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Authors: Bernard Cornwell

BOOK: Stonehenge
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“How would I know?”

“I don’t suppose you would,” Camaban said carelessly, then frowned. “Did I tell you Sannas is dead?”

“No.” Saban was oddly shocked, not because he had any fondness for the old woman, but because as long as he had lived she had been a part of his world, and not just any part, but a forbidding presence. “How?” he asked.

“How would I know?” Camaban retorted. “She just is. A trader brought the news, and she was an enemy of Slaol so it’s good news.” He turned to gaze again at the temple. Now, freed of the fog’s moisture, it was a black double ring in a black valley crouched in the mountain’s black-rocked grip. It was wide and splendid, a mad priest’s tribute to his god, and Camaban had tears in his eyes. “It is our temple,” he said reverently, “and it will banish winter.”

Somehow they had to persuade Scathel to let them take it, then carry it halfway across the world to Ratharryn.

Chapter 10

The thick fog that had shrouded the Temple of Shadows gave way to days of warm sun and calm winds. Old folk marveled at that early summer, saying they could not remember its like, while Kereval claimed that the weather’s kindness was a sign of the sun god’s approval of his new bride. Some of the fishermen, who kept a small salt-reeking hut beside the river where they made offerings to a weather god called Malkin, made dire prophecies of storms, but day after day their pessimism was confounded. Kereval’s favorite sorceress, a blind woman who uttered her wisdom while in the throes of violent fits, also predicted storms, but the skies stayed stubbornly clear and the winds light.

Kereval’s feared warriors made their summer raids into the neighboring territories to bring back slaves and livestock; traders came from the land across the western sea bringing gold; and the growing crops greened the land. All was well in Sarmennyn, or should have been, except that when Camaban and Saban returned to Kereval’s settlement they found the folk sullen.

It was Scathel’s return that had soured Sarmennyn. The high priest raged and preached against Kereval’s agreement with Ratharryn, claiming that Lengar would never return the treasures unless he was forced and so, while Camaban and Saban were traveling with Aurenna, the high priest had dug a monstrous hole in front of Kereval’s hut and placed above it a lattice of stout branches so that the pit could serve as a prison cage for Saban. There Scathel could torture Saban, confident that every mutilation would be magically visited on Lengar, but Scathel’s hopes were frustrated by
Kereval who refused to give his permission. Kereval stubbornly insisted that Lengar would return the treasures and the chief liked to point to the bright sky and ask what better omen the tribe could wish. “The god loves his bride already,” Kereval claimed, “and when she goes to him, he will reward us. There is no need for the brother magic to be used.”

Yet Scathel constantly preached the need for Saban’s eyes to be gouged out and for his hands to be lopped off. He toured the huts inside the settlement and visited the homesteads that lay within a half-day’s journey and he harangued Sarmennyn’s people, and the folk listened to him. “Ratharryn will never take a temple from us!” Scathel ranted, “Never! The temples are ours, built by our ancestors, made from our stone! If Ratharryn wants a temple, let them pile their own dung and bow to it!”

“If your brother were to send us some of the gold, it would help,” Kereval told Camaban wistfully, but Camaban shook his head and said that that had never been part of the agreement. The gold would come, he said, when the temple was moved, though he took care not to say that it was Scathel’s own shrine he wanted for the tribe’s passions were already running too high. Kereval did his best to calm the growing anger. “Folk will calm down when they see the sun bride go in her glory,” the worried chief assured Saban.

Day after day Saban would visit the sun-bride’s temple and watch the shadow of the tall outlying stone. He feared that shadow, for it crept ever closer to the center stone, and when the shadow touched the stone Aurenna must go to the flames. Aurenna herself avoided the temple, as if by ignoring the shadow she might lengthen her life; instead, in those days as she waited for her wedding, she was drawn to Haragg. “When you go to your husband,” he would tell her, “you must persuade him to stop the waste. He must reject the brides!” But Haragg could no more persuade the tribe to abandon their yearly sacrifice than Kereval could persuade them that Lengar would keep faith, so Aurenna would have to die. As the days grew longer she spent more time with Haragg and Saban, and Haragg left them together for he understood that Aurenna was attracted to the tall, dark-haired young man who had come out of the heartland with a missing finger and a single blue tattoo on his chest. Other young men boasted of their killing scars, but instead
of boasting Saban told Aurenna stories. At first he told her the same stories his own mother had told him, like the tale of Dickel, the brother of Garlanna, who had tried to steal the earth’s first harvest and how Garlanna had turned him into a squirrel as punishment. Aurenna liked the stories and was ever hungry for more.

The two were never alone for the sun bride was always guarded. She could go nowhere except into the privacy of her own hut without being dogged by the four spearmen and so Saban became used to her guardians and even befriended one of them. Lewydd was a fisherman’s son and he had inherited his father’s squat build. His chest was broad and his arms hugely strong. “From the time I could walk,” he told Saban, “my father made me pull nets. Pull nets and paddle! That makes a man strong.” It was Lewydd who had devised a way of transporting a temple’s stones to Ratharryn. “You must take them by boat,” he said. Lewydd was three years older than Saban and had already gone on two slave raids deep into the eastern territories. “Almost all of the journey to Ratharryn can be done on water,” he claimed.

“Ratharryn is far from the sea,” Saban pointed out.

“Not by sea, by river!” Lewydd said. “You would ride the sea to the river that will carry us to the far edge of Drewenna, and there we would need to carry the boats and the stones to the rivers of Ratharryn. But it can be done.”

The boats at Sarmennyn, like the river craft at Ratharryn, were made from the trunks of old, big trees. There were few woods in Sarmennyn, so the priests would mark certain trees that must be preserved until they grew large enough for the boat-builders and when the trunk was tall enough the tree would be cut down and hollowed out. Lewydd took Saban to sea one day, but Saban hid his head in his hands when the great waves hissed toward him and Lewydd, laughing, turned the boat around and let it run back into the river’s calm.

Aurenna liked to cross the river in one of the hollowed-out boats. She and her spearmen would walk in the woods on the eastern bank and inevitably she would seek out a great gray-green boulder that was flecked with sparkling chips and small pink marks, and Aurenna would sit on the rock and watch the river run by. When Saban accompanied her she would ask him to tell her more stories
and once he told her how Arryn, god of their valley, had chased Mai, the river goddess, and how she had tried to hinder him by turning great stretches of the land into marsh, and how Arryn had felled trees to make paths across the bog and so cornered her at the spring where she rose from the earth. Mai had threatened to turn him to stone, but Arryn had whispered to Lakka, the god of the air, and Lakka had sent a fog so that Mai could not see Arryn, who sprang on her and made her his wife. Still, Saban told her, a mist would rise from Mai’s river on cold mornings to remind Arryn that he had only found happiness through trickery.

“Men use trickery,” Aurenna commented.

“Gods too,” Saban said.

“No,” she insisted. “The gods are pure.” Saban did not argue with her for she was a goddess and he was a mere man.

Sometimes, as Saban talked, he worked. He had found a yew tree in the woods and he had cut a limb and trimmed away the bark and most of the heartwood, and then shaped a great long bow to replace the one Camaban had hurled into the sea. He tipped the bow with notched horn, greased the wood with bull’s fat, and Lewydd found him sinews with which to string it and Aurenna cut some strands of her golden hair that he wove into the sinews so that the bowstring glittered like the sunlight. “There,” she said, laughing, “you have a goddess’s hair on the bow. It can’t miss!”

On the day he first strung the bow he seared an arrow clean across the river and deep into the farther woods. Aurenna wanted to try the weapon, but did not have enough strength to pull the string even halfway. Lewydd could draw it fully, but he was used to the Outfolk’s short bow and his arrow spun clumsily away to tumble into the stream.

“Tell me another story,” Aurenna commanded Saban and so he told her the tale of Keri, goddess of the woods, who had been loved by Fallag, the god of stone, but Keri had spurned him and so Fallag forever shaped himself into axes that could cut down Keri’s trees. And a day or two later, bereft of stories about the gods, Saban told Aurenna about Derrewyn and how he had hoped to marry her, and how Lengar had come from the darkness and loosed an arrow that had changed his life. Aurenna listened to the tale, staring at
the river swirling by, and then she looked at him. “Lengar killed his own father?”

“Yes.”

She shuddered, then frowned for a long while. “Will Lengar return the treasures?” she asked, breaking the silence.

“Kereval thinks so.”

“Do you?”

Saban did not answer for a long time. “Only if he is made to,” he confessed at last.

Aurenna flinched at that answer, plainly distressed. “Erek will force him,” she said.

“Or Scathel will.”

“Who wants to put you in the pit.”

Saban shrugged. “He will do worse than that.” And then he thought of what must happen to Aurenna within a few days and his heart was suddenly too full and he could not speak. He looked at her, marveling at the shine of her hair and the curve of her cheek and the sweetness of her pale face, and he was astonished by her serenity. Soon she must burn, but she faced that fate with a placidity that disturbed Saban as much as it impressed him. He ascribed her calmness to her divinity, for he could find no other explanation.

“I shall talk to Erek,” Aurenna said softly, “and persuade him to make Lengar keep his agreement.”

“Lengar will say that Erek sent him the gold and that he is entitled to keep it.”

“But surely he wants a temple?” Aurenna asked.

Saban shook his head. “It’s Camaban who wants the temple moved. Lengar told me he doesn’t believe it’s possible. Lengar wants power. He wants to rule a great land and have hundreds of folk bring him tribute. It’s Camaban who dreams of bringing the god to earth, not Lengar.”

“So Erek must kill Lengar?”

“I wish he would,” Saban said forcefully.

“I will ask him,” Aurenna said gently.

Saban stared at the river. It was much wider than Mai’s river, and it swirled dark where the sea tides pulled and tugged at the current. “Are you not terrified?” he asked. He had not meant to ask her, but just blurted out the question.

“Of course,” Aurenna said. It was the first time they had spoken of her marriage and now, also for the first time, Saban saw tears in her eyes. “I don’t want to burn for the god,” she said quietly so that the spearmen could not hear her. “Everyone says it is quick! The fire is so big, so fierce, that there isn’t time to feel anything except Erek’s embrace, and after that I shall be in bliss. That’s what the priests tell me, but I sometimes wish I could live to see the treasures returned.” She paused and gave Saban a wan smile. “Live to see my own children.”

“Has any sun bride ever lived?” Saban asked.

“One did,” Aurenna answered. “She leaped through the flames and fell into the sea, and somehow she did not die but came to a beach near the cliff. So they brought her up and pushed her into the fire. But it was a very slow death because the fire was low by then.” She shuddered. “I have no choice, Saban. I must jump into Erek’s fire.”

“You could -” Saban started.

“No!” she said sharply, stopping him before he could say more. “How can I not do what Erek wants? What would I be if I ran away?” She frowned, thinking. “From the moment when I can first remember thinking for myself I knew I was meant to be someone special. Not important, not wealthy, but special. The gods want me, Saban, and I must want the same thing that they want. I sometimes dare hope that Erek will spare me and that I can do his work here on earth, but if he wants me at his side then I should be the happiest person ever born.”

He stared down at the rock on which they sat. It glinted in the evening light as though shards of moonshine were trapped in the pale green stone, while the flecks of red made it seem as if blood were imprisoned within the rock. He thought of Derrewyn. He thought of her often, and that worried him, for he did not know how to reconcile those thoughts with his yearnings for Aurenna. Camaban had told him Derrewyn was pregnant and he wondered if she had given birth yet. He wondered if she was reconciled to Lengar. He wondered if she remembered their time before Hengall’s death.

“What are you thinking?” Aurenna asked.

“Nothing,” Saban said, “nothing.”

Next evening Saban joined the priests as they went to see how far the stone’s shadow had crept in Aurenna’s temple. Scathel spat at him, then stooped to see that the shadow was still two finger’s breadths from the central stone. Saban wanted to take a stone maul and hammer away the pillar’s edge, but instead he prayed and knew, even as he pleaded with Slaol, that his prayers were in vain. He watched for omens, but found nothing good. He saw a blackbird fledgling fly and thought it a good augury, but a sparrowhawk stooped and there was a flurry of feathers and a spray of blood.

Midsummer was a day or so away and still the sun shone bright, though the fishermen, laying their offerings of bladderwrack and oarweed before Malkin’s shrine, swore that the storm god was stirring. Camaban climbed a hill that was brilliant with milkwort and crimson-spiked orchids and claimed he saw a brownish line on the western horizon, though that far threat did not cause nearly so much excitement as the return of five young men who had been among the war party that had accompanied Lengar to Ratharryn. The five spearmen had made a long journey, skirting hostile tribes by staying in the woods, and all were weak and tired when they reached the settlement.

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