“They may be suspicious. Especially Guenevere. The notion I want to honor her on her birthday will put her on her guard at once. You’ll never get her to talk. And Morgan won’t be any easier.”
“I plan to be subtle. You’re a warrior. You wouldn’t understand. Besides, it’s primarily Lancelot and Mordred I plan to cross-examine. Neither of them is exactly… well, you know.”
For a moment Arthur fell silent. When he spoke again he avoided looking at Merlin. “You know me. I’m not a thinker. I like to believe I’m an able administrator, a competent general, an honorable man-but I don’t think a great deal. But Merlin,” he turned his head to face him, “I honestly can’t think of anything that’s getting better.”
“Middle-age weariness, that’s all. When you reach a certain age, nothing in the world looks good anymore.”
“No, that’s not what I mean. I remember what it was like when I first became king. When I first conquered all of England. You knew me then, you were there. I had such hopes. Such dreams for the kind of land I wanted to build.” He picked up the wineskin and poured more. “I’m so afraid this isn’t it.”
“Nothing human is perfect, Arthur.”
“I’m not talking about perfection. I’m talking about simple peace. Find the killer for me, Merlin. Find him. And while you’re at it, find my crystal skull and its shrine. And Excalibur. I feel naked without it.”
On the way back to his tower, Merlin encountered Pellenore. The man was galloping as usual along a winding corridor, astride an imaginary horse, shouting, “Giddyup, boy! Faster! Faster!”
Merlin stepped back into a recess, hoping the mad fallen king wouldn’t see him. And for a moment it seemed that he wouldn’t. He came careering along, directly toward Merlin, and seemed about to keep going. But then he pulled up his steed and stared straight at him. “Have you seen them?”
“Your dragons?” He was not in a mood to humor the man. “No, Pellenore, I haven’t seen them, no more than anyone else has.”
“See how cunning they are? They need to be rooted out and killed.”
“Of course.” He stepped out of his recess and started to walk away. “Pellenore, I wish I didn’t find you so alarming. ”
He ignored this. “I was a king, you know. I deserve a bit of respect. I never get it.”
“No, I suppose you don’t. You’re not a king any longer, after all. Arthur is the one.”
“For now.”
Merlin looked around. “There are people who would consider a statement like that treasonous. There have been murders. You might want to be a bit more discreet.”
“The beasts kill everyone they can. You’ve seen it. First Arthur’s squires. Next…” He looked away from Merlin and smiled shyly. “I’m the only one who understands. If they kill Arthur, I’ll be king again.”
“Naturally. And that would be so good for all of us.” But it occurred to Merlin this was an opening not to be missed. He switched seamlessly to a friendly tone. “Why don’t you come walking with me for a while? We never talk.”
“Well, all right, for a few minutes at least. But I have dragons to hunt.”
“Yes, of course.”
He took Pellenore by the arm, and they ambled along the hall together. “What do you know about the death of the squires?”
“What squires?”
Knowing it was probably pointless, Merlin said, “Ganelin and Borolet. You’ve only just mentioned them.”
“They were killed by a beast.”
“Did you see it? Were you there?”
“It isn’t just dragons, you know. There are griffins, manticores, ogres. A malevolent gnome lives directly underneath Camelot. And there is a sphinx. She sharpens her claws on the castle’s stones. She is vicious. Arthur must beware. ”
Merlin smiled, wondering if someday madness might take him himself. Certainly most of the knights thought him… eccentric. “I’ll be sure to tell him when I see him.”
“Don’t humor me, Merlin. I’m only mad in one direction. ”
What on earth could he mean? Or was this simply more madness? “Suppose the one who killed the twins is a human monster, not the kind you’re hunting?”
“Do you know the answer to the riddle of the sphinx, Merlin? What walks on four legs in youth, on two in maturity and on three in old age? Answer: man. We humans are the worst, monstrous or not.”
“I never knew you had such a dark view of humanity.”
“I’m a deposed king. First there were flatterers and hypocrites at court. Now there are all the ones who pretend pity and compassion. Who could see humanity more clearly?”
Mad in only one direction. Indeed. “I’ve never gotten to know you, Pellenore. I think I’d like to.”
“Be careful. The dragons devour everyone who gets near me.”
“Should I wear armor?”
“Should Arthur?”
“There have been times, now and then, Pellenore, when people have suggested you’re not as unhinged as most of us like to imagine. I’ve had that thought myself. I wish I knew.”
“The ogres plant those thoughts. I’m mad as a rabbit in March. What do you know about Rome?”
“Rome?” He wished the old man’s conversation was easier to follow. “It is the capital of Italy. But not the glorious place it once was. The Goths have overrun it and destroyed most of what was beautiful. Pellenore, you’re a classicist, like me.”
“I’m not anything like you, and you are not like me. People distrust you, Merlin. If you go around saying things like that, it will only get worse. Most people find knowledge suspect. People think you’re in league with the dark powers. They merely think me insane.”
“Perhaps I should chase a few beasts myself.”
“Perhaps you should. Good-bye.”
He whipped his imaginary horse and sped off down the hall.
Merlin watched him go, thinking that there must be some way of discovering exactly how addled the man was. And whether he was capable of murder. And, if he was, whether his mind was sound enough for him to be held accountable for it.
Certainly he seemed, in his peculiar way, to have a sensible,coherent view of the world. It simply didn’t correspond to anyone else’s. Is that what madness is?
He felt hungry and went to the refectory. There wasn’t normally much activity there except at mealtimes, but he thought he should be able to scrape up a snack. The place was empty except for Nimue, who was eating a large bowl of soup and a small loaf of bread. She smiled and waved at him.
“Colin. I didn’t think I’d find anyone here but the kitchen servants, if them. It isn’t lunchtime.”
“You’d be lucky to find them. There are so many little pantries and hidey-holes. It took me ten minutes to find someone to heat up my soup.” She ate. “What did Arthur say?”
“About…?”
“Don’t be foxy. I know you were going to talk to him about Ganelin’s chart. And about the status of the investigation. ” Some soup dribbled down her chin; not having a napkin, she wiped it with her sleeve. “Such as it is. If you catch sight of one of the maids or the kitchen boys, flag her or him down for me, will you?”
Merlin sat beside her and tore a piece of her bread for himself. “He wants us to go ahead with it.”
“Us?”
“Us. You’re to assist me. And Brit is to work with us.”
“The three of us. If we were all women, we’d be like the Fates, closing in on a guilty man.”
“You’ve been reading Greek tragedy. You’re learning.”
“I have to please a stern old teacher.”
He laughed. “This bread is dry. Don’t they have anything fresher? And I think Greffys may be joining our little party, too.”
"Greffys? You’re joking. Even for a squire, he’s… well, you know.”
“Yes, I know. But we’re going to need someone who’s on good terms with the cooks and valets and maids and so on, and that pretty much means one of the squires.”
“I
know some of the servants. And I think Brit does, too.”
“It’s not the same thing. The squires are half servants themselves. But believe me, if we don’t need Greffys, I certainly won’t use him.”
“I mean, not to speak ill of the dead, but Ganelin wasn’t exactly an intellectual. But he was Aristotle compared to Greffys.”
“He’s a boy, Colin.”
“So am I.” She sneered sarcastically.
“I think we’re definitely going to be traveling. Give some thought to what you want to take.”
“To Corfe, to corner Guenevere?”
He nodded. “Or Lancelot, or whichever one of her minions looks to be guilty.”
“Do I have to go to Morgan’s realm, too? I’d rather not.”
“I hadn’t thought of it, but it probably wouldn’t be a good idea to take you there. No sense taking the chance someone might recognize you.”
“Thanks.” She was plainly relieved. “When do we get started?”
“First thing tomorrow, if Brit is free then. Or now, if you’d rather.” He unrolled the chart on the dining table. “I keep looking for a pattern in this.”
“Maybe there is none.”
“That would be our luck. One thing stands out, though. The crosses, Xs and stars are all on one side of the Great Hall.”
“If it is the Great Hall, Merlin. I mean, I know it looks like it, but I knew Ganelin better than you did. That could just as easily be a diagram of some damn fool sports thing he was thinking about.”
“That’s exactly what we need. A positive attitude.”
She shrugged. “I’m only trying to be helpful.”
He focused on the chart. “But these triangles-they’re spread out all around. See?”
She studied it. “You’re right. On both sides of the hall and in every corridor.”
“Only one creature goes gadding about the castle that way. I think the triangles must represent Pellenore.”
Her soup was getting cold. She picked up her bowl and drank it off. “That makes sense. As much sense as anything about Pellenore can. I’m still hungry.”
“You’re a growing boy.” He smiled a sweetly sardonic smile. “I just ran into Pellenore in the hall, on my way here. We had the oddest exchange. His lunacy has always struck me as lightweight. But he was saying the strangest things. He’s smarter than I ever thought, and better educated, and even more perceptive, in his way.”
“So how do we verify that the triangles are his? I mean, a crazy old man…And he’s been here for a thousand years, hasn’t he? Who would remember him from before?”
“I knew him then, slightly. But he went mad almost at once after Arthur defeated him and took everything away from him. There was never much chance to decide what I thought of him before-before he-” He made a twisting gesture.
“It’s all ancient history to me. Where were his lands?”
Merlin looked surprised. “You don’t know? They were here.” He pointed downward, emphatically. “Camelot was his castle, and the shires around it were his domain.”
Nimue whistled. “I had no idea.”
“No one your age ever understands anyone older. The world began when you were born, didn’t it?”
“Don’t be condescending, Merlin. But then, there must still be-”
“Exactly what I was thinking. There must still be people here who served in his household. People who knew him then and know him now and understand what happened to his mind.”
“Were any of Arthur’s knights his?”
He wrinkled his brow. “I’ve never followed the knights’ dongs all that closely. It’s possible. Brit will know, or Arthur will. But there must be someone here.”
“Who knows him now? Who does he confide in?”
“Heaven knows.” He took the last of the bread and bit into it. “The dragons, I suppose.”
“I’m still hungry. Where are the bloody servants?”
“Off in those pantries you mentioned, sleeping.”
“Damn. I want more soup.”
“Do we need servants for that? There’s a fire in the hearth. I could use some, too.”
And so the next morning Britomart met the two of them in Merlin’s study. She was half-asleep and kept yawning then excusing herself.
“Bad night, Brit?” Nimue was full of energy. “You should be wide awake and ready for work, like me.”
“Be quiet. If there’s anything worse than a morning person, it’s a self-righteous morning person.”
Merlin got between then and recapped for Brit what they had deduced about Ganelin’s chart. “If we can match our four suspects to the four kinds of symbols…” He smiled and let the thought finish itself.
Brit yawned again, more widely than before, and picked up the map and inspected it closely. “If this really is a diagram of the castle, then…” She wrinkled her brow. “Let’s see. This is the Great Hall, at the center. And this shows only part of the rest of the castle. It leaves off ten yards or so in any direction. But…” She looked around, as if something she saw might correspond to something Ganelin had sketched. “The servants’ quarters, the storerooms and the stables are off to the right of the hall. There are triangles in every hallway.”
“Very Pellenore-like, wouldn’t you say?”
She nodded. “Or at least, not very Mordred-like or Lancelot-like. Do you have any food around here? I need something to wake me up.”
“Sorry. I can send a page to the refectory for you, if you like.”
“No.” She was becoming absorbed with the chart. “I’ll cope till I can get there myself. And on the other side of the hall are the corridors leading to Arthur’s tower and yours, the rooms where the knights live and the refectory. Crosses, Xs, stars.” She looked up at him. “They radiate from the Great Hall. It might almost be possible to connect them into direct lines.”
Merlin looked over her shoulder. “That’s true for the crosses and Xs. The stars seem to wander a bit.”
She traced them with a fingertip. “Who could have been wandering about like that? And why? It seems so aimless.”
There was a tapping at the window. Merlin’s raven Roc was there. He opened the window to let him in, and the bird flew onto his shoulder. Merlin reached up and stroked its head. “I think we can only get so far using the chart alone. There are other ways to proceed. If we can start eliminating the suspects, one by one, then the one left must be the killer. If the chart backs up what we suspect, that’s one more level of certainty.”
“Makes sense, I suppose.” Brit yawned still again.
“You suppose?”
“I’ve never been involved in anything like this before.”
“None of us has, Brit.”
Nimue shivered in the cold air from the window. She got up and pulled it shut. “I think we all agree that Pellenore is the most unlikely suspect, don’t we? So he should be the easiest to eliminate.”
“Exactly.” Merlin rubbed his hands together like a man about to cut into a succulent steak. “What do you remember about Pellenore from the time when Arthur defeated him, Brit?”
“It’s been years. More than a decade.”
“I know. Try and remember. I was busy trying to get the country functional again, or I’d remember myself. I’d like to find some people who knew Pellenore then. And some who are close to him now, if there are any.”
She concentrated. “I don’t remember a lot. But after the battle, a lot of his knights defected to Guenevere or headed to the Continent to go off on their own quests or whatever. A good knight can find service at just about any court in Europe.” She wrinkled her nose. “Why some of us are still here…”
“Hmm. It sounds vaguely ominous. But are any of them still here?”
“I think most of them are dead, or gone.”
“His servants, then? Did any of them stay with him?” She shook her head as if she was trying to clear it. “I don’t think so. Why would anyone stay with a losing king? There’s no advancement in that.�
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The raven fluttered its wings and squawked, and he reached up to quiet it. “Damn. I wonder if Arthur remembers anyone.”
“It can’t hurt to ask.”
And Arthur did.
There was one knight in particular, he recalled, named Byrrhus. He had been among the oldest of Pellenore’s company, and he had signed on to Arthur’s service after the climactic battle. But he had retired and left Camelot soon after that. “He sends me odd notes now and then. Half of them make no sense at all. But he’s alive. Can you imagine it? A knight moving into a quiet, peaceful existence still alive and with all his limbs and both eyes intact.”
Britomart didn’t like the sound of that and said so.
Merlin enjoyed her discomfort. “Face facts, Brit. You’ve chosen a dangerous line of work.” He turned to Arthur. “I don’t suppose you know where he retired to?”
He rubbed his chin. “Londinium, I think. Or London, as the residents call it now. Yes, I’m sure of it. I remember he had opened an inn. It was called… let me think… it was called Nero’s Nose or something of the sort.”
“Fine.” Merlin rubbed his hands together like an eager child smelling cake. “Then to London we go.”
“Are you serious?” Brit sounded extremely unhappy. “Have you ever been there? It’s the dreariest town in England. It only flourished when the Romans made it their headquarters. Once we drove them out of the country…”
“We’re not going for a holiday, Brit. We have a job to do.”
“Suppose he’s dead? Or senile?”
“We’ll know that soon enough.”
London was a small, sleepy town on the banks of the Thames River. It consisted of a few score houses, a shaky wooden bridge spanning the river and a few decrepit shrines to the Roman gods, some of them still in use. The place was dominated by the ruins of a Roman garrison where children played at being soldiers.
When Merlin, Brit and Nimue arrived there after half a day’s travel, it was raining. Brit got a bright red cloak out of her luggage and wrapped herself in it. Merlin told her it made her look like a fallen woman.
“Be quiet.”
The river ran swift and muddy. Overlooking everything were the remains of a Roman fort built of large, dark stones. The long outer wall was dotted with watchtowers. Despite the rain there were children playing atop them. But only the front wall was intact; as they moved past, they could see that the others had huge gaps in them.
The Excalibur Murders Page 11