in front of me.'
'Look then, and see them coming!' said Llwyd the Hud.
Thereupon, Pryderi and Rhiannon, together with the missing hounds, appeared at the foot of the gorsedd mound. Manawyddan, beside himself with joy, hailed them and welcomed them.
'Lord and king, now free my wife, for you have certainly obtained all of what you asked for.'
'I will free her gladly,' Manawyddan said, lowering his hand and opening the glove so the mouse could jump free. Llwyd the Enchanter took out his staff and touched the mouse, and she changed into a charming and lovely woman once more-albeit a woman great with child.
'Look around you at the land,' cried Llwyd the Hud to the lord of Dyfed, 'and you will see all the homesteads and the settlements as they were at their best.'
Instantly, the whole of the country was inhabited and as prosperous as it had ever been. Manawyddan and Rhiannon and Pryderi and Cigfa were reunited, and, to celebrate the end of the dire enchantment, they made a circuit of all the land, dispensing the great wealth Rhi Manawyddan had obtained in his bargain with the enchanter. Everywhere they went, they ate and drank and feasted the people, and no one was as well loved as the lord of Dyfed and his lovely queen. Pryderi and Cigfa were blessed with a son the next year, and he became, if possible, even more beloved than his grandfather. Here, Angharad stopped; she let the last notes of the harp fade into the night, then added, 'But that is a tale for another time.' Setting aside the harp, she stood and spread her hands over the heads of her listeners. 'Go now,' she said softly, as a mother speaking to a sleep-heavy child. 'Say nothing, but go to your sleep and to your dreams. Let the song work its power within you, my children.'
Bran, no less than the others, felt as if his soul had been cast adrift-all around him washed a vast and restless sea that he must navigate in a too-small boat with neither sail nor oars. For him, at least, the feeling was more familiar. This was how he always felt after hearing one of Angharad's tales. Nevertheless, he obeyed her instruction and did not speak to anyone, but went to his rest, where the song would continue speaking through the night and through the days to come. And although part of him wanted nothing more than to ride at once to Llanelli, storm the gaol, and rescue the captive by force, he had learned his lesson and resisted any such rash action. Instead, Bran bided his time and let the story do its work.
All through the winter and into the spring, the story sowed and tended its potent seeds; the meaning of the tale grew to fruition deep in Bran's soul until, one morning in early summer, he awoke to the clear and certain knowledge of what the tale signified. More, he knew what he must do to rescue Will Scarlet.
CHAPTER 34
I wake in the night all a-fever with the odd conviction that I know what it all means. The letter, the ring, the gloves-I know what this strange treasure signifies, and why it has come to Elfael. For the first time, I am afraid. If I am right, then I have discovered a way to save Elfael, and I fear I may not live to pass on this saving knowledge to those who can use it. Oh, Blessed Virgin, Peter, and Paul, I pray I am not too late.
I sit in the cold dark and damp of my cell, waiting for daylight and hoping against hope that Odo will come early, and I pray to God that my scribe has true compassion in his heart.
I pray and wait, and pray some more, as it makes the waiting easier.
I am at this a long time when at last I see the dim morning light straggling along the narrow corridor to my cell. I hear Gulbert the jailer stumbling around as he strikes up a small fire to heat his room. I content myself with the sorry fact that our jailer lives only a little better than his prisoners. He is as much a captive of the abbot as I am, if not the more. At least I will leave this rank rat hole one day and he, poor fella, will remain.
Odo is long in coming. I shout for Gulbert, asking if the scribe has been seen, but my keeper does not answer me. He rarely does, and I remain a tightly wrapped bundle of worry until I hear the murmur of voices and then the scrape of an iron door against the stone flags of the corridor. In a moment, I hear the familiar shuffling footfall, and my heart leaps in my chest.
Easy now, Will me lad, I tell myself, you don't want to scare the scribe; he's skittery enough as it is without you gettin' him up all nervous. So to make it look like I have been doing anything but waiting for him, I lie back on my musty mat and close my eyes.
I hear the jingle of a key, and the door to my cell creaks open. 'Will? Are you asleep?'
I open one eye and look around. 'Oh, it is you, Odo. I thought it might be the king of England bringing my pardon.'
Odo smiles and shakes his head. 'No luck today, I fear.'
'Don't be too sure, my friend.' I sit up. 'What if I told you I knew a secret that could save our sovereign king from black treachery and murder, or worse.'
Odo shakes his head. 'I know I should be well accustomed to your japes by now…' The look in my eye brings him up short. 'I do begin to believe you are in earnest.'
'Aye, that I am, lad.'
I am pleased to see that he is in a mood to humour me this morning. He settles heavily into his accustomed place. 'How will you save King William?'
'I will tell you, my friend, but you must promise me a right solemn oath on everything you hold most sacred in the world-promise me that what I tell you will not pass your lips. You cannot write it down, nor in any other way repeat what I say to another living soul.'
He glances up quickly. 'I cannot.'
'You will, or I will not say another word.'
'Please, Will, you do not understand what you're asking.'
'See here, Odo, I am asking you to pledge your life with mine-no more, no less.' He would look away, but I hold him with the strength of my conviction. 'Hear me now,' I continue after a moment, 'if I am wrong, nothing will happen. But if I am right, then a great treachery will be prevented and hundreds, perhaps thousands of lives will be saved.'
He searches my face for a way out of this unexpected dilemma. All his natural timidity comes flooding to the fore. I can see him swimming in it, trying to avoid being swept away.
Fight it, Odo, boy. It is time to become a man.
'Abbot Hugo…,' he begins, then quits. 'I could never… he would find out anything you said… he would know.'
'Has he the ears of the devil now? Unless you told him, he would never know.'
'He would find out.'
'How?' I counter. Here is where the battle will be fought. Is his desire to do right stronger than his fear of the black abbot?
After a moment, I say, 'Only the two of us will know. If you say nothing to him, then I fail to see how Hugo will ever know what I mean to tell you.'
He looks at me, his round face a tight-pinched knot of pain.
'It is life and death, Odo,' I tell him quietly. He is that close to fleeing. 'Life and death in your hands.'
He stands abruptly, scattering pen and parchment and spilling his inkhorn. 'I cannot!' he says, and bolts from the cell.
I hear his feet slapping the stones in the corridor; he calls Gulbert to let him out, and then he's gone.
Well, it was a risk doomed from the start. I should have known better than to think he could help. Now escape is my only hope, and it is such a starved and wretched thing it brings sad tears to my eyes. I tug at the chain on my leg and feel the lump in my throat as frustration bites. To hold the solitary answer to the riddle of the baron's treasure-to be entrusted with the key to free Elfael and to be unable to use it-that fair makes the eye-water roll down my whiskered cheeks.
I lie on my filthy bed and think how to get word to Bran, and my head-dull from these weeks and months of captivity-feels like a lump of useless timber. I think and think… and it always comes out at the same place. I can do nothing alone. I must have help.
Oh, God, if it is true that you delight in a heartfelt prayer, then hear this one, and please send Odo back.