“And that frightens you?”
“Yes, it frightens me.”
“Then I am greatly encouraged,” I confessed.
“Are you indeed?” He regarded me closely once more.
“I am,” I told him, “for it tells me you are but flesh and blood after all, Arthur ap Aurelius, though some have begun to think otherwise.”
I saw his teeth glint white in the darkness as he smiled. He rose abruptly, reaching down to help me to my feet. “Come then, disagreeable bard,” he said. “It is time to discover which path we shall take—and trust God to meet us on the way.”
Book Three
The
Forgotten
War
1
ALL YOU WHO LOOK UPON THE land now and raise your unholy complaint, tell me: where were you when the Black Boar gouged our sacred earth with his tusks and shook the very hills of Ynys Prydein with his ungodly bellowing?
Tell me! You, who from the lofty battlements of your superior intellect scan all that passes in the world and pronounce upon it, tell me now that you divined the disaster that came to pass. I defy you! Instruct me, Wise Ones, in how it could have been prevented.
O Great of Knowledge, secure in your wide intelligence as you regard the calamity of Twrch Trwyth, tell me: did you also foresee the Yellow Ravager?
When the dread Comet passed over the Island of the Mighty and scourged Lloegres with its tail, where were you? I will tell you, shall I? You sailed for Armorica!
Who left the land of your birth to barbarians? Who left your shores undefended? Who turned away from Britain in its day of peril and dread? Not Arthur. Never Arthur.
Why do you complain? Why do you demean him now? I demand an answer! Tell me: why do you grieve heaven with your tedious contention?
The caviling of the false-hearted is the mewling of sick cats. It signifies nothing—save a pinched, ungenerous spirit, perverse in spite and rotten with envy. The weak-willed always decry those who, when the day of strife breaks, fill their hearts with courage and cast safety to the wind. Fear is man’s first enemy, and his last. Hear me now; I tell you the truth: conquer fear and your reward is assured.
On the night that Arthur sought light along conflict’s shadowed paths, he found only fear. Even so, being Arthur, he put fear behind him and strove instead in faith. Thus, all that came after will yet be accounted him as righteousness. This is something small-souled men will never understand.
We triumphed that night, but our victory sowed the seeds of a bitter harvest. We purchased liberty for the Ereann Isle, but at great cost to Ynys Prydein. For Ierne’s freedom meant hateful travail for Britain.
At Arthur’s word, Rhys sounded a short, piercing blast on the horn, and it was answered no fewer than seven times across the valley. At the horn’s second sounding, we lashed our horses to speed. Down we struck, falling like lightning from a cloudless sky.
We drove into the sleeping camp. The Vandali, living by constant warfare and accustomed to it, overcame the shock and reacted swiftly. Leaping from their round tents, they ran screaming to their weapons, and within moments the battle was joined. It was then that Arthur’s genius revealed itself anew.
For, by employing so many points of attack, he spread the enemy and forced them to remain on the defensive. Though each of our attacking forces was small, the more numerous barbarian host could not afford to ignore any of them, for every lapse was punished severely. The Black Boar and his warlords could neither unify nor concentrate their defense, and thus were robbed of the advantage their vast numbers gave them. The swift-moving raiders struck and retreated to strike and strike again.
The tactic would not have worked in the daylight. But it was perfectly suited to a night raid, where darkness multiplies the ordinary confusion and chaos of battle into a potent force all its own. Arthur manipulated this force, wielded it like a weapon. A harp singing under the touch of a true bard is but a dull, stifled thing compared to the song of a weapon in Arthur’s hands. And I thrilled to it.
I rode in the front rank with him—Llenlleawg and Gwenhwyvar on his left, with me on his right, backed by Cador and Meurig and their warbands. From time to time, I caught fleeting glimpses of other warbands as they darted in and out along the battleline. It was in Arthur’s battle order to resist engaging the enemy head-to-head, so we delivered only glancing blows—striking and breaking off before they could muster their forces to trap us, which was ever their chief intent.
Arthur continually searched the heaving sea-swell of battle for the Black Boar’s standard; if he chanced upon Twrch Trwyth in the fight, the opportunity of crossing swords with the Vandal war leader would not pass him by. As the fortune of combat decreed, Arthur received his chance. For on one of our swift-breaking forays, I saw the boar standard rise up before us, and in the same instant heard a full-throated battle cry as Arthur sped past me, making for the place. I lashed my mount forward, striving to keep pace with him. I saw Llenlleawg’s sword flash in the firelight as he matched Arthur stroke for stroke.
The two of them pushed into the churning mass before us. Turning to my right, I saw Gwenhwyvar struggling to follow. “Lady!” I shouted. “Here! This way!”
She was beside me at once and together we struck into the bristling wall of defenders. I slashed with my sword, my arm rising and falling, the quick blade hacking a grudging path through the stubborn press. All at once the way parted, and I saw before me the huge Vandal chieftain, surrounded by his bodyguard, and Arthur, high on his rearing mount, Caledvwlch a reddish blur in his hand.
Twrch Trwyth, angry, his eyes mere slits of hatred, met Arthur’s assault. He leapt forward, throwing his spear before him, slashing at Arthur’s throat.
But Arthur was swift. Up came his blade. The Black Boar’s weapon splintered and the spearhead spun away. Disarmed, Amilcar fell back, taking cover behind his upraised shield. Crack! Arthur struck the shield a bone-breaking blow. Then another and another.
The Vandal chieftain staggered and fell back. I saw him stumble as his bodyguard surged forward, encircling him once more. Then the tide of battle bore him away. The foemen swarmed us and it was either break off the attack or be dragged down. There was nothing for it but to disengage.
We regrouped just out of spear-throw. “I had him!” shouted Arthur in frustration. “Did you see? I had him!”
“I saw,” Gwenhwyvar said. “You hurt him, Arthur. He went down.”
“Aye, he went down,” Llenlleawg confirmed. “But I think he was not wounded.”
“I was this close!” cried Arthur, slapping his thigh. The shield rattled on his arm. “I had him in my grasp!”
“He will not long elude you,” Gwenhwyvar said. “Few men feel the Bear of Britain’s bite and remain alive to tell it.”
Cador reined in beside us. “Too bad. You will have another chance, Artos.”
“If that is to be,” answered Arthur, scanning the melee, “it will be another battle. This one is finished.”
“Finished?” Cador protested. “Artos, we are just beginning to make our mark here.”
“And the enemy has begun throwing off his confusion.” He pointed with his sword. “Soon Twrch will realize he can repel us. I would rather we were gone before that time.”
We looked along the line. The Vandali were everywhere moving to the offensive. At last emboldened, they were fighting back; the tide of battle was turning. It was time to withdraw.
“Rhys!” shouted Arthur. “The horn! Sound the retreat!”
Thus with the sound of the hunting horn ringing in our ears, we fled, flew back up the long slopes and into the dark. We paused at the crest of the hill to look back upon our night’s handiwork. The enemy camp swirled in turmoil: tents burned, men screamed and cried, running here and there. Around the perimeter, however, the silent dead lay thick-strewn on the ground.
“Victory,” Arthur muttered. “It swells your heart with pride, does it not?”
“Amilcar will understand his aims cannot
succeed,” I replied. “It may be that you have saved the lives of many this night.”
“Pray God you are right, Myrddin,” the king replied. Then, turning his mount, he rode down the hill away from the valley.
We did not return to the abandoned stronghold, but rested beside a stream a short distance away from the battleground. At dawn one of the scouts Arthur had posted to watch the enemy camp appeared to rouse us.
“The enemy is striking camp, lord,” the rider said. “They appear to be moving.”
“Show me,” Arthur said. He summoned Cador and myself to attend him, and, in a gesture of reconciliation, Conaire as well. We arrived at the crest of the hill overlooking the Vandal camp just as the sun broke fair in the east.
We stared into the valley, the red-rising sun in our eyes, and watched as a line of warriors extended from the mass and began threading along the stream, heading west. Soon the entire invading host was moving, flowing like a dark river towards the sea.
“They are leaving,” observed Cador. “The triumph is yours, Artos! You have defeated them.”
Cocking his head to one side, Arthur gazed long at the retreating floodtide. When he turned away at last, “Follow them” was all he said.
Then Arthur and I returned to our men, leaving Cador, Conaire, and the scout to oversee the retreating foe. The kings and lords were awaiting word, and Arthur lost no time: “It appears the enemy host is leaving the valley. I have set Cador and Conaire to follow and bring word of their purpose.”
So we settled down to wait, and the day progressed. Men looked to their weapons and nursed their wounds, grateful for the rest. As the sun passed midmorning, Fergus arrived to great acclaim with much-needed provisions—including a small herd of cattle on the hoof. He set those with him to distributing the food and came to us. Ciaran, the priest, was with him.
“What am I hearing?” Fergus demanded, almost stumbling in his excitement. “The enemy routed? That is what they are saying. Is it true?”
“So it does appear,” Gwenhwyvar informed him. She rose and greeted her father with a kiss. “The Black Boar has left the valley—Conaire and Cador follow to learn where he has gone.”
“And here I am with meat and grain enough to last the summer,” Fergus complained good-naturedly. “What am I to do with it now?”
“The food is no less welcome for that,” Cai told him. “Waiting is hungry work. I am starving.”
“Say no more, my friend.” Fergus turned and called a string of commands which brought men running with ready-baked loaves, haunches of roast meat, and skins of ale. The Irish lord had, it seemed, snatched bread from the ovens and meat from the spit, gleaning the very crumbs from beneath the tables of those from whom he obtained his support.
“Oh, they were happy to give it,” Fergus explained when Bedwyr commented on the astonishing largesse. “Once I had sufficiently aroused their sympathy, they could not give me enough. Bless them.”
“Fergus mac Guillomar!” Gwenhwyvar cried. “You robbed Conaire’s settlements?”
“Tch!” sniffed Fergus. “You wound me, daughter! Did I steal a mouthful? I never did.” He gazed around him and, finding few believers, appealed to Ciaran. “Tell them, priest. You were there.”
“It is true,” Ciaran affirmed. “All gave freely. But upon my life, I still do not understand how it is that those most reluctant in the beginning gave the greater share in the end.”
Fergus grinned. “Ah, it is my winsome way. I find that once a man properly understands what is required of him, he is more than happy to oblige.”
“And the presence of armed warriors crowding the threshold had nothing to do with it, I suppose,” Gwenhwyvar remarked.
“Daughter, daughter,” Fergus chided, “do you expect me to go scurrying through the land unprotected? Listen to you now. I rode with stout warriors—I freely confess it. How else was I to fend off the Vandali and bear away the supplies entrusted to my care?”
Everyone laughed, much amused by Fergus’ explanation. “Friend Fergus,” Arthur said, “however you came by the meat and ale, it is more than agreeable. I thank you, and can but praise your diligence.”
“You are good to commend me so,” the Irish king replied. “Still, I would rather I had been here last night with you. I missed a good fight, I think. If only I could have seen it.”
“Well, I was there,” Cai told him, wiping his mouth on his sleeve and raising the cup in his hand. “And I tell you the truth, the foam in this cup is a far better sight to my eyes than any I saw last night.”
The day grew warm—another hot, cloudless day—and, after their meal, the men lay down to sleep, taking what shelter they could find under trees and bushes round about. In this way we passed the time, waiting for Conaire and Cador to return with word of the Vandal retreat.
It was not until dusk the next day that the awaited word arrived. The two lords and their scout appeared out of a crimson sunset, hungry and thirsty, having ridden far and fast to report that the barbarian horde had boarded their ships and sailed away.
2
“THEY KNOW THEY CANNOT stand against us,” Conaire boasted. “We have driven them away.” The nobles were inclined to agree with Conaire; most lords viewed the barbarian departure in an auspicious light. Arthur knew better.
“The Black Boar has not given up the fight,” the High King told the onlookers. “He has merely gone to easier plunder elsewhere.”
“What do we care about that?” Brastias countered. “He has left Ierne, and that is all that matters.”
“Is it?” Arthur turned on the unruly lord. “Amilcar has left before—only to appear again farther down the coast.” He summoned the Irish lords. “You know your island best,” he began, “therefore you must ride the coasts to determine where the Black Boar has gone.”
“It will take time,” Conaire warned. “There are more wrinkles in the shore than stars in the sky.”
“Then you must go with all haste,” Arthur bade him. After a short discussion it was determined that each king, leading a scouting party of six men, would search out a different portion of coastline, thus making a complete circuit of the island. They would then hasten back with the report. Meanwhile, Arthur’s own ships would begin a sweeping search—some working north, around the headlands and then south, through the narrows, others sailing south down the west coast, then around to the east and up.
“It is a most inelegant plan,” Arthur observed as the first scouting party rode from the camp. He paused, his brow heavy-furrowed as he watched the riders depart. “God knows, I can think of no other way.”
“There is no other way,” Bedwyr replied. “You have observed the most prudent course, and there is nothing more to be done until the scouts return. Put it from your mind, Bear.”
But Arthur could not put it from his mind. The days passed—and how they creep with numbing slowness for those who wait. After six days had gone, Arthur posted sentries on the high ground to watch the approaches from the east, west, north, and south, charging them to bring word the instant they saw anyone returning.
While the rest of the camp settled back to wait, the High King prowled the perimeter—a most restless bear; he ate little and slept less, growing more irritable by the day. Gwenhwyvar and Bedwyr tried to pacify him, and when their own attempts failed, they brought the problem to me.
“Such anxiety is not good for him, surely,” the queen said. “Myrddin, you must do something.”
“What do you suppose I can do that you cannot?”
“Talk to him,” suggested Bedwyr. “He always listens to you.”
“And what would you have me tell him?” I countered. “Shall I say: Do not worry, Arthur, all will be well? He is right to worry. Amilcar has placed us in perilous difficulty and Arthur knows it. Think, Bedwyr: we cannot move from here until we know where the Boar has gone. Meanwhile, the barbarians are free to strike where they will.”
“I know that,” Bedwyr said icily. “I only meant that it does Arthur
no good to fret about it.”
“He is the king! Should he not fret for his own?” I replied.
Bedwyr rolled his eyes. “Bards!”
“It is no help to quarrel among ourselves,” Gwenhwyvar interposed. “If we cannot calm Arthur, at least we need not add to his worries.”
In the evening of the ninth day, two riders under Fergus’ command returned to say that the northwestern coast from Malain Bhig to Beann Ceann had been scoured. “No enemy ships sighted anywhere,” the scout said. “Lord Fergus presses the search north to Dun Sgeir.”
Four days later, scouts returned from the east coast. “We ranged as far south as Loch Laern,” they said, “and saw naught but your own ships working down the narrows, lord. The pilot said they had seen no sign of the Vandali either.”
Seven days more brought further news: no enemy ships anywhere on the west coast from Dun Iolar to Gaillimh Bay. After that the reports came more rapidly—one or two a day—and all with the same account: no enemy ships; the Vandali were nowhere to be found. If any thought this information would cheer Arthur, they were mistaken. Despite the encouragement of his lords, he greeted these reports with deepest dread—as if each negative sighting confirmed a dire suspicion.
The only variation in the pattern came from the last of the parties led by Laigin, whose scouts had searched out the remote and sparsely populated finger-thin peninsulas of the south coast. “There were ships, I believe; but we did not see them,” the Laigin said. “The people of the Ban Traigh say that many ships were there, although no invaders attacked.”