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The Heir of Logres

Page 18

by Suzannah Rowntree


  Perceval slid onto the end of the bench where Blanchefleur had kept a space for him. The King on his right, at the head of the table, had his hands loosely clasped on the board before him. Opposite Perceval, the Queen had reached out to put her hand on the King’s forearm; it was another of the little soft gestures she seemed always to use these days. Next to her Sir Kay was sitting. Sir Bedivere held the foot of the table opposite the King, and Sir Lucan and Blanchefleur sat on Perceval’s left.

  On his right, Cavall the wolfhound rested his shaggy chin on the corner of the table by the King’s elbow, and looked up at his master with liquid and adoring eyes.

  It was, Perceval thought with his eyes smarting a little from wood-smoke, a far cry from the Round Table in the great hall of Camelot.

  “The scouts tell me Mordred is drawn up for battle in the north-west,” Perceval announced. He planted a finger on the map. “Here, above the Wye. What’s your will, sire?”

  “To take counsel on the matter.” The King leaned back in his chair. “And to hear your thoughts on a thing I saw in the night visions.”

  Beside him, Perceval felt Blanchefleur straighten a little. Sir Kay lifted a perplexed hand and tugged his beard.

  “A matter of songwarie? Surely the father abbot would give better counsel.”

  “That you may judge, when I have told.” The King glanced around, and meeting the full attention of eight faces, he said, “I walked in a city, the fairest of any at this time standing, and there came to me a great train of ladies, and Sir Gawain at the head of them.”

  Perceval turned and saw Blanchefleur staring at the King with wide eyes and parted lips. Then she glanced at him and he knew that she too felt that pain of longing. It was hard, having once stood in the City, to return into exile.

  “I said to him, ‘Fair nephew, what are these?’ And Gawain said to me, ‘These are all the ladies I ever fought for in my life, and for the love of Logres they have begged leave to bring me where I might speak to you and counsel you.’ ”

  Bedivere said, “And their counsel?”

  “Not to fight today, but to ask for a truce and wait until Lancelot comes.”

  Perceval raised an eyebrow. “Father said that?”

  “It seemed strange to me also,” said the King. He unclasped his hands and laid the palms flat on the table-top. “What say you? Trust the dream?”

  “It is good counsel,” Bedivere said. He had taken the map and was frowning over the place Perceval had indicated. “Mordred holds a strong position. And Lancelot cannot be far off.”

  “I say we forget the dream,” Kay said. “The Gawain I know would not have counselled you to delay a battle, or to seek help in the Knight of the Lake.”

  Perceval looked at Blanchefleur. She said, “Sire, the city in your dream. Was it golden-skied, on a great mountain that shadowed the whole earth?”

  Remembrance stirred in the King’s eyes. “Yes, with a spire at the peak. I could spend a year and a day in telling you all its beauty.”

  “It sounds to me as if you were in Sarras.”

  “So I thought in my dream, but hardly dared to hope when I woke.”

  She smiled, a little sadly, Perceval thought.

  He cleared his throat. “Sire, before he died, my father sent for me.” The memory was yet too raw for easy sharing, and he shied away from putting it into speech. “Had he given you counsel in his last moments, he might have said the same words.”

  The King nodded. “Then we will take his counsel. Let us go to the west and fall to bargaining while we wait for Lancelot.”

  “What shall we offer him?” Sir Lucan spoke for the first time.

  “A month’s truce to begin with,” Sir Bedivere suggested.

  The King rubbed his chin. “We will need to offer some bait, something to tempt him.” He turned to Blanchefleur. “What might he accept?”

  She looked up with a smile. “Less than the full dominion of Britain? I offered him Cornwall and he refused it.”

  “He refused Cornwall?”

  “His counter-offer was Cornwall and the office of heir.”

  The King smiled at her. “To open with, I would have offered him something meaner. No matter.” He rose from the table. “Send a messenger to find Lancelot, and pass the word to strike camp. Let us go to Mordred.”

  THE NEXT EVENING IN CAMP, SIR Bedivere came to the King’s tent with news. “Mordred is willing to discuss a truce, sire. I have told him you will meet him in the morning at Terce to settle the thing. The terms are that each will bring fourteen knights.”

  “Fourteen knights? So many?” The King stroked his beard.

  “Seven would have been better,” Bedivere acknowledged. “But Mordred insisted on the larger number.”

  “Again,” said Perceval, “as though he is afraid.”

  “We will take no chances,” the King said. “If Mordred uses treachery, let us be ready for battle.”

  When Arthur went out to meet Mordred the next morning, Perceval stood behind the King on his left, sunlight warming his back, and smiled at Mordred, Agravain and the others as they advanced. It tickled him still to be alive after Mordred’s order to kill him. He scanned the banners of the enemy host, looking for the standard of the Silver Dragon. There it was. According to Perceval’s scouts, Sir Breunis and a few of his trusted men had indeed disappeared on that fateful night by the River Tamesis. After that, Mordred had invested one of Breunis’s old lieutenants with the title that had once been his lord’s, and Perceval idly wondered which of them—Mordred, Breunis, or Breunis’s man—had really earned the name Saunce-Pité.

  Mordred and the King discussed tribute payments, border disputes, and succession as if either meant the truce to last years rather than weeks. While he listened Perceval amused himself playing a game with Mordred’s men. Each of these was a knight he knew, and some were men he had fought alongside at the battle of Joyeuse Gard. He looked into each of their eyes in turn, measuring how long it took them to glance away or transfer their attention to the sky above his head.

  Sir Agravain, oddly, lasted longer than any of the others. For a while he tried to stare back, and with the effort a bead of sweat began to trickle down his forehead, but eventually he too dropped his gaze. What happened next was almost too sudden to see. Only Perceval saw him flinch away from something on the ground. There was a little ripple in the grass and Perceval saw the diamond-shaped head of an adder rise from the ground and strike at Agravain’s booted foot. Then his uncle flashed his sword out: under the bright morning sun, it must have shone from the hillside like the flaming blade of Eden. The King broke off what he was saying mid-sentence.

  “Treachery!” Sir Bedivere cried. He had only seen the sword.

  Downhill, Sir Ector gestured to his trumpeter to sound the charge.

  At the shouting and the trumpet-blast, Agravain looked up from the adder transfixed on his swordpoint. Other swords leapt from sheaths as both sides recoiled a few steps, and he stood suddenly abandoned in the space between two bristling forces. Sudden realisation of what he had done flashed across Agravain’s face—then Perceval wheeled and ran with the others, back to where the squires held their horses. He shook his head. Agravain! God help the fool! Too soon, too soon!

  Perceval reached Heilyn, whom he had permitted to come because there would be no battle, and snatched Gringolet’s reins. He glanced up and down the hill. Trumpets blared, men yelled, Mordred and his knights were scrambling into the saddle to ride back up to their army, which crested the hill and poured down to meet them like a flood. Downhill, Sir Ector and the King’s footmen—shadowed by banners of Trinovant, Camelot, and the southern fiefs—surged up the slope, a rising tide cut free of gravity.

  There was no time to speak, hardly time to mount. Perceval got one foot into the stirrup before he shouted to Gringolet. The old warhorse wheeled and went trotting down the slope. Perceval pulled himself into the saddle, slid his other foot into the stirrup, and reached the safety of his own ranks, whic
h opened to flow about him a moment before Sir Ector’s trumpeter gave the signal to let fall the pikes.

  Then the two bodies of foot met with a splintering of spears, and the shout of the charge blurred into the screams of the melée.

  The King mustered his knights on the right flank. There were fewer than fifty of them all told, knights of the Table with other lords who had come to fight for the King.

  In the commotion Sir Bedivere was pale and grinning. This must be the sound of the great wars of his youth, when barbarians from across the sea harried Britain and the King won his name on Badon Hill. He pulled on his helm and laced it shut, shouting, “What now, lord?”

  The King turned to look up the hill where Mordred’s knights stood waiting. Perceval had discussed the terrain with him last night. It was good smooth ground, but steep; a charge would tire and flag by the crest of it. If they waited for Mordred to charge down, on the other hand, the sheer weight and force given by the slope would work to his advantage even if he ordered the men to check their speed. Let Mordred’s knights reach the main body of battle, which now straggled slowly down the slope in a swaying ribbon of steel and blood, and they would cut easily through the line. The best tactic would be to wait until Mordred’s horse came downhill and then cut through their flank obliquely.

  “We charge,” said the King. “Now, before they move.”

  “Now?”

  The King signalled to his trumpeter. “Mordred is bareheaded.”

  Perceval gripped his lance and tensed for the signal. Even so, the call of the trumpet caught him almost by surprise. With a heave like an earthquake, Gringolet bounded forward. Then they went flying up the hill, horses straining, lances in rest.

  They caught Mordred unawares, as Arthur had guessed; his men were barely moving when the King’s knights met them at the crest of the hill. Perceval saw and marked the golden eagle of Agravain, and wrestled Gringolet aside to strike him clear on the brow of his helm. So the last prince of Orkney was the easiest unhorsing of his life, though whether in the end Agravain was finished by lance or sword or snake-venom, Perceval never knew.

  His spear splintered somewhere in that charge and he swept out his sword, but by now he had already broken through Mordred’s ranks to the other side. Perceval pulled Gringolet into a trot and wheeled him almost straight into the gigantic blow of an axe swung by Sir Sadok, who had sat beside Sir Caradoc at the Table. Perceval warded the stroke, but it lit on Gringolet’s neck, and the old horse went down.

  Perceval rolled clear just in time and rose to his feet. Where were the others? Was he cut off, here behind Mordred’s lines? But Sir Sadok was still trying to kill him and there was no time to look. Perceval ducked, lifting his shield against another buffet. The other knight circled him at a continuous tight canter, raining down blows from every direction. Perceval kept moving, catching the blows on his shield, feeling for the first time the panic of a foot soldier attacked by a cavalryman faster and bigger than himself. There was not a moment to stop, or to breathe, or to flail out at the horse’s legs.

  Perceval began to be dizzy.

  Then another knight flashed past, sword swinging. Sadok caught the blow on his shield, but this gave Perceval the moment he needed to thrust his sword deep into the enemy’s horse. Sadok slid from the beast’s back, and then they were more evenly footed. But it was not for nothing that Perceval had once been called the greatest swordsman of Logres.

  It was past midday when he struggled back from the rear of the line and found himself on the crest of the hill up which they had charged hours before. It was windy up here on the ridge, and there were clouds rolling across the sun. The cavalry charge had become a melée, and the melée had become a bitter killing match. Neither side yielded ground. There was little sound anymore but the wet thud of heavy blows. Downhill, the battle moved east a short way. Perceval strained his eyes at the crowd and saw Sir Ector’s banner still flying.

  He turned his attention back to the high ground. Many of the horses were dead now and the fighting was done on foot. Even at this hour it was impossible to say who was winning; the matter was still far too evenly matched.

  And Sir Gawain, if it had been him, had warned them against fighting before Lancelot arrived. For the first time, Perceval began to worry.

  He spotted Heilyn not far away, fighting some gigantic northern baron with a mace. Perceval shook off his weariness and went toward them. There was a brief fearful struggle in which he would have lost an arm if Heilyn had not been there by his side. Then at last the two knights of Logres laid the enemy twitching on the battlefield, and Perceval grasped the young knight’s arm. “Heilyn. Leave us. You’ll find horses at the camp. Go back to Lydaneg and tell them of the battle.”

  It was impossible to see Heilyn’s face under his helm, of course. Nor did he make any reply; only turned and went away down the hill.

  The wind sliced Perceval to the bone. Under his mail all his clothing was drenched with sweat so that if he stopped moving he was seized by teeth-chattering cold. He kept moving. There were ravens drifting overhead, black against purple sky, scenting a feast already. A little way uphill, two of them floated down and began to dig at one of the carcases lying there.

  There was something wrong with this battlefield, Perceval thought. By now, one or another of the sides should have fled, or should have been swallowed by the other. Today, some deep and stubborn enmity held men who had once been brothers to a grim and unyielding combat. Their numbers melted like snow, and still neither side gained the upper hand. Perceval ground his teeth in vexation. What about Mordred? If Mordred could be killed, surely his men would lose heart and flee. But the obsidian blade had broken upon the traitor’s shadow.

  He swallowed. What was about to happen here on Camlann ridge? Was this, then, the end of Logres?

  He passed his sword to his left hand to flex his tired fingers. Then he closed them again on the hilt and went back into the fighting.

  What passed in the next few hours blurred into one desperate, gasping struggle for life. But an end came even to this. He blocked a blow meant for Sir Ironside, and slew the man that was fighting him, but too late: the knight fell into the mud and died slowly of his many wounds. He saw Sir Kay’s tall figure sink under the blades of three men at once, and avenged the gruff steward as he could. The sky blackened. Perceval found the last of the three knights who had killed Sir Kay, and beat him to the ground, and stood dizzily alone among dead men.

  He lifted his head and blinked back his pain and weariness. Was no one else still standing? He went stumbling between the stiff bodies of men and horses until he found a man in battered armour leaning against the wind on a spear.

  There was a dog lying with shallow whining pants at his feet.

  “Who else is left?” asked the King through bloody lips. He had lost his helm; at some point it had been broken open and ripped off.

  They turned and saw another. Mordred the traitor came limping toward them on dragging feet. His surcoat was stained in blood, every faithful knight of Logres had made him a target, but he was still standing, and now lifted shield and sword for one last charge.

  “There he is,” breathed the King, “the worker of this realm’s grief.”

  And he gripped his spear, which still flaunted the Red Dragon of Britain, in a hand which trembled for weariness.

  Perceval caught the King’s arm. “Sire, if he cannot be killed…”

  But his own hand was weak enough to be shaken off by a gesture, and the King looked at him with such wrath and grief in his eyes that Perceval was silenced.

  “If this is the end of our fair fellowship, as Merlin told me when I was a youth, and the time of my departure from Logres, I go willingly. But first I will try if that traitor’s carcase has lost its old virtue.”

  And he lifted his spear and charged. When Mordred saw the King coming he broke into a stumbling run. But all weariness had fallen from Arthur of Britain, and he struck the traitor with such force that his spe
ar passed through shield, and armour, and body.

  Mordred gasped and a gout of blood trickled out at his lips. The King kept his grip on the spear-haft, nigh fainting from his exertion. Then Mordred dropped his splintered shield, reached forward, gripped the ash, and with a dim straining grunt pulled himself closer to the King.

  “Sire!” Perceval framed the warning with his mouth, but nightmarishly, his voice ceased to work.

  Mordred’s sword hung in the air. At the last moment the King lifted his shield, but his arm was too feeble. The blade bit into his skull. The King fell.

  Then Mordred also crumbled to the ground, and when Perceval crept closer, he found the son of Morgan staring at the sky with empty eyes.

  BY MIDDAY WHEN NO WORD HAD come from the north, Blanchefleur knew something must have gone wrong, and badly. That afternoon, as leaden clouds hid the sun and a cold wind blew from the West, the silence oppressed all of them more heavily. In the end, as the afternoon dragged toward evening, Guinevere put on her cloak and said, “Are you coming?”

  “Wait for us.”

  They had their horses brought out and were climbing into the saddle when Sir Heilyn came riding up the hill into the courtyard, drooping upon a lonely horse.

  Blanchefleur’s heart stood still when she saw him. If Perceval were alive, surely he would have come to her, too?

  “What news?” asked the Queen.

  Heilyn said: “Battle, with no victory in sight.”

  “We will go,” said Guinevere.

  “Lady Queen, no. The battlefield is no place for you.”

  “Young knight, yes. When the fighting is done, then the battlefield becomes the place of women. I tell you we will go.”

  Heilyn looked from the Queen to Blanchefleur, and she knew he saw the same resolve in both of them. “Well.” He turned to Branwen.

  “If you are going back, please don’t leave me here,” she begged. “Am I to be the only one left in Logres?”

  “We will go together,” he said, and they rode west, into the wind.

 

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