Read The Circle of the Gods Online

Authors: Victor Canning

The Circle of the Gods (21 page)

He pulled himself to his feet and turned away from the pool, but as he raised his eyes across the glade, he saw that which was a humble and wild joy in him and a never-to-be-forgotten sign. The gods had tried and tested him, humbled him in misery, but from that misery they had sparked a fire to kindle in him the life flame of his destiny. Never again would he deny them, for clear against the bright green of new forest leaf stood their sign of favour. Cropping peacefully at the lush spring grass was the white mare, her brier- and thorn-raked hide flecked with her own and his blood, the halter hanging slack from her lowered neck, and the long white tail switching across her quarters to break the tease and bite of worrying flies.

Sure of himself, Arturo walked slowly across to her, and the mare stopped cropping, raised her head and looked at him from her dark-pooled eyes and showed no sign of fear or flight. He stood by her, put out a hand and stroked her muzzle, and she took his touch with a gentle blowing of breath through her nostrils. He spoke to her gently then and called her white one, called her queen of all horses, breathed and crooned the low love talk of a horse master and ran his hand along the proud line of her neck and promised her cherishing and honour for all the days of her life.

He took her halter and led the white one back through the forest paths to the villa. He could have mounted and ridden her but would not on this day for he knew her pride was like his own. They came together down the slope to the Villa of the Three Nymphs. And when his people and his comrades came running and hurrying to gather about him, the mare stood quietly and without fear.

He said to the crowd about him, “She is the White One, the Shining One, and wherever we ride against the enemies of this country she shall be known and seen as the White Horse of Arto and all the shields that follow shall be marked with her emblem and all our scarf and helmet colours shall be the white of her shining hide and the crimson of her blood and mine, which dapple it now.”

Then, from the crowd, he called a small boy who had come with one of the visiting families and he handed the loose halter end to him and said proudly, “Lead her to the stables and remember always that after Arturo you were the first to have her gentle obedience.”

The boy led the White One away and she followed without let, stepping like a queen along the lane which the crowd fell back to make for her passage. As she went Arturo turned away from his people and walked across the yard to the ruined steps which led up to the colonnaded open way which ran across the face of the west wing of the villa where Daria stood, the morning breeze flicking free the tendrils of her dark hair and moulding the soft wool of her blue gown about her tall, full body.

He took her right hand and said humbly, “You know what is in my heart, and I know what is in yours. Although I have mastered the White One, to you I say I would take you for wife and between us for all our days there shall only be cherishing.”

Daria was silent for a while. Then, raising a hand and brushing her dark hair from her face, she said, smiling, “You do me honour, my lord Arturo, in the asking.
Aie
… I will gladly and lovingly be wife for you. But though we shall lie in the long grass and listen to the golden birds sing and drink the new wine, those times will be few and far-spaced for I know that there will be often the loneliness of longing for you when the White One takes you away. And now”—she smiled broadly, mocking and teasing him with her eyes—“you must do grace to my father and go ask him for leave to make me your bride. I doubt that he will refuse you, but should he, then make him a gift of a jar of beer and ask again when he has drunk it.”

Inbar of the tribe of the Enduring Crow had been well drilled by the captain of the guard on how he should behave before Count Ambrosius. Stiffly drawn up to his full height, he stood before the low wooden table at which the Count sat on a folding stool and waited for the man to raise his head to mark his awareness of his presence. All he could see at the moment was a bald head with fluffy wings of greying hair over the ears, bowed low over a sheet of new parchment covered with writing. On a bed against the far wall of the room lay an old but well-polished cuirass, a red cloak, and a horsehair-plumed bronze helmet as old as the cuirass. Count Ambrosius, all knew, kept to the old Roman ways and ordered his army so. The word from some was that he was a fool who lived in a dream, but there were many more who knew the real truth of the commander. It was that truth of the man which Inbar was hoping to use for his own advantage now.
Aie
… and many a long week it had taken him to get this audience.

After a while, and Inbar, whose judgment of men was shrewd, gauged the waiting imposed on him to be deliberate, the Count pushed the parchment to one side and raised his head. As their eyes met, Inbar lifted his right hand in a military salute but said nothing, remembering the words of the guard officer who had been one of the last he had bribed to get this interview. A pair of shrewd, narrow-lidded, pale-blue eyes fixed themselves steadily on him and a bare arm was raised to jerk the folds of a white toga to comfort about the thin shoulders. A small, hard man, thought Inbar, with no comfort in him for others and need for none himself … a shadow Roman, dreaming of the past, but a weasel of a man, swift and deadly. And on that he was placing his hopes.

“Name yourself and your business.” The voice was low but gritty like the rub of sandstone on sandstone.

Inbar said, “I am Inbar of the tribe of the Enduring Crow, cousin to Baradoc its chief, and uncle to Arturo, the son of Baradoc.”

At the mention of Arturo's name Ambrosius's lips thinned and from his hands, which he held locked together as his elbows rested on the table, came the crack of his knuckles as his fingers tightened. He said, “I have heard of you from Prince Gerontius and know you to be a dead man for shaming the wife of Baradoc.”

“Shame there was none, my lord, for the woman would have been willing and I would have made her my wife. Dead I should be, but am not for the gods were on my side when I took the long run and the death drop. Out of their bounty I hit the water cleanly feet-first, sank deep and then swam underwater to the cover of the cliff foot, where that night my wife came—”

“Yes, yes, the gods were with you, but spare me the rest and come quickly to your matter with me.”

“Arturo has taken men and horses from you, my lord, and his company grows.”

“You tell me what I already know, man. Come to your point.”

“I would kill Arturo for you.”

Ambrosius raised his head and the cold blue eyes widened in surprise. With an impatient wave of his hand he said, “What need to come to me and waste my time? Any man is free to kill Arturo for he is outlawed, and then the blood price will be paid.”

“So it would seem, my lord. But beyond the seeming is now the truth that there is not a man in this land who would kill Arturo for a blood price that he could not live long to enjoy. The blood price must be claimed openly before you or the noble Prince Gerontius and proof given of the deed. Such openness would mark a man for life, but that life would be short for there are those among his companions who would make it so.”

Count Ambrosius was silent for a while, the thin fingers of one hand fidgeting with the neck yoke of his toga. Then quietly he said, “It is true that must be the manner of the paying of the blood price. It is true, too, that I would have him dead. At the moment he is a gadfly but others begin to gather with him. So, what is in the mind of Inbar of the Enduring Crow?”

“Much, my lord, which I would wish to rest secretly between us. Alone, unmarked, and unknown to any, I will kill Arturo for you. As return I ask little. First I would have a small command in your army for I am tired of wandering like a lone wolf. After that, and I can be patient over the years, I ask that when his father, Baradoc, dies you should through your friendship with Prince Gerontius have me named as chief of the tribe of the Enduring Crow.”

“Baradoc's death would not clear the road for you. He has another son by the Roman woman Gratia he married, and could have others.”

“No, my lord. From my own wife, who still lives with the tribe, I know that the woman Tia is now barren since the birth of a fourth child, a girl-child.”

Ambroisus gave a thin smile. “And it is to your wife—since you are forbidden to go west of Isca—that you would look for the end of the second son … a wasting disease, a destroying fever? So, so, and if needs be—for barrenness is no more a certainty in a woman than her affections—she would see that no future man-child lived long?”

“Yes, my lord.”

Count Ambrosius lowered his head on one hand and with the other fingered the edges of the parchment on the table. Arturo and his companions were an annoyance to him. He was a young man of spirit and wild dreams and loud boasts with thirty or forty men at the most (but
his
men and
his
horses). For a moment or two he was on the point of dismissing Inbar. He had greater worries on his mind than Arturo. Vortigern, sunk in senile debauchery in Demetae, had sent no levies this spring and Prince Gerontius had cut his levy heavily. The great sickness over the eastern lands was passing, though slowly; and wily Hengist, who had once fought as a Roman auxiliary, was fast-drawing fresh men from across the northern sea and would soon begin to move, for no Saxon warrior sat content in camp for long. Against all this, while he sat here, lacking men still to make his move, waiting on promises, Arturo surely was a single gadfly. Then the thought quickened in him that the great Caesars and conquerors were ever at the mercy of time and chance. The sting of a single gadfly could make a mount rear or stumble and a noble captain fall to his death.

Raising his head, he said curtly, “Let it be as you promise, and it shall be as you wish.”

“I thank you, my lord.”

As Inbar went out through the anteroom the captain of the guard said, “How was the old lizard?”

Inbar smiled and said, “In the mood for taking flies.” He reached into his belt pouch and handed the man a worn and clipped silver piece of the reign of the Emperor Gratian which had been in the baggage of a trader he had murdered for loot on the Salinae—Glevum road, coming south. So, too, would he serve young Arturo, striking suddenly and without warning.

During the handful of weeks which led up to the feast of Beltine, which was on the first day of the month dedicated by the Romans to Maia, their goddess of growth and fertility, Arturo lived in two worlds. There was the world of his love for Daria and hers for him, and the world of the passion in him to set out on his first campaign—though he knew in his heart that with the forces at his command it would be no more than a demonstration of audacity to make his name widely known and bring more men to his side.

In the world of men and horses he passed most of his time, and this without chiding from Daria, for she knew the temper of the man she was marrying and secretly approved it. But he rode most afternoons with her on a hide saddle before him and old Anga trotting at the heels of the White One. They went to a withy bower on the far fringe of the water meadow below the forest which the companions had made for them. There they lay in the long grass and drank, not new wine, but the fresh stream water and listened truly to the golden birds sing, for the hawthorn thickets on the forest edge were full of yellowhammers in full song. It was there that they talked and caressed one another and between the long sweetness of kisses learned those things which make the sturdy frame and sheltering roof to house the heart and strength of true love.

One afternoon Pasco the priest came to them and, sitting down on the old grass-covered anthill, spoke to them of marriage.

He said to Arturo, “The Lady Daria has told you that she is of the Christian faith?”

Arturo nodded. “Yes, but not long since.”

Daria said, “Why should I talk of something which, in good time, Pasco could talk of far better than I?”

Pasco said, “It is logic—of a womanly kind. Which means, contrary to most people's thinking, that it is wise. So, my lord Arturo, you know that I cannot marry a follower and worshipper of Christos to one who worships all the heathen gods?”

Arturo nodded, unconcerned. “Yes. I know that, but it seems to me that you threaten to close a gate against a young ram when he is already within the pen. I worship my country's gods and those of my race. Are not your Christos and his great father gods like other gods?”

“They are indeed, and more so than any other gods.”

“That is no uncommon thing among gods. Some are greater than others. So I am happy to worship your Christos and his father for they are gods and I, worship all gods. How else can a man live in grace and under heavenly protection unless he gives homage to all gods? From my mother and my teachers I learned long ago that all the gods the Romans worshipped were but our gods with a different name. Great Bellenus was their Apollo. Our great Credne, who made the silver hand for the god Nodons, was their Vulcan, and so with all of them to the highest. Our all-powerful Dis was their Jove. A name is nothing. There must be as many names for the gods as there are races on this earth with different languages. Have no worry, good Pasco. You can marry me to the lady Daria with a clear mind since I will happily worship this Christos and his great father.”

Pasco rubbed his chin and sighed. To argue with Arto further was to invite a spreading of confusion and trouble. The lady Daria would have Arturo for husband for she loved him. For that, if need arose—since her faith was not well-tempered—she would unhesitatingly declare herself no longer a Christian. It was better, he gauged, to keep the sheep in the fold than lose it forever to a young ram from a strange flock. And was it not true that Christos often chose to bring the heathen by strange paths to grace?

Seeing Daria's eyes attentive on him and her hand holding Arturo's in union which his common sense told him, since the season was spring and young blood was young blood, must soon be celebrated, he said, “Then I will marry you. But there is one small rite of the Christian god you must make.”

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