Read The Broken Kings Page 39


  Niiv called out and came running up to me. She pecked me on the cheek, squeezed my hand. She was elfin-eyed and as mischievous as ever, and had clearly enjoyed her day at the well.

  “I’m suddenly very tired,” she said. “I can’t think why. I’m going to ride down to our lodge in the evergroves.”

  “I shan’t be long after you. This meeting is very tedious.”

  She found her grey pony and rode through the east gate, down across the plain to the sanctuary of trees and mounds, where we had built our small home.

  I returned to the meeting, sitting close to the door, feeling the welcome warmth of the central fire. Winter was in the air, the first sharp signs and scents of it. A brisk touch on the cheeks, a swirl of darkening cloud, moving from the north.

  Kymon was on his feet, addressing an issue agitatedly and strongly. He was a tall, rugged man, now, his grey cloak pinned at his midriff, the fire making a golden sheen of the sweat on his chest. His right arm was horribly scarred from a raid, as was his cheek, the white scar cutting through his full moustache. Urtha sat, listening with an air of impatience, as his son took him to task on some matter of protocol.

  Colcu, King of the Coritani and a guest at this council, sat with his legs spread, his arms crossed and his face fierce, listening to his friend, unhappy with what he was hearing, but respecting the courtesy of the Hall.

  Recently, relations between Kymon, Urtha, and Colcu had become strained; over what issue? I could never tell. Horses, hostages, hunting. Always something.

  After a moment Urtha caught my eye and frowned. I shook my head slightly, raised a hand, and he nodded, giving me a grim, sad smile before staring down at the ground as I left the hall again for the chill evening.

  “Merlin!”

  One of the women at the well was beckoning to me. She was carrying a small bag and when I reached her she passed it to me nervously. “Niiv left this behind. I don’t know if she meant to.”

  “I’ll take it to her. Good night.”

  It took a moment before I remembered what it was: the small sack that Niiv had been carrying when she had clambered, screaming abuse, onto Argo, as we had departed for Crete. There was an object in it, something she had guarded very carefully at all times, except when she had run with the swarming crowds of Tairon’s town.

  When the woman had disappeared behind the trees, back to the water grove, I opened the bag and took the object out. I was sure Niiv had meant me to look at it. At least, that’s how I rationalised my invasion of her property.

  It was a piece of grey slate, not metal as I’d thought, on which she had scratched words using her own language. It came as a small shock to realise that she had made these markings, expressed the thought, at a time of great hazard. She had been preparing for the worst during that voyage, and this had been then, and was now, a promise to me:

  I have put aside enough of my life to find you again in times to come. I long for that future time. Please be sure you recognise me when our paths next cross. All of this for an affection I felt for you from the moment we skated on the ice, in my own country, in the shadow of my father’s death. My Merlin. Your Niiv.

  I placed the bag gently in the corner, trying not to disturb her as I entered our home. But when I crept into the bed, Niiv was still awake, lying on her side, away from me. She turned to look at me. Her eyes were wide and happy, bright with life and affection, her smile warm. “Tell me something.”

  “Anything,” I assured her as I pulled the furs over us, shivering with the cold.

  “Did you truly come to love me?”

  The form of her question startled me, saddened me. I couldn’t speak for a moment. But then I kissed the tip of her nose, held her close, feeling the way she pressed her back against my body, curling into me. I brushed my lips on hers as she gazed at me. “I love you. You know I do.”

  Now her lips touched mine, a teasing kiss. “I asked you: Did you truly love me?”

  Again, it took me a moment to find the words. I spoke softly. “You irritated me at first. You even scared me on occasion. You know this. We’ve talked about this before. But things have been different for a long time. You must know that, too. I love you very much.”

  She sighed, smiled at me once more before turning her head away, to rest on the pillow. “I believe you do. I believe you did. You loved me. This is not the end, then. We will have a future together. I’m so glad of that.”

  She snuggled into me again, trying to catch my warmth. “You’re not going to leave me, are you? Not tonight.”

  I closed my eyes and listened to her soft breathing. “No, Niiv. I’m not going to leave you.”

  She shuffled and sighed, then settled. “Hold me tightly, Merlin. I need to sleep, now. I need your arms around me. I have to brave the dream.”

  “What dream is that?”

  “The Swan Dream. I have to dream of swans. They’re so beautiful. I love them. So did my father.”

  I held her very tightly. I talked to her quietly. And quite soon she went to sleep.

  My arms did not tire of holding her.

  * * *

  Came the dawn, came Urtha. He pulled back the deer-skins of the doorway and sharp winter light spilled into our small house. Urtha was a dark shadow in that frame of brightness. Brusque and brash, he was suddenly humbled when he saw the scene. He didn’t speak for a moment, then asked, “Am I disturbing you?”

  “No. You’re not disturbing us.”

  He looked at Niiv, then at me. “I can see from the dried tears that this has not been the easiest of nights.”

  “A very long night.”

  “Shall I wait outside?”

  “No. No—please. Stay where you are. I’m ready to feel the day.”

  I eased my arm from under Niiv and kissed her cool brow. I remembered again her scratched promise.

  I have put aside enough of my life to find you again in times to come.

  Yes, I thought. And you’ll be young and I’ll be old, and you’ll make my life a challenge again.

  But there was pleasure in the thought, and joy, despite this silent moment of loss.

  Her grey hair was spread over the goose-feather pillow. Her hollow cheeks seemed younger, now, all creases of concern and age in her old woman’s skin relaxed. “I told you not to squander your charm,” I whispered. “But I’m glad you don’t want to lose me.”

  Urtha sighed from the doorway. “I suppose I’ll lose you, too, now. You’ll be walking that Path you’ve been missing for so long.”

  I left the bed and pulled on my winter clothes. “I have no other choice. I’ll be on my way again.” They were hard words to say to a man who had become a great friend.

  Urtha nodded, resigned to the inevitable. “I know,” he said quietly. “I’ve always known. The day always comes. By the way: someone’s back again. Our friend: Argo. She’s moored very close to here. Are you surprised?”

  What could I say? His words made me feel melancholy, but for a moment only. I was moving on and there was a thrill in the thought of it. I was more than ready for change.

  “No, I’m not surprised. I knew she would come. I’ve been feeling her presence for a few days now. I’m going with her, too.”

  “Where?”

  “North, of course. Where else? I have to take Niiv home to her father. Then I have to pick up the journey where I left off, when I met Niiv and Jason and you, three encounters that led to a good few years of change in my life.”

  Urtha smiled at the memory. “I’ll miss you. Especially with winter coming, and this place confined within its walls.”

  “You’ll find plenty to do. You always do.”

  Beyond him, the light was winter-harsh, an odd sort of light. The light that comes from a heavy snowfall.

  “Has it been snowing?” I asked. “That will make it a hard season.”

  “Not snow, not yet,” Urtha said with a knowing shake of his head. “You have to see this to believe it. It happened overnight.”

&nbs
p; He held back the skins for me and I stooped below his arm and stepped into the evergroves, looking with astonishment towards Taurovinda.

  The land, for as far as the eye could see, in all directions, was white with swans.

  Notes on the Text

  The Codex: The Merlin Codex is a set of writings, on parchment scrolls, found in several sealed, hollowed lengths of petrified wood in a cave in the Perigord region of France in 1948. They are fragmentary. They are two thousand years old. Other such containers may yet be discovered.

  The Codex has been divided into three parts: Celtika; The Iron Grail; and this third volume, The Broken Kings.

  The three volumes represent different periods of writing over a very long span of years. The style changes; some details are not consistent.

  Nevertheless, they are an insight into forgotten history and legend, written by a man who is legend himself, although we have come to much misrepresent and misinterpret him.

  Merlin: Known by many names, including Antiokus (see Celtika), Merlin itself was a boyhood nickname meaning, according to the text, “cannot tie his laces.”

  The Oldest Animals/the Ten Masks: There are several references to the Oldest Animals and the Ten Masks in the Merlin Codex. They are a Western European form of what the Australian indigenous people refer to as The Dreamtime. The Oldest Animals of Western Europe’s ancient mythology were the Owl, the Salmon, the Stag, the Bear, the Beaver, the Wild Boar, and the Wild Hound. The masks are Moondream, Lament, the Child in the Land, the Shadow of Forests, the Hollowing Man (able to access the Otherworld), Death (who walks in the underworld), the Storyteller, the Hound, the Salmon, and the Bird of Prey (see Lavondyss).

  Crete: I have used the modern form of the name for the island, rather than Minoa. The Egyptians of the Sixth Dynasty may have known the seafarers of Crete as Ha-nebu or “northerners”; another name was Keftiu, “those from the hinterland.” In the Old Testament, Crete is referred to as Caphtor.

  Pohjola; Mielikki: Pohjola is the ancient name for northern Finland, a place of enchantment and shamanism. Mielikki was a tree goddess, also known as Old Forest Lady, Northland’s Lady, Lady of Winter.

  Morrigan, Badb: goddesses of battle, often appearing as screech owls, hawks, or crows, hovering over the field of battle, ready to escort fallen warriors to their otherworldly life.

  Imbas forasnai: the “Light of Foresight.” This is referred to frequently in the Old Irish epic tales, in particular in The Tain or The Cattle Raid. It was a visionary attribute usually associated with young women.

  Druid: Literally: “oak man.” Druids were men (sometimes women) who were trained in memory, medicine, wisdom, poetry, and magic. They were called by various titles—rarely referred to as “druids”—and I have adopted Speaker for Kings, Land, and Past.

  Talienze: The Codex is unsatisfactory on the nature of the Speaker, Talienze, who was from Vortingoros’s kingdom, but had certainly been brought there, perhaps as a child hostage, or perhaps as a wandering man who chose to settle. It may be that part of the Codex is missing, or that the boys who described the abrupt end of the man (see text) gave an incomplete picture.

  Pendragon: This man is clearly the Arthur of later legend, as yet Unborn. His ease of movement between the Celtic Otherworld and the “real” world contrasts with the difficulty of such movement by the Dead. Merlin occasionally attempts to explain how these differences are controlled, what rules they obey, but his descriptions are confusing, referring to an older understanding of magic, and I have chosen to omit them.

  Daidalos: I have used the older form of the name, Daidalos, rather than the more familiar Daedalus, as this is how it appears in the Codex. The Dyctean cave referred to in the text is the cave on Crete where Zeus was born. It is not clear from the Codex whether Daidalos had adapted Zeus’s birthplace to a shaping chamber.

  Honey children: The Codex suggests that Daidalos had three daughters, but the fate of two of them is unclear. What is certain is that Lady of Wild Creatures—a form of the Earth or Mother Goddess—used the child, or children, for her own ends, perhaps “stealing back” the caves that Daidalos used as shaping chambers, but an account of their fate, if it was known, is missing from the Codex.

  Argo: When Jason refitted Argo, he used oak from a branch of the Dodonian oak, an oracle, a grove in central Greece dedicated to Hera, Zeus’s wife. Athena was Zeus’s daughter, though without a mother. Though Hera and Athena often argued (ferociously), they each took a turn, in Jason’s time, in protecting Argo.

  Robert Holdstock

  London, June 2006

  Also by Robert Holdstock from Tom Doherty Associates

  Celtika

  The Iron Grail

  Mythago Wood

  Lavondyss

  The Hollowing

  By the same author

  Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn

  Ancient Echoes

  The Fetch

  Merlin’s Wood

  Necromancer

  Where Time Winds Blow

  The Emerald Forest

  (from the film by John Boorman)

  www.robertholdstock.com

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  THE BROKEN KINGS: BOOK THREE OF THE MERLIN CODEX

  Copyright © 2007 by Robert Holdstock

  All rights reserved.

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, NY 10010

  www.tor.com

  Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Holdstock, Robert.

  The broken kings / Robert Holdstock.—1st ed.

  p. cm. — (Book three of The Merlin codex)

  “A Tom Doherty Associates Book.”

  ISBN-13: 978-0-7653-1109-2

  ISBN-10: 0-7653-1109-7

  1. Merlin (Legendary character)—Fiction. 2. Argonauts (Greek mythology)—Fiction. 3. Jason (Greek mythology)—Fiction. 4. Arthurian romances—Adaptations. 5. Wizards—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6058.O442B76 2007

  823'.914—dc22

  2007003803

  First Edition: May 2007

  eISBN 9781466840300

  First eBook edition: February 2013

 


 

  Robert Holdstock, The Broken Kings

 


 

 
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