Yseult: A Tale of Love in the Age of King Arthur (18 page)

BOOK: Yseult: A Tale of Love in the Age of King Arthur
3.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

They sailed close to the coast of Britain as long as possible before turning west to cross the Erainn Sea. Britain and Eriu were factually at war, even if the tribes of the north were not taking part, and these waters were dangerous for a Dumnonian ship. If they met any other vessels, they would claim they were Armorican, a claim which Kurvenal's dialect would support, but if any of the others were questioned, they might not be believed.

After two days at sea, the coast of Eriu came into sight a little before sundown. Kurvenal stood at the prow, observing the thin strip of enemy land on the horizon.

Iaen came up behind him. "What now?" he asked quietly.

"Reef the sails, and we'll wait for nightfall," Kurvenal said. "When it gets dark, we sail in as close to the coast as we dare. We will have to set Drystan out before it grows light."

"We are there?" a voice called out behind them.

Kurvenal hurried over to where Drystan was trying to prop himself up on his makeshift bed and pushed him gently back down again. "Save your strength, Drys. You'll need it."

"But I must dress in the rags we brought."

"There is time enough for that."

"Is the coracle ready?"

"We still need to pack food for a few days, but your harp and sword are on board."

"Good." Drystan stopped resisting Kurvenal's hand and closed his eyes again. Kurvenal gazed down at the handsome face of his friend, the fine features marred by dark rings under his eyes, wisps of hair dark with sweat clinging to his temples.

Kurvenal brushed away a tendril of hair. "Sleep, my friend." The hint of a smile touched Drystan's cracked lips.

With the cover of night upon them and all ready, they woke the prince again and helped him into his beggar's rags. Before they lifted him into the coracle, Drystan grabbed Kurvenal's hand, his grip surprisingly strong.

Kurvenal returned the pressure, glad of the dark to hide the tears he could feel collecting in the corners of his eyes. "You will make it, Drys. You were blessed with the cleverness of a cat."

"Odd in the son of a dog, don't you think?" Drystan chuckled weakly.

Kurvenal swallowed a sob. "Take me with you."

His friend shook his head. "You know I can't do that. If I don't come back within a year, you can give me up for dead and return to Armorica."

"Don't talk that way. You'll be back."

"I hope so."

They lowered the coracle into the water and waved as it drifted slowly away from the ship. All too soon, they had to turn east again; their own ship would have to be out of sight before anyone found Drystan. Kurvenal watched where the coracle bobbed on the ocean, a dark spot on the shimmering waves, watched until long after he could recognize anything anymore.

* * * *

When the first rays of sun flooded the sky, Drystan checked the horizon to make sure the Dumnonian ship was out of sight. Then he gathered his remaining strength, took up his harp, and began to play a mournful tune, a song of loss and longing. With every rock of the small boat, his leg was jolted, and pain shot through his body, but he continued to sing and play, putting all the energy he had left into the music. It was easier than he had thought. The music soothed him, the sound of the harp strings, the joy of lifting his voice to the sunrise.

He was young, and he was playing for his life.

He didn't know how long he sang — soon all he was aware of were the strings beneath his fingers and the music in his ears.

"Ho, bard!"

Drystan stopped playing and raised himself up on his elbows as well as he could. A small fishing boat manned by two weathered fishermen was nearing his coracle. To his surprise, he could feel tears of relief rolling down his cheeks.

The boat drew up alongside his. "Why in the name of Dagda are you out here so far from shore playing the harp?" one of the fishermen asked.

He choked back a sob of joy. "Gods be praised! I had given up hope anyone would find me."

The second fisherman wrinkled his nose. They were close enough now to notice the stench of his wound. "I think he's injured."

Drystan nodded. "Please, get me to shore and to a healer, and I will tell you my story." As soon as they heaved him on board their own boat, he fainted with the pain of it. Or perhaps relief.

* * * *

Yseult the Fair had brought the news of Murchad's death to her mother herself, and decided to remain in Ard Ladrann through the dark half of the year. Enna Cennsalach assured her that she had made a place for herself at Dun Ailinne, and Illann had begged her to stay and continue accompanying his war band on their forays to the north, but at the sight of her uncle's lifeless eyes and the deep wound at his temple, Yseult's taste for battle had fled, at least for a time. The only battle she cared for now was the battle against the man who had murdered her uncle, but he was far across the sea.

As Murchad's nearest relative at Dun Ailinne, it had been her duty to clean and prepare the head before it was given a place of honor in the sanctuary of the war goddess Morrigu on the ramparts of Dun Ailinne. She now wore a small linen pouch on the belt at her waist, a pouch containing a scrap of metal she had found in the mess of flesh and bone on the side of Murchad's head. That pouch was always with her, to remind her of the man who had killed her uncle. Someday she would fight again, would find and defeat Drustanus of Dumnonia.

But not now.

Now she would wear the scrap of metal at her waist — and recover. Life at Ard Ladrann was calm and quiet. It was not a large rath, only six houses inside the walls and the same number without. Closer to the sea were the fortified houses of a merchant, a shipbuilder, and several local fishers. It mattered not that Ard Ladrann was so small; important was that Yseult was united with both Brangwyn and her mother.

The three of them had spent much of the fat month stocking up on late-season healing herbs and plants, the leaves and acorns of the oak, the flowers and stems of the agrimony, the roots of the comfrey, the haws of the hawthorn, the petals of the birthwort. Now, however, they were busy with preparation for the harvest festival of Alban Elued, for the guests expected to participate in the games and horse races. The harvest festival was shorter than Lugnasad; there was so much to be done, little time could be spared for thanksgiving. And this year, the weather had been amazingly warm, meaning there might still be an early winter sowing.

But in the last few days, the weather had taken a turn for the worse, driven by a freak cold wind from the north. Yseult was reminded that it was the last half of the month, a time of foreboding when nothing good could come of anything begun, a time meant for endings and not beginnings. If they were to do any planting, it would have to wait until after Alban Elued.

Yseult clutched her cloak around her shoulders as she entered the storehouse where a slave was checking the supplies. She was kneeling before a pile of pelts, sorting out some for bedding for their expected guests, when Brangwyn found her. She looked up with a smile.

"Your mother wants you in the house of healing as soon as possible," Brangwyn said. "She needs our help."

Yseult gave the pelts she had chosen to the slave assisting her and stood up, brushing off her checkered green tunic. "What is it?"

"Some fishermen found a bard in a boat off the coast of Rath Inber and brought him here. He is seriously injured."

"Why here?" Yseult asked, hurrying after her cousin. "Is there no healer in Rath Inber?"

"They say they did not want to anger the Dagda by letting such an excellent minstrel die — his talent must be extraordinary. And his condition is so serious, they thought only Yseult the Wise could heal him."

When Yseult and Brangwyn entered the house of healing, her mother was examining the bard's wound while two fishermen stood nearby. The injured man was lying on a pallet near the open door, but the stench of his wound filled the round-house. Yseult paused briefly in the doorway, trying to become accustomed to the awful smell. Healing houses generally had at least two doors and sometimes four in order to ensure proper ventilation, but in this case, the extra door was not enough.

"You know nothing else about him?" her mother was asking one of the fishermen.

"He fainted as soon as we pulled him into our boat. He hasn't woken up since."

"He played with great skill," the other fisherman said. "And his voice was as pure and sweet as the god Dagda's. If ever a bard deserved to be saved, it is he."

"So you have said."

"I think his dialect may have been that of Armorica," the first fisherman added thoughtfully.

"These rags can tell us nothing," the queen murmured.

"But you will save him?"

"I will do what I can." She nodded dismissal to the two fishermen and turned to Yseult and Brangwyn.

"The bard is in great danger," she said to them quietly. "The wound has festered badly. Luckily, I see no black tissue, and I don't think the blood is poisoned. Brangwyn, heat some water. I need an infusion of chamomile, beech, wormwood and elm to clean the wound. Yseult, make me a poultice of birch, mallow, and bread mold. Don't forget to use both the bark and leaves of the birch."

"Yes, mother. Should I fetch some moss?" Yseult asked.

"Yes, but make me the poultice first. We will also need yarrow, borage, and mandrake root, quickly. It will take all our skill to save this man."

It must be serious with the bard if her mother asked for some of her precious imported mandrake. Yseult the Wise had tried repeatedly to cultivate it in her own gardens, but it did not grow well and she had to buy it from traders from warmer, drier regions such as Hispania and Gaul.

When Yseult returned to the pallet with the poultice requested, her mother was passing a small dagger through the fire. It was not the one she always wore in the belt at her waist — for healing she had a special knife. "I will need you both to hold him for me while I open the wound," she said, looking up. "It won't be pleasant."

Yseult felt a twinge of irritation at her mother's lecturing tone. "I know. I have been treating the wounds of Illann's war band for a year now."

The queen nodded shortly, obviously distracted. "True. But I assume you have not allowed any of your patients to reach the state this man is in. Take his shoulders."

Yseult knelt on the opposite side of the pallet from Brangwyn, wishing she had not allowed her temper to get the better of her. Luckily, her mother was too busy to notice. She and her cousin took the bard's shoulders and upper thighs in their strong hands while the queen bent over his leg and applied the heated dagger to the inflamed skin, making a slit where the flesh was mottled angry red and sick greenish-yellow, refusing to heal. The vile smell of the wound was compounded by the smell of singing hair and flesh. Her mother was right; it wasn't pleasant. With the cut, ugly green pus began to seep out of the wound, making it even more foul-smelling than before.

With a violent jerk and a cry, the bard woke, but Yseult and her cousin held him fast. His eyes flew open, and she found herself staring down into irises of the deepest green she had ever seen, a green of sea and faraway places, dark and filled with pain. Her hands tightened convulsively on his shoulder and leg.

"Bite on this," her mother commanded, handing the young man a piece of the precious mandrake root. "It will dull the pain." He bit down as instructed and closed his eyes again.

"We will need a dressing for the wound when I'm done," the queen said, addressing Yseult. "Make one with the herbs and some moss."

Yseult nodded and got up. She set a pot on the fire for more hot water and hurried out of the rath to gather moss. The color reminded her of the bard's eyes, and she clenched her hand around a fistful, fighting unreasonable tears. She didn't know anything about him but those eyes and the planes of his face and the thick braid of his hair, but she did not want him to die. The wound looked as if it had been deep and jagged, but with Yseult the Wise caring for him, surely it could be cured.

When she returned, her mother was still draining the wound, applying as much pressure as she dared. The bard gasped, his eyes clenched shut. A mixture of pus and blood seeped out of the cut, and the queen cleaned it with the herbal infusion Brangwyn had made. She was more thorough than gentle, and the young man's jaw and the cords of his neck stood out with the effort to fight the pain. After cleansing the wound, she applied the poultice to the cut in his thigh, and over that, the hot sack of moss Yseult prepared. Then the three women bound it with a roll of linen.

Other books

Rakehell's Widow by Sandra Heath
Sea of Stars by Amy A. Bartol
Scoundrel of Dunborough by Margaret Moore
Painted Memories by Flowers, Loni
Kansas City Noir by Steve Paul
The Mastermind Plot by Angie Frazier
Complete Plays, The by William Shakespeare
Perfectly Flawed by Trent, Emily Jane