The seasons passed. For long, for very long there was
peace—for the young King was a rumor in the hills, and if men
spoke well of him, still his day was not yet dawned. So traitors
aged who had had most guilt; and true men grew old as well.
“You must do what I cannot,” Niall would say to
Evald of the King; and poured his hopes into him and taught him
arms, “He is your cousin,” Niall would say. “And
you will set him on his throne. As I would.”
Any war in which Niall would not be foremost seemed very far to
Evald, for out of his childhood this man had come, already gray,
and soon white-haired, but vigorous, a storm that scoured out the
hold and scoured the land of every injustice he could find; and
rode at times, he or his men, to remind his enemies whose hand
ruled in Caerdale. And Evald, who remembered only hurt before this
man came and took him to his heart, had never thought those days
would end. But end they did, at first without his realizing
it—for first Caoimhin went, and then Banain, and Dryw went
back to his mountains, and then Scaga took most of the
border-riding on himself, while Niall sat at home. And so age came
on him. So it came to a small talk in the hall, not the first such
sober talk, but the deepest.
“Time will come,” said Niall, “when I am gone;
and men will talk—mark you, son, I love you. But true it is
you are my son by love and not by blood. The King’s own
cousin: never you forget it. But Evald’s too; you are my
cousin and not my son. There are those faithful who will stand by
you come what may: you know their names. But men will whisper and
try to bring you down, that being the way of men.”
“Then I will fight them,” said Evald. “And you
will not be gone. Never speak of it.”
“That would not be wise.” Niall reached for a
pitcher and poured wine into his cup, poured another for him.
“So. I have a match for you in mind.”
The color fled Evald’s face and flooded it. He took the
cup. He was sixteen and until that moment he had been a boy,
thought like one, mostly for the hunt and games and dreams of glory
in the skirmishes with An Beag; but he shared a cup with his
father, rare honor, and asked quietly: “Who?”
“Dryw’s daughter.”
“Dryw!”
“His daughter, I say, not the man.”
“Dryw is—”
“Not the cheeriest of men that were my friends. But the
youngest and well-gifted with sons—a fierce lot. He has one
daughter, dear to his heart. His sons have one sister. And they care
for their own. I could set no truer folk at your back than
Dryw’s. It would ease my mind.”
“Because the man who sired me was one who killed the
king.” Evald lowered his head. He had never said as much, but
he had heard.
“Because you are my heir,” Niall said sternly. Then
more gently: “I would not see the alliances I made slip away
from you. Dryw I trust; his sons I would trust if you had a bond to
them. Her name is Meredydd.”
“What does Mother say?”
“That it is the wisest thing to do.”
“What says lord Dryw?”
“He is yet to ask. First I ask my son.”
“So, well,” Evald said uncomfortably. “Yes. If
it’s right.” It was unfair. There was nothing Niall
could not have asked of him. For love of Niall and his mother he
would have flung himself on spears, this being the direst kind of
fate he had imagined for himself, warriorlike to keep Caer WielL He
had never thought that there were other ways. This dismayed him
more than enemies, that he had to suddenly become a man in many
ways, and to be wise, and to get children of his own.
“This year,” said Niall.
“So soon.”
“I do not count my time in years.”
“Sir—”
“ ’Twould please me and please your mother. I think of her.
I would see you with the strongest allies I can find—for her
sake, if I am gone.”
“She will always be safe.”
“Of course she will.” Niall drank and put on a
merrier face, and smiled for him, which was always like a stone
that had learned to smile, so lean and hard he was.
But looking at him Evald grew afraid, perceiving for the first
time that he was, after all, old; and that his riding out of the
hold was growing hard for him, and his limbs were not so strong as
they had been. So Banain had begun, growing thinner, bonier in the
knees, until she stopped being young, and they took her to the
hills. Evald believed no fables: Banain was dead; his pony had died
this spring leaving his sisters heartbroken, and he cherished no
illusions.
Why must things die at all? he thought. Or grow old? And he
thought with terror that the curse was on him too, that now he must
be a man and learn to trade in councils what men traded, and that
fighting for the King when he should rise might be something less
glorious and more the slow and lifelong battle it had been for
Niall.
Evald’s son, they would call him, and never trust him
without the claim of his mother’s blood and
Cearbhallain’s allies to support him. He lost his boyhood in
that thinking, and knew what, somewhere in the depth of his heart,
he had always feared: that he might lose Cearbhallain himself, and
slip back into the dark from which Cearbhallain had rescued him.
They sang songs of Cearbhallain, of bloody Aescford, of bravery and
wit and gallant deeds; and this man fostered him and shielded him
and his mother, which he was old enough to understand was not the
least of the gallantries of Cearbhallain. He remembered the harper,
if very dimly, a golden vision and bright songs; he remembered
mostly pain of his true father, blood and pain and a harsh loud
voice; and one night of shining metal and hands with the blood of
all those who had ever hurt his mother. She had laughed that night,
and ever after smiled, and Niall had let no more blood come near
her—he washed when he had come home from fighting on the
border and never would see them until he and all the men with him
had put off their armor and all the manner of war—because
this is Caer Wiell, Niall said, not a robber hold like An Beag. And
so the men about him learned to say.
But that was years ago. Before the tower rose.
It is for me, Evald thought, full of dread, and looked up at the
scaffolding and the jagged stone against the sky. He builds it for
me, not for himself. And then the foreboding came on him that it
was the last thing Niall might do.
I do not reckon my time in years, he had said.
So month by month of summer the tower rose toward its roofing,
and in all those months Niall rode but seldom, and ached much of
nights: Meara tended him gently in his sometime illness, and Evald
saw how the gray had touched her hair as well, and how worn she
grew as his father failed. Only Niall smiled and won her smile from
her. But most times Meara wore a worried look.
Month by month the messengers went back and forth with Dryw; and
that grim man came, all grayed himself, a lean clamp-jawed man with
young men about him who looked little more than thieves—his
sons. “So, well,” Dryw said having looked Evald up and
down, “I have had my spies. They report well of the
boy.”
“My father speaks well of you,” Evald said, which
impertinence brought the mountain lord’s cold eye back to him
and gained a frown.
“Which father?” Dryw asked with Niall there to
witness.
“The one who calls you friend,” Evald said sharply,
“and whose opinions of men I honor.”—Which
pleased Dryw and made him laugh his dry chill laugh and clap Niall
on the arm.
“He is not easily at a loss,” said Dryw. And so they
sent him away and arranged particulars together, Dryw and Niall,
like two farmers chaffering over sheep.
So it was done, and Niall reckoned he had done the best he
could. Spring, Dryw promised; Meredydd should come by spring. So
Dryw and his sons went home again before the winter snows and Evald
walked about with that stricken, panicked look about him that he
had had that day of the talk in the hall—but it was well
done, well done, Niall told himself, and so Meara said—For,
said Meara, now he has kin of mine on the one side and friends of
yours on the other.
“And he has Scaga,” Niall said. “He has Scaga,
truest and closest,” which eased his heart to think on.
But that, with his tower, seemed enough. It seemed too wearying
to bundle into heavy garments and go riding in the autumn chill;
the fire was comfort. Many things which he had done of duty he left
now to younger hands, and while he thought it would be splendid, as
the snow fell, to saddle up and ride, to hear the hooves crunching
the snow, the steady whuff of breath, and to feel the keen edge of
the wind against his face—it would not be Banain under him.
And to wrap up to take a ride to exercise some horse his men could
do as much for seemed pointless, when his men must shelter him from
any hostile meeting, when the most that they might look for was a
cup of cheer at some farmhouse—but that put him all too
keenly in mind of other things he missed. So he forever thought he
would like to do these things, and the wanting was joy enough, not
to be spoiled by doing. The best thing was his fireside, and
listening to the harper who had come to his hall (but nothing like
Fionn Fionnbharr, so even that joy paled). At last there was the
fire’s warmth against the cold that crept into his limbs, and
good food, and Meara’s kindness and his folk about him. He
was fading, that was all, a gentle fading, so that he went all to
gauntness.
“I shall see the spring,” he said to Meara.
“That long I shall live.” What he meant was that he
should see his son wed, but that seemed too grim a promise set
against a wedding: and Meara shook her head and shed tears over
him, scolding at him finally, which well contented him: so he
smiled to please her. In all he was very tired, and thought the
winter would be enough for him. His dreams when he dreamed were of
that place between the hills; of orchards bare with winter; of
walking knee-deep in snow to the barn and of the smell of bread
when he was coming home.
He became a burden: he feared he was. He lay about much in the
hall. His sons and his daughters cared for him—for his
daughters too he intended marriages, young as they were, and sent
messages, and arranged one for Ban and his youngest for one of
Dryw’s grim sons, the best that he could do. So even in his
fading his reach was far, and he took care for years to come. But
Meara surprised him in her devotion and her tears—a deep
surprise, for it had never seemed love on her part, only habit; for
his part it was tenderness, a habit too. It was the only thing
which grieved him, that he had always been scattered here and
there, doing this or that for her, and for the children, and never
knowing that very simple thing.
Had he loved her, he wondered? He was not sure whether he had
loved anything as it deserved, only he had done his duty by
everything, save only a little while, a few years for himself, to
which his mind kept drifting back for refuge. But he had been very
fortunate, he thought, that his duty had brought so much of love to
him.
And he had made a place for gentler things. That, most. He had
brought a little of the Steading with him. It all seemed a dream,
and that of Aescford dimmest, and Dun na h-Eoin, and the very walls
of Caer Wiell. What was real was a fire, a fish, a shadow among the
oaks; but—strange—he was not afraid this time. And a
small brown face with eyes like murky water.
O Man, it said, O Man—come back.
Niall Cearbhallain was dying. There was no longer any hiding it.
An Beag had made trial of the borders, but prematurely: Scaga drove
them out again, and harried them within sight of their own hold for
good measure, before grief and concern drew him back again. So
Scaga was there by the hall both day and night, and had armed men
stationed here and there about the countryside; and farmers to
light watchfires if anything stirred.
It was all, Evald recognized, well done, as Niall himself would
have ordered it—as perhaps Niall had ordered it in his
clearer moments, to the man who was his right hand and much of his
heart.
So Dryw came, winter as it still was, and the frosts still too
bitter for any greening of the land. He came riding up the
Caerbourne with enough armed men about him to force his way if he
must, like a cold wind out of the southern heights—so
unlooked for that at first the outposts took alarm. But then they
could see his banners from the walls, the blue and the white, and
the first cheer came that Caer Wiell had known for days.
Evald watched them ride beneath the gates. It was, he knew, like
what his father had told him of Dryw, not to waste time with
messengers, and for the first time he felt an affection for that
skull-faced madman. They came with rattle of armor and the gleam of
spears and expected to be housed; but among them came a pony with
ribbons in its mane, and on that pony rode a cloak-shrouded
girl.
“Meredydd,” he whispered, slinking from the wall as
if he had seen something best forgot. He had no heart for
marryings. Not now, never now.
But, “Yes,” his father said when Dryw had come to
him. “Yes, good for you, old friend.” His mind was
clear, at least this evening.
So Evald met his bride, who was a thin girl whose clothes
ill-fit her, and whose eyes looked nervously over him. Meara had
scarcely any time for her with so much on her thoughts, so Evald
was left to murmur courtesies in the lesser hall. He was only
grateful she had brought her nurse to take care of her.
“I wish,” Meredydd said mouselike, from the door in
leaving to go upstairs, “I wish I had got my best dress
finished. It doesn’t fit.”
This was all very far from him, but he saw the red in her cheeks
and saw how young she was. “It was good of you to come sooner
than you promised,” he said. “That was more
important.”
Meredydd lifted her face and looked at him, seeming
heartened.
She was not, he decided, what he had planned, but not what he
had dreaded either, having a capable way about her when she looked
like that. And truth, she quickly had her own baggage up the stairs
and ordered her own room and was down seeing to her father’s
housing and running back and forth with this and that, taking loads
from the servants and sending them on other errands so deftly all
that number was fed, while his mother took the respite offered her
and simply stayed by his father’s bedside.
So Evald stayed there what time he could, but never now did
Niall stir that evening, but slept a great deal, and seemed deeper
in his sleep.
“Go,” Meara said to him. “Tomorrow the
wedding, Dryw has said. And it would please him to know. She is a fair
child, is she not?”
“Fair to us,” Evald said, numb in his deeper
feelings, but Meredydd had settled into his thinking as she had
settled into the hold, without question, because it had to be.
“Yes, fair.” His eyes were for Niall’s face. And
then he turned away, and passed the door where Scaga stood watch,
haggard and grim and never leaving.
“He sleeps,” he said to Scaga.
“So,” said Scaga. Nothing more.
It was a premonition on Evald that he should not go up to bed
tonight, but stay near. He went down into the wardroom where there
was a fire, and lingered there a time, into the dark of the night
and the sinking of the fire. There was little murmur from the
courtyard or the barracks where Dryw’s folk had settled:
there was little sound from anywhere.
But the beat of hooves came gently through the dark, gently past
the wall, so that it might have been a dream if his eyes had not
been open. The hair prickled at his nape and for a moment there was
a heaviness over him too deep to throw off.
After that came a scratching at the stones of the wall, and that
was too much. He got up and flung his cloak about him, moving
quietly, not to disturb the peace. He went out onto the wall,
padding softly as he could, unsure whether his ears had tricked
him.
Suddenly a darkness bounded up onto the wall, a hairy thing, all
arms and eyes. He cried out, a strangled cry, and it leapt back
again.
“Cearbhallain,” it piped. “I have come for
Cearbhallain.”
Evald lunged at him: it was too quick and bounded away, but he
threw his knife at it. It wailed and dived over the wall, and now
everywhere men were crying after lights.
But Scaga reached him first, pelting down the stairs.
“It was a hairy man,” Evald cried, “some dark
thing—come for him; it said, it had come for him. I
flung my knife at it—it went down again.”
“No,” said Scaga. No more than that. Scaga went
running for the stairs; but that no was one of
anguish—of fear, as if he knew the nature of the thing. Evald
hurried after, but “Stay by your father,” Scaga shouted
at him, and was gone.
He stood still upon the stairs. He heard the lesser gate open,
heard the hoofbeats going away and rushed to the wall to look. It
was a piebald horse with something on its back; and after it Scaga
ran, down by the river, under the trees.
“Dryw!” Evald shouted into the yard.
“Dryw!”
So it stopped, small and forlorn. The horse had fled, going
whatever way it could. And Scaga stopped, crouched near,
panting.
“Iron,” it wept, “o the bitter iron. I
bleed.”
“Come back,” said Scaga. “Was it for him you
came? O take him back.”
A shake of the hairy head, of all the body, indistinct in the
moonlight, among the leaves. “The Gruagach pities him. Pities
you. O too late, too late. His luck is driven all away now. O the
bitter iron.”
Scaga looked down at himself, his weapons. He laid aside his
sword. “That was his son. He did not understand, never knew
you. O Gruagach—”
“He is gone,” the Gruagach said, “gone, gone,
gone.”
“Never say so!” Scaga cried. “A curse on you
for saying it!”
“Scaga goes wrapped in iron. O Scaga, ill for you the
forest, ill for you. The Gruagach goes back again where you might
go, but never will you. Ill for you the meeting. You were never
like your lord. Eald will kill you in the day you meet. O Scaga,
Scaga, Scaga, they wept for you when you left And the Gruagach
weeps, but he cannot stay.”
There was nothing there—neither shadow nor moving branch
or leaf, only the moonlight on the river.
And Scaga ran, ran with all that was in him, to reach Caer
Wiell.
“He is dead,” Evald told him when he came inside,
when he had reached the doors. And Scaga bowed down in the hall and
wept.
There was a decent time of burying and mourning, and Dryw
stayed, buttressing Caer Wiell against its enemies.
Evald—lord Evald—with Scaga at his side, dispensed
justice, ordered this and that in the lands round about, set guards
and posts and took oaths from men that came.
Even from aged Taithleach came a message that only Dryw
understood. “The King,” said Dryw privily, his
skull’s-face ever more grim than its wont: “this
passing has set back the time that might have been. Had your father
lived and been strong—but he is gone. Alliances must be
proved again.”
“Send back,” Evald said, “and say that I am
Cearbhallain’s son and the lady Meara’s, no
other.”
“So,” said Dryw, “I have
done.”
And another time: “You cannot go back to your
lands,” Evald said, “without the promise kept my father
made. And I shall be glad of your daughter.” It had come to
be the truth, for Meredydd had nested in the heart of Caer Wiell to
his mother’s comfort and to his own, and if it was not love
at least it was deepest need. If he had had to sue for Meredydd on
his knees now he would have done so; and it was his father’s
will, the which he tried to do in everything.
“It is nigh time,” said Dryw.
So Caer Wiell put off its mourning in the spring. The stones
remained, and the grass grew and flowers bloomed, violets and
rue.
And vines twined in the wood, among forgotten bones.
The seasons passed. For long, for very long there was
peace—for the young King was a rumor in the hills, and if men
spoke well of him, still his day was not yet dawned. So traitors
aged who had had most guilt; and true men grew old as well.
“You must do what I cannot,” Niall would say to
Evald of the King; and poured his hopes into him and taught him
arms, “He is your cousin,” Niall would say. “And
you will set him on his throne. As I would.”
Any war in which Niall would not be foremost seemed very far to
Evald, for out of his childhood this man had come, already gray,
and soon white-haired, but vigorous, a storm that scoured out the
hold and scoured the land of every injustice he could find; and
rode at times, he or his men, to remind his enemies whose hand
ruled in Caerdale. And Evald, who remembered only hurt before this
man came and took him to his heart, had never thought those days
would end. But end they did, at first without his realizing
it—for first Caoimhin went, and then Banain, and Dryw went
back to his mountains, and then Scaga took most of the
border-riding on himself, while Niall sat at home. And so age came
on him. So it came to a small talk in the hall, not the first such
sober talk, but the deepest.
“Time will come,” said Niall, “when I am gone;
and men will talk—mark you, son, I love you. But true it is
you are my son by love and not by blood. The King’s own
cousin: never you forget it. But Evald’s too; you are my
cousin and not my son. There are those faithful who will stand by
you come what may: you know their names. But men will whisper and
try to bring you down, that being the way of men.”
“Then I will fight them,” said Evald. “And you
will not be gone. Never speak of it.”
“That would not be wise.” Niall reached for a
pitcher and poured wine into his cup, poured another for him.
“So. I have a match for you in mind.”
The color fled Evald’s face and flooded it. He took the
cup. He was sixteen and until that moment he had been a boy,
thought like one, mostly for the hunt and games and dreams of glory
in the skirmishes with An Beag; but he shared a cup with his
father, rare honor, and asked quietly: “Who?”
“Dryw’s daughter.”
“Dryw!”
“His daughter, I say, not the man.”
“Dryw is—”
“Not the cheeriest of men that were my friends. But the
youngest and well-gifted with sons—a fierce lot. He has one
daughter, dear to his heart. His sons have one sister. And they care
for their own. I could set no truer folk at your back than
Dryw’s. It would ease my mind.”
“Because the man who sired me was one who killed the
king.” Evald lowered his head. He had never said as much, but
he had heard.
“Because you are my heir,” Niall said sternly. Then
more gently: “I would not see the alliances I made slip away
from you. Dryw I trust; his sons I would trust if you had a bond to
them. Her name is Meredydd.”
“What does Mother say?”
“That it is the wisest thing to do.”
“What says lord Dryw?”
“He is yet to ask. First I ask my son.”
“So, well,” Evald said uncomfortably. “Yes. If
it’s right.” It was unfair. There was nothing Niall
could not have asked of him. For love of Niall and his mother he
would have flung himself on spears, this being the direst kind of
fate he had imagined for himself, warriorlike to keep Caer WielL He
had never thought that there were other ways. This dismayed him
more than enemies, that he had to suddenly become a man in many
ways, and to be wise, and to get children of his own.
“This year,” said Niall.
“So soon.”
“I do not count my time in years.”
“Sir—”
“ ’Twould please me and please your mother. I think of her.
I would see you with the strongest allies I can find—for her
sake, if I am gone.”
“She will always be safe.”
“Of course she will.” Niall drank and put on a
merrier face, and smiled for him, which was always like a stone
that had learned to smile, so lean and hard he was.
But looking at him Evald grew afraid, perceiving for the first
time that he was, after all, old; and that his riding out of the
hold was growing hard for him, and his limbs were not so strong as
they had been. So Banain had begun, growing thinner, bonier in the
knees, until she stopped being young, and they took her to the
hills. Evald believed no fables: Banain was dead; his pony had died
this spring leaving his sisters heartbroken, and he cherished no
illusions.
Why must things die at all? he thought. Or grow old? And he
thought with terror that the curse was on him too, that now he must
be a man and learn to trade in councils what men traded, and that
fighting for the King when he should rise might be something less
glorious and more the slow and lifelong battle it had been for
Niall.
Evald’s son, they would call him, and never trust him
without the claim of his mother’s blood and
Cearbhallain’s allies to support him. He lost his boyhood in
that thinking, and knew what, somewhere in the depth of his heart,
he had always feared: that he might lose Cearbhallain himself, and
slip back into the dark from which Cearbhallain had rescued him.
They sang songs of Cearbhallain, of bloody Aescford, of bravery and
wit and gallant deeds; and this man fostered him and shielded him
and his mother, which he was old enough to understand was not the
least of the gallantries of Cearbhallain. He remembered the harper,
if very dimly, a golden vision and bright songs; he remembered
mostly pain of his true father, blood and pain and a harsh loud
voice; and one night of shining metal and hands with the blood of
all those who had ever hurt his mother. She had laughed that night,
and ever after smiled, and Niall had let no more blood come near
her—he washed when he had come home from fighting on the
border and never would see them until he and all the men with him
had put off their armor and all the manner of war—because
this is Caer Wiell, Niall said, not a robber hold like An Beag. And
so the men about him learned to say.
But that was years ago. Before the tower rose.
It is for me, Evald thought, full of dread, and looked up at the
scaffolding and the jagged stone against the sky. He builds it for
me, not for himself. And then the foreboding came on him that it
was the last thing Niall might do.
I do not reckon my time in years, he had said.
So month by month of summer the tower rose toward its roofing,
and in all those months Niall rode but seldom, and ached much of
nights: Meara tended him gently in his sometime illness, and Evald
saw how the gray had touched her hair as well, and how worn she
grew as his father failed. Only Niall smiled and won her smile from
her. But most times Meara wore a worried look.
Month by month the messengers went back and forth with Dryw; and
that grim man came, all grayed himself, a lean clamp-jawed man with
young men about him who looked little more than thieves—his
sons. “So, well,” Dryw said having looked Evald up and
down, “I have had my spies. They report well of the
boy.”
“My father speaks well of you,” Evald said, which
impertinence brought the mountain lord’s cold eye back to him
and gained a frown.
“Which father?” Dryw asked with Niall there to
witness.
“The one who calls you friend,” Evald said sharply,
“and whose opinions of men I honor.”—Which
pleased Dryw and made him laugh his dry chill laugh and clap Niall
on the arm.
“He is not easily at a loss,” said Dryw. And so they
sent him away and arranged particulars together, Dryw and Niall,
like two farmers chaffering over sheep.
So it was done, and Niall reckoned he had done the best he
could. Spring, Dryw promised; Meredydd should come by spring. So
Dryw and his sons went home again before the winter snows and Evald
walked about with that stricken, panicked look about him that he
had had that day of the talk in the hall—but it was well
done, well done, Niall told himself, and so Meara said—For,
said Meara, now he has kin of mine on the one side and friends of
yours on the other.
“And he has Scaga,” Niall said. “He has Scaga,
truest and closest,” which eased his heart to think on.
But that, with his tower, seemed enough. It seemed too wearying
to bundle into heavy garments and go riding in the autumn chill;
the fire was comfort. Many things which he had done of duty he left
now to younger hands, and while he thought it would be splendid, as
the snow fell, to saddle up and ride, to hear the hooves crunching
the snow, the steady whuff of breath, and to feel the keen edge of
the wind against his face—it would not be Banain under him.
And to wrap up to take a ride to exercise some horse his men could
do as much for seemed pointless, when his men must shelter him from
any hostile meeting, when the most that they might look for was a
cup of cheer at some farmhouse—but that put him all too
keenly in mind of other things he missed. So he forever thought he
would like to do these things, and the wanting was joy enough, not
to be spoiled by doing. The best thing was his fireside, and
listening to the harper who had come to his hall (but nothing like
Fionn Fionnbharr, so even that joy paled). At last there was the
fire’s warmth against the cold that crept into his limbs, and
good food, and Meara’s kindness and his folk about him. He
was fading, that was all, a gentle fading, so that he went all to
gauntness.
“I shall see the spring,” he said to Meara.
“That long I shall live.” What he meant was that he
should see his son wed, but that seemed too grim a promise set
against a wedding: and Meara shook her head and shed tears over
him, scolding at him finally, which well contented him: so he
smiled to please her. In all he was very tired, and thought the
winter would be enough for him. His dreams when he dreamed were of
that place between the hills; of orchards bare with winter; of
walking knee-deep in snow to the barn and of the smell of bread
when he was coming home.
He became a burden: he feared he was. He lay about much in the
hall. His sons and his daughters cared for him—for his
daughters too he intended marriages, young as they were, and sent
messages, and arranged one for Ban and his youngest for one of
Dryw’s grim sons, the best that he could do. So even in his
fading his reach was far, and he took care for years to come. But
Meara surprised him in her devotion and her tears—a deep
surprise, for it had never seemed love on her part, only habit; for
his part it was tenderness, a habit too. It was the only thing
which grieved him, that he had always been scattered here and
there, doing this or that for her, and for the children, and never
knowing that very simple thing.
Had he loved her, he wondered? He was not sure whether he had
loved anything as it deserved, only he had done his duty by
everything, save only a little while, a few years for himself, to
which his mind kept drifting back for refuge. But he had been very
fortunate, he thought, that his duty had brought so much of love to
him.
And he had made a place for gentler things. That, most. He had
brought a little of the Steading with him. It all seemed a dream,
and that of Aescford dimmest, and Dun na h-Eoin, and the very walls
of Caer Wiell. What was real was a fire, a fish, a shadow among the
oaks; but—strange—he was not afraid this time. And a
small brown face with eyes like murky water.
O Man, it said, O Man—come back.
Niall Cearbhallain was dying. There was no longer any hiding it.
An Beag had made trial of the borders, but prematurely: Scaga drove
them out again, and harried them within sight of their own hold for
good measure, before grief and concern drew him back again. So
Scaga was there by the hall both day and night, and had armed men
stationed here and there about the countryside; and farmers to
light watchfires if anything stirred.
It was all, Evald recognized, well done, as Niall himself would
have ordered it—as perhaps Niall had ordered it in his
clearer moments, to the man who was his right hand and much of his
heart.
So Dryw came, winter as it still was, and the frosts still too
bitter for any greening of the land. He came riding up the
Caerbourne with enough armed men about him to force his way if he
must, like a cold wind out of the southern heights—so
unlooked for that at first the outposts took alarm. But then they
could see his banners from the walls, the blue and the white, and
the first cheer came that Caer Wiell had known for days.
Evald watched them ride beneath the gates. It was, he knew, like
what his father had told him of Dryw, not to waste time with
messengers, and for the first time he felt an affection for that
skull-faced madman. They came with rattle of armor and the gleam of
spears and expected to be housed; but among them came a pony with
ribbons in its mane, and on that pony rode a cloak-shrouded
girl.
“Meredydd,” he whispered, slinking from the wall as
if he had seen something best forgot. He had no heart for
marryings. Not now, never now.
But, “Yes,” his father said when Dryw had come to
him. “Yes, good for you, old friend.” His mind was
clear, at least this evening.
So Evald met his bride, who was a thin girl whose clothes
ill-fit her, and whose eyes looked nervously over him. Meara had
scarcely any time for her with so much on her thoughts, so Evald
was left to murmur courtesies in the lesser hall. He was only
grateful she had brought her nurse to take care of her.
“I wish,” Meredydd said mouselike, from the door in
leaving to go upstairs, “I wish I had got my best dress
finished. It doesn’t fit.”
This was all very far from him, but he saw the red in her cheeks
and saw how young she was. “It was good of you to come sooner
than you promised,” he said. “That was more
important.”
Meredydd lifted her face and looked at him, seeming
heartened.
She was not, he decided, what he had planned, but not what he
had dreaded either, having a capable way about her when she looked
like that. And truth, she quickly had her own baggage up the stairs
and ordered her own room and was down seeing to her father’s
housing and running back and forth with this and that, taking loads
from the servants and sending them on other errands so deftly all
that number was fed, while his mother took the respite offered her
and simply stayed by his father’s bedside.
So Evald stayed there what time he could, but never now did
Niall stir that evening, but slept a great deal, and seemed deeper
in his sleep.
“Go,” Meara said to him. “Tomorrow the
wedding, Dryw has said. And it would please him to know. She is a fair
child, is she not?”
“Fair to us,” Evald said, numb in his deeper
feelings, but Meredydd had settled into his thinking as she had
settled into the hold, without question, because it had to be.
“Yes, fair.” His eyes were for Niall’s face. And
then he turned away, and passed the door where Scaga stood watch,
haggard and grim and never leaving.
“He sleeps,” he said to Scaga.
“So,” said Scaga. Nothing more.
It was a premonition on Evald that he should not go up to bed
tonight, but stay near. He went down into the wardroom where there
was a fire, and lingered there a time, into the dark of the night
and the sinking of the fire. There was little murmur from the
courtyard or the barracks where Dryw’s folk had settled:
there was little sound from anywhere.
But the beat of hooves came gently through the dark, gently past
the wall, so that it might have been a dream if his eyes had not
been open. The hair prickled at his nape and for a moment there was
a heaviness over him too deep to throw off.
After that came a scratching at the stones of the wall, and that
was too much. He got up and flung his cloak about him, moving
quietly, not to disturb the peace. He went out onto the wall,
padding softly as he could, unsure whether his ears had tricked
him.
Suddenly a darkness bounded up onto the wall, a hairy thing, all
arms and eyes. He cried out, a strangled cry, and it leapt back
again.
“Cearbhallain,” it piped. “I have come for
Cearbhallain.”
Evald lunged at him: it was too quick and bounded away, but he
threw his knife at it. It wailed and dived over the wall, and now
everywhere men were crying after lights.
But Scaga reached him first, pelting down the stairs.
“It was a hairy man,” Evald cried, “some dark
thing—come for him; it said, it had come for him. I
flung my knife at it—it went down again.”
“No,” said Scaga. No more than that. Scaga went
running for the stairs; but that no was one of
anguish—of fear, as if he knew the nature of the thing. Evald
hurried after, but “Stay by your father,” Scaga shouted
at him, and was gone.
He stood still upon the stairs. He heard the lesser gate open,
heard the hoofbeats going away and rushed to the wall to look. It
was a piebald horse with something on its back; and after it Scaga
ran, down by the river, under the trees.
“Dryw!” Evald shouted into the yard.
“Dryw!”
So it stopped, small and forlorn. The horse had fled, going
whatever way it could. And Scaga stopped, crouched near,
panting.
“Iron,” it wept, “o the bitter iron. I
bleed.”
“Come back,” said Scaga. “Was it for him you
came? O take him back.”
A shake of the hairy head, of all the body, indistinct in the
moonlight, among the leaves. “The Gruagach pities him. Pities
you. O too late, too late. His luck is driven all away now. O the
bitter iron.”
Scaga looked down at himself, his weapons. He laid aside his
sword. “That was his son. He did not understand, never knew
you. O Gruagach—”
“He is gone,” the Gruagach said, “gone, gone,
gone.”
“Never say so!” Scaga cried. “A curse on you
for saying it!”
“Scaga goes wrapped in iron. O Scaga, ill for you the
forest, ill for you. The Gruagach goes back again where you might
go, but never will you. Ill for you the meeting. You were never
like your lord. Eald will kill you in the day you meet. O Scaga,
Scaga, Scaga, they wept for you when you left And the Gruagach
weeps, but he cannot stay.”
There was nothing there—neither shadow nor moving branch
or leaf, only the moonlight on the river.
And Scaga ran, ran with all that was in him, to reach Caer
Wiell.
“He is dead,” Evald told him when he came inside,
when he had reached the doors. And Scaga bowed down in the hall and
wept.
There was a decent time of burying and mourning, and Dryw
stayed, buttressing Caer Wiell against its enemies.
Evald—lord Evald—with Scaga at his side, dispensed
justice, ordered this and that in the lands round about, set guards
and posts and took oaths from men that came.
Even from aged Taithleach came a message that only Dryw
understood. “The King,” said Dryw privily, his
skull’s-face ever more grim than its wont: “this
passing has set back the time that might have been. Had your father
lived and been strong—but he is gone. Alliances must be
proved again.”
“Send back,” Evald said, “and say that I am
Cearbhallain’s son and the lady Meara’s, no
other.”
“So,” said Dryw, “I have
done.”
And another time: “You cannot go back to your
lands,” Evald said, “without the promise kept my father
made. And I shall be glad of your daughter.” It had come to
be the truth, for Meredydd had nested in the heart of Caer Wiell to
his mother’s comfort and to his own, and if it was not love
at least it was deepest need. If he had had to sue for Meredydd on
his knees now he would have done so; and it was his father’s
will, the which he tried to do in everything.
“It is nigh time,” said Dryw.
So Caer Wiell put off its mourning in the spring. The stones
remained, and the grass grew and flowers bloomed, violets and
rue.
And vines twined in the wood, among forgotten bones.