by Ilka Tampke
‘Ailia.’ Fraid turned to me. ‘We need you to sight the battle and secure it with your blessing.’
The blood quickened in my neck. ‘Perhaps it should be Llwyd—’ I stammered. ‘He has blessed many battles.’
‘No,’ Llwyd said. ‘You are the Kendra. I will assist you, but you alone can foresee this battle’s outcome.’
‘There are few hours left until dawn,’ said Fraid. ‘Let us all take sleep. Ailia, you will have but one day to see and sanctify this battle.’
When the warriors had departed and we were preparing our beds, I asked Fraid where Sulis was.
‘She left for the Isle,’ Fraid answered.
‘By night?’
‘She would not stay.’ Fraid smiled as if to reassure me. ‘She holds her knowledge too firmly,’ she said. ‘Do not heed her.’
I had not heeded her. And I hoped I was not mistaken.
At daybreak, Llwyd and I walked to the Oldforest, where we could work unseen. An ovate followed, carrying the pots and herbs, and leading the calf whose blood would summon my sight.
Llwyd led us to the pool where I had twice met Taliesin.
‘Here,’ said Llwyd.
As we positioned our tools, the familiar mist rose up from the water, obscuring my view to the other side. I knew Taliesin waited beyond it. But I could not call him now. I had to wait until I was alone. I had to wait until the battle was fought and won.
While Llwyd sat in silence, watching for portents of birds or hares, the ovate prepared for my seeing. Deftly he slayed and skinned the calf and set about making a broth of its blood over a fire of oak.
I sat on the forest floor, facing the sunrise, the river gurgling before me. The ovate laid the calfskin, fleshside out, over my head. Beneath this heavy tent, I smelled the dung warmth of the animal’s pelt and the tang of its blood. I was handed a cup of broth and I sipped, closing my eyes.
It could take many hours to bring me to sight. With the ovate and Llwyd keeping vigil beside me, I began the deep, rhythmic breaths, and the chants I had learned from Steise, to coax open my eye.
Soon there were moments of sight: Ruther’s face, Taliesin’s. I saw fragments of Cookmother, Heka, then at last there were soldiers in red tunics at camp. See! I commanded myself, but I pushed too hard and the image slipped like vapour. I needed the raven eye to make clear sight. I needed to change form. ‘Heat me!’ I cried to the ovate.
They fuelled the fire, setting steaming bowls beneath my calfskin, and passing me medicines. I dizzied with heat and dripped with sweat, but the raven form would not come. I changed with the Mothers, I anguished. Why not here?
And yet I knew why. My doubts had been founded. I was free with the Mothers, but here I could not take form without skin. Then why? I agonised. Why had they chosen me?
I laboured to see what I could, grasping at the wisps of sight at the edges of my vision. I saw Ruther gathered with two men of the legion, talking with purpose, but I heard no sound. ‘I cannot hear what is said!’ I lamented aloud.
Llwyd’s voice came as if from a great distance. ‘Call to the Mothers, Ailia. Make sight of the battle. Make sight of our success—’
Images of our fighting men painted for battle, eyes alight, flashed before me then faded. ‘It is a blur!’ I cried. ‘It does not come.’ I weakened, near fainting beneath the heavy cloak.
‘It will come, Kendra, do not desist.’
But it did not.
Though Llwyd asked and coaxed, I said nothing more as I sat and waited. It could not be known that my eye would not open.
Finally it neared day’s end. Exhausted, I pulled the skin tent away from my shoulders.
‘Do you have an answer for the warriors?’ asked Llwyd.
I had heard the song. I knew it must be defended, whether or not I had sighted the battle. For why else had I been chosen? ‘Yes,’ I said.
We walked back to the farmhouse in dusk. All the way, I silently crafted the words that would give the warriors strength.
‘Have you seen us victorious?’ Fraid asked as we arrived.
There were several more warriors gathered around the fire, including some with tartans from townships in greater Summer. Among them was Uaine, Bebin beside him, a plump boy child squirming in her arms.
I looked around at the faces staring at me. They had asked me to guide them. Their future hung on my answer. What I could not find with my sight I would create with my words. No one would know that the sight had not come.
I bade them be seated and stood before them in the strong place. Then I began. ‘Our fighters are fewer in number than Rome’s but we hold one incontestable weapon.’ I paused to quell the shake in my voice. ‘That weapon is truth.’
A long silence greeted my statement. But they were listening.
‘If you strengthen truth, it will strengthen you.’ I took a deep breath, drawing on the words of the Mothers, of Taliesin, of my own heart. ‘If you guard truth, it will guard you.’
As I looked around at the warriors, I saw a kindling in their spirits.
I stepped onto the bench so that I could see, unobstructed, all to whom I spoke. ‘If you honour truth,’ I continued, ‘it will honour you. If you defend truth, it will defend you.’
My heart quieted. I was clear in what I must tell them and the words rose up from my learning like water. ‘For it is through truth that great tribes are governed.
‘Through truth every law is beautiful and every cup is full.
‘Through truth, mighty armies of invaders are drawn back into enemy territory.’
Their eyes were ablaze.
‘For so long as you fight for truth, it will not fail you and you will not perish.’ I paused to take breath, the will of the warriors pliant in the fire of my words. ‘As Kendra, I tell you that we will fight, men and women of Summer. And truth will make us indestructible.’
The warriors broke into smiles and cheers.
I stepped off the bench with trembling legs. I knew I had done the right thing. They had to believe in their strength. This would be enough.
In the hum of chatter and strategy that followed, I gathered with Fibor and Llwyd.
‘We will prepare this night,’ said Fibor. ‘There will be little time to dress and paint—’
‘Ruther must be distracted,’ said Llwyd. ‘He still commands several warriors—’
‘And we cannot risk him sending scouts to the Roman camps,’ said Fraid, who joined us.
Fibor exhaled with a grunt. ‘He must be detained and his men told not to disturb him. Otherwise the risk of discovery is too great.’
‘I will distract Ruther.’ My steady voice belied my knotting stomach.
‘No, Ailia,’ said Llwyd, ‘we need you with us.’
‘But she is the only one,’ said Fraid, ‘who can weaken him.’
‘Commence the preparations,’ I said, fastening my cloak. ‘I will make sure Ruther is mine until dawn.’
‘Go now,’ said Llwyd, kissing my cheek. ‘We need every minute.’
As I stepped out of the warm farmhouse into the dark spring night, I was met with an overwhelming dread. Of all the fears I had known in my lifeturn, this moment felt the most ominous. A brutal force lay in wait, seeking to tear us from our roots. The people of Albion were no strangers to battle. It was the way of the tribes to fight for their boundaries, to display their bravery. But this was not battle sport. This was an attack on our very existence. We must defeat it or we would not survive it.
I quickened my step. I had to keep my wits sharp now.
One of Ruther’s men stood at the sleephouse door and I bade him tell Ruther I was there. I drew up, taking on a small glamour, while I waited to be admitted, not too much, lest Ruther be suspicious. I was called through.
He looked weary as he drank by the fire, but straightened at the sight of me. ‘What brings you back?’ he asked.
‘Does the girl Heka share your bed this night?’
‘No. She is cast from my favour.’
‘Goo
d.’ I dropped my cloak and moved toward him.
31
Disturbance
To deny our kin is to disturb our soul.
I AWAKENED JUST after first light. The cries of the smiths drifted up from the craft huts and I wondered if their night had been fruitful, if I had bought them enough time.
Ruther murmured and I watched him sleep, the same fine face that woke me from my first Beltane. His eyes flickered behind closed lids, dreaming perhaps of his beloved city. I opposed him but I could not hate him. In his own way, he acted in truth.
I placed my lips on the ridge of his cheek, then sat up, reaching for my under-robe.
In a flash he had roused and pulled me back down. ‘Do you think I will let you go now you have come to me?’
‘I cannot stay,’ I protested, wriggling from under him.
‘So you have not changed your mind?’ He propped on one elbow as I dressed. ‘You did not come to stay?’
I shook my head. ‘Last night was my farewell gift.’
‘Ailia—’ His tone became grave. ‘In truth, it is best if you do not go. Let me hide you until the danger is passed.’
‘Never,’ I said as I stood. ‘I will not be hidden away.’
‘You must trust me. You will not be spared.’
‘For how long would you have me hidden?’ I scoffed, strapping my sword to my belt.
‘Until I have gained their trust. There are scouts from the legion in the township already, surveying the land, seeing who is dangerous. Please let me protect you.’
‘Impossible.’ I pulled on my cloak, eager to be gone from him. He was too insistent now.
‘If you will not see sense, then I will see it for you.’ In the blink of an eye he had sprung up from the bed and was pulling me across the room. Gripping me around the waist, he kicked away the basket that covered the opening to the storepit beneath.
‘Stop—’ I struggled against him but he was as strong as a bullock, determined to force me into the narrow opening. I fought, raking his skin with my fingers, but he held my arms like a vice.
With his final shove, I tumbled down the ladder. I sat, shocked, on the dirt floor, scratches bleeding on my hands and legs.
‘You will have food and drink—you will be safe!’ called Ruther from above.
‘And when will I be released from this cage?’ I shouted up at him.
‘When it is done and I have their trust. Then I will release you.’
‘No!’
But he was drawing the bolt of the trapdoor and my scream was deadened by the damp earth around me.
The storepit was cold, airless and entirely black until Ruther opened the door and descended the ladder with a torch that he fixed into a wall bracket. In the weak light of the flame, I saw there were blankets on the floor, a pot and a jug of water. He had prepared for this. He had intended to trap me and I had walked straight to him.
‘You snake,’ I whispered in disgust.
‘You will be grateful.’ He turned to the ladder, then back to me. ‘Give me your sword.’
‘No.’ I panicked. He could not take it. ‘I will cause no further trouble if you leave it with me. This is my promise.’
He stared for a moment then snorted with indifference. ‘There is little harm that can come of it here. Tidings, Ailia.’ He climbed the ladder and shut the trapdoor beneath him.
I heard the iron latch slide shut and I sank to the floor. The warriors would think I had abandoned them. They would doubt their strength. ‘Fight,’ I urged them with my mind’s voice as I sat for hours in the dank silence.
Later, one of Ruther’s attendants brought food, but would tell me nothing of what was happening in the township. I begged and cajoled him but he handed me the bread and stew without a word and latched the door again.
What torture it was to be powerless in wait, while the tribespeople were working to face the darkest enemy we had yet known. What kind of Kendra was I who allowed herself to be hidden and protected while her people put their lives at risk? Who could not even give them the seeing that was needed?
I could not eat the food. It was as though my body was making Troscad of its own will, protesting the confinement that I was neither strong nor clever enough to protest myself.
Again there was scuffling above me and the sound of the latch being drawn. Strange, it was only moments since the attendant had left. Was he back for my bowl so soon? I stood, ready to pass it to him, untouched.
A woman descended the ladder. The fine hairs on my neck bristled. It was Heka. ‘What are you doing here?’ I whispered. ‘Does Ruther know you have come?’
She pulled the door shut above her. Her business would have to be swift or the servant would find it unlocked when he returned. When her feet touched the floor she turned to me, her eyes glittering in the torchlight. There was mud on her skirts and her hair was strewn with straw. ‘He does not know,’ she said.
She looked to the bowl by my feet.
‘Take it.’
She crouched on her haunches, devouring the meal. ‘You have come to greatness, Ailia,’ she said, chewing a large mouthful of stew. ‘Or must I call you Kendra?’
‘The news has spread quickly,’ I said.
‘This is not all I know.’ She scraped the bowl with her fingers. ‘You have been with Fraid and the Journeyman. I know you have sanctified a plan to fight.’
I was astonished. ‘How can you know this?’
‘We are not so far from one another as you would wish,’ she said. ‘I followed you to the farmhouse. I have heard your talk.’
Once again, I was shocked by how brazen, how sly, she was. If she used this against me, Ruther would not spare Fraid or Llwyd, or any of those who had pledged to fight. ‘Heka—’ My voice was low. ‘For the final time, I ask you: what do you want of me? Why do you pursue me?’
She set down the empty bowl. ‘The Roman army comes. They are hours away and I do not want to be among the dead. I need a horse and cloak and coin to escape. Give this to me or I will go to Ruther.’
I stifled my laugh. ‘Coin? And where, please tell, will I get your coin?’ I motioned around at the chamber. ‘Do you see a horse here between us?’
‘Ask Ruther, when he comes, to arrange it and I will wait for it—’
We both looked up as the door creaked and was tugged open. The servant had come to take my bowl.
Heka caught my glance and her eyes flared with panic.
‘Quick,’ I whispered. ‘Lie still under the blanket. Stay there!’ I called to the servant. ‘I will pass up my bowl.’
‘Why was the door unlocked?’ he growled as he reached for the bowl. ‘Has Ruther been?’
‘No,’ I answered quickly. ‘You must have forgotten to draw the latch.’
The servant grumbled as he hauled himself up from the opening. ‘I will not forget it now.’ The door thudded shut and I heard the bolt slide.
Heka threw off the blanket. ‘Now I am caught here, curse you!’
‘Good then.’ I sat beside her. ‘This may serve us both.’
Like any journeywoman, I did not have much by way of metals, but I had the favour of those with wealth and could easily have her provided for. My only treasure was Taliesin’s love. As long as I had this, I could promise her anything. ‘I will give you coin, Heka. I will give you horses. I will give you all that I have to give. But first you must tell me the truth. You must tell me my skin. You must tell me everything you know of my family. Not just one question answered, but all. Without this—tell Ruther what you will—you will have nothing.’
She looked at me and I saw she was startled by my boldness. ‘What promise do you make me,’ she said slowly, ‘if I tell you all?’
I took deep breath. My words, when they came, were raw and meant. ‘You will have what is mine, Heka, or you shall own my freedom.’ It was a form of geas that I offered. Under it, I would be cursed if I acted outside her will: a debt of obligation that surpassed all others.
‘You would put you
rself under my geas?’ She was stunned.
‘Yes. Even my freedom is useless without skin,’ I said. ‘I am nothing without skin.’
She nodded.
‘Who are you, Heka?’ I murmured.
‘Ay then, I will tell you.’ She turned from me and spoke into the darkness, her voice softly rasping. ‘I first came to Caer Cad when I was seven summers old. It was the time of the Gathering. I came with my father and mother. She was huge with a babe. They offered me for the gift. Perhaps it was the shock of the ritual or the relief that I was not chosen, but Mam’s pains started early, and soon it was plain that she was going to have the babe that night. There was a birth hut in the town, but Mam wanted to be near the river. She insisted on it. So we all went down: the midwife, me, others as well. I was scared,’ said Heka.
‘Two girls came from Mam that night.’ She paused. ‘The first was Kerensa. Mam was still strong after her, lying on the riverbank and smiling at her sweet face. But when the second child set to follow, Mam started twisting and crying to get into the water. She kept screaming, “Let me under”, and trying to crawl in. The river was icy. But maybe she thought the cold would ease the pain, so we helped her in, me on one side, a woman on the other, and the midwife in front to catch the child.
‘She tore right open with the coming of it. The night water ran black with her blood and when the babe was lifted out of the water, she was so slippery that the midwife lost the grip of her ankles and she was washed downstream where she lodged on a log. Nearly drowned in her own mother’s blood, before I got to her.’ Heka turned to me to see if I understood.
‘It was me,’ I whispered. ‘I am the child in the river.’
Heka nodded.
I could not breathe. Heka was my sister.
‘It was I who hauled you out and laid you on the grass next to Kerensa, while our mother bled to death in the river. You came hard and stole her life to buy your own. If it were only Kerensa, Mam would still be alive. She was whole after Kerensa.’ Heka closed her eyes for a few moments before she spoke again.
‘You were not sameling twins; you were odd. When we got back to the camp, my father said we could keep only one and the other had to be left somewhere to be safe and fed.