Cry of Sorrow
Page 31
Suldydd, Lleihau Wythnos—early morning
THE DAY OF Princess Enid’s wedding to Morcant the Pretender dawned bright and clear. The morning was cool, but there was a hint of afternoon heat to come. The capital city of Llwynarth was crowded, for today was both market day and the day when the people of Rheged would see their Princess given to the enemy.
Gwydion, Rhiannon, Trystan, Gwen, and Arthur, all plainly dressed as became a farmer’s family, made their way through the crowded streets to the marketplace. They did not falter when they passed what had been Nemed Draenenwen, the sacred grove of hawthorn trees, now destroyed to make way for a temple to the Coranian god.
Gwydion led the way confidently, armed with the information that Dudod had given him via Wind-Speech the night before. Without halting he led them to the stall of Menestyr, one of the most important cloth merchants in Rheged. It had been this man, Gwydion had been told, who had first tried to warn Enid when she had come to Llwynarth many months ago.
Gwydion halted at the back of the stall, motioning for the rest to precede him. The interior was dim, and bales of cloth teetered precariously, stacked one on top of the other. They could hear good-natured bickering from the merchant and his customers up in front of the stall, but little light penetrated to the back, due to a curtain placed between the front counter and the back of the stall.
“Care to buy something?” a man’s voice inquired at Gwydion’s elbow.
Before Gwydion could answer, Rhiannon launched herself at the man and hugged him tight. Keeping her voice down, she began to scold him. “Uncle Dudod! How dare you leave for Llwynarth without telling me? After all I have done for you, how could you treat me so shabbily?” She smiled as she said it and kissed him soundly.
“Well, my dear,” Dudod replied airily, “you know the life of a traveling man. Here one day, gone the next. You are not the first woman to be displeased by such habits.”
“And I won’t be the last, I’m sure.”
“Thank you, Dudod, for your efforts,” Gwydion said. “We have had a slight change of plans, as you can see by Trystan’s presence.”
“Owein wasn’t happy with your plans, I see,” Dudod replied, grasping Trystan’s arm in greeting.
“Not quite. But you will be happy to know that your niece stood up for me. If it hadn’t been for that, we’d still be with Owein, arguing.”
“Did you now?” Dudod asked, turning back to Rhiannon. “That must have hurt.”
“Ha, ha,” Rhiannon said flatly.
“I wasn’t joking. And the rest of your party?”
“This is Gwenhwyfar. You saw her last some time ago when we found Rhiannon in Coed Aderyn.”
“You’ve changed a great deal, dearest Princess,” Dudod said, kissing her hand.
“Remember her age, uncle, and yours,” Rhiannon said dryly.
“And this is the son of an old friend,” Gwydion went on. He knew that Dudod was fully aware of Arthur’s identity. But he was not yet ready for Trystan to know it.
Dudod understood instantly. “Greetings, son of an old friend. Now, we have fine clothes to make you all very important people, indeed—important enough to get into the temple for the ceremony. Our good merchant, Menestyr, has already gotten places for you—some in the back and some in the middle, as requested. Gwydion and Rhiannon, General Baldred will surely recognize you if you are too much in his eye. And Gwydion, Trystan and I have the same problem with Bledri and Morcant. Whatever contact must be done with Enid, it will be done by Gwen and this young man.”
“It would be better, I think, if only those two went to the temple,” Trystan said.
“But not as safe. They will need your protection if anything goes wrong,” Gwydion replied. “Between you, I, Rhiannon, and Dudod, we can get them out in case their task does not come off as easily as I expect. We will be sure to sit well away from them as Dudod has arranged.”
“Then on with the clothes and off to the wedding,” Dudod said, “on this, one of the saddest days in the history of Kymru.”
“Poor Enid,” Gwen said, to no one in particular.
GWYDION, TRYSTAN, AND Rhiannon sat in the very back of the temple, close to the doors. Inside it did not look much different from the temples Gwydion had seen during his time in Corania. A drinking horn rested on the left of the stone altar. The bowl to hold the bull’s blood was on the right, and the ritual knife gleamed wickedly in the light of four white candles placed in the corners of the altar. Above the altar was the banner with the symbol of Lytir worked in gold on white cloth. The pit where the bull was usually housed was covered over, for there would be no sacrifice today—not of a bull, at any rate, Gwydion thought.
Gwydion glanced at Rhiannon to his right and at Trystan, on Rhiannon’s other side. The three of them were dressed richly. Rhiannon’s dark hair was covered with a veil of misty blue, secured to her head with a circlet of silver. She wore a kirtle of dark blue over a white smock. Trystan’s hair was secured at the nape of his neck with a band of gold and emeralds, and his tunic and trousers were green. Gwydion was dressed in a black tunic and breeches, and his hair was secured at his neck with a band of rubies.
Gwen and Arthur were halfway down the aisle, toward the middle of the temple. Gwen was in a gown of white (which she had protested against, saying she preferred her breeches and boots). Arthur’s tunic and trousers of saffron drew Gwydion’s eyes like a lodestone. Of them all, Arthur was the most important, and Gwydion watched him like a hawk.
Once again, though surely no one would believe it, Gwydion tried to think of some way to rescue Enid. Though he had said it was impossible, he tried again to think of a way. Much as he despised her for her foolishness, that was all it had been—foolishness. She had not thought to betray her brother, had not thought to put herself into this slavery. She had not really thought of anything at all except for her infatuation with Bledri. And she would soon pay full price for that. But even as his thoughts went round and round, he knew it could not be done. They would be more than lucky to leave Llwynarth with the ring. They would surely have no chance of getting Enid out, too.
The noise outside the temple alerted him that the ceremony was about to begin, and he wrenched his thoughts away from rescuing Enid, knowing it to be useless.
The doors of the temple opened, and as the procession entered, the crowd rose to its feet. The first two men to enter, Gwydion knew by reputation. They were Oswy, the Coranian Byshop of Rheged, dressed in a robe of green, and Saebald, the Master-wyrce-jaga, his black robe relieved by a stole of green. Behind them walked General Baldred, resplendent in a golden tunic trimmed with rubies. Next to him came Bledri, the renegade Dewin who had thrown in his lot with the enemy—and Princess Enid to the wolves. Bledri wore the traditional silvery robe of the Dewin with his pearl torque around his neck. At the sight of him in those garments, which he had no right to wear, Rhiannon gave an angry hiss—lost, of course, in the noise.
Behind them came Morcant, he who had once been a Lord of the murdered King Urien and was now the self-styled King of Rheged. His dark eyes were gleeful as he looked down at the woman whose thin hand rested on his arm. It was Morcant’s lecherous look at the Princess that almost made Gwydion throw everything to the winds and kill the traitorous King.
Princess Enid did not look to the left or the right but straight ahead as she walked down the aisle on Morcant’s arm. The opal ring of the House of PenMarch glittered on her hand. Little was to be seen of Enid’s face beneath her veil, but her stiff shoulders, her rigid bearing, told its own tale.
At the sight of their Princess dressed in the Coranian manner, in a gown of red with a golden veil cast over her head and shoulders, the crowd murmured sharply in dismay. But the whispers were quickly halted at the sight of the Coranian guards that poured in behind the couple.
As Morcant and Enid reached the altar, four guards grasped the poles of a square canopy and held the red cloth over the couple. Byshop Oswy lifted his hands for silence.
&
nbsp; This was no traditional Kymric wedding. This couple would not stand before a Druid in a green grove surrounded by joyous friends and family. The groom would not carry an alder branch and the bride would not carry ivy, those symbols of Cerrunnos and Cerridwen, the Protectors of Kymru. There would be no talk of the Great Wheel, of rebirth and beginnings, of finding the heart’s love for this turn of the Wheel. There would be none of that, for this was a Coranian wedding, built on treachery and greed.
At the Byshop’s signal, Morcant, his voice gloating, pulled a simple band of gold from his little finger, which he put on Enid’s trembling hand. “With this ring, I thee wed, and this gold and silver I give thee; and with my body, I thee worship; and with all my worldly chattels, I thee honor.”
Then Enid replied, her voice low and hopeless. “I take thee to be my wedded husband; to have and to hold; for fairer, for fouler; for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; to be bonny and buxom in bed and at board; till death us depart.”
Then she slowly pulled the opal ring off her finger. She bowed her head and blindly held out the ring to Morcant. He snatched it from her and put it on his finger. Then he triumphantly tore the veil from her head and pulled her to him, crushing his mouth upon hers.
The crowd was frozen, plainly horrified. Out of the corner of his eye, Gwydion saw Trystan’s hands clench into fists. He almost remonstrated, when he realized his own hands were clenched, as well.
General Baldred stepped forward, grabbing one of Morcant’s arms, thus effectively ending the embrace. Baldred raised Morcant’s hand, the hand where the opal ring glittered, and called out, “This is your true King! Today has he received the ring from the hand of King Urien’s daughter. Today has he wed her, and let none now dispute—he is your King!”
ALONG WITH THE rest of the spectators, Gwen rose as the wedding party retraced their steps up the aisle. The sight of Enid’s face unnerved her. Enid was pale, and there were tears in her eyes. Her mouth was swollen and red from Morcant’s kiss. But the Princess held her head high, not looking directly at anyone. Yet Gwen knew Enid would recognize her when the moment came. They had gotten to know each other well when Enid and her brother had come to visit Ogaf Greu; the time when Gwen’s brother, Geriant, had looked on Enid and loved her and begged her to marry him. Gwen contrasted the dark, hideous Morcant with Geriant, who was so golden, so beautiful, so brave, and so kind. She thought that perhaps Enid was remembering that, too.
“Ready?” Gwen whispered to Arthur as Enid neared them.
“Of course,” Arthur replied. “Don’t be a fool.” Arthur craned his neck and looked down at his feet as though noticing something wrong with his boots. He tsked in exasperation and bent to pull them up tighter. His elbow jabbed her sharply in the ribs, and she yelped, jumping away from him and, somehow, falling to her knees in the center aisle—directly in front of Princess Enid herself. Gwen clutched at the Princess’s red gown to steady herself and looked up into Enid’s eyes.
“You there, what are you doing?” Morcant demanded.
“She fell,” Enid replied, holding out her hand to help Gwen to her feet.
As Gwen rose, her palm brushed against Enid’s. And the note smoothly passed from one girl to the other.
Arthur yanked Gwen back to her place, and the wedding party continued up the aisle.
“Did she get it?” Arthur whispered.
Gwen nodded, too overcome by the glimpse of torment she had seen in Enid’s eyes to speak.
RHIANNON WAITED WITH the others in the bathhouse at Caer Erias, listening for the sound of Enid’s arrival. Getting into the fortress had been easy, for the doors were opened in expectation of the guests for the wedding feast.
Rhiannon reached out and laid a gentle hand on Gwen’s hair, searching for some way to comfort her daughter. For Gwen had been pale and had not spoken a word since the wedding. Rhiannon expected Gwen to jerk her head away, but the girl did not. Instead, Gwen turned to her, her blue eyes filled with tears. Blindly Gwen reached out and Rhiannon was there, pulling her daughter into her arms, softly stroking her hair and whispering words of comfort. After a moment Gwen stiffened and drew away, shifting to the far side of the bench on which they sat.
Rhiannon said nothing, for she had long since recognized that the hatred her daughter felt was fair. She had done the same to her father years ago. Myrrdin had tried to tell her, to warn her that the Wheel turned around.
Rhiannon settled back onto the bench and waited. She looked up and Arthur caught her eyes as he stood near the doorway with Trystan, Dudod, and Gwydion. He left them and came over to her, settling himself on the bench between Rhiannon and Gwen. He ignored Gwen’s taut back and turned to Rhiannon.
“She will not be much longer, we think. It should not be too difficult for her to excuse herself from the feast. She need only say that she wishes to bathe in order to be presentable to the King tonight.”
Rhiannon smiled. Arthur was not saying anything she didn’t already know, but he was trying to help. She glanced over at the men in the doorway and Gwydion returned her gaze, then quickly looked away.
“My uncle is a fool,” Arthur said quietly.
“So he is,” she replied. “And I have learned to let fools be fools and not to be bothered with them.”
“No, you haven’t.”
Before she could reply, they heard the sounds of movement outside the bathhouse. Gwydion, Trystan, and Dudod moved away from the inner door, motioning for the others to hide themselves.
The outer door opened and shut, and they heard footsteps nearing the chamber. The second door opened, and Enid stood framed alone in the doorway. She quickly shut the door behind her and flew into Trystan’s arms.
“Trystan, oh, Trystan,” she cried, weeping in the shelter of his arms. “My brother has sent you to save me after all! Oh, how I have begged the gods for this!”
Trystan closed his eyes in agony and bowed his head over hers. For a moment the only sound was of Enid weeping. Then she raised her head. “Let’s be gone from here,” she said eagerly. “How do we go?”
“We don’t,” Gwydion said coldly, moving to stand next to Trystan. Dudod and Arthur took their places on either side of Gwydion while Rhiannon and Gwen went to stand in front of the door.
“What do you mean, we don’t?” Enid cried, not looking at Gwydion, but rather at Trystan.
“I—I’m sorry, Enid. We can’t,” Trystan said, his voice breaking.
“Can’t?” Enid stepped away, searching their faces wildly. She spun for the door, but Rhiannon and Gwen were in her way. “What are you doing here if not to come for me? Why won’t you help me? Why?”
“We did not come here for you because there is nothing we can do for you,” Gwydion said. Only the tautness of his shoulders betrayed how hard those cold words were for him to say. “We have come for the ring.”
“The ring?”
“The ring you stole from your brother, its rightful owner.”
“I didn’t steal it!” Enid flared. “I—I borrowed it.”
“Then the time has come for you to return it. For we have need of it. The land wakes to fight for freedom. The Protectors are come back to us. The Treasures must be found. Even now we have one in our possession. And the Treasures will be used to make a High King, one who will drive the enemy from this land. And to find the next Treasure, we need the ring.”
“You can’t have it!” Enid cried. “Not without taking me with you. That is my price!”
“Your price?” Gwydion hissed, stepping closer to her. Enid looked around, but the rest of them only stared at her, appalled at what she was saying.
“Your price?” Gwydion asked again, his voice cold and deadly. “How dare you talk to us of price. For all of us have paid—and will continue to pay—in heart’s blood for what has been done, for what will be done. We have lost those we have loved. We have lost our country, our freedom, our way of life. And you—you who placed yourself in your own prison—demand h
elp. You who have caused suffering to your brothers, to Sabrina and Trystan because they could not save you, to Prince Geriant who loved you, to the Cerddorian who had to flee for their lives from Coed Addien when you betrayed their hiding place—you set a price. You sicken me. We stand at the brink of destruction, and all you can think of is to be rescued from what you have done to yourself.”
“Get me out of here!” Enid screamed. “Get me away from Morcant. Away from Bledri and the things that they do to me! Get me out and you will have your ring!”
“Enid ur Urien var Ellirri, I know you have listened to your brother speak of your father’s last message to him. And so I say this to you now, in the words foretold by Bran the Dreamer, the words passed down from ruler to ruler, ‘The High King commands you to surrender Bran’s gift.’ Know that I am the Dreamer who was born to give you this command. Know that to ignore this command is to betray Kymru herself.”
The chamber was silent as Enid and Gwydion faced each other. The color drained from Enid’s face at Gwydion’s words. At last her eyes filled with tears, and she dropped her head. “Forgive me,” she whispered. “Please forgive me.”
Trystan stepped forward and again took Enid in his arms. She clung to him and her tears fell, but she was silent. At last she raised her head and turned to face Gwydion. “I do not have the ring. I gave it to Morcant in the ceremony today. But I can get it for you. When he takes me tonight, he will be thinking of nothing but my humiliation and of inflicting pain. I can get it for you then, for he wears it on his finger.”
Gwen choked back a sob at Enid’s words. Enid turned to Gwen. “Give your brother a message from me. Please.”
Gwen nodded but could not speak.
“Tell Geriant that I wish with all my heart that I had known what I had in him. Tell him that I wish he were the man I married today. I would have spent the rest of my life with him and been content. But that will never be now.”