UP f°r a" ^at ^ost ^me- Now, with so satisfactory an audience as ma hen and a subject that was so close to his heart, he outdid himself, JI Stephen learned that among the Welsh there was no greater sin^to deny hospitality to a traveler, that Welshmen scorned the chain-.j arrn0r of the English knight, that Llewelyn's closest friends were s named Rhys and Ednyved, and the ancient Welsh name forShrewsbury was Pengwern.The sun had taken on the dull, red-gold haze of coming dusk as Llewelyn obligingly gave Stephen a lesson in the basics of Welsh pronunciation. "SayRhys like this: Rees. And Ed-nev-ed. Now try Gruffvdd; it sounds like yourGriffith. In Welsh, the double 'd' is pronounced as 'th.' So my little brother's name is spelled A-d-d-a, but we say it as Atha, Welsh for Adam." He paused, his head cocked. "Do you hear that? Someone is calling your name."Stephen scrambled to his feet so fast he all but tumbled down the brook embankment. "My brother! Jesii, but he'll flay me alive!" "Why?""I coaxed him into taking me with him to Shrewsbury this morn. We agreed to meet at St George's bridge and I... I just forgot!" "Well, cannot you say you're sorry and ..." Stephen shook his head, staring at the boys now mounting the crest of the hill. "No, not with Walter. He ... he's not much for forgiveness ..."The approaching boys looked to be about fourteen. The youngster in the lead had Stephen's butter-yellow hair. He strode up to Stephen and, without a word, struck the younger boy across the face, with enough force to send Stephen sprawling."We've been looking for you for nigh on two hours! I've a mind to leave you here, and damned well should!"As Walter reached down and jerked Stephen to his feet, Llewelyn came forward.He'd taken an instant dislike to Walter de Hodnet, but for Stephen's sake, he sought to sound conciliatory as he said, "It was my fault, too. We were talking and ..."Walter's eyes flicked to his face, eyes of bright blue, iced with sudden suspicion. "What sort of lowborn riffraff have you taken up with now, Stephen?"Llewelyn flushed. "I am Llewelyn ab lorwerth," he said after a long pause;instinct was now alerting him to trouble. At the same time Stephen burst into nervous speech."He is a Welsh Prince, Walter, and ... and he's been telling me all aboutWales ..."''Oh, he has?" Walter said softly, and Stephen, who knew his rother well enough to be forewarned, tried to shrink back. But Walter
still had a grip on his tunic. With his other hand he grasped a fistful ofStephen's hair and yanked, until Stephen's head was drawn back so fa that he seemed to be staring skyward, and was whimpering with pajn"That's just what I could expect from you. No more common sense than the stupidest serf, not since the day you were born. So he's been telling you about Wales? Did he tell you, too, about the crops burned in the fields, the villages plundered, the women carried off?" Releasing Stephen, he swung around suddenly on Llewelyn."Suppose you tell him about it now. Tell my lack-wit brother about the border raids, tell him how brave your murdering countrymen are against defenseless peasants and how they run like rabbits when \ve send men-at-arms against them!"Sul was grazing some yards away, and for several moments Llewelyn had been measuring the distance, wanting nothing so much as to be up on the gelding's back and off at a breakneck run. But with Walter's taunt, he froze where he was, pride temporarily prevailing over fear. He'd never run like a rabbit, never. But there was a betraying huskiness in his voice as he said, "I have nothing to say to you."Walter was flanked by his two companions; they'd moved closer to Llewelyn, too close, and he took a backward step. But he dared retreat no farther, for the brook embankment was at his back and he did