Song of the Pendragon (The Last Pendragon Saga Book 3)
Page 1
Song of the Pendragon
Pronouncing Welsh Names and Places
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Sample: The Pendragon’s Quest
Book Three in The Last Pendragon Saga
Song of the Pendragon
by
Sarah Woodbury
Copyright © 2011 by Sarah Woodbury
Song of the Pendragon
He is a king, a warrior, the last hope of his people-and the chosen one of the sidhe ... Faced with the unleashed might of the Underworld, Rhiann, Cade, and their companions travel to the world of the sidhe. And it is there, in the heart of Arawn’s domain, that Cade finds himself finally able to grasp the reins of his own power to become the Christian king and pagan hero that has always been his destiny.
Song of the Pendragon is the third novella in The Last Pendragon Saga.
The Last Pendragon Saga:
The Last Pendragon
The Pendragon’s Blade
Song of the Pendragon
The Pendragon’s Quest
The Pendragon’s Champions
Rise of the Pendragon
The Lion of Wales series:
Cold My Heart
The Oaken Door
Of Men and Dragons
A Long Cloud
Frost Against the Hilt
The Gareth and Gwen Medieval Mysteries:
The Bard’s Daughter
The Good Knight
The Uninvited Guest
The Fourth Horseman
The Fallen Princess
The Unlikely Spy
The Lost Brother
The Renegade Merchant
The After Cilmeri Series:
Daughter of Time (prequel)
Footsteps in Time (Book One)
Winds of Time
Prince of Time (Book Two)
Crossroads in Time (Book Three)
Children of Time (Book Four)
Exiles in Time
Castaways in Time
Ashes of Time
Warden of Time
Guardians of Time
Masters of Time
www.sarahwoodbury.com
To Carew
Pronouncing Welsh Names and Places
Aberystwyth –Ah-bare-IHST-with (the ‘th’ is soft as in ‘forth’)
Bwlch y Ddeufaen – Boolch ah THEY-vine (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘they’; the ‘ch’ as in in the Scottish ‘loch’)
Cadfael – CAD-vile
Cadwallon – Cad-WA/SH/-on
Caernarfon – (‘ae’ makes a long i sound like in ‘kite’) Kire-NAR-von
Dafydd – DAH-vith (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘they’)
Dolgellau – Doll-GE/SH/-eye
Deheubarth – deh-HAY-barth
Dolwyddelan – dole-with-EH-lan (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘they’)
Gruffydd – GRIFF-ith (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘they’)
Gwalchmai – GWALCH-my (‘ai’ makes a long i sound like in ‘kite; the ‘ch’ like in the Scottish ‘loch’)
Gwenllian – Gwen-/SH/-an
Gwladys – Goo-LAD-iss
Gwynedd – GWIN-eth (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘the’)
Hywel – H’wel
Ieuan – ieu sounds like the cheer, ‘yay’ so, YAY-an
Llanbadarn Fawr – /sh/an-BAH-darn vowr
Llywelyn – /sh/ew-ELL-in
Maentwrog – Mighn-TOO-rog
Meilyr – MY-lir
Owain – OH-wine
Rhuddlan – RITH-lan (the ‘th’ is hard as in ‘the’)
Rhun – Rin
Rhys – Reese
Sion – Shawn (Sean)
Tudur – TIH-deer
Usk – Isk
Chapter One
Rhiann
“Rhun tells me you can shoot a bow?” Bronwen said.
Rhiann looked up from her mending, smiling. She was trying to be helpful, but any distraction from the basket of torn clothing at her feet was welcome. “Did he?”
Bronwen smiled. “Don’t pretend you don’t know what I mean. How did you learn?”
Rhiann rested her hands in her lap, wondering how much she should reveal, and then decided to accept the friendship Bronwen offered. It was rare in her experience. “When I was a young girl. I dreamt there was another mother and father somewhere in the world, missing me. For a while, I examined every family that entered my father’s hall for the possibility that they were my parents. But I was small, skinny, and shy, and never even had the courage to approach a likely couple. Instead, I would behave foolishly to gain attention, laughing too loudly at a joke perhaps, or chasing one of the kitchen cats around the tables, getting underfoot, to the point that, invariably, my nurse would send me to my room.”
“That’s not so unusual,” Bronwen said. “All girls behave in such a manner, one time or another.”
Rhiann gave her a rueful smile. “Perhaps. All I know is that I would go, protesting, to fall sobbing on my pallet. My life changed, however, when the captain of my father’s guard, a man named Owain, befriended me. Although my father’s desire for me to learn the bow was not meant for either Owain or me to take seriously, not really, Owain did—or at least took it seriously enough to encourage me to keep trying.
“After my first lesson, which I’d participated in under protest since I deliberately did everything in my power to displease my father, I surprised myself by waking early the following morning and putting in an appearance at the archery range. I remember walking down the path to the clearing near Aberffraw, dressed in a boy’s breeches and linen shirt. The mist had been hovering just above the grass and at first we couldn’t see the targets.”
“‘Imagine them,’ Owain urged. ‘There will come a time when you’ll be able to close your eyes and loose your arrow, and find that you hit your target. This won’t be because of luck, or a magic arrow. It will be because you have practiced every day until your arms trembled. Your skills will have grown with you, and the bow will come so naturally to you that you cannot miss.’”
“Rhun says much the same,” Bronwen said. “Already, Cador begs his father to take him to shoot, even though he is only big enough to hold the tiny bow Rhun made for him.”
“Cador loves his father,” Rhiann said. “He wants to please him.”
“Yes,” Bronwen said.
“It was the same for me,” Rhiann said. “For the first time, I had someone who genuinely cared about me. I’d been such a lost and lonely child I hadn’t even known I was capable of feeling love and certainly hadn’t ever had it returned. For the first time ever, another person had seen me, Rhiann, as a human being—not a burden, or a bastard princess, or an embarrassment—but as someone worthy of his attention. From then on, I went to Owain with all my girlish sorrows and foolish complaints. All he’d ever do is pat me awkwardly on the shoulder and hand me my bow and quiver. ‘Let’s go shoot,’ he’d say, and off we’d go to spend an hour in peace.”
Rhiann paused, remembering the comforting routine of practice: Press, loose. Press, loose. After Owain had died, when Rhiann was fifteen, she’d found solace with the bow, spending hours at the range. But then, she’d made the mistake (not intentional, of course) of blossoming into a woman. The difference between fifteen and seventeen was the difference between her father ignoring her and suddenly discovering that he had a valuable commodity on his hands. Rhiann had eve
n heard him comment to one of his advisors, a gleeful note in his voice, that his ‘ugly spit of a girl had turned into a beauty.’
Rhiann hadn’t necessarily believed him, since he had a vested interest in her looks since it raised her selling price. Unfortunately, one consequence of his interest was that in the following years, Cadfael more closely scrutinized her actions. While he hadn’t actually forbid her from continuing her archery, she’d kept it as much to herself as possible. He’d caught her three months ago, coming back to the fort adorned in her usual male clothing, the sun high in the sky. Quoting the Old Testament, he’d cursed her for bringing disgrace upon his house and confined her to her room. Her clothes had disappeared into Alcfrith’s trunk, although Rhiann hadn’t know that at the time. Her father burned her bow and wouldn’t allow her another.
With this, the distance between them hardened and became permanent. By the time Cade came to Cadfael’s court, Rhiann had not spoken more than four words to her father in months (those words being “No,” “Yes,” and “My lord.”). In retrospect, it was no wonder he’d wanted to sell her as bride to a Saxon, if only to be rid of her somber presence behind his chair. And now he was dead. It occurred to Rhiann that someone ought to send word to Alcfrith that she was a widow for the second time, and more free than she’d ever been.
With that task on her mind, Rhiann took leave of Bronwen, whose attention had been caught by Cador, and entered the great hall to find Cade and many of his companions slumped in chairs around the fire. They’d been conversing, but stopped as she appeared.
“What is it?” Rhiann looked from one to the other. “I can tell by the way you suddenly stopped talking that something’s happened.”
Dafydd had stood at her approach and now indicated that she should take his chair. Rhiann smiled at him, a little nervously, and sat.
“I made a mistake last night,” Cade said. “My friends are impressing upon me the error of my ways.”
“Not that some good hasn’t come of it, mind you,” Rhun said. “You saved a life, learned humility, and we know more about Teregad and Mabon than we did before.”
Cade bowed his head gravely. “Thank you, Rhun, for that small consolation.”
“What mistake are you talking about?” Rhiann said.
Goronwy spoke. “Our most noble lord took it upon himself to attack a large encampment of Teregad’s men all by himself. I hate to think what would have happened if we hadn’t arrived in time to rescue him.”
Rhiann looked over at Cade who actually looked sheepish. “It’s true. I’ve apologized profusely and admitted the error of my ways. No need to pile on.”
There probably was a need, but Rhiann let it go. “Now tell me of Mabon and Teregad. What have we learned?”
“We know that they are less confident in their powers than they want to be,” Bedwyr said. “They sent men to camp on our ridge because they want Cade dead. They’ve given up on the idea of bringing him to their side and want to kill him instead.”
Rhiann stared at Bedwyr. “That’s the good thing to come out of this?”
Taliesin smiled. “Mabon already admitted Cadwaladr’s power when he asked him to serve him, and now, with this action, Mabon has acknowledged that Cadwaladr will never submit to him.”
“Since Lord Cadwaladr escaped from Caer Ddu, Mabon has been worrying that Cadwaladr has resources greater than his own,” Siawn said. “He doesn’t understand how Cadwaladr escaped—who could have helped him or why—and now Mabon’s only thought is to destroy him.”
“Mabon’s a god,” Rhiann said. “The son of Arawn and Arianrhod. How can Cade be more powerful?”
“Cade offers the people of Wales exactly the opposite of the gods: order, reason, justice,” Taliesin said.
“And I’m sidhe,” Cade said, in case anyone had forgotten. “That makes me stronger than any human.”
“Which Mabon doesn’t know about,” Rhun said, “especially as we have so far killed anyone who might report it to him.”
“And all of this is important—why?” Dafydd said. Rhiann loved that he just asked the questions that came into his head. Often they were the same as hers, but ones she was too shy to ask.
“Because it clarifies what we must do,” Cade said.
“Right,” Goronwy said. “We must stop Mabon. He can’t be allowed to continue interfering with our world and loosing more demons among us.”
“I thought only Arawn could release the demons,” Rhiann said.
“It seems Arawn is humoring Mabon,” Cade said.
“Humoring him?” Rhiann said, indignation in her voice. “Even though he’s a grown—man, god, whatever he is—his father does whatever Mabon wants in order to make him happy?”
“Exactly,” Cade said.
“It’s one thing to challenge Mabon,” Rhiann said. “It is quite another to fight Arawn. He’s the Lord of the Underworld!”
“We know that, Rhiann,” Cade said. “But our choice is to do nothing, or to do this.”
“Our path is laid before our feet,” Taliesin said. “Regardless of our numbers, regardless of which other lords support us, we will ride to Caer Dathyl and descend beneath it to the entrance to Annwn. If it’s there, of course.”
“And we will close the cauldron before Mabon turns Wales into his personal playground,” Rhun said, nodding. “Sounds straightforward.”
That broke the tension in everyone’s face and they laughed. Then Goronwy turned serious again, focusing on Cade. “Or we’ll die in the attempt.”
Cade nodded slowly. “Yes. Or we’ll die in the attempt.”
* * * * *
The journey from Bryn y Castell this time was very different. Before leaving the fort, Cade, Rhun, and Taliesin had spent many hours talking together, and afterwards they sent riders to all the principalities in Gwynedd. They decided that they weren’t just going to make war on Caer Dathyl. In this, Rhun’s view had won out: Cade was going to declare himself before his people. He would claim the throne of Gwynedd, lay the foundation for his ascension to the crown of the High King, and ask for the help of Gwynedd’s other kings in defeating Arawn.
Before traveling to Caer Dathyl, the companions would go to Aberffraw. And Cade would see his mother.
The company stayed a night at Dinas Emrys on the way. As they navigated the harsh terrain, Rhiann thought back to that first day with Cade, and shook her head in amazement at how far she’d come in so short a time. Am I even the same person? The garrison welcomed them, having heard and seen nothing amiss since they’d left. Dinas Emrys, for all its mythical significance, was only important to Cade and Taliesin, not Mabon.
By the next evening, the company had reached the Menai Strait. Once again, the experience was very different from before, although the boatmen at the ferry were the same men who had transported Cade and Cynyr before Cadfael’s soldiers had ambushed them. This time, in contrast to when Cade and Rhiann had crossed the other way in great distress, they traveled at night for Cade’s sake, and fifty knights and men-at-arms accompanied them. Cade had left as a fugitive. Now he returned as a king.
Rhiann wore a dress, split up the middle so she could ride more comfortably. She’d argued that if she’d left dressed as a boy, she should return the same way, but Cade had shaken his head.
“You left as the unloved, bastard daughter of the former King of Gwynedd. You return as ...” he paused, “a king’s friend.”
Rhiann had looked at him, wondering at his choice of words but afraid to ask what they might mean. Cade immediately looked away and found something else to focus on. The moment was lost.
They followed the main road this time. It went northwest from the Strait, and then turned southwest towards Aberffraw. As if the gods, or at least some of them anyway, approved of their journey, the weather had turned warmer and ceased the endless rain. Once again the moon lit the sky and the stars were strewn across it like diamonds on the hilt of Caledfwlch.
Anglesey is comprised primarily of farmland, and unlike t
he rest of Wales, nearly devoid of hills. At some far distant time in the past, someone first built on the ridge on which Aberffraw stood. The Romans had pushed those ancient people out but the Welsh had taken the fort back again after the Romans had left. They’d lived there ever since. The torches from the gatehouse tower shone for miles. Rhiann could see them long before they reached the fort, and for the first time in her life, felt like they were welcoming her home.
Cade had sent word that he was coming but Rhiann still worried that he wouldn’t be treated with respect. She shouldn’t have. As they rode up to the gatehouse, the sentries stood stiffly, saluting Cade with fists thumping on their chests.
“The man on the right is one of the men-at-arms who dragged you into the hall last time,” Rhiann said to Cade, speaking low so no one else could hear.
“I recognize him,” Cade said.
“My lord, Cadwaladr.” The man stepped forward. “Welcome to Aberffraw.”
“A bit different this time, isn’t it?” Cade’s tone was mild.
“Yes, my lord,” the man said. He was probably worried as to whether or not he would still have a head on his shoulders before the night was out, but Cade just nodded and passed through the open gate.
Alcfrith greeted him at the entrance to the hall, a cup of wine in her hand.
“Mother,” Cade said.
“Cadwaladr,” she said. “Welcome, my lord, to Aberffraw.”
Cade crossed the threshold alone, took the cup, drank, and handed it back to Alcfrith. Then he leaned down, and, with some hesitation—whether because of his affliction or out of uncertainty at his reception, Rhiann didn’t know—embraced his mother. Alcfrith held herself stiff, her hands out, not touching him and perhaps afraid to spill the cup. Rhiann reached out and took it from her and the action released her. Her arms came around Cade’s waist and she put her face into his chest.
Rhiann stepped forward from where she’d been standing with Goronwy, Rhun, and Taliesin, each of them a step behind Cade, and gazed around the hall she’d hated for as long as she could remember. She’d seen such depravity here, such horror over the years. Men in her father’s court had behaved in a far worse fashion than Cade ever could, sullying their souls, or even casting them away and never noticing their loss. Cade, with his absent soul, was far more human than many of them.