Authors: Ilka Tampke
The moon darkened and a cold rage lifted me to standing. My heart clenched like a
warrior's fist and breath hissed through my throat.
Without thought, I pulled off my sandals, the bare soles of my feet pressed on the
dirt. I closed my eyes. My urge to harm Heka, as she had harmed, was so powerful
I was swaying with it.
And then I felt it. A shivering. Something pushing, as though the earth's spirit
was nudging at my feet. With my next breath it was within me, coursing up from deep
in the ground. Life laws had been broken by Heka's act and now it was as if the Mothers'
own anger rose up through me, stirring and fuelling my own. With deep breaths, I
pulled it forth until my belly flooded with the strength of it. With a hard spasm,
it rose from my core, erupting in a choking howl. And on this sound was carried all
my fury: my desire for Heka to suffer for this fawn.
I fell against the wall of the kitchen, panting heavily. I did not know what I had
sent forth, only that it was black with intent. And I was spent like a hunter after
a kill.
I eased the jewel from the buck's ear, gathered him into my arms and buried him with
my bare hands at the queen's gateway.
When I finally burrowed in beside Cookmother, I was hollow with grief. I squeezed
against her broad back, but it was no use. I could not rest. Something had awoken
and was stirring within me.
A sacred prohibition, a curse, a taboo.
Touch the forbidden object, cross the forbidden
threshold, and suffer dishonour, even death.
A journeyman or woman will place the
geas, but if the need is true, anyone can call it.
A geas called by a woman is the
most powerful of all.
âW
HAT
ROTTEN
SOUL
yields this sick act?' Cookmother grunted as we scrubbed the blood
from the doorstep.
Questions of my lateness had been silenced by the death of the fawn.
âWho would do it, Ailia? Who is so spirit-ill in the township?'
I did not expose Heka's name. To do so would reveal that I had relinquished Cookmother's
gift. But this was not all. There was an infection festering between this strangemaid
and me, and it filled me with shame.
Cookmother freed me from my tasks. âFind the wretch who would slay the queen's totem,
and call for retribution. Or I'll have Llwyd himself set a geas,' she called.
It was Mael the breadmaker who told me that Heka slept at the
fringes. âShe touts
a trade that she learned at the Roman portsâ' his eyes bulged as he heaved a tray
onto the bench, ââwhere women are bought and sold like loaves.'
A slate-grey sky bore down on Caer Cad. I walked out the gates and into the labyrinth
of rough huts and tents that made up the fringes. The stench of human shit rose from
the narrow paths, and eyes glinted from the doorways as I passed. âGet gone!' I yelled
as a swarm of screeching children peppered me with pebbles.
Neha's bark led me to Heka. She sat under a makeshift thatch, gnawing on gristle,
next to a man withered with age.
âHeka?'
She looked up.
âI would speak with you,' I said.
She came reluctantly to her feet and stood before me. âSpeak then.'
Under the daylight, I saw the dirt that browned her skin and the lice teeming in
her hair. For a moment her wretchedness overwhelmed me. Most came to the fringes
by skinlessness, others by crime or injury. She was sister to the dog. What held
her here? Had all refused her as I refused her? Then I pictured the fawn. âThe animal
slainâyou have done grave wrong with it. You had business with me, not a babe of
the forest.'
âWhat say you?' She screwed up her face, affecting confusion.
âDon't play the fool, you injure the Tribequeen's own kin in the killing of the Beltane
fawn.'
She laughed. âAnd how is it my work?'
âThis.' I pulled the pin from my pocket and held it before her. âYou left your mark.
Were you so dull-witted as to think I would not know you?'
âAh, the pin. That has been lost to me since yesterday mornâthank you for its safe
return.' She reached to take it but I snatched it away.
âHeka,' I stammered, âdo you deny it?'
She took a bored breath. âIf ill was done by the pin, then it was not by my hand.'
She could not weasel from this. It was a lie without shame and I could almost taste
the pleasure she took in it. âWho else would seek to disturb me so?'
âI do not know. But whoever it was, it was not I. Ask your worksister, Cah. She
walked with me yesterday. We drank together, here, at the fringe fires. She will
tell you.'
Cah? What was
her
business here? My certainty cracked and doubt drifted in. I began
to wonder if indeed the pin had been lost and I had accused her falsely. âTell me
the truth, woman, or, by the Mothers, you will suffer for your lies. I will ensure
it.'
Heka laughed again. âYou set me a geas? Ooh! By which journeyman is it sanctioned?
Which skin laws enforce it?' She scratched a lesion at her throat.
âI know it was you,' I said, despairing. âI know it.' But my voice was thin.
Heka snorted and turned away.
I brimmed with fury as I walked back through the fringe huts, but it was an impotent,
crippled anger that found no justice. Never before had I been deemed worthy of such
ill. Yet I could not cast off the thought that it was somehow deserved. That her
lies were payment for mine. Then I thought of the precious buck and I was stiffened
with hate all over again. My geas had no sanction, but it was made with the full
weight of my heart.
I stopped before I reached the southern gate. I could not return to my kitchen tasks
in such distress. There was only one who could help me make sense of this, and, while
I had leave from Cookmother, I would test his promise to me.
With Neha at my side, I stole back along the first rampart, and
slipped through the
northern entranceway, down the hill. A farmer was driving cattle in the next field
and women were washing blankets at the Nain, but none noticed me as I edged south
through the crop fields then out along the Cam.
It did not take me long to reach our place. The water mirrored the dark sky, its
burbling drone more a warning than a comfort.
Come
, I willed him, wrapping my summer
cloak tightly as I waited.
Neha barked at something in the river.
I peered over the bank and my eye caught an arrow of light as a fish shot to the
deep. After a moment it surfaced again, the weak sun catching on its flank. It was
the fish from the bathing pool. I was sure of it. âHush, Neha,' I chided, as she
let forth a torrent of barking.
I crouched, watching it ribbon through the water, its belly crimson and silver, black
at its spine. Never had I seen anything so beautiful. I laid my hand on the river's
surface and the fish glided under my palm. The touch of its skin halted my breath.
In a flash, it had darted upstream.
I cried out in dismay and to my delight it returned, then swam away once more. I
stared after it, enchanted. Did it want me to follow?
It flipped joyously as I began to walk. I quickened my step until I was not ten paces
from the edge of the Oldforest and there I stopped. Cookmother had always warned
me to keep a fair distance from the forest's edge, that its spirits had a long reach.
But I could not take leave of this animal.
The fish darted back and forth, cajoling me forward, until I stood right at the forest's
threshold. I stared into the shadowy corridors that were hardly touched by the day's
thin light, my flesh pimpling in the sudden cold.
Neha barked beside me but the sound was distant.
The salmon leaped once more then lunged into the forest. Now I had no doubt: it was
asking me to go in. What harm could come when
I had the invitation, the protection,
of such a magical creature?
I took a step, then several more, until there were dark, moss-covered trunks, not
only before and beside me, but also behind me, and I was fully encased within the
forest.
Neha did not follow.
It was an eerie world in which I found myself. Filtered light through the canopy
lent a veiled, moonlit quality to the narrow path. The air in my nostrils was cold
and scented with rot. Silence surrounded me, save for the faint barks of Neha and
my muffled footfall on the forest bed.
I did not tear my eyes from the fish, who led me steadily now, without jumps or turns.
My mind knew nothing but its rhythmic undulations, like a trickle of blood through
the black water.
When it slowed, I was deep in a grotto: a hidden place as lovely and secret as any
I had seen. A small waterfall dropped into a wide pool ringed with mossy boulders
and surrounded by hazel trees. Their branches spread over the water like gnarled
fingers, laden with fruit as crimson as the fish's skin. Every few moments a nut
dropped into the water, where it bubbled and sank, prompting a thin mist to rise
off the surface.
I stood at the edge, as the fish circled. Before my eyes, its colour strengthened
until it was the hue of a fresh wound. It plunged and surfaced several times. Then
there was stillness and it was gone.
In an instant, my dress and sandals were off and I was into the water. My legs blanched
with the coldness but I pushed further in. Underfoot were sharp stones, silty mud,
wriggling things. But with my next step, I could not find the riverbed. There was
no floor. When I inched forward, my toes felt a ledge, and beyond this, only space
and water.
Hesitantly, for I had never swum alone before, I glided out over
this deep place.
I let myself drop until I was fully submerged but still there was nothing beneath
me. It was a well of some kind, a spring, within the river. The water at its opening
was ice-cold as I flailed above it, eddies pulling me downward. This was where the
fish had gone.
With a deep breath, I dropped under once more and peered into the darkness, straining
to sight a flash of red.
âAilia!' Taliesin's voice echoed through the water.
I broke the surface, searching frantically. âTaliesin!' I called, splashing back
to the bank. âI am here!'
âAiliaâ' Again I heard his voice but it was distant, muted, as if through a barrier.
I called to him as I clambered from the pool, but my shouts were met with silence
and a heavy mist that had rolled in from the heart of the forest. Pulling on my dress
and sandals, I ran among the trees, calling, but the mist denied me sight and he
did not speak again.
When I was finally still, shaking with cold, the truth of where I had come struck
me like a blow. The fish's hold was broken and suddenly I was terrified. âNeha!'
I screamed, running back to the forest entrance, âNeha, where are you?'
I ran without rest, stumbling on roots and stones until the trunks started to thin
and I sighted my dog waiting patiently.
âThank the Mothers,' I murmured into her neck when I reached her. As she licked my
face, I lay back on the grass, laughing to be out of the forest and free of its seduction.
How foolish I had been, how lacking in strength. âYou were cleverer,' I whispered
to Neha. âYou knew to resist.'
I promised myself never to be drawn again, but no sooner had I done so than I remembered
the voice calling through the mist. Was it some mischief of the forest? No. It was
Taliesin, I could have sworn it. He was there.
When I pushed through the doorskins, only Bebin and Ianna were in the kitchen, hemming
cheesecloths at the table.
âWhere is Cookmother?' I asked.
âGone with Cah to attend a dirt-dweller near death from skinsores,' said Bebin.
I stared. âWhich dirt-dweller?'
Bebin shrugged. âSomeone Cah had knowledge of.'