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Authors: Morgan Llywelyn

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BOOK: After Rome
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I shall simply be Dinas. That name will stand for everything I am. Names are more important than titles anyway.

My horse has grown such a massive winter coat that Saba calls him “the bear.”

The bear. Arthfael in the Cymric tongue, Ursus in the Latin. The Great Bear in the night sky is Ursus Major. That would be a splendid name for a horse if I were going to name my horse. Which I'm not.

Some things must never be changed.

Returning earlier than usual from one of his solitary rides, Dinas made an announcement. “We've taken advantage of your hospitality long enough, Saba. We're going to leave in the morning.”

Meradoc and Pelemos reacted with mixed feelings. The prospect of resuming the adventure was exciting; the prospect of leaving the cabin was painful. Over the winter both men had come to consider the place almost as their home, and Dinas and Saba as their family. In Meradoc's case it was a dream come true. For Pelemos it filled a gap he had thought could not be filled.

Saba had known their departure was inevitable, but still it was a blow. She could accept Dinas leaving—if she was honest with herself, and she was, the sporadic nature of their love was one of its attractions—but Pelemos and Meradoc had become her friends. In the solitude she thought she wanted, she had undervalued the human need for friends.

“Do you have to take them both, Dinas?” She was breaking the unwritten agreement about questions but she could not help it.

He raised an eyebrow. “Want to keep one of them as a pet?” he said teasingly.

She laughed to keep the mood light. “To replace my dogs? I think not, the dogs would never understand. But having help has made a great difference this winter; I never realized how hard I was working until other hands eased the load. With one or two men I could…”

“Or two?” he queried.

“I could buy more sheep and harvest more wool.” Her voice warmed with enthusiasm. “The women from the villages below could share in the weaving, Dinas. Life is harder for them than for the men, and it would be a help if they had blankets to sell.”

“You could build a kingdom of your own up here in the high pastures,” Dinas said with a smile. “I never thought of you as being so generous.”

“I've been generous to you,” she replied tartly.

The unexpected display of ambition on the part of a woman had caught Dinas off guard. He attempted to look contrite. “You've been more than generous, and I'm grateful.”

“We all are,” Meradoc chimed in.

“If she needs one of us to stay,” said Pelemos, “it should be me. My poor skills would be no use in ambushing ships, but farming is—”

“Is out of the question,” Dinas interrupted. “I need you, Pelemos; I need both of you.”

“It was just a thought,” Saba said coolly.

Dinas smiled again to conceal his confusion. Was her indifference real, or feigned? He had no idea. His relationship with Saba had lasted so long because she never demanded his understanding. She allowed him to come to any conclusion he liked.

He had chosen to think she was very much like himself.

Saba caught and held his eyes. Dinas infuriated her with his smiling lazy mockery. She thought he was doing it deliberately to hurt her. Or—and this was worse—perhaps he didn't know the effect it had on her. Or care.

Suddenly she was very tired. Let him go, then. Let them all go.

*   *   *

She stood in the doorway of the cabin and watched them ride away. For the first time he could remember, she did not wave farewell to Dinas when he turned in the saddle and looked back. She simply closed the door.

“I could still stay with her,” Pelemos offered. “I would not mind.”

Dinas said sharply, “She didn't want you, she wanted me.”

“Then you stay with her,” suggested Meradoc.

“Don't be ridiculous.” Dinas tightened his legs on the dark horse and galloped away. They had to push the ponies to their utmost to keep up with him.

The pass of Llanberris proved more challenging than anything they had yet encountered. The peaks looming above were gaunt, primeval, shrouded with an icy mist too bitter to breathe. The wind moaned around crags and buttresses formed in the dawn of time. Boulders as large as cottages loomed out of blowing snow, then as suddenly disappeared.

Light played tricks on the eyes.

Near the foot of the pass the riders were confronted by snowdrifts as high as the stallion's withers. They had to retrace their steps until they found another way down. No trail was safe; none was level. The slopes were littered with ubiquitous scree that could slide unexpectedly under a horse's hooves and send animal and rider plunging to their doom.

Wolves could be heard howling in the distance, though it was hard to believe anything could survive in such a landscape.

While they sheltered in the lee of a cliff to catch their breath, Meradoc said, “Does anyone live up here at all?”

“More than you would expect,” Dinas told him. “They've been grazing their sheep in the high pastures for centuries—or quarrying slate, like Saba's people. It's a hard life but it's what they know. The old ones would never leave, but in the tail of winter we may find some youngsters willing to talk about it.”

“Talking is one thing,” Pelemos remarked. “Changing your life is another. I never knew anyone who willingly changed his life.”

“I did,” said Meradoc. “And so did you.”

“I'm not sure I did. In fact I'm not sure how I came to be here at all.”

“Perhaps you're under an enchantment,” Dinas remarked.

Pelemos swept his eyes over the scene around them. The eternal mountains, the ephemeral mist. Anything might come riding out from behind a boulder with a blast of silver trumpets and a rainbow of ancient banners.

“Perhaps I am,” he said.

As they made their way down from the pass they caught glimpses of bleak, lonely farmhouses tucked into isolated valleys; they encountered tiny communities of slate miners working in nearby quarries; they could not help seeing the abandoned dwellings of those who had failed to make any living from the infertile soil. Dinas never lost his way, but rode with calm assurance. When they saw anyone he always stopped for a talk, which inevitably became a drink of something that burned the throat, and a night's sleep under a roof.

Dinas had an unerring instinct for finding those whose spirits were not permanently rooted in their native soil. He could talk to them in a language they understood. By the time they reached the foothills he had recruited eight young men with fire in their bellies and hunger in their eyes. Dafydd, Cynan, Hywel, Cadel, Bleddyn, Iolo, Docco and Tostig—whom the others called “Otter” because he had short arms and legs but an extremely long torso.

*   *   *

Before they set off on their first morning as a company, Dinas appointed Meradoc captain of the horse. “Everything to do with the horses, except for my own, is your responsibility. As an officer, you will ride just behind me. And one other thing—keep an eye on my saddlebags. Don't let anyone touch them. If they aren't with me they must be with you, understand?”

By now Meradoc knew what Dinas had in those bags, down to the last gold coin and fishhook. And leather bundle. Knew and did not judge. He had thrown in his lot with Dinas and the dark horse and that was that. “I understand,” he said.

Dinas told the recruits, “You are infantry now but that's only temporary. What we need is cavalry. Every one of you who stays with me and proves his loyalty will be given two good horses. In the meantime, follow Pelemos. His pony walks at a pace you can keep up with. Don't come near my stallion though, he doesn't like other people.”

Dinas made sure the dark horse pranced and rolled his eyes in a way guaranteed to ensure respect.

The first thing a leader must have is the respect of his men.

In the first flush of excitement the little band did not question where Dinas was leading them, but when they made camp a husky former stonecutter called Tostig asked him, “Why are we going east? You said our stronghold would be on the western coast.”

“We aren't setting up a permanent base right away,” Dinas replied, “because I want to get the horses first. That's why I'm going to the territory of the Cornovii; they breed the best animals. While we're there I plan to add a cousin of mine to our number, and also visit Viroconium about a personal matter.”

“What personal matter?”

Meradoc shook his head at Tostig. “Dinas doesn't like to be questioned.”

“Why? What's he trying to hide?”

Dinas kept his face impassive and pretended he had not heard.

Leading may not be as easy as I thought. But I can do this.

He envisioned himself at the head of a well-equipped private army, arriving unannounced at Cadogan's fort and creating such an impression his cousin would beg to join them. With Cadogan as one of his officers he could approach Vintrex and demand justice for his mother. If justice had not already been done. Which he doubted; there was very little justice left in Britannia. But with an army at his back he would have a better chance.

At night when they sat around a campfire with their bellies full, belching and farting and talking about women, Pelemos told stories.

His tales were about a place called Albion that no one believed in anymore, during a time no one remembered. Later some would claim he never repeated a story, but he did. He could tell the same one over and over, changing names and small details, and make it fresh and new every time. Pelemos could go from comedy to tragedy with a subtle change of voice, and be equally convincing. He might put stress on a certain incident one time and hardly mention it the next.

There were some constants. Meradoc discovered the stories always included six recurring characters. He began secretly putting names to them: Warrior, Priest, Druid, Warrior Woman, Friend, and Bard. They might be of either gender, with the exception of Warrior and Warrior Woman, but they were always recognizable. If one paid close attention.

Dinas also listened closely, displaying an attentiveness that was out of character with his restless nature. He began to long for the wild, free Albion the Romans had destroyed. A partly fictional Albion in which memory and imagination competed for primacy, shaping and reshaping a history that never was.

Dinas was aware of this. But he chose to believe anyway.

One day Meradoc asked him, “Where does Pelemos get the tales he tells?”

“Storytellers are inspired, I suppose.”

“Inspired by what?”

Dinas gave an uncomfortable laugh. “You ask too many questions, little man.” Then he changed the subject.

I once told Meradoc I wouldn't lie to him, but failing to answer a question isn't a lie. Besides, what I know of inspiration defies explanation. A few minutes spent in a Christian shrine, pretending a piety I did not feel—did the martyred saints inspire me that day in Deva?

Are there such things as saints? Or angels, or sorcerers, or gods. Or God.

Do I care?

*   *   *

Equipping and training a company of inexperienced warriors—and it was warriors Dinas wanted, not merely followers—presented some large problems. Finding twenty-one suitable horses was not going to be easy. They had to be sound in wind and limb and less than ten years old. Every man should have two, one to ride and one to lead, and Dinas was including a backup for the dark horse in that number. He preferred to have geldings, which were less trouble, but he would accept a good mare if he found one.

The dark horse would be the only stallion.

When they entered the territory of the Cornovii Dinas sought out horse breeders his father had known. To his chagrin, only two out of fifteen still had any animals. The other farms had been sold or abandoned. After five days of hard negotiation Dinas succeeded in buying only half a dozen horses. The best of the lot was a lop-eared, big-headed gelding whom the seller swore was descended from Sarmatian stock.

“The Romans recruited the Sarmatians as mercenaries,” Dinas told Meradoc. “Their cavalry horses were famous for their speed and agility. But I'm afraid you and Pelemos will ride ponies for a while longer.”

“I don't mind. I like my little mare.”

Dinas, who could be stingy with compliments, gave him an appraising look. “You've developed a good seat. And soft hands. You deserve a good horse.”

“I suppose good horses are very expensive.”

Dinas smiled. “You learned that from Saba.”

“Learned what?”

“To ask a question without asking a question.”

It was Meradoc's turn to smile.

“Just so you know,” Dinas said, “when I find the right animal for you I'll buy him. I have enough money; trust me.”

“I do,” said Meradoc.

Cadel pleaded to be given the Sarmatian horse. He claimed he had had some riding experience and therefore deserved the best mount.

“What riding experience?” Dinas challenged. “Your background is the stone quarries.”

“We used donkeys in the quarries,” Cadel replied, bristling. “And I rode them.”

Since there were more men than horses, Dinas devised a plan he called “ride and tie.” Each recruit was given a number. One through six mounted the available horses and the rest followed them on foot. When the person with number one reached a certain point he dismounted and tied his animal, leaving it for a walker. Number two repeated the maneuver, then number three, and so on. The exchanges continued throughout the day. By sunset every man had spent considerable time on horseback.

Dinas asked Meradoc to keep an eye on them and help where necessary. “As my captain of the horse, when we make camp it will be your job to set up picket lines for the horses. They need to be able to reach enough grass to feed.”

“You never tie up your horse at night,” Meradoc remarked.

Dinas smiled. “I don't need to.”

BOOK: After Rome
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