Part 27 (1/2)
”We feast to celebrate the warband's safe return, and in a day or two the men disperse to their own homes in the hills and valleys of our lands and their hands return to staif and plow. But not this year,” cried Elphin. ”Not ever again while I am king.”
The people murmured. ”What is he saying? What does it mean?”
”Now and henceforth the warband stays here!” shouted Elphin as he looked out across his people's wondering faces. ”When we first rode out we were boys; we were farmers, we were herders, and the sons of farmers and herders. But in seven years we have become warriors!”
The people nodded their approval of his words.
”In ancient times our kings lived with their warbands in their timber halls. These ancient times are returning to our land, it seems; therefore, it is only fitting that warriors remain with their battlechief.”
”It is so, Lord Elphin,” the people of the caer replied.
”For this reason I shall cause to be raised, here on this very spot, a great hall! A great hall to rival those possessed by the battlelords of old.”
”A great hall!” gasped the crowd, delighted.
”Henceforth we live like our fathers of old, looking not to the east or west, nor to the south for our protection, trusting not to the Pax Romano., Pax Romano., but looking to ourselves and trusting the iron in our own hands. Now and henceforth we protect our own!” With that he drew his sword and held the naked blade in both hands high above his head. but looking to ourselves and trusting the iron in our own hands. Now and henceforth we protect our own!” With that he drew his sword and held the naked blade in both hands high above his head.
The people raised a noisy cheer, crying as one: ”Long live the king! Long live Lord Elphin!”
Across the way Hafgan and Blaise stood swathed in their blue robes, contemplating the proceedings. ”What do you think?” asked Blaise.
”It will do,” replied Hafgan.
”It will do, I dare say. But do to what end?”
”Well,” replied the druid as the revelry commenced once more, ”it will keep them well occupied for the next year. I was wondering what would happen with the warband staying home. Elphin is right, they are warriors now-it is better to keep them occupied with a warrior's life and duties.”
”And it will do to keep them underfoot here.”
”Do not begrudge them their home, Blaise. Elphin is to be praised. His work is teaching him well-he is becoming a canny king.”
”Is it enough?” wondered Blaise.
”It is enough for now,” answered Hafgan. ”More will be given when more is required.” He looked upon Elphin with pride. ”He is a good king and a good father for Taliesin. See how the boy's eyes follow his every move? Yes, Blaise, it is enough.”
Hafgan's presence did not go long unnoticed, and soon a shout went up for the bard to tell a story. The shout became a chant, ”Fetch my harp, Blaise,” he said and began threading his way toward the high table.
”There you are, Hafgan,” said Elphin happily. ”Come and sit with me.”
The druid bowed but remained standing at the foot of the table. ”How may I serve you, lord?”
”It appears a tale is in order. I tell you, it is long enough since we have heard anything but snoring around the fire.”
”What tale does my lord wish to hear?”
”Something of high deeds and courage,” replied Elphin. ”Something befitting a celebration such as this. You choose.”
Taliesin, lurking near his father's side, scampered around. ”Tell the story of the pigs!” he cried as he climbed into Elphin's lap. ”The Pigs of Pryderi!”
”Hush, Taliesin,” said Rhonwyn. ”Hafgan will decide.”
Blaise returned with the harp, and Hafgan strummed it absently as if trying to decide which tale he would tell. The torchpoles were lit and the people drew close, settling themselves in knots and cl.u.s.ters on the ground.
When all was quiet, Hafgan lifted the harp to his shoulder and, with a wink to Taliesin, began to play. ”Hear then, if you will, the tale of Math ap Mamonwy,” he said and waited until the crowd was settled again.
”In the days when the dew of creation was still fresh on the earth Math, son of Mathonwy, was king over all Gwynedd and Dyfed and Lloegr, as well as the Westerlands. Now Math could only live so long as his feet were held in the lap of a maiden-except when the turmoil of war prevented him. The maiden's name was Goewin, daughter of Pebin, of Dol Pebin, and she was the fairest known in her time.
”Now in those days word came to Math of a creature new to the Island of the Mighty whose meat was sweet and better to eat than beef. And this is the way of it...”
Hafgan told of how Math sent his nephew Gwydyon to Pryderi, son of Pwyll, to bring back some of the pigs which had been sent as a gift to Pryderi by Arawn, lord of Annwn, so that they might raise herds of swine for themselves. Taliesin sat curled in his father's lap, memorizing the cadence of Hafgan's voice and hearing there the echoes of ancient deeds-deeds which had pa.s.sed into legend so long ago that no one could remember them or even guess what they might have been, but lived now, if only for a glimmering moment, in the dim reflection of Hafgan's words.
To be a bard, thought Taliesin, to know the secrets of all things under earth and sky, to have the power to order the very elements with nothing but the sounds of your voice- now that that would be a life worth living! Someday, he vowed, I will be a bard would be a life worth living! Someday, he vowed, I will be a bard and and a king. Yes, a druid king! a king. Yes, a druid king!
He raised his eyes to the night-dark heavens and to the host of stars winking through the glare of the torchlight. And it seemed to him that he was eternal, that some part of him had always been alive and always would be, that he had been called to life for a purpose. The more he thought about this, the more certain he was that it was true.
As Hafgan's words filled his ears he observed the rapt faces of his kinsmen, rose-red in the glow of the torches standing round and about, and he knew that although he was forever bound to them, his people, at the same time he was destined for something else, a life far different from any than those sitting within the circle of Hafgan's magic words could conceive.
These thoughts filled him with a sudden, piercing ache, an arrow-struck emptiness, and the boy closed his eyes and pressed his face against his father's chest. A moment later he felt Elphin's strong fingers in his hair.
He opened his eyes to see his mother watching him, her eyes s.h.i.+ning in the flickering light-they would s.h.i.+ne without the torches, with love for him and for her husband. Taliesin smiled at her and she turned her attention back to Hafgan's story.
The love was right and good, Taliesin knew, and Hafgan had told him often enough that love lay beneath the foundation-stone of the world. But there was something missing too. Something he had no name for that love could not encompa.s.s or supply; something that had to come from a source other than the human heart. That something, whatever it was, was the arrow that p.r.i.c.ked him with such emptiness and longing.
These thoughts were only dimly recognized; they were what Hafgan called ”wise feelings.” Taliesin had them frequently, and often, like now, without any regard for the attending atmosphere. Right now he should be happy and content, relis.h.i.+ng the story of Math the Pig Stealer in its every detail. And he was-with that part of him which was the small boy.
But the other, older part of him was looking on the happy scene and crying out for the lack of something Taliesin was not even sure had a name.
Wise feelings, Hafgan had told him, have a reason all their own. You cannot fight them; you can only accept them and listen to what they tell you. So far Taliesin had never learned anything from them- except not to talk about them with anyone. Instead he kept them to himself, bearing the exquisite pain of their presence silently. True, Hafgan could sometimes tell when he was experiencing them, but even Hafgan could not help him.
He raised his eyes to the stars once more and saw their cold splendor. I am part of thai, he thought. I am part of what they are, part of all that is or ever was. I am Taliesin; I am a word in letters, a sound on the breath of the wind. I am a wave on the sea, and Great Mannawyddan is my father. I am a spear thrown down from heaven...
These words went spinning through the boy's head and his spirit quivered as they touched him before winging away into the throbbing obscurity from which they were sprung, leaving their mark on him, a brand seared into his young soul as if with white iron.
I am Taliesin, he thought, singer at the dawn of the age.
The next day, as the remains of the feast were being cleared away, Cormach, Chief Druid of Gwynedd, arrived in Caer Dyvi, alone but for the dun-colored pony he rode. He did not speak to any who stood silently by and watched Mm pa.s.s, but went straightway to Hafgan 's hut and stopped there.
”Hafgan!” he called.
An instant later Blaise appeared, thrusting his head from behind the yellow oxhide that covered the door of the hut. ”Corrnach!” The young man stepped slowly out. ”What are I mean, welcome, Master. How may I serve you?”
”Where is Hafgan? Take me to him.”
”Gladly. Will you walk? It is not far.”
”I will ride,” answered the old roan.
Blaise took the pony's bridle and led the horse aad its rider back through the hill-fort the way they had come. Once outside the timber gates they turned from the track and headed into the forest, where they struck along a well- worn path among the trees to the clearing Hafgan often used for Talie-sin's instruction.
As the two entered the clearing they saw the boy and his teacher in a customary pose: Taliesin sitting hunched at Hafgan's feet, the oak staff across his lap while the druid sat on his stump, eyes closed, listening to his student's recitation. The pose s.h.i.+fted as the Chief Druid slid from the pony's back. Hafgan rose and Taliesin jumped to his feet. ”Cormach is here!”