Childe Morgan

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Childe Morgan Page 26

by Katherine Kurtz


  Then he returned to his wife’s side to keep vigil until the end, carefully lying down beside her to slide an arm beneath her shoulders and cradle her to his breast, lips pressed tenderly against her feverish temple. Sometime during what remained of the night, he drifted into sleep, and she, into eternity.

  Chapter 24

  “She hath given up the ghost;

  her sun is gone down while it was yet day.”

  —JEREMIAH 15:9

  SIR Kenneth Morgan awoke shortly before dawn to find his wife cold and still beside him. The last candle had guttered out and the fire had gone to smoldering ashes, providing only a faint glow against the chamber’s gloom.

  He lay there until dawn began to stain the sky beyond the chamber’s arched window, holding her lifeless body close, gently stroking her golden hair, allowing himself the rare indulgence of tears. But as the house began to stir, he collected himself and gently rose, splashed water on his face, went briefly to his sisters’ rooms and to Vera’s, to inform them of her passing. On his way back, he summoned Melissa to begin doing what was needful for his wife’s body. After that, he roused the sleeping king to impromptu squiring duties, both of them retreating to his writing room, where Kenneth set about making arrangements for her funeral.

  “I have several letters to write, and I need to get you back to Rhemuth as quickly as possible,” Kenneth said, pulling out pen, ink, and parchment, all business now. “I’m thinking to send you back with Llion. I hate to take him away from Alaric at a time like this, but he’s the only one I can trust to be discreet about the fact that you’ve been here. Do you remember much of what went on last night?”

  Brion shook his head as Kenneth sat down at his writing desk and set pen to parchment. “Very little. And when we first arrived, I kept wondering when someone was going to recognize me.”

  “You are fortunate that, outside court, most people have little idea what you look like—yet—and most squires look greatly alike. That will change once you’re crowned, of course. Meanwhile, rejoice in your freedom.”

  “I had already noticed the difference, back at Rhemuth.” Brion paused a beat before continuing, sinking down on a stool not far from Kenneth. “This is a terrible time to ask this, Sir Kenneth, but will you stay beside me, be my guide?”

  “Always, my prince,” Kenneth said softly, setting down his quill.

  AWHILE later, Sir Llion came with a servant bearing a breakfast tray, and with questions regarding the arrangements.

  “Llion,” Kenneth said, setting the tray aside and dismissing the servant. “Just the man I wanted to see. I’ll need you to accompany this squire back to Rhemuth with as little fuss as possible, and no questions asked.”

  Llion glanced at the “squire” in Haldane livery, then looked again more closely, his eyes widening.

  “I am who you think I am,” Brion said, smiling faintly as he stood a little straighter and shook hands with a dazed Sir Llion. “But Sir Kenneth says I may trust you. And I’d rather the rest of the household didn’t know I’ve been here. I needed to see Lady Alyce before she died, and it never would have happened if I’d had to go through formal channels. Will you keep my secret?”

  “Of course, my Liege,” Llion murmured. “Ah—aren’t you being crowned in less than a week?”

  “All the more reason to get him back to Rhemuth,” Kenneth answered, handing Llion a letter he had penned to Trevor, informing him of Alyce’s passing. “And can you find him something besides Haldane livery to wear? There will be heavy traffic on the roads to Rhemuth, as people begin arriving for the coronation, and I’d rather no one took too close a look at him.”

  “I get to wear a disguise?” Brion asked, a pleased twinkle in his eyes.

  Llion snorted, unable to contain an answering smile. “Sire, you will be following a long tradition of kings who go among their people incognito.” He glanced at Kenneth. “Will Morgan livery do, my lord? I should be able to locate something that will suit.”

  “My king, wearing my livery…” Kenneth rolled his eyes. “See to it, then. And Llion—”

  “My lord?”

  “Please tell Lady Vera and my sisters I’ll be down directly. And ask Father Swithun to attend me, if you will.” He sighed. “We have sad duties to perform today. Sad duties for all of us.”

  SIR Llion left with the king within the hour. Kenneth, for his part, had the household assemble at noon in the hall, where the priest led them in prayers for their departed lady. Alaric was taken to play with Duncan, Kevin, and the steward’s son, who was a year older. Afterward, Kenneth announced that his wife’s requiem would be celebrated the following morning at the local church outside the manor walls, where she would be interred with generations of Morgan ancestors and wives. He did not add that later, when suitable arrangements could be made in Culdi, her body would be moved from Morganhall.

  A little later, Kenneth retrieved his son and took him up on the roofwalks of the house, well-bundled against the cold, where they could see for miles. There they inspected the roof slates and lead gutters, chatting of commonplace things while Alaric stooped from time to time to prod at the remains of a pigeon’s nest or occasionally retrieve a feather or bit of speckled shell. The boy seemed oblivious to what had occurred only hours before, and studiously avoided mentioning his mother.

  They supped together and paid a visit to the infant Bronwyn before Kenneth tucked his son into bed for the night and retired to write more letters, the ones he had been avoiding. The one to Zoë was the most difficult: his beloved Zoë, soon to give birth to her own second child, who would be devastated to learn of the passing of her heart-sister. The one to Mother Judiana, at Arc-en-Ciel, was little easier—and he had no idea where to write to Sé Trelawney, though perhaps Jovett would know. Jovett, at least, would be at the coming coronation, and might even be in Rhemuth already.

  Later that evening, in the castle’s tiny oratory, Kenneth kept a solitary vigil beside his wife’s body, recalling her grace and strength and the lives she had touched. Nearby lay the volume of Delphine’s poetry that she had penned for him for Christmas. His sisters and Vera had paid their respects and retired.

  He had debated whether to bring Alaric down to see her, but decided it was better that the boy remember his mother the way she had been, alive and vital and loving. Time enough, tomorrow, to endure the reality of her absence; for now, Kenneth could still pretend, for a little while, that she only slept, and would soon awaken. He had not yet decided whether a four-year-old should be expected to attend a funeral. Before leaving the nursery he left instructions with Xander that, when Llion returned, he was to be sent to the oratory immediately.

  It was toward midnight when Llion at last made an appearance. Kenneth was sitting on a straight-backed chair beside his wife’s open coffin, wrapped in furs against the cold and trying not to fall asleep. Vera and Melissa had braided her golden hair like a coronet across the crown of her head and dressed her in a clean white shift, laying her in a mantle of Corwyn green that lined the coffin and spilled over its edges.

  It had been Xander’s idea to drape the banners of Corwyn and Lendour across the lower half of the coffin, covering her from waist to toes. Earlier, Kenneth had folded back the veil of fine white linen covering her face, so that he could sear her image into his memory before they closed the coffin in the morning. This soon after her death, and by the flickering light of the watch candles set at the corners of the bier, he could, indeed, imagine that she only slept, that soon the rosy lips would part and the eyes would open to gaze lovingly into his, like a window into heaven.

  “My lord?” Llion’s voice intruded softly on his grief, and Kenneth looked up with a start to see not only Llion but his wide-eyed son, one small hand closed in the young knight’s larger one, the other hand dangling an unidentifiable stuffed animal by its tail.

  “I hadn’t thought to bring him down here, my lord,” Llion apologized, “but he insisted on seeing his mother. Xander said you’d asked for me
.”

  Sitting up straighter, Kenneth held out his arms to his son, who ran to embrace him like a limpet, burying his face in his sire’s shoulder. The boy was shaking as Kenneth held him tight and stroked the white-gold hair, and the face the boy finally lifted to his father was tear-stained, the lower lip aquiver.

  “Here, now, what’s this?” Kenneth whispered, wiping away some of the tears with his thumb and gazing into the boy’s eyes. “Where is my brave knight?”

  For answer, Alaric took a quick glance over his shoulder at his mother in her coffin, then hid his face against the stuffed toy in his arms, smothering a sniffle. With curious detachment, Kenneth thought the animal might be a cat. It had droopy lengths of black wool trailing from the end opposite the tail, where whiskers might be.

  For a long moment he merely continued to caress the boy, holding him close for comfort, until finally he glanced back to where Llion waited anxiously, and nodded dismissal. After a few more minutes, he gently kissed his son’s cheek and again drew back far enough to look him in the eyes.

  “You must be very, very sad,” he said quietly. “I know I’m sad.”

  Alaric sniffled, scrubbing at his eyes with one balled fist, then sniffled again and gathered his toy animal to his chest, not looking up.

  “Papa,” he said tremulously, after a moment, “why did Mama have to go away?”

  “I don’t know, son. She got very sick—too sick for anyone to help her. But she didn’t want to go. She didn’t want to leave us. She loved us very, very much.”

  The boy turned to look over his shoulder at his mother again, then squirmed to be put down on the floor beside the coffin, resting one hand tentatively on the green silk spilling from inside. After a few seconds, Kenneth slipped to one knee beside him, embracing him in the circle of one arm.

  “I loved her so much,” the boy said tremulously, gazing at the still form. “Can I kiss her good-bye?”

  “You already did that, son,” Kenneth said gently. “Maybe you don’t need to do it again.”

  “But I want to!” the boy replied, lifting his chin defiantly.

  “All right, then,” Kenneth agreed. “We’ll both kiss her good-bye. All right?”

  Nodding, Alaric said, “You first.”

  “Very well.”

  Shifting closer toward the head of the coffin, Kenneth half-rose to lean over it and press a kiss to her forehead, then crouched back down and glanced down at his son. Alaric had edged closer, but then he thrust his stuffed toy into his father’s hands with a whispered, “Hold this,” and began digging in the little pouch at his waist.

  Wisely saying nothing, Kenneth watched as the boy produced what appeared to be two pigeon feathers from the depths of the pouch, each about as long as one of Kenneth’s fingers. Inspecting them gravely, Alaric smoothed one where it had gotten rumpled in the pouch, glanced at the coffin, then tipped his face up toward his father.

  “Can you lift me up, Papa?” he said.

  “Better yet, suppose I make a step for you?” Kenneth replied, setting aside the toy and shifting onto one knee, so that the other made a step on which the boy could climb up.

  Looking intent, Alaric clambered up the step thus offered, braced by his father’s arm around his waist, and set both hands on the sides of the coffin, a feather in each hand, gazing at the occupant for a long moment.

  Then he leaned down carefully to kiss the cold forehead, wrinkling his nose at the faint odor of death. But before straightening, he reached into the coffin to slip a feather behind each of his mother’s shoulders. He was nodding slightly as he leaned back into his father’s embrace, obviously satisfied with what he had done, though Kenneth had no idea why he had done it.

  “Alaric,” he said softly, after a few heartbeats, “why did you do that?”

  Calmly, the boy stuck out his arm to retrieve his stuffed toy from his father, and hugged it to his chest.

  “Father Swithun said she’s with the angels now, Papa,” he said with utter conviction. “So she’ll need wings.”

  “Oh,” Kenneth breathed. “Yes, she will.”

  “And I think I’ll give her Lady Whiskers to keep her company,” the boy added, leaning forward to tuck his toy beside her. “That way, she’ll remember me.”

  “That’s…a very good thing to do,” Kenneth agreed, choking back fresh tears. “But I’m sure she will always remember you. And we shall remember her.”

  He settled back onto his chair at that, gathering his son into his arms to cradle him against his heart. Soon both of them drifted into sleep for what remained of the night, until two carpenters from the stable yard came to close the coffin.

  IT began to snow later that morning, the last of 1095: a hushed and pristine backdrop for the modest funeral procession that began to form up in the yard at Morganhall, just as a solitary bell began to toll in the church without the manor walls. They were family, mostly, who gathered to walk behind the coffin of the fair Alyce de Corwyn Morgan, for in the dead of winter, and with the new king’s coronation only days away, it was impossible to gather any others who might have wished to be there, had the times been otherwise, or to delay the burial until they could attend.

  Kenneth had asked six of his household knights to bear his wife’s coffin, Llion and Xander among them; but as they hoisted it onto their shoulders and began their slow march down to the church, following the processional cross and the priest with his two acolytes and the banners of Corwyn and Lendour, it struck him that one of the black-cloaked knights looked very like Sir Sé Trelawney.

  All the way to the church, Kenneth tried to get a better look at the man without being obvious, Alaric’s hand in his—for the boy had insisted on attending. Vera and her Kevin followed directly behind, along with Delphine, Claara, Melissa, and several other members of the immediate Morganhall household; Duncan had been left with the kitchen servants while they did the day’s baking, being deemed too young to attend. Under the circumstances, Kenneth was well content to keep it very much a family affair.

  And an affair for family it surely was, he realized, as he watched the knights carefully deposit his wife’s coffin on the black-draped catafalque before the altar, for one of the black-clad men was Sé, who very much had been a part of Alyce’s family, friend of her childhood—though God alone knew how he had learned of Alyce’s passing, or had managed to get there in time for the funeral.

  But when the six men bowed to the altar and then began melting back to take places in the congregation, the man Kenneth had been watching turned and looked him directly in the eyes, setting right hand to breast and inclining his head in graceful acknowledgment before easing back with the others to disappear in the sea of black-clad mourners.

  Kenneth was never able to spot him again, though he watched for him all through the Requiem that followed; and it was another knight who took his place when it came time to carry Alyce’s coffin down into the crypt. But he found himself taking comfort in the belief that Sé Trelawney had, indeed, been there, as he had promised he would always be there for Alyce and for their son.

  Later, after her coffin had been laid beside those of his Morgan kin, who were also kin to their son, all of the family mourners—though Sé was not among them—returned to Morganhall, where Kenneth made it known that he intended more formal memorial Masses to be celebrated in his wife’s memory in the spring or summer at Cynfyn and Coroth, be-fitting her status as Countess of Lendour and Lady of Corwyn. It was not the time to mention that her body would eventually find a different resting place, per her own wishes. For the nonce, at least, there was a new king to be crowned in less than a week: a task to which all the household’s energies now must turn, and as would have been her wish.

  Given the stress of the previous several days, most of the family elected to retire early that night, though Kenneth spent an hour with Xander and Llion organizing what must be taken with them back to Rhemuth in the morning. Kenneth, especially, desperately needed sleep before heading back to Rhemuth th
e next day, as did Llion, each of whom had already completed a round trip to the capital in the past two days to fetch and return the king.

  It was Xander who roused them the next morning at first light, which came late at midwinter. Alaric had slept in his father’s bed that night, and tumbled awake with energy abounding at the prospect of the journey back to Rhemuth with his father. Kenneth was not sure the boy understood about the importance of the coming coronation, but the trip itself held appeal for a four-year-old. Xander took over the responsibility of getting him fed and bathed, so that Kenneth and Llion could concentrate on finishing the packing of the few items they would need for the journey.

  After washing and dressing in the plain black he had worn the day before, Kenneth stumbled into his son’s room, where both Xander and Llion now were attempting to finish dressing the boys.

  “I’m wondering whether it’s necessary to put so young a child into mourning for the coronation,” Kenneth said, as Xander tugged an over-tunic of heavy green wool over the boy’s usual winter garb of white shirt and black leggings. “I didn’t yesterday, because it’s hard enough for a lad to lose his mother at his age. On the other hand, I think it’s particularly important to have him at my side when I swear fealty. It will underline his status as the future Duke of Corwyn, despite his Deryni blood.”

  Llion glanced at the new heraldic over-tunic spread on the bed behind him, ready to pack; Alaric had outgrown the quartered tunic he’d only just worn in June for Prince Brion’s coming of age. Though Melissa had spent hours sewing a narrow border of Lendour red and white along the edges of the garment, the Corwyn device itself was almost sober enough to pass for mourning. The fine black wool of the field was relieved only by its heraldically improbable green Corwyn gryphon, picked out in gold, and the brighter relief of Kenneth’s gold double tressure fleury-counter-fleury now surrounding the beast, from his Morgan line.

 

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