Read Warriors of Camlann Online
Authors: N. M. Browne
âBe sure I can rip out your throat before you can knock the blade from my hand.' Dan made his voice loud and threatening, but he knew Medraut believed him because it was true. Medraut's strength was no match for Dan's swiftness.
âDuke Arturus, I do not want this man's death on my hands. Do you now believe my claim?'
The Duke crossed the arena to stand alongside him, and in a very public gesture accepted Dan's sword and proclaimed, âYou are very welcome, Daniel Bear Sark. You are all that Taliesin promised.'
Dan longed to deny that, longed to explain that his old berserker self would never have had to fight so hard for victory. How could he explain that even now as blood dripped down Medraut's side, Dan felt the man's wound in his own flesh? He needed to talk to Taliesin. There was too much he did not understand.
Dan had been guided to the bathhouse; they were not unlike Macsen's Roman-style baths at Craigwen. Taliesin joined him there. The blue, spiralling, druidic tattoos on his aging, too-thin frame made him resemble some strange exotic lizard. His hair grew long now and like his beard was streaked with grey; only his eyes were unchanged. These differences like so much else in his new situation troubled Dan. Still, it was good to feel the cleansing heat and to wash the bloodstains from his body, which ached with the effort of the fight and hurt where he had hurt Medraut. It was difficult to accept the evidence of his own eyes that his own flesh was whole and uninjured. He felt battered, confused, and more than a little afraid. Only some of the tension left his body in the warmth and quietness of the baths. Taliesin had sent the servants away and had been granted privacy, as a boon of Dan's victory. Or so it seemed.
Dan knew he needed to find Ursula but had been assured that a man with the unlikely name of Petronax had been sent to look for her. Dan had not the strength to argue. Bedewyr seemed to believe that Petronax could be trusted. Dan, bone-weary and bewildered, accepted his judgement. Dan would have no chance of finding anyone in the state he was in, of that one small thing he was certain. He had reached the limits of his strength. But it was good to stop for a moment, to rest. He relaxed a little more. Taliesin said nothing but watched Dan with that strange, still intensity of his, and Dan knew he would have to ask, knew that the older man had always been miserly with his secrets. Dan was afraid of what Taliesin might tell him and yet he hated to be ignorant. He tried to keep his tone light as if nothing mattered.
âSo, how did you do it then?'
Taliesin looked at Dan, his expression inscrutable. Dan thought he was afraid, felt it strongly, but could not understand why. What had Taliesin to fear from a question â less, surely, than Dan had to fear from the answer?
âWhat do you mean, Daniel?'
âHow did you leave Macsen's time after me and end up here before me â wherever
here
is? It doesn't make sense.'
There was a long pause, several heartbeats, and
Taliesin sighed. Dan knew he was gathering his internal resources, fighting his fear. He still did not know why.
Taliesin's voice was quiet, undramatic, as if he deliberately eschewed his bardic skill to tell the bald truth. âAfter you left Craigwen, things went well with us. Macsen managed to consolidate his position and there was peace. The loss of Rhonwen played on his mind â whatever else she was and is, she remains his sister and he loves her. He begged me to find a way to get her back and to learn more about the Veil â it had after all proved useful to him, to us. Years passed for me while you and Ursula were outside time, inside the Veil where there is no time. I travelled in search of the remaining druids, to find the secret of raising the Veil. I learned what I could of the fading magic of the druids and their link with the Veil, their knack of calling it and guiding it. I used it to travel to many places in times very different from Macsen's and my own.'
Taliesin's eyes seemed very dark and old to Dan as he listened, excited in spite of himself.
âI saw things â I couldn't tell you.' Taliesin gave him a quick glance from under bushier eyebrows than Dan remembered.
âAt last, I found a man who could help me â Igris, a philosopher, wiser than any druid, from a people who had explored the potential of the Veil over the ages. He found Rhonwen for me. She was at what he called a
“turning point” â a moment in time when big changes depend on small events. He said that the descendants of my people, the Combrogi, were fighting for survival and that Rhonwen was hastening our end.'
Taliesin looked at Dan again with appeal in his eyes. âThe prophecy you heard me speak of â that was real. Igris talked in terms I rarely understood, but one night we sat in something like a sacred grove and he explained quite clearly that if no leader emerged to guide us, all that the Combrogi had been, all that we had loved and fought for would not just die, but vanish as if it had never been. That our land, Island of the Mighty, that I love, would be possessed by others.
The Bear
is the key to our survival but he could not or would not say who
The Bear
was.'
âWhat was the prophecy? I heard you say it but I didn't understand.'
âIgris told me, “As the bear on the high hillside protects the cubs, so
The Bear
of Ynys Prydein, the Island of the Mighty, protects its own. Remember
The Bear
and cherish it, for when
The Bear
is gone the hillside falls.”'
âWell, that could mean anything!'
Taliesin's smile was brief and humourless. âI don't think members of his order were supposed to interfere in the ways of the worlds revealed to them through the Veil, though they were allowed to comment â as long as they did it poetically andâ'
âUselessly?' Dan finished for him.
Taliesin's smile was still wan and troubled. âMy first responsibility was to find Rhonwen and send her back to Macsen. I knew from what Igris had said that she was advancing our destruction by allying herself with our people's enemies. I found her, begged her to return with me to Macsen. She laughed in my face.'
His expression was momentarily unreadable but Dan could sense Taliesin's deep shame. âI did not intend to remain here but discovered that I could not leave. I do not understand why but each world we visit through the Veil changes us. There were worlds I visited where my limited and hard-won journeyman magic was very strong, where I could shape-shift as easily as think; while here, I have little gift and that which I have is a strange, fey, capricious thing â different from anything I have ever known.' Taliesin spread his hands expressively.
Dan found himself nodding â it was his own experience. He was no longer a berserker here, and Ursula no longer a sorceress. Thinking of Ursula, the anxious knot in his stomach tightened.
âBut how â I mean, where were we during all this time?'
âYou were caught like a fly in amber, in the Veil. Time only starts again when you are free of it â and I got free while you were still trapped in the timeless Veil. Eventually â¦' Taliesin hesitated and Dan could feel his trepidation. âI called you here.'
It took a long moment for Dan to understand, then he felt his face flush hot with fury as the implications of this quiet statement sunk in.
âWait! Hear me! Let me explain!' Taliesin reached out to touch his shoulder but Dan jerked his arm away.
âI cannot call the Veil anymore â that power is lost to me, but Igris spoke sometimes about ways in which those who had stepped outside time could always find each other again. I thought I could husband my magic to influence your destination â influence Ursula. I have touched her mind â when we helped her return from her shape-shifting. I knew her and I knew I could find her again, though it took me years to do it.'
Dan turned away from the bard, not wanting to hear more. He had trusted Taliesin and yet it was he who had prevented them from going home, he who had deliberately brought them to this place. Because of Taliesin he might never see his sister Lizzie or his father again. He was too angry to speak.
âIt was not just that I thought Ursula would get me home â after Rhonwen refused to help me. When I thought about what Igris had said I thought I knew what the Combrogi needed. I wanted â still want â to help them.' Taliesin was pleading with Dan to listen, to understand, to forgive.
âRhonwen has great influence here with the Aenglisc, and I believe her influence could destroy this island. She
plays old games â making alliances with her people's enemies, as if she had learnt nothing from Macsen. The Combrogi are fragile here, a shadow of what they once were. They were ruled for generations by those we might call Ravens or Romans. When the Roman armies left and many of their senior people were kicked out, the people who remained were Romanised Combrogi, neither one thing nor the other, somehow lacking the strength of either. There were those who rejected Roman ways and wanted to be true to their ancient roots but they lost their influence a generation ago. Their heritage is weakened but these Combrogi are still my people. I feel it and I know Igris was right â there is a turning point here. All they need is a leader to believe in â to revive their spirit.' Taliesin paused, his eyes alight with sudden passion. âI thought Ambrosius might have served to unite them but the hill people, those who clung to older ways, would not follow him and Arturus â well, you have seen him. He is a good general but not a hero. So I tried to rekindle their pride and I did what I had once lived by doing â I told them heroic tales.'
Dan thought he knew what was coming next. âOf Boar Skull and the Bear Sark?' He couldn't keep the sneer from his voice.
âYes, and of Igris's prophecy because I thought that one of you might be
The Bear.
Ursula's name means little bear â while you, Bear Sark, what could be more
obvious?' Taliesin glanced quickly at Dan. âAnd, yes, I admit it, I wanted you to be the answer, for then Ursula might be able to get me home. I know my own weakness and am wise enough to know I'm a fool. I was able to find her in the timeless, frozen moment when you entered the Veil and I called her to me. I sent men to wait for the coming of the Veil. I did not want to work magic too close to Arturus and his bishop, as there are many here who do not think he needs the company of even an apprentice druid like myself. It was a mistake because my men got to you too late. I fear that Rhonwen, sensing the closeness of the Veil, sent men of her own to investigate. Her magic here is all trickery but her affinity with the Veil remains.'
Dan's face contorted with horror. âRhonwen! You think Rhonwen has captured Ursula?'
âI don't know, Dan. I hope not. I'm so sorry. It has all gone wrong, and how could it have gone right when I went against all that I have ever believed in to bring you here. I've brought trouble on you, lad, and I never meant for that to happen. I wanted to help these people; I wanted to get home. I was desperate and I was wrong. Can you forgive me? I knew I was wrong as soon as I saw you.'
Dan was struggling to digest this new piece of information. Rhonwen hated Ursula and Ursula without her magic was vulnerable. Dan remembered how
anguished Ursula had been in the moments before they'd been attacked. He should have had his wits about him, should have paid more attention. He spoke in a terse, hard voice.
âYour plan didn't work, Taliesin. Ursula has no magic. She can't raise the Veil, and I'm no longer the Bear Sark. We're trapped here, all three of us. We none of us can get home.' Dan was angry beyond reason and in danger of thumping Taliesin who was now an old man. Worse than that he was very afraid he might shame himself by crying tears of fury and frustration. What the hell did Taliesin think he was doing, interfering in all their lives?
Taliesin let out a low groan of anguish and prostrated himself on the floor. âBy all that is sacred and holy, by the One, and by my own vows as a bard, I beg your forgiveness, Daniel.'
Dan looked at him without really seeing him; he had no time for histrionics. âOh get up, Taliesin. As if that is going to make any difference.'
Taliesin raised his head from the hot floor, and scrambled to his feet. The hypocaust was directly beneath the mosaics of the floor and even for penance it was too hot a place to lie for long. Dan could feel Taliesin's anguish, feel his guilt as if it were his own. Dan's empathy was a curse, for he did understand exactly why Taliesin had done what he'd done, just as he knew exactly how
earnestly Taliesin now regretted it. There was little point in recriminations. It was done now.
âThis is giving me a headache, Taliesin. I can't forgive you now. Maybe, if Ursula is safe, I will try, but Taliesin, please, leave me out of any of your future schemes for saving whatever world you find yourself in.'
Taliesin clapped his hand on Dan's shoulder and forced him into unwilling eye contact. Taliesin's eyes blazed with fierce conviction.
âI swear to you, Daniel, that I am your true friend and ally here. I will do all I can to get you home. I swear the triple oath of the druids of my blood, by fire, by water and by the earth and by the holiness and wholeness of the One.'
The tiles around the bath had cracked in places and with a sudden movement Taliesin dragged his wrist across the sharp edge of a broken tile so that his blood welled. He crossed the wound against his heart and bowed his head. Dan felt the sudden smarting pain in his own wrist.
âOK, Taliesin. You win!' he said in English, under his breath, before stepping forward to enfold the old bard in a warrior's embrace. âIt
is
good to see you again. I would have missed you, had you given me the chance.' Dan sensed Taliesin's deep gratitude and warmth threatening to engulf his own precarious self-control. Celts!
*
There were soldiers ready to escort Dan from the baths. He was given fresh clothes, a tunic in the Roman style, a soldier's garment. He asked instead for a homespun tunic of the kind Taliesin wore, and asked Taliesin if he might borrow a long cloak like his, if he had a spare. Taliesin's eyes narrowed as Dan dressed himself but he said nothing, not even when Dan fastened his empty sword belt under his cloak. Dan knew that Taliesin longed to ask him what he was doing.