Read The Crimson Chalice Online

Authors: Victor Canning

The Crimson Chalice (3 page)

“Cuna? Because he's young and still a little stupid. But the others will teach him. Sometime as we travel I will teach you the other words they know.”

“These are words of your language?”

“Na
, these are our words. There is a magic in them because only the dogs, I and soon you will know them. Can you whistle?”

“No, of course I can't.”

“Then you must learn because there could be times when you might need Bran.” Baradoc put his forefingers to his mouth and let out a sudden blasting whistle that made Tia jump.

Within a few moments a shadow swept across the sunlit patch beyond the bower. Then with a noisy beating of his great wings and a raucous calling of
carp carp
Bran, the raven, swept under the spreading branches of the yew. He circled twice around Baradoc and then settled on his shoulder, eyes alert, the great ebony beak weaving from side to side.

Drawing back a little, Tia said, “That's Bran?”

“Yes. And when he attacks he goes for a man's eyes.” Baradoc reached up his right hand and Bran jumped to his wrist. “Take a piece of cheese and throw it into the air for him.”

Tia broke off a piece of cheese and tossed it high into the air.

Bran made no move to take it and the cheese fell to the ground.

“He's not hungry.”

Baradoc laughed. “Oh, yes, he is. Bran is always hungry. But he will take food from no one unless he, too, is given the word. Throw it up again.”

Tia took the cheese and tossed it into the air once more and, as she did so, Baradoc called gently,
“Aka, Aka!”

Bran swooped from Baradoc's wrist and took the cheese low to the ground as it fell and then flew off to the top of a nearby ash tree.

Tia said, “So now he knows I am allowed to feed him?”

“Yes. Though he fends for himself even better than the dogs. When you can whistle he will always come to you.”

Baradoc stripped off his undershirt and rolled over onto his stomach, couching his head on his arms.

Tia asked, “What now?”

Baradoc grinned sideways at her. “You promised to massage me. My muscles are as stiff as salt-dry ropes.”

After a moment's hesitation Tia went to his side and knelt by him. For an ex-slave he had an abrupt way of treating her at times, but she guessed that this came from his self-confidence and his pride in the fact that he was a chief's son. The women of the remoter tribes, she knew, were of little importance except to do the bidding of their men. Leaning over him, she began to massage and work his shoulder muscles in the way she had often done for Priscus. As she worked she pushed from her mind as much as she could the thought of her brother and his wife. In a handful of savage hours her whole life had changed. The gods had been good to them all for a long time, and now the gods had turned away from them. When she got to Aquae Sulis she and her uncle would make their devotions to the gods of the Shades and set up a stone for Priscus and his wife. And then? What would she do then? Her uncle was old and would not last much longer. This country—her country, for she had known no other, but not hers in the way it was Baradoc's—was falling apart. There was a darkness failing over the land. She could feel the coldness of its shadow touching her heart.

Easing and working the stiff arm and back muscles of the youth, she said, “How long will it take to get to Aquae Sulis?”

“Who knows? There is no marching these days along the west road like a century of legionaries, quickly knocking off the miles. We've got to take the old tracks and steer clear of towns and villages. It's taken me three weeks to come down from Durobrivae and there's not been a day without smoke in the sky from some villa or homestead going up in flames. Tell me, Tia—what have you got in your bundle? My two good friends, whose throats I'll cut one day, took all my stuff and the packhorse as well.”

“There's not much. Some food. Some clothes. A few cooking things. A little money, the dagger, and a brooch that belonged to my mother.”

“I see. Well, we'll need to acquire a few more things.”

“Acquire?”

“Yes. Steal if need be.” He rolled over and away suddenly and, looking up at her, said firmly, “But one thing you've got to remember—if I tell you to do something, you do it—fast! Any bush or thicket can hold a cutthroat. Understood?”

After a moment's hesitation Tia said, “Yes.”

“And we must cut your hair even shorter. You've got to look like a boy, even if a pretty one. So don't pull a long face about it.”

Although she hid it, there was a flare of anger in Tia at the way he spoke. Sarcasm edging her voice, she said with a little shrug, “If that's what the great Baradoc, son of a chief, orders—then yes.” On her knees she made a mock bow.

Baradoc grinned and said, “Don't give me any of your sauce.” He stood up and began to flex his arms and shoulders and then bent over and touched his toes, loosening up his body. As he did so, he went on, “You must know this part of the country well.”

“Yes.”

He jerked his head toward the glade. “Where does the path lead?”

“To the sea. It's not far.”

“Is there a village down there?”

“There was until last year. A long boat raided it and it was burned. But there are still a few old huts the fishermen use when the shoals come along the coast.”

Baradoc bent and threw open her bundle. He took out a thin woollen blanket, slung it over his shoulders and tied it about his neck. He smiled at her. “I'm going scavenging. You stay here.” He turned and said something in his own language to the dogs and then walked off. Lerg and the other dogs watched him go. Cuna whined for a moment and then was silent. As Baradoc disappeared through the trees Tia saw Bran lift himself from the ash treetop and slide away on the sea breeze, slanting low over the forest toward the coast.

Tia moved to the open bundle and began to tidy the things that Baradoc had left in disarray. She arranged them neatly in the silk cover but left out the small cauldron and the beaker and her dagger. Before tying the ends of the coverlet together again she unwrapped from a piece of linen her mother's brooch. It was a small gold oval set on a strong pin. On its face, worked in relief, were clasped hands. Around them ran the inscription “To Januaria Hermia, my dearest. Marcus.” The brooch had been given to her mother on her betrothal by her father.

Holding it, Tia was struck by a sense of desolation. Alone now, with no need to cosset her pride or hide her feelings from anyone, she felt the strange dark knowledge of utter loss possess her. Resting back on her heels, she put her hands to her eyes and wept silently, her shoulders shaking, her head bowed.

After a while she felt the warm lap of a tongue caress the back of her hands. Looking up, she saw that Aesc had come to her and licked her hands. Behind her Lerg sat upright on his haunches, his great tongue lolling from his mouth as he watched her. She fondled Aesc's silky head and, as she did so, Cuna gave a little whimper, came to her and flopped his head into her lap.

She fondled Cuna's head, setting his stubby, docked tail wagging. The gods took, she thought, and the gods gave. There was no questioning their ways. Yesterday was one life; today another—and one for which she was utterly unprepared or fitted. Well, so what? She thought with a moment's heartening defiance. She must learn to live a new life. And then, almost as though she could hear his voice, a favourite saying of her brother's came back to her.
The blackest night must die under the fiery wheels of Apollo's golden chariot.

It was close on sunset when Baradoc returned. He came with the blanket slung over his shoulder, bulky with his findings. He carried in his right hand a long, wooden-shafted fishing spear, its socketed three-pronged iron head missing a tang and the two others badly rusted. He dumped the bundle on the ground and, squatting by her, laid out his pickings from the fishing huts. There were some rusty hooks of different sizes; a length of worn hempen rope; part of a circular throwing net with some small stone weights still attached to its skirts; a tangle of old catgut lengths; a sail-maker's needle with a broken point; a small wicker-woven birdcage with the bottom missing, into which he had stuffed odd lengths of cloth; two wooden platters, both badly cracked; a large lump of beeswax; a raggedly shaped piece of goat's hide as stiff as a board; a thick woollen fisherman's shirt, with a slit down the side, half a sleeve missing and the front coated with tiny, dried opaline fish scales; a well-worn piece of striking flint; and a small length of tallow candle with a rush wick.

As he laid all these out, Tia watched in silence. He took no notice of her until he had pulled out the last of his finds, a pair of long coarsely woven leggings that reached down to the ankles, stained with rust and pitch marks and with a great hole in their seat. He dropped them on the pile and looked at Tia with a grin of satisfaction.

“What do we want with all that rubbish?” she asked.

He shook his head and said, “I know the kind of place you come from. Like my old master's. You had servants and maids, fine clothes, and fine table furnishings. Aye, even glass in your windows and worked mosaics on the great-room floor. Baths and hot rooms and everything you wanted for the table. You've lived soft, wench—but now the world is upside down.”

Tia jumped up and said furiously, “Son of a chief you may be, but call me ‘wench'again and I walk from here and find my own way to Aquae Sulis. My name is Gratia. As a mark of friendship, Tia to you. Name me so and not as a herd or kitchen girl.”

“Whooah! Rein back! I meant no rudeness. Tia it shall be.” He reached up, took her hand and pulled her down. “Should we fight now, whose side would the dogs and Bran take since they have been given the word for you?”

“I'm sorry. I have a quick temper.”

“No, 'Tis pride and that is a good thing. I shall not offend it again—except by mischance, for which I ask forgiveness now to save further trouble. So, let's get back to our rubbish which is no rubbish. What one man throws away another can use. A fish spear with two prongs is better than no fish spear. Fish can be eaten but first they must be caught. So I brought the spear, the hooks, the gut and the piece of net. I can sharpen a new point to the needle and with threads pulled from the cloth and waxed you can repair the shirt and the long hose.”

“Who are they for?”

“The shirt is for me. The hose for you.”

“I wouldn't wear those filthy things!”

Baradoc was silent. For all that she had recently suffered Tia was far from realizing what change had come over her life. Never before had she ever had to think of a black tomorrow, of a tomorrow which would be as full of want as all the yesterdays. In this wilderness of place and evil times she was no more able to survive alone than a fledgling, unfeathered, pushed from its warm nest. He could have wished that it had been some simple herd girl who had saved him and who would have needed no teaching. Still … she was not. He said with good humour, “The clothes can be washed first and mended after. In long hose and the legs gartered you will be a handsome young fellow. And don't frown at me—it must be so for your own safety. Now, do I have to explain the rest as though you were a raw recruit, goggle-eyed in barracks for the first time?” He took the flint and, holding the spearhead jabbed into the ground, struck the stone against one of the iron prongs and brought brief, blue sparks spurting to life. “Raw fish or fowl cheer no belly. Fire we must have to cook. And have I not brought two cracked platters to go with your cooking cauldron and that wicked little dagger you keep always close to your side?”

“And this—this stinking piece of hide?”

“It's a long way to Aquae Sulis. Those fancy sandles of yours could need new soles in a week. Now—let's get packed up and moving. And, Lady Tia, leave the rest of the cake and cheese near the top of your bundle. We shall need them before the night is out.”

Marching, Baradoc watched the moon and the stars in their slow swings, and shaped his course, but even in pitch darkness the magic compass in his mind would have served him, though less finely. Once or twice he heard an owl call, and now and again came the harsh screech of a hunting night jar. The forest was alive with Nature's hunters, whose skills were more precise than any man's. Now and again either Lerg or Aesc would come from the darkness to his side for a few seconds and then disappear to their posts once more. Toward morning, with daylight like a grey wash of cobwebs through the eastern trees, he sent Cuna out to the right flank. Of all the dogs he and his old master had bred for export abroad, there had been none to touch Lerg or Aesc. They had been kept jealously for the household. Cuna would learn the wordless signs in time. Of all animals, the gods had gifted dogs with a magical kinship with man, but only to some men the gift of the words and signs that held them coupled in understanding and loyalty.

2. The Black Raven

It was almost midmorning before Tia woke. There was a fresh westerly wind blowing and the sky was full of low, rolling grey clouds. She sat up and looked around her. She had only the vaguest memory of the last stretches of their march and the moment when Baradoc had halted and said they would make camp. She had been conscious of his stirring around in the moonlight and shadows, unloading their bundles and spreading covers on the ground, of herself dropping on them and finally of his throwing the blanket across her.

She stretched her arms, yawned and rubbed the last of sleep from her eyes. The camp had been made on a high bluff which rose clear of the forest, in a small ravine whose sides were a jumble of broken stones. Behind her the rock face rose sheer and smooth like a fortress wall. The sound of running water reached her ears. Away to the left a thin stream dripped down a moss-covered cleft of the rocks and was gathered into a small gravelly pool, from which it seeped away down the hillside in a marshy slope bordered by primroses and blue-starred periwinkle growths. There was no sign of Baradoc or the dogs, but Bran sat on a spur of rock above her, beak-combing his flight feathers and scratching himself about the head as he made his morning toilet. Tia smiled to herself and decided to follow his example. Her tiredness was gone but she felt dirty and tousled.

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