Pendragon's Heir (59 page)

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Authors: Suzannah Rowntree

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Perceval said, “With no footmen?

Blanchefleur said, “And if we cannot kill him?”

“One man can be overwhelmed. Locked away.”

Sir Ector said, “What about Lancelot?”

“Lancelot told me he would come as soon as he had mustered an army.” Perceval tossed the core of his apple into the fire. “He said it would be a week at most before they set out.”

The King nodded. “The longer Mordred continues to retreat, the closer he takes us to Lancelot. If all goes well, we may catch him between us, or join forces before Mordred stops to press battle upon us.”

Sir Ector said, “Best of all, his men may resent the pace and fall away.” He pulled his spectacles off his nose and folded up the map over which he had been brooding. “Mordred may have fled, but half the country has taken arms and gone with him. In the end it may take more than Lancelot to save us.”

The King bent his head. “This is true.”

There was a little silence. Then the Queen said: “Speaking of Sir Lancelot, you asked me a question a few hours ago, my daughter.”

Startled, Blanchefleur glanced uneasily at the King. “I did.”

“He told you you were no daughter of his. You should have believed him.”

There was a note of blame in her voice, and Blanchefleur reddened. “I wanted to hear it from you. I wondered why you never said anything about the rumours. I wondered if, maybe, the reason was that they were true.”

“No. No, Blanchefleur.” Guinevere looked from daughter to husband. “Arthur is your father. I swear it before both of you. Before every light of heaven.”

The King did not look at her and his voice, when he spoke, was mildness itself. But he said, “You never made it so plain to me.”

She shifted uncomfortably. “No?”

This time he looked her in the eye. “No.”

“You mean you thought
I
—?”

“Not often. But I knew what you felt for him. It was always there in the back of my mind.”

Guinevere drew back with a hiss of intaken breath as if she had touched hot steel. “You
saw
that?”

“Not until after the wedding, when it was too late to let him have you.”

“You would have done that?”

“I like to think I could have.”

There was a breathless silence. At last Guinevere said: “It was over within the same year it began, long before Blanchefleur. Hearts mend. You were patient. You taught me to love you in the end.”

With a swift motion the King covered his eyes with his hand. When he spoke, his voice was ragged but no less quiet and gentle. “You never told me.”

“That I love you?” Guinevere’s eyes were bright and hard and her fingers were jumping on the arm of her chair. “You are right, I never did, just as I never told you Blanchefleur’s true parentage. Let me tell you why. It was Morgan. There was a time when she delighted in hinting she had borne your son. I became angry with you then and I have been angry with you ever since. And now that I hear it was a lie, I do not know why I am angry with you still, except that I am the most thankless lady in Christendom.”

The King looked up at her. Though his eyes were damp and his face had gone red, he spoke with as much authority as if he sat in his seat of judgement at Camelot. “It is a lie. And I do not swear it, not even by the lights of heaven, because you have never known me to speak a false word.”

“It is true,” and now the brightness in her eyes was more like tears.

He held out his hand to her. “Come. Forget it all. Twenty years is too long for lovers to live bitterly.”

It was terrible to see the Queen, always so self-possessed, forget herself at last. That pale face had once seemed frozen into hauteur. Now it crumpled like the ice on a spring river. She fell to her knees, wound her arms around the King, and buried her face in his side.

At last she withdrew her head from the King’s jerkin and put up her face to be kissed. Then she looked over her shoulder at the rest of them—her cheeks, for the first time since Blanchefleur had known her, flushed bright red—and laughed shamefacedly.

The King laughed too, heaving in a sobbing breath. He passed his hand across his eyes again and looked at Blanchefleur. “Have you more questions?”

She had once meant to ask about Mordred. But that was answered, and another question rose in its place.

She said: “It seems so dreadful to lose Camelot, and more than half the Table, in just a few months. Do you not wonder why this is happening to us? I thought the Grail Quest was meant to give Logres the grace to last forever.”

“And it might have. But we failed,” said Perceval.

Blanchefleur crooked an eyebrow at him. He said:

“Sire, do you remember what I told you about the Quest?”

“That the work is every man’s.” The King tightened his arm around the Queen. “That was what the Table forgot. Perhaps that is why we lost something stronger than cities. My army is full of old men. All the young knights, all the sons, have gone with Mordred. We never taught them the meaning of Logres. Now we will pass, and the work of our hands will go with us.”

Perceval stiffened. “Sire! Some of us are left.”

The King smiled, and they could feel the weight of his pride on their shoulders like robes. “Yes. There are always some left, some who feed on that heavenly food and drink of that heavenly cup. And therefore Logres will last forever.”

40

Readily those rough men of the Round Table

With rich royal steel reave that mail;

Braided hauberks they burst and burnished helms,

Hew heathen men down, hearts in sunder;

Fight with fine steel, the fated blood runs:

The boldest of brow are feeble before them.

Morte Arthure

B
ECAUSE THE
K
ING SENT MESSENGERS TO
all the lords in the south of Britain to ask for knights and footmen to meet him at the ruined city of Camelot, and camped there two days waiting for them to arrive, Mordred was able to draw off to the other side of the Severn, crossing at Caer Glow and retreating toward the south. His army swelled as he travelled, slowing his progress. The King’s army, because it was smaller, moved faster and crossed the river by boat at Lydaneg. Nine days after the skirmish outside Trinovant, Sir Perceval woke in the soft spring morning and received the report of a scout who told him that Mordred was not eight miles away to the north-west, drawn up on a bare ridge above the Wye, ready to give battle.

Perceval tucked his sword-belt under his arm and went to find Gringolet, whom Heilyn was already brushing and saddling for the day’s business. In Perceval’s race to reach Camelot, he had left the exhausted Glaucus with Lancelot in exchange for a fresh mount, and would not see the horse again until Lancelot came from the north. Meanwhile, his father’s destrier was a beast he understood well, and trusted to carry him in battle.

He rubbed Gringolet’s forehead in greeting. Heilyn glanced up at him and said, “A messenger has come from the King to bid you to council. I told him you were meeting with scouts from the west and would be with him anon.”

“Good man.” Perceval buckled his sword-belt and sniffed the deep warm air. A little of the old spring-fever quickened his blood. Was it really three years since he had left his mother’s cot?

Heilyn asked, “What news from the north?”

“A fight, I hope.”

The rhythm of brush-strokes went on and the squire said, “Sir, I much desire to win knighthood in this encounter.”

Perceval hesitated. “I thought I would have you stay behind to guard the ladies.”

Disappointment crowded the eagerness out of Heilyn’s face.

“If the day goes badly they will need a protector,” Perceval explained. “There is no one I trust as well as you, and you are a new-married man. Give your bride time to tire of you.”

Heilyn only half-smiled.

“If we go to the Wye today, perhaps I may not return. Let me knight you now.”

Heilyn slipped the bit into Gringolet’s mouth. “Not if you love me. I had rather deserve it.” He tightened the cheek-strap and looked up at Perceval pleadingly. “Will you not also need trustworthy men in the battle? And if the ladies require a champion, they will want someone stronger than I. Let me ride to war, and do you remain with the ladies.”

Perceval fell back a step in blank astonishment. “What, send you to face battle while I lie snug in camp?”

“Even so.”

Perceval looked into Heilyn’s glum face and then, with a flash of understanding, he saw. “By the light of Logres, Heilyn, you may be no knight, but you have the soul and stomach of one.” He drew his sword. “Kneel.”

The squire still hesitated. “And the battle?”

“Not for anything.” Perceval grasped him by the shoulder. “And not for any lack of love, my brother. But because all things pass away, and I would save you alive, if I could. I would send one thing out of the wrack and ruin of Logres, one soul to whom I might point in the end and say, ‘I left a man to carry our hope,’ that I might not be ashamed when I go to stand in my lot at the end of days …Let me knight you, and if you love me, consent to do this last duty for me.”

Heilyn sighed. “As you will,” he said, and he went to his knees.

T
HE ABBOT OF THE SETTLEMENT AT
Lydaneg was an Irishman of a homely peasant sort, and it was in his low, warm house that Perceval found the King and his council gathered around a table which bore maps and messages and the remains of breakfast.

Perceval slid onto the end of the bench where Blanchefleur had kept a space for him. The King on his right, at the head of the table, had his hands loosely clasped on the board before him. Opposite Perceval, the Queen had reached out to put her hand on the King’s forearm; it was another of the little soft gestures she seemed always to use these days. Next to her Sir Kay was sitting. Sir Bedivere held the foot of the table opposite the King, and Sir Lucan and Blanchefleur sat on Perceval’s left.

On his right, Cavall the wolfhound rested his shaggy chin on the corner of the table by the King’s elbow, and looked up at his master with liquid and adoring eyes.

It was, Perceval thought with his eyes smarting a little from wood-smoke, a far cry from the Round Table in the great hall of Camelot.

“The scouts tell me Mordred is drawn up for battle in the north-west,” Perceval announced. He planted a finger on the map. “Here, above the Wye. What’s your will, sire?”

“To take counsel on the matter.” The King leaned back in his chair. “And to hear your thoughts on a thing I saw in the night visions.”

Beside him, Perceval felt Blanchefleur straighten a little. Sir Kay lifted a perplexed hand and tugged his beard.

“A matter of songwarie? Surely the father abbot would give better counsel.”

“That you may judge, when I have told.” The King glanced around, and meeting the full attention of eight faces, he said, “I walked in a city, the fairest of any at this time standing, and there came to me a great train of ladies, and Sir Gawain at the head of them.”

Perceval turned and saw Blanchefleur staring at the King with wide eyes and parted lips. Then she glanced at him and he knew that she too felt that pain of longing. It was hard, having once stood in the City, to return into exile.

“I said to him, ‘Fair nephew, what are these?’ And Gawain said to me, ‘These are all the ladies I ever fought for in my life, and for the love of Logres they have begged leave to bring me where I might speak to you and counsel you.’ ”

Bedivere said, “And their counsel?”

“Not to fight today, but to ask for a truce and wait until Lancelot comes.”

Perceval raised an eyebrow. “Father said that?”

“It seemed strange to me also,” said the King. He unclasped his hands and laid the palms flat on the table-top. “What say you? Trust the dream?”

“It is good counsel,” Bedivere said. He had taken the map and was frowning over the place Perceval had indicated. “Mordred holds a strong position. And Lancelot cannot be far off.”

“I say we forget the dream,” Kay said. “The Gawain I know would not have counselled you to delay a battle, or to seek help in the Knight of the Lake.”

Perceval looked at Blanchefleur. She said, “Sire, the city in your dream. Was it golden-skied, on a great mountain that shadowed the whole earth?”

Remembrance stirred in the King’s eyes. “Yes, with a spire at the peak. I could spend a year and a day in telling you all its beauty.”

“It sounds to me as if you were in Sarras.”

“So I thought in my dream, but hardly dared to hope when I woke.”

She smiled, a little sadly, Perceval thought.

He cleared his throat. “Sire, before he died, my father sent for me.” The memory was yet too raw for easy sharing, and he shied away from putting it into speech. “Had he given you counsel in his last moments, he might have said the same words.”

The King nodded. “Then we will take his counsel. Let us go to the west and fall to bargaining while we wait for Lancelot.”

“What shall we offer him?” Sir Lucan spoke for the first time.

“A month’s truce to begin with,” Sir Bedivere suggested.

The King rubbed his chin. “We will need to offer some bait, something to tempt him.” He turned to Blanchefleur. “What might he accept?”

She looked up with a smile. “Less than the full dominion of Britain? I offered him Cornwall and he refused it.”

“He refused Cornwall?”

“His counter-offer was Cornwall and the office of heir.”

The King smiled at her. “To open with, I would have offered him something meaner. No matter.” He rose from the table. “Send a messenger to find Lancelot, and pass the word to strike camp. Let us go to Mordred.”

T
HE NEXT EVENING IN CAMP
, S
IR
Bedivere came to the King’s tent with news. “Mordred is willing to discuss a truce, sire. I have told him you will meet him in the morning at Terce to settle the thing. The terms are that each will bring fourteen knights.”

“Fourteen knights? So many?” The King stroked his beard.

“Seven would have been better,” Bedivere acknowledged. “But Mordred insisted on the larger number.”

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