He could not afford that; and the possibility was very real. If there were other Deryni involved in Guaire’s formative religious movement—and here, his meeting with the redoubtable Queron Kinevan became greatly suspect—then Camber had to assume that all of them, human and Deryni alike, were probably in periodic close communion of minds. Guaire, like any other human working closely with Deryni—especially a master like Queron—would have grown more sensitive to Deryni contacts in general. And while an adept like Camber might delve deep enough to hide the signs of his probing from Guaire’s human awareness, he could not be sure of deceiving another Deryni.
But what could he do? Guaire was here and now. If Camber dared not use his Deryni abilities to change Guaire’s mind, he wondered whether there was, perhaps, some logical way to convince Guaire that his miracle had been no miracle at all, but only the dream Camber now wished it had been. Success on that front would not solve the problem, would not end the burgeoning order devoting itself to “Saint Camber,” but it might at least provide an opening wedge.
And Guaire might let fall some additional clues about his Order’s plans. Anscom could be alerted; and he, who knew Camber to be no martyred saint, would stall and delay any official recognition of a Camber cult for as long as he could—perhaps indefinitely.
Determined to do just that, Camber gathered the shreds of his logic around him and looked at Guaire again, at the same time sending Joram a stern admonition not to interfere, to let him handle this.
Camber coughed self-consciously. “Aye, I remember, son,” he finally managed to murmur. “But surely you don’t really believe that Camber appeared to you that night? You said yourself that it was a dream.”
Guaire looked past him, eyes unfocused on the flickering fire as he retreated to some inner recall.
“I remember it as being dreamlike,” he said slowly, “and yet, there was that about it which was no dream. Just before he appeared, I remember waking and being very aware of the room around me: of Brother Johannes snoring in his chair—and that, in itself, was strange—of the warmth of the fire, the wavering light, the smells and textures of the bedclothes around me. His coming was no less real than those.”
“Dreams can be very vivid,” Camber said tentatively.
“Aye, but I do not think this was a dream,” Guaire insisted, turning his gaze back on Camber with its full intensity. “I think that he was there, in some mystical way I can’t explain. I think he came back from beyond. I think he continues to guide and inspire us, to the good and aid of all mankind. Do you not agree that these are the kinds of things he would have done, had not the mad Ariella slain him? To urge us to carry on the work he started?”
Camber squirmed uncomfortably in his chair. “These are the kinds of things he always espoused,” he had to agree. “But he was no saint, Guaire. He was a man, like other men. He had strengths and weaknesses, and the same kinds of temptations which assail us all. Being Deryni, perhaps his temptations were even greater than we dreamed. I do not think he was a saint, Guaire.”
“No? But you admired him.”
“Yes.”
“You admired him so much that you took his name in religion as your own, that his memory might live on.”
“That is true,” Camber conceded, wishing desperately that he had done no such thing. “But that hardly makes the man a saint.”
Guaire bowed his head. “I know it is not always easy to see these things, Your Grace—especially when one has been so close to a man, as you were to him.” He looked up, a beatific smile on his lips. “But you’ll see. God willing, you and many others—even his children—will come to know his greatness as we have. That is one reason we wish to build his shrine in the cathedral, where his body lay before its last journey, so that all may pay him reverence. One day, his tomb at Caerrorie will be a shrine as well. To some, it is already. I only wish that Father Joram would permit us freer access, even if he does not yet believe.”
He turned to gauge his effect on Joram, but the young priest had half turned away, face buried in his hands as he tried to get his emotions under control. With a shrug, Guaire stood and smiled again at his master, compassion glowing in his eyes.
“Camber touches him,” he said softly, “and, in time, will touch all men. Forgive me for pressing the issue, Your Grace, I see now that my request was premature. I’ll not speak to His Grace the archbishop, and you need not petition him on my behalf. God will find a way, when it is time.”
“Guaire—”
“Yes, Your Grace?”
Camber stood, trying to decide how he was going to phrase this. He dared not actually forbid Guaire to pursue his apparent goal, for Guaire was not bound to him by any formal vows of obedience; nor did Camber think such would have held him, if they had been sworn.
Guaire must have sensed the drift of Camber’s hesitation, for his next words and actions took the matter forever out of Camber’s control. Dropping to one knee, he took Camber’s hand and dutifully kissed his ring. His head remained bowed, but his voice was steady, leaving no doubt of his resolve.
“Forgive me, Your Grace, but I see that I’ve put you in a difficult position. I regret that. As you know, it had been my intention to continue serving you as Camber bade me, but I see now that I can better serve him in other ways.” He looked up, meeting Camber’s eyes squarely.
“I must leave your service now, Your Grace. I hope you will not take it amiss, but each of us must follow his own conscience, and my goal is clear now. You have shown me where my duty lies.”
“Guaire, it isn’t necessary to leave,” Camber began, knowing that if Guaire did leave, it would be even more difficult to follow the progress of the incipient Camber cult. “I will not interfere with your work. If you wish to take vows with this new Order—what did you call it?”
“I did not, Your Grace, but it will be called the Servants of Saint Camber,” Guaire said calmly.
“The—Servants of Saint Camber,” Camber repeated, controlling a tendency of his voice to crack with the words. “If—if you wish to do that, I shall not stand in your way. Men of many orders can work together for me. While I may not agree with your aims, I respect your right to try to do what you think you must. I should hate to think that I have driven you away by my inflexibility.”
“You have not driven me away, Your Grace,” Guaire said, getting to his feet and glancing at Joram again. “Nor has Father Joram. But it’s time I went. There are things which must be done, which I can help, God willing it be so. My brothers and sisters have the right to expect my undivided attention. ’Tis time I made a full-time commitment to Camber’s cause.”
“Very well, then. If you must, you must,” Camber replied. “But think about what you are doing, and why. You could be mistaken, you know.”
“I do not think so, Your Grace. May I have your leave to go now? I’ll gather my belongings and be away by noon.”
“You have it, son, and my prayers that God will guide you in the right paths,” Camber whispered.
Guaire bowed and turned to go toward the door. As his hands worked the latch, Camber made one last, desperate appeal.
“Guaire—”
“Your Grace?” Guaire paused in the doorway to look at his bishop a final time.
“Guaire, I don’t know who your friends are in this venture, but please pass this on to them for me. I think you’re wrong. I think you’re deluding yourselves, building hopes on idle wishes. Your intentions to follow in Camber’s tasks are noble, and I think he would have been pleased; but do not make of him something he was not.”
“Good-bye, Your Grace,” Guaire whispered, and turned away to disappear behind the closing door.
With so inauspicious a beginning, the rest of the morning could hardly have been expected to go smoothly; nor did it. No sooner had Guaire had time to get out of earshot than Joram erupted in appalled horror.
What had Camber been thinking, to let Guaire leave? The man must be brought back, his mind probed to discover
the exact threat of this new order calling itself the Servants of Saint Camber. Servants of Saint Camber, indeed! It was blasphemy for such an order even to be contemplated. Guaire had witnessed no miracle!
But Camber remained calm, even in his own dismay. Forming a close but emphatic link with his son, he insisted that Joram review all the same alternatives which he himself had considered while he talked with Guaire, making him see precisely why they could not afford to interfere overmuch.
Camber’s son and his very good friend must have supremely logical reasons for opposing Camber’s canonization—though, obviously, those could not be the real ones—but even ordinary methods of resistance must be employed prudently. On no account must Camber’s own part reach the point where Alister Cullen came into question. The chancellor-bishop was getting on far too well with the king just now to risk any hint of scandal.
Joram had to concede the wisdom of that observation. Even he could not fault the progress made by Cinhil during the past six months, much of it at his father’s urging. The king’s entire attitude toward the business of governing seemed to have improved greatly.
But how would Cinhil react when he learned of the movement to canonize Camber? Suppose the Servants somehow found out about Cinhil’s version of a miracle? If they forced the matter to a formal inquiry, even the king would not be able to deny under oath what he had seen. The fact that he must be regarded as a reluctant witness regarding Camber’s alleged sainthood would only tend to support the Servants’ allegations.
For that matter, what of Dualta, who was far more ripe for pumping about a Camberian miracle than Cinhil? Joram was willing to bet that his father did not even know where Dualta was!
On that point, it was Camber’s turn to concede. He did not know where Dualta was—though he had a vague impression that the young knight might have been sent along on Baron Hildred’s horse-finding expedition, since he was known to have a good eye for horseflesh. Did Joram have some reason for suspecting that Dualta had talked?
Not exactly. But Dualta had spoken with Joram several times in the month immediately after the incident, and Joram knew he had not forgotten it. After those initial discussions, in which Joram tried to discourage Dualta’s awed recall, the knight had come no more to Joram.
What contacts might Dualta have made in the intervening time? Suppose he, like Guaire, had met the increasingly evident Dom Queron and confessed all? By now, the story of how “Saint Camber” had healed the Bishop of Grecotha could already be part and parcel of a budding Camberian hagiography. If so, then all who were present that night could be implicated.
Reluctantly, Camber had to admit the possibility, though he did not think it likely. Had Guaire known anything of the Cinhil witnessing, he would surely have confronted the man said to be the object of the miracle. The fact that he had not, argued well for the probability that he and the Servants did not know. Of course, lack of that information would not necessarily stop the Servants of Camber. Saints had been proclaimed before on far flimsier evidence than martyrdom at the hands of an evil sorceress and supposed appearance in a miraculous-seeming dream.
The prospect of sainthood did not please Camber, and the living of a partial lie disturbed him. Still, if he must bear this cross in order to see Cinhil’s education and guidance through to their proper ends, then he would do it. He did not have to like it, and did not; but, like many others, he would learn to live with it, if he must.
Joram found it difficult to understand how his father, now a priest and bishop, could dismiss deliberate religious hypocrisy. But he did agree to abide by Camber’s direction and to temper his own vigorous opposition with prudence, for the greater good.
However, they agreed that further discussion between the two of them would serve no useful purpose just then. Accordingly, when they had composed themselves sufficiently to venture outside Camber’s apartments, they made their way to the archbishop’s chapel without delay. Anscom was waiting impatiently, so the two Deryni, father and son, did not attempt to make explanations before Mass. Vesting quickly, each used the order and serenity of the liturgy to restore his own inner calm, emerging renewed and reassured.
When all had been properly concluded, and they were seated in the archbishop’s solar breaking their fast, they told Anscom everything that had happened, sharing their assorted mental impressions as well as the verbal retelling.
Anscom, who had received all without interruption after his initial shock, shook his head after sipping from a cup of goat’s milk.
“Camber, you continue to be a thorn in my side, don’t you? Oh, I know it isn’t really your fault. You’ve done what you had to do. But the problem exists, nonetheless.”
He made a face at the milk, for he drank it only out of duty to a sensitive stomach, which was churning even more than usual at the morning’s news. Camber did not reply.
“However,” the archbishop continued, “you can rest assured that no shrine to Saint Camber will be built in my cathedral while I’m archbishop.” He set down his empty cup with a gesture of finality. “As for canonization—well, there’s not much any of us can do to stop a popular folk movement, I suppose, but I will promise to prevent any formal petition from reaching the Council of Bishops.”
“Thank you, Anscom,” Camber said quietly. “I could not ask for more.”
Anscom shrugged. “I wish it were more. Frankly, I don’t see how you can be so calm about it all. I’m sure I should be a bundle of nerves if someone were trying to make a saint of me.”
Camber gave a wan smile as he buttered a bit of fine white bread. “You’ve seen the rationalizations I’ve had to make, to achieve this state of outward calm,” he said, popping the bread into his mouth. “But what else can I do?” He chewed and swallowed. “Revelation of the truth would completely undermine the progress we’ve made in these past few months. Cinhil is really beginning to think like a king, at last. We haven’t seen his likes for at least a century, so far as potential is concerned. You should see the plans for military reorganization that he and Jeb and I drew up yesterday. They’re brilliant—and most of the input is from Cinhil, not Jeb or me.”
He nodded thanks as Joram refilled his cup with fragrant brown ale, pausing to drain it by half before continuing.
“And that’s not all. We’ve only made preliminary notes so far, but some of his ideas for legal reform are truly revolutionary. He’s taken the basic texts that we made him read while he was in the haven, and he’s used them as a jumping-off point to devise plans I’ve never even thought of. Oh, some of them are too theoretical to work, but the point is that he’s learning. He’s starting to think independently, to synthesize new ideas from what we gave him. Sometimes even I have trouble keeping up with him, Anscom.”
Anscom, who had been eating a slab of cheese with apple slices, wiped his fingers and then his knife on a damask napkin and began cleaning his nails with the tip of the blade. His eyes held a twinkle of amusement.
“I’m not arguing with you on that point. I know, from my meetings with him, the kinds of things he’s proposing.” He turned his gaze on Joram. “But, what about you, Joram? And Evaine and Rhys? Can the three of you cope with your father becoming a saint, if that’s the price we must pay for our good King Cinhil?”
Joram put down the piece of bread he had been methodically turning into dough pellets and dusted his hands over his plate.
“There must be something we can do to stop it, Your Grace.”
“I agree that there ought to be. Unfortunately, your father’s life and untimely ‘death’ are precisely the stuff of which martyrologies are made. There’s little we can do to stop the talk.”
“But the hypocrisy of it all!”
“I know.” Anscom sighed. “But sometimes one can’t afford to be overfastidious. Moral scruples aside, can you handle the rest? For example, what if Guaire and his friends should ask Lady Elinor for permission to enshrine the tomb at Caerrorie?”
“Oh, God, she wouldn’t let t
hem, would she?”
“I don’t know. I’m asking you. She’ll not have Evaine and Rhys to rely upon in the future, you know. If Evaine’s appointment as a lady-in-waiting weren’t enough to keep them at court, then Rhys’s confirmation as the queen’s physician certainly will be. Megan is pregnant again, you know.”
Camber lowered the cup he had been raising to his lips and looked at Anscom in surprise. “So soon? Does Cinhil know yet?”
Anscom shook his head. “Rhys only confirmed it a few days ago. It will be another boy, if she carries it to term. Needless to say, Rhys’s services will be constantly on call until she’s safely delivered at the end of the summer. However, Joram still hasn’t answered my original question. What will Elinor say if the Servants of Saint Camber ask her permission to enshrine the tomb?”
“Without coaching, she might agree,” Joram said gloomily. “She was very fond of—Camber.” He looked up at his father, at Anscom, back at Camber again.
“Father, couldn’t we tell her the truth? She’ll have to know eventually, if you still plan to include the boys.”
“Eventually, yes; but not yet. Rhys tells me that she’s considering remarriage, and I’m afraid her prospective bridegroom can be a bit of a hothead. If she has to cope with my sainthood, I’d rather she knows nothing she has to be afraid of revealing.”
“Cousin Jamie?” Joram asked.
Camber nodded. “Anscom, we’re talking about young James Drummond. You may remember him from the haven. When Cathan was courting Elinor, James was also a suitor. Now that Cathan is gone …” He shrugged. “At any rate, I’ll be very surprised if Elinor doesn’t say yes. The boys need a father, and Elinor needs a husband. The combined resources of Culdi and the Drummond lands will make quite a tidy holding.”
“But you referred to him as a hothead,” Anscom said. “Do you mean that, if he knew the truth about you, he might let it slip?”
“Let’s just say that I’d rather not give him that temptation just now,” Camber replied. “I don’t believe in husbands and wives not being able to share totally, if they want to—which means that both of them will have to learn to cope with the comings and goings at Caerrorie like the rest of us. Joram, do you think they can do it?”
The Legends of Camber of Culdi Trilogy Page 73