The Hallowed Isle Book Three

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The Hallowed Isle Book Three Page 19

by Diana L. Paxson


  There was another thing. Igierne was a trained priestess, and Morgause had seen her often in the willed and disciplined stillness of ritual. But there had always been a tension, a sense of leashed power in reserve, like a warhorse on a tight rein. Now, her mother simply sat still.

  “I have brought the gift of the Goddess back to its place . . .” said Morgause, letting the lead rope fall.

  “You do not say that you have brought it back to me,” observed Igierne.

  “It is not yours,” said Morgause. “Nor is it mine . . . that is what I have learned.”

  “If you know that, you have learned a great deal.”

  “I have indeed . . .” Morgause gave a rather shaky sigh and dropped down to sit cross-legged in the dust at her mother’s feet. Through the trees she could see sunlight dancing on the blue water, and knew the Lake for another vessel of power.

  Manus was nearly the last of the seekers to come back to Camalot, and when he returned, he rode clad as a warrior, escorting a young priestess who had been sent by Igierne.

  “I am glad to see you!” said Guendivar when the babble of welcome had died down. “But what is all this?” she indicated his armor. “You have changed!”

  He blushed as everyone turned to look at him once more, but all could see that he wore the gear as one accustomed, not like a kitchen boy who had stripped some armor from a body he found by the road.

  “Why did the Lady send you to guard her messenger?” wondered someone.

  Aggarban pointed the stick upon which he had been leaning at the kitchen boy.

  “And why are ye wearing a Votadini plaid?”

  “Because it is mine!” snapped Manus, reddening once more. “And you are a blind oaf, brother, that never stooped to look at the folk who serve ye, or ye would have recognized me before!”

  There was a moment of stunned silence, and then Gualchmai guffawed with laughter. “Oh indeed, he has ye there, Aggarban. And in truth he does have the look of Goriat, does he not, Gwyhir?”

  “Oh, he does, he does—” agreed the second brother, his gaze travelling upward, “but much, much larger.. . .” And then everyone, even Artor, who had finished his conversation with the priestess, began to laugh.

  “And he has outdone you all,” said the king, “for Goriat has found the Cauldron, or at least brought word of it. That is the message my mother has sent to me. The sacred vessel is safe in its shrine, and the Lady of the Votadini is there as well.”

  “Mother?” exclaimed the three older brothers, amazement stamping their faces with a momentary identity.

  “Was it Morgause who stole it, then?” exclaimed Cai amidst a rising babble of speculation.

  “The message does not say, and whatever lies between my sister and my mother is their own affair,” Artor said repressively.

  “If the Cauldron has been found, then all our wandering warriors can come home,” Guendivar said then.

  “It will not matter,” observed Betiver. “Pagan though it was, I think the Cauldron was what the priests mean by a sacrament—an earthly symbol that points the way to something beyond. That was what we saw that night, and that is what they are looking for.”

  “Perhaps we have been too successful,” Cai said ruefully. “When we were constantly in danger from the Saxons or the Irish, men had no time to worry about much beyond their own skins.”

  “And now they worry about their sins.. . .” Artor sighed.

  “Take comfort, my lord. So long as human beings must live in the world, they will need good government, and heaven does not hold the only beauty of which men dream.”

  For a moment, Betiver’s glance touched Guendivar. Then he looked away. But others had followed the motion, and now she stood at the center of all men’s gaze. She heard their thought clearly, though it was not with her physical ears.

  “For some, the Vessel of Light is here . . .”

  Igierne made her way along the edge of the Lake. Beyond the farther shore, the humped shapes of the mountains rose up against the luminous blue of the night sky like a black wall, shutting out the world. Beyond the lapping of the water and the crunch of her footsteps on stone and gravel, the night was still. The surface was uneven and she moved carefully, using her staff for support, for her stiff joints would not be able to save her if she should fall. It was one of the disadvantages of growing older, and at this moment, she felt both old and tired.

  But for the first time in many moons, she was at peace. Her daughter had come home as Igierne’s own mother had foretold. Morgause had much to unlearn as well as to learn before the rage and hatred in which she had lived for so many years were entirely replaced by wisdom and love. Igierne did not suppose that their relationship would always be peaceful, but at least they now had one, instead of a state of war. And the Lady of the Lake had no desire to break her daughter’s will—to rule the Isle of Maidens, Morgause would need to be strong, as she had been strong. But Igierne could foresee, now, a time when she herself would be able to let go.

  The Lake slept beneath the stars, reflecting only an occasional flicker of light, and on the island, the priestesses slept likewise. Only the Lady of the Lake was still wakeful. On the eastern point a bench had been set for those who wished to salute the sun or watch the moonrise. With a sigh Igierne settled herself upon it and laid down the staff. Her priestesses came here often when the moon was new or full. But the waning moon was an old woman who rose late and ruled the silent hours between midnight and dawn, and she had few worshippers.

  She is like me . . . Igierne smiled to herself. Let Morgause learn to wield the full moon’s power. Her coming had freed her mother to study the secrets of the waning moon and the dark, to truly become the raven whose wings shine white in the Otherworld—Branuen, the Hidden Queen.

  As if the thought had been a summons, Igierne glimpsed behind the mountain a pallid glow. In another moment, the Crone’s silver sickle appeared in the sky.

  “Lady of Wisdom, be welcome,” whispered Igierne. “Cut away that which I need no longer, and purify my spirit, until it is time for me to return to your dark Cauldron and be reborn.. . .”

  PEOPLE AND PLACES

  A note on pronunciation:

  British names are given in fifth-century spelling, which does not yet reflect pronunciation changes. Initial letters should be pronounced as they are in English. Medial letters are as follows.

  SPELLED PRONOUNCED

  P.................b

  t.................d

  k/c..............(soft) g

  b.................v (approximately)

  d.................soft “th” (modern Welsh “dd”)

  g.................“yuh”

  m................v

  PEOPLE IN THE STORY:

  CAPITALS=major character

  *=historical personnage

  ( )=dead before story begins

  [ ]=name as given in later literature

  Italics=deity or mythological personage

  *Aelle, king of the South Saxons

  Aggarban [Agravaine]—third son of Morgause

  (*Ambrosius Aurelianus—emperor of Britannia and Vitalinus’ rival)

  (Amlodius, Artor’s grandfather)

  Amminius—one of Artor’s men

  ARTOR [Arthur]—son of Uthir and Igierne, High King of Britannia

  (Artoria Argantel—Artor’s grandmother)

  BETIVER [Bedivere]—nephew to Riothamus, one of Artor’s Companions

  Bleitisbluth—a Pictish chieftain

  Brigantia/Brigid—British goddess of healing, inspiration, and the land

  CAI—son of Caius Turpilius, Artor’s foster-brother and Companion

  CATAUR [Cador]—prince of Dumnonia

  Cathubodva—Lady of Ravens, a British war goddess

  *Catraut, prince of Verulamium

  *Ceawlin—son of Ceretic

  Ceincair—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  (*Ceretic [Cerdic]—king of the West Saxons)

  *Chlodov
echus [Clovis]—king of the Franks in Gallia

  *Constantine—son of Cataur

  *Cunobelinus—warleader of the northern Votadini

  Cunorix—an Irish warleader, formerly Artor’s hostage

  *Cymen—Aelle’s eldest son

  Doli—a Pictish warrior in the service of Morgause

  *Drest Gurthinmoch—High King of the Picts

  Dugech—one of Morgause’s women

  *Dubricius—bishop of Isca and head of the Church in Britannia

  *Dumnoval [Dyfnwal]—lord of the S. Votadini

  Ebrdila—an old priestess on Isle of Maidens

  Edrit—a young warrior in the service of Aggarban

  Eldaul the younger [Eldol]—prince of Glevum

  *Eormenric—son of Oesc, child king of Cantuware

  Ganeda [Ganiedda]—Merlin’s half-sister, wife of Ridarchus

  (Gorlosius [Gorlois]—first husband of Igierne, father of Morgause)

  Goriat [Gareth]—fourth son of Morgause

  Gracilia—wife of Gualchmai

  GUALCHMAI [Gawain]—first son of Morgause

  GUENDIVAR [Gwenivere]—Artor’s queen

  Gwyhir [Gaheris]—second son of Margause

  Hæthwæge—a wisewoman in the service of Eormanaric

  (*Hengest—king of Cantuware, leader of Saxon revolt)

  Ia—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens, in service of Morgause

  *Icel—king of the Anglians in Britannia

  IGIERNE [Igraine]—Artor’s mother, Lady of the Lake

  *Illan—King of Leinster, who for a time holds part of North Wales

  Julia—a nun from the Isle of Glass, Guendivar’s companion

  Father Kedi—an Irish priest at the court of Artor

  Leodagranus [Leoderance]—prince of Lindinis, Guendivar’s father

  Leudonus [Lot]—king of the Votadini

  Leuku—one of Morgause’s women

  Mother Maduret—abbess of the nuns at the Isle of Glass

  Matauc [Madoc]—king of the Durotriges

  MEDRAUT [Mordred]—fifth son of Morgause, by Artor

  Melguas [Meleagrance]—an Irishman born in Guenet, abductor of Guendivar

  MERLIN—druid and wizard, Artor’s advisor

  MORGAUSE—daughter of Igierne and Gorlosius, queen of the Votadini

  Morut—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  (*Naitan Morbet—king of all the provinces of the Picts)

  Nest—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  Ninive—daughter of Gualchmai by a woman of the hills

  (*Oesc—grandson of Hengest and king of Cantuware, Eormenric’s father)

  Peretur [Peredur]—son of Eleutherius, lord of Eboracum

  Petronilla—wife of Leodegranus, Guendivar’s mother

  *Ridarchus—king at Alta Cluta and protector of Luguvalium

  Rigana—widow of Oesc, Eormenric’s mother

  *Riothamus—ruler of Armorica

  Tulach—a Pictish priestess, wife of Blietisbluth

  Uinist—a Votadini warrior who serves Morgause

  Uorepona—“the Great Mare,” High Queen of the Picts

  (Uthir [Uther Pendragon]—Artor’s father)

  (*Vitalinus, the Vor-Tigernus—ruler of Britannia who brought in the Saxons)

  PLACES

  Afallon [Avalon]—Isle of Apples, Glastonbury

  Alba—Scotland

  Alta Cluta—Kingdom of the Clyde

  Anglia—Lindsey and Lincolnshire

  Aquae Sulis—Bath

  Belisama Fluvius—River Ribble, Lancashire

  Bodotria Aestuarius—Firth of Forth

  Britannia—Great Britain

  Caledonian forest—southern Scotland

  Calleva—Silchester

  Camalot [Camelot]—Cadbury Castle, Somerset

  Cantium, Cantuware—Kent

  Cantuwareburh—Canterbury

  Cicutio—Brecon, Wales

  Demetia—Pembroke and Carmanthenshire

  Durnovaria—Dorchester, Dorset

  Fodreu—Fortriu, Fife

  Gallia—France

  Glevum—Gloucester

  Guenet [Gwynedd]—Denbigh and Caernarvonshire

  Isle of Glass [Inis Witrin]—Glastonbury

  Isle of Maidens, the Lake—Derwentwater, Cumbria

  Isca (Silurum)—Caerwent

  Lindinis—Ilchester, Somerset

  Lindum—Lincoln

  Londinium—London

  Mona—Anglesey

  Sabrina Fluvia—the Severn River and estuary

  Segontium—Caernarvon, Wales

  Sorviodunum—Old Sarum, Salisbury

  Summer Country—Somerset

  Urbs Legionis [Deva]—Chester

  Uxela Fluvius—River Axe, Severn estuary

  Venta Belgarum—Winchester

  Venta Siluricum—Caerwent, Wales

  Viroconium—Wroxeter

  Voreda—Old Penrith, Cumberland

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  DIANA L. PAXSON is the award-winning author of The Lord of Horses, The Wolf and the Raven, The Dragons of the Rhine, The White Raven, and The Serpent’s Tooth and co-author (with Adrienne Martine-Barnes) of Master of Earth and Water, The Shield Between the Worlds, and Swords of Fire and Shadow, the chronicles of Fionn mac Cumhal. She lives in Berkeley, California.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

  ALSO BY DIANA L. PAXSON

  The Hallowed Isle series

  The Book of the Sword

  The Book of the Spear

  Wodan’s Children Trilogy

  The Dragons of the Rhine

  The Wolf and the Raven

  The Lord of Horses

  With Adrienne Martine-Barnes

  Master of Earth and Water

  The Shield Between the Worlds

  Sword of Fire and Shadow

  COPYRIGHT

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.

  Copyright © 1999 by Diana L. Paxson

  Published by arrangement with the author

  ISBN: 0-380-80547-2

  EPub Edition May 2013 ISBN 9780062290953

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data:

  Paxson, Diana L.

  The book of the cauldron / Diana L. Paxson.

  p. cm. — (The hallowed isle ; bk. 3)

  1. Great Britain—History—Anglo Saxon period, 449-1066 Fiction. 2. Arthurian romances Adaptations. 3. Arthur, King Fiction. I. Title. II. Series: Paxson, Diana L. Hallowed isle ; bk. 3.

  PS3556.A897B64 1999 99-38405

  813'.54—dc21 CIP

  First Avon Eos Printing: November 1999

  AVON EOS TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND IN OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA, HECHO EN U.S.A.

  OPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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