask the sharpness with which he watched the world and the tenderness with which he met it. He could not be of low birth; he was learned.
I stood, calling Neha to my side, terrified that I would not see him again. He was so tall that I had to tilt my head to find his eyes. âThank you,' I said. âPayment has been well made. Yesterday's dab of honey for today's fish and stories.'
âA fair exchange,' he agreed. âThere is no further business that binds us.'
âNo,' I said. âNone at all.'
âI shall meet you here tomorrow then?'
âYes,' I said with too much relief. âI will see you then.'
As I walked home through pastures and wheat fields doused in amber light, Taliesin's words swirled around me. I knew what he said was true: for those held in skin, this lifeâthis fleshformâwas just a fragment in a river that was ever-flowing. Totems did not die, nor did the souls who had joined with them.
But for those like me, death
was
the end. A casting back to the void. For most of the skinless this was too much to bear, it was why they relinquished their days to the comforts of beer at the fringe fires. A life without ritual. A life unlived.
Now, more than ever, I knew that this would not be my way. I whistled for Neha, who had bounded into a field in pursuit of a hare. I was going to search for my skin until the last breath flowed from my body.
âThere you are!' Cookmother said, as I slipped into the kitchen. âTake these to the council.' She pressed a jug of beer into each of my hands, too distracted by preparing meat for the councillors to question the lateness of my return.
I walked straight back out into the dusk. Tribal council met on the third night of the wane, or whenever Fraid required it. Most often in the Great House, but if the evening was mild, like tonight, they would gather directly under the stars that would guide them.
I wove between them, filling the horns of the twelve tribespeople who formed our council: Fraid at the strong place, Llwyd to her left. Fibor and Etaina, Ruther's father, Orgilos, and seven others.
âYour son has disturbed us, Orgilos.' Fibor's voice still carried some of Beltane's heat.
âHe speaks not for me nor I for him,' said Orgilos.
Fibor drank. âIt is said that the apple does not fall wide of the tree.'
âSometimes pigs eat the apples and shit in the fields,' Orgilos responded.
Etaina threw back her head and laughed. âMy sister's daughter is also newly returned from fosterage,' she said. âRuther is but one of many who begin to proclaim the light of Rome. In the eastern tribes, there are many minded as he is minded.'
âAnd what of their loyalty, wife?' Fibor raised his cup as I refilled it.
âDissolving in grape wine and olive oil,' said Fraid. âWe are protected by distance. And the strong minds of the western kings.'
âWe are protected by skin,' said Llwyd, and the council's silence acknowledged it.
I stood behind Fraid, outside the circle. The eastern horizon was deep-water blue with one lively star rising to its surface.
âYou call us to determine if we should prepare for war, sister,' said Fibor to Fraid. âWe are fools if we do not. We know the Romans lust for these tribelands.' He looked around the circle, eyes blazing, âThey will come. If we are not prepared, then they will fuck us like a dog!'
Fraid turned away.
âPerhaps we should strengthen the earthworks around the hill,' agreed Orgilos. âAs a precaution.'
âAt the very least!' cried Fibor. âAnd replenish our stones and renew the chalkâ'
âAs you know full well, we rebuild the ramparts according to the rhythm called by the Mothersâat the seventh winter solstice,' said Llwyd.
âWill the legions wait for the Mothers' call?' said Fibor.
âThe legions will fall at their call,' Llwyd answered, âwhen it is spoken by the woman who carries our song.'
The council murmured.
I stiffened, aware of the discomfort rising among them. Again, this woman. Who was she, who carried such hope? I burned to find out.
âThis is the true heart of our argument, council.' Llwyd looked around him. âWe have not known a Kendra for one and twenty summers. Albion hungers for her born Mother. Bleeds for her. Without our Kendra, we start to rot, and the Emperor Claudius can smell it. This is why the Roman beast begins to stir.'
âYou believe one journeywoman will keep the Roman legions at bay?' said Fibor.
âShe is not one journeywoman,' said Llwyd, unflinching. âShe is the Kendra of Albion.'
âShe is not here,' said Etaina softly.
I recognised the yearning in Llwyd's silence.
âIt is true that we hunger,' Etaina continued with care. âBut is it not the Mothers themselves who keep the Kendra from us? With deepest respect, Journeyman, perhaps they call us now to act in our own strength.'
Fibor grunted his agreement. âThey ask us to fight for ourselves.'
Llwyd stared at them. âHave you drifted so far since she has been gone?' he asked. âWithout her, we have lost the very reason that we fight at all. She is our bridge to the Mothers.' His voice trembled.
The sky was now dark. The council was quiet. No one could deny that Llwyd spoke the truth.
âWe will start the work to the ramparts at the next wax.' Fraid stood to end the discussion. âAnd we call for our Kendra.'
The Singing is the Mothers' world, the making of things.
Once they are made, the world is hard.
âG
RAB IT FIRM
, Ailia. Don't be timid or it won't flow.'
I was squatted in the sheepyard with my fingers squeezed around a swollen teat. The Tribequeen's ewes were heavy with milk and we were all needed to empty them. I had paired with Cook-mother, who was bent over the animal, holding it still as she barked instructions.
âTell me of the Kendra,' I asked over the hiss of milk.
She looked at me in surprise. âWhat do you know of the Kendra?'
âLittle. This is why I ask.'
âBe still, you wretch!' she cried as the ewe bucked its head. âShe is gone. Dead for thrice seven summers, without a daughter to bear her cloak. Albion yields no other Kendra.'
âBut will she return? How is she found? How is she known?'
âHow will I endure your ceaseless prattle?'
âPlease,' I urged. âYou bid me always to be curiousâwho is she?'
Cookmother sighed. âHer name means most knowing woman. Her wisdom descends by blood and rises by training. Keep milking, don't slow!'
I tugged on the fingers of skin that hung from the udder. âWhy is she so little spoken of?'
Cookmother leaned closer. âFraid has bade that we do not speak of it. Because it is feared that in losing her, we are distanced from the Mothers.'
My eyes widened. âDoes she journey?'
âOf course she journeys. All wisewomen journey,' Cookmother snapped. âHow else are they called journeywomen?'
âBut the Kendra?' I pushed.
âHer journeys with the Mothers endure. They are not fleeting.' Cookmother pauses. âThe Kendra learns with them. They are her teachers.'
I took breath at the words.
âAy, it is an honoured path she walks.' She lowered her voice, glancing sideways to ensure that we were unheard. âBut dangerous also. The Mothers are strong. And they can be cruel. They will take of her what they want.'
My fingers clenched the teat. âWhat, Cookmother? What do they take?'
The ewe jerked, kicking the pail, and splashing milk over the ground.
âBy the Mothers!' cried Cookmother, setting the pail upright with a thump. âConcentrate on the task, Ailia, you have no need to know of this.'
âI
want
to know.' I was surprised by the strength in my voice.
âThen listen,' she said, her eyes locked to mine. âThere was a time the Mothers stood much closer. It was easy to see them. Now the new world bleeds into ours and the Mothers are fading. It is harder for the journeywomen to enter their realm. The learning we need is different. We still call upon our Mothers, but perhaps the time to walk with them has passed. Perhaps the need for the Kendra has passed.'
Never before had I known her to question the old ways. âJourneyman Llwyd would not agree,' I whispered.
âLlwyd has not known what I have known.'
I stared at her, startled. âWhat have you known?'
She shook her head in agitation. âEnough!' she said. âAsk me of plantcraft. You're well gifted for it and that's what you are born to. No more, no less.'
A flame of protest flared in my chest but I said nothing more.
âCookmother?' I ventured, when we had milked without words for some moments.
âAy?' she grunted.
âHow did she die?'
âDrowned, I recall. Drowned in a river.'
The late morning brought an unseasonal heat, sedating the township with the scent of warm earth. Work slowed as townspeople paused to give thanks for the Mothers' gift of an early summer.
Bebin and I took hours to boil and strain the sheep's milk, and I had almost given up on seeing Taliesin. But then Cookmother settled for a rest after highsun, and murmured her drowsy approval when I told her I was going harvesting for spring roseroot.
âIf you give me half an hour, I'll come with you.' Bebin looked up from the table where she was shaping the sheep's cheese into soft boulders.
âOh no,' I faltered, âI want to pick from the north side of the hill and if I wait any longer the buds will close.'
Her smile could not mask her disappointment and I resolved to attend to her soon.
This time it was he who was waiting, sitting on the bank, when I turned the last bend of the river path.
I was damp with sweat as I dropped down beside him. âHow do you fare in this fearsome heat?'
He shrugged, making me feel foolish for my trifling question. âAs I fare at all times.'
Neha clambered joyfully over him.
âAnd how is that?' I retorted.
He looked at me as if to answer, then shook his head. Something needled him today. âOne such as you would not understand.'
âWhat do you mean “one such as me”?'
âOne who lacks nothing.'
âLacks nothing?' I laughed at the untruth. âHow little you know.'
He worried a small tear in the seam of his trousers. How had I displeased him?
âYou should ask your hutmother to repair that,' I ventured.
âI would if I had a mother to ask. But I do not. Hut or otherwise.' He glanced at me. âNor father.'
I stared at his profile, stunned. By the Mothers, he was as I was. Yet he must have known his mother once, for he was skinned. âI am sorry for it.'
âWhy?' He straightened. âIt was not your doing.'
I sighed. His spirit was covered in bruises. A wrong word and he would snarl like an injured dog. Yet when I coaxed him to come closer, it was as though I had captured a piece of the sun in my hand.
I stretched out my legs, sticky with sweat. Heat rose off the earth as if the Mothers themselves were feverish. âPity we cannot eat those berries,' I said, looking at a bush laden with black fruit on the far side of the river.
âWe can,' he said.
âOh noâ'
âCome,' he insisted, rising. âSwim with me.'
âI can't,' I confessed. âI cannot swim.'
âBut you are of the river tribes,' he questioned, âhow can you not swim?'
âWhy should I?' I snapped. âOur bodies are not meant for water.'
âYes, they are,' he said, sitting back down. âWe all began life in water. Was it not where we were safest?'
He picked up my hand, stretching my fingers, and let it fall in my lap. Then he squeezed my thigh through my skirt. âLarge hands. Strong limbs,' he pronounced. âThis body was meant to swim. I will teach you.'
âNo!' I laughed. It was forbidden for me to be taught. Besides, I would be so graceless.
âAs you wish.' He walked to the bank and launched himself into the rolling water.
I trailed my feet among the reeds in the shallows. The river was wide here, perhaps twenty paces across, swollen with spring melt. Taliesin stood chest-deep in the current, his shoulders gleaming like polished wood. âIt's colder than a widow's bed!' he called.
âWhat did you expect?' I laughed. âIt's full of mountain snow!'
He swam to the other side of the river and climbed onto the bank.
I watched him as he plucked and savoured the fruit, mocking me with his unhidden pleasure. âAll right,' I shouted. âTeach me to swim!'
He stuffed his mouth with more berries before crossing back. Standing before me, water running off his skin, he took a berry, warm from his mouth, and slipped it gently into mine. âGet in,' he said, as the acid sweetness broke on my tongue.
The water swirled cold around my thighs.
âYou'll need to take off this.' He gathered my billowing leine and tugged it over my arms.
Facing him in my thin linen under-robe, my resolve started to slip away. âTaliesin,' I said. âI spoke in truthâI have never swum.'
âI will not let you drown.' He took my hands. âLet the water lift you. And kick your legs.' He walked slowly backward, pulling me into the belly of the river, as I gripped his wrists. âGood,' he nodded, his dark eyes blazing.
Never had my body been so immersed. Never had it felt the icy eddies and nagging currents of deep water. Breathlessly, I let go one hand as he pulled me further. Now the river was too deep even for him to stand and we were both water-bound and jubilant, joined only by our fingers.
The current surged, testing our hold. âTaliesin!' I gasped.
But instead of tightening his grip, he cast me free.
Water drowned my protests as I slipped under, flailing in panic. The current had dragged me downstream several paces before I felt his hands around my ribs. âWhy did you let me go?' My heart hammered under his palms.
His expression was bemused, unrepentant. âTo see what you could do.'
âI can do nothing!' I clung to him like a frightened child. âYou need not test it a second time.'
âNo.' He cradled me.
Our faces were close. I was suddenly conscious of how tightly I pressed against him, but was too nervous to loosen my grip.
He carried me to the shallows of the far bank, but no sooner had I relaxed my hold, than he ducked out of my reach.
Incredulous, I watched him glide back to the other side, where Neha paced the bank. âSwim back, Ailia!' he called.
Furious, I ignored my fear and plunged forward in a frenzy of kicking to berate him. But when I could find neither the surface above me nor the riverbed below, I panicked again, swallowing water and clawing at the current. I heard Neha barking. My chest burned. Would he not come?
âKick and lift!' I heard the muffled command through the prism of water.
Desperate, I thrust forward again and kicked with all my strength, gasping for air whenever I broke the surface. I struggled forward until my legs sank in exhaustion, finally finding foothold on the riverbed.
âDo your promises mean nothing?' I panted. âWhat teaching is this?'
âThat which has seen you cross the river alone,' he said without apology.
I glared at him, then burst into laughter.
Then he showed me, more carefully, the art of travelling through water until finally, with him coaxing beside me, I swam smoothly from one bank to the other and back again.
I had almost forgiven him as we climbed out to dry.
âWhat is your greatest fear?' he asked.
We lay back on our elbows in the sun. His questions were like cast stones, falling straight to the depths.
âTo be alone.' It burst out before I could catch it and I prayed he did not think me too brittle. âAnd yours?'
âA witless conversation.'
I stared down at his long fingers splayed in the grass.
âAnd your greatest pleasure?' he continued.
In an instant of truth, I realised it was him, but I could not confess it. âKnowledge,' I answered, thinking of when I was happiest.
âMine also.'
âHah! What do you love in it?' I had never spoken in such a way with another.
He thought a while. The sun had dried his hair to crisp coils on his shoulders. âThat it saves us.' He glanced at me and saw the question in my face. âWhat else is evil but ignorance?' he said.
âA brutal assessment.'
âBut true.'
âAnd for those who are untaught through no choice of their own, what is their salvation?'
He stared at me. âIt is a great waste that you have not been made journeywoman.'
âWhy do you say so?'
âBecause you would look so fetching in the robes.'
I shoved his arm and he collapsed onto the grass.
âBecause you have a mind that asks,' he said, sitting up. âLike a river that finds new paths. Such minds are rare as jewels. I am surprised it has not been recognised.'
I reddened under his praise. âMy tribespeople need me for other purposes.'
âIt is not for the tribespeople to determine. If the Mothers want you, they will call you to journey.'
âBut skin is needed to journeyâ' I flinched, almost confessing myself.
âOf course,' he said, frowning.
I took a deep breath, wondering how long it would be until he discovered how far from a journeywoman I was. Until that moment, I would drink of the cup he offered. âTaliesin, can you tell me of the Kendra?'
His eyebrows lifted. âYou ask me of your own Kendra?'
âBut Albion is without a Kendra.'
He looked at me with an expression I could not read.
âIs it so illicit a truth?' I ventured. âMight no one speak of it?'
âHow is there no Kendra?' he interrupted, his voice sharp. âWhat has happened?'
âI don't knowâ' I faltered. âThe township is forbidden to speak of her. I am told she is lostâ¦drowned. There is no other.' I had gone too far with this question. He would learn too much of my ignorance.
âDrowned,' he repeated to the river. âThen what holds your people to the Mothers?'
âWhyâ¦the same that holds yoursâ¦' I floundered. âThe journeypeople?' I thought of Llwyd's distress, of Cookmother's words. âPerhapsâ¦not enough.'