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The Perilous Order Page 2
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warped image of the Blessed Virgin gazed tristfully at Arthor
as he marched stiffly forward, sword held high. The sight of
the Holy Mother reminded the youthful warrior of the many
battles he had fought for his stepfather, Kyner, chieftain of the
Christian Celts, and he lowered the dazzling sword.
'What manner of ruse is this?' Arthor asked and moved to
hand the weapon to the wizard.
'This is no ruse, Arthor,' Merlin replied as he took the horse
by the bridle and led the gray charger around a bend of mulberry
trees and lime shrubs. 'You have drawn the sword Excalibur
from the stone. As of this moment, you are the rightful king
of all Britain.'
'IT Arthor shook his head. 'Hardly so. I am but Lord
Kyner's servant. I'm a half-breed - a rape-child, sired by a Saxon
plunderer on some nameless peasant woman of Cymru.'
Merlin leveled his cold, silver eyes on the trembling lad and
said quietly, ' N o , Arthor. Y o u are no half-breed, no offspring of
violent rape. Y o u are the one and only child of Uther Pendragon
and Ygrane, queen of the Celts.'
Camelot
Above the verdant gorge of the Paver Amnis, on a high plateau,
the city-fortress of Camelot stood unfinished, surrounded by
fields of stonecutters' blocks. The incomplete curtain walls,
ramparts, and skeletal towers overlooked slopes of carnival tents
and colorful pavilions, as the third of the five-year festivals
blustered noisily. Jugglers and musicians entertained the throngs
of Roman Britons and Celts who had gathered on the wide,
emerald champaigns to celebrate their union against the tribes
of pagan invaders.
A swift rider charged across the playing fields, where con-
testants tested their skills at archery, javelin throwing, and
swordsmanship. Yells of protest assailed the rider until the
crowd heard what he was shouting: 'The sword is drawn!
Excalibur is drawn from the stone!'
Then, the pipers, fiddlers and acrobatic tumblers fell still and
silent, and excited murmurs ran through the revelers among
the feast tables and colorful gaming tents. All activity - the pig
runs, tugs-of-war, round dances, target shoots and equestrian
races — came to a sudden halt. Under the proud spires and
tiers of scaffolded parapets and half-built vallations, a hushed
excitement rippled through the festive throngs.
'Is it true?' Severus Syrax asked as the rider slid from his
steed and bowed before the pavilion of commanders, whose
tent walls displayed both Christian symbols and ornately knotted
Celtic emblems. The swarthy magister militum from the great city
of Londinium was the first to burst forth from the pavilion at
the cries of the rider. His Persian features, outlined by precise
lines of dark beard and elegandy coiffed black curls, shook with
surprise. 'Who drew the sword?'
'A boy, my lord magister,' the rider huffed. 'A boy with a
lengthy name — Aquila Regalis Thor . . .'
'Arthor!' Kyner shouted with amazement. The large Celtic
chieftain, wearing a white tunic emblazoned with a scarlet cross,
emerged from the pavilion and loomed behind the viperous
Severus Syrax. The Celt's arctic blue eyes grew wider as
he saw that the messenger spoke earnestly, and the war-
rior's gruff hand rose to his mouth and covered his ponder-
ous mustache as if holding back a startled cry. 'My son —
Arthor?'
Severus Syrax shoved aside the panting rider and pointed
with a beringed finger across the summer pastures to where
the lanky, dark-robed figure of Merlin approached, leading a
palfrey by its bridle. And upon its back - young Arthor, sword
upraised.
'Holy Mother of God!' Kyner cried out as if stabbed. 'It is
Arthor!'
Obeisance and Defiance
Merlin led the mounted swordsman past the silendy watch-
ing wagonloads of revelers and across the grassy tournament
grounds, where combatants stood stunned at the sight of the
uncouth lad holding Excalibur high in both hands. They moved
slowly as if in a royal procession, and only the stern presence of
the wizard kept the wide crowds from hooting derision at the
youth in his hempen sackcloth.
'This is your king!' Merlin announced loudly when they had
attained the range before the citadel's main gate. They stopped
before the grand pavilion of yellow tent canvas and purple
pennants where the warlords and chieftains stood arrayed in
mute astonishment. 'This is he who drew Excalibur from the
stone. On your knees before your lord — the high king of Britain
- the one son of Uther Pendragon and Ygrane, queen of the
Celts — Aquila Regalis Thor!'
Merlin's mighty voice rolled across the countryside and
boomed in echoes from the empty fortress behind him.
Immediately, the throng fell to their knees. Only the warlords
and chieftains gathered before the grand pavilion remained
standing until Merlin glared at them and Kyner dropped
hesitantly to one knee.
'Get up, you fool!' Severus Syrax cajoled. 'Can't you see
this is a wizard's trick? It's just your boy, Arthor.'
Kyner did not budge. Suddenly, a thousand innocent details
ignored over the past fifteen years fell together for him into the
prodigious realization that this boy, whom he had assumed was a
cast-off, a churlish offspring of a pagan and a peasant, was indeed
noble-born. Even Kyner's true son, Cei, the thick-jawed bully
who had berated his stepbrother over the years, admonishing
the half-breed to keep his place among the servants, understood
at once that Merlin spoke the truth, for he had fallen to his knees
before all others.
Urien, the bare-chested, salt-blond Celt of the Coast, spoke
strongly: 'If this manchild is in truth the son of our former
queen, Ygrane, I will swear to him my lifelong allegiance. But
I will hear the truth of this from the mouth of the woman who
was my queen — and not from a wizard.'
Old Lot of the North, bare-shouldered in the Celtic tra-
dition, his great mustache fluttering with his harsh breathing,
stood behind Urien and said nothing. His redhaired witch-wife
Morgeu the Fey was nowhere to be seen.
'And I speak for the British warlords,' Severus Syrax piped
up again. 'It will take more than a wizard to elevate this boy
to the throne. Even if he is the son of Pendragon and Ygrane,
he is but a child! Are we so desperate as to entrust ourselves to
a child?'
Stout and with a neckless head like a block of masonry, Bors
Bona beat a fist against his leather cuirass and shouted, 'We want
a man of deeds for our high king!'
Marcus Dumnonii, the blond commander of the West, said
nothing, but when the others turned to depart, he followed.
Within moments of Merlin's introduction of King Arthor, the
fields had begun to empty as the chieftains and warlords gathered
their people and headed to their homes in the diverse corners of
the
troubled island kingdom.
Kyner and Cei
Kyner and Cei approached the king mounted on his palfrey and
knelt before him, heads bowed. 'My Lord!' the gruff chieftain's
voice cracked with hurt. 'Can you forgive us for having treated
you as a servant all your life?'
'Father!' Arthor moved to dismount, and Merlin dissuaded
him with a reproving look. The boy ignored the wizard
and leaped from the horse. 'Get up, father. Y o u need never
bow to me.'
Kyner refused to stir and kept his face lowered to the
ground. 'I bend my knee before my king. Will you for-
give me?'
'There is nothing to forgive, father.'
'I am not your father—' Kyner spoke in a small voice.
'Uther Pendragon sired you. I merely sheltered you — a servant
in my household. I am ashamed I had no more charity for you
than that.'
'Ashamed?' Arthor handed Excalibur to Merlin, who accepted
it reluctandy and took the boy's elbow with the sword. Arthor
twisted free and approached the kneeling chieftain. 'You taught
me the teachings of our Lord. Y o u obliged me to learn to read
and write both Latin and Greek. Y o u took me with you on all
your diplomatic missions to Gaul and showed me the royal
courts of the wide world. And, despite my surliness, despite
my ingratitude, you gave me an honored place at your side on
the field of battle. Y o u treated me as weD as you treated your
own firstborn, Cei.'
Cei moaned. 'My lord — have mercy on me!'
'Cei — you are my brother!'
Cei's large body shivered. 'Do not mock me, my lord.'
'Mock you?' Arthor knelt before them. 'You two alone of
all the warlords and chieftains accept me as king. By this, you
have shown me that you are truly my father and my brother.
For however long I may reign, I will never consider you less.'
Merlin put one hand under Arthor's shoulder and physically
lifted him to his feet. 'You are king. Y o u bow to no one
but God.'
'Then stand — father, brother,' Arthor said and pulled himself
free of Merlin with an annoyed look. 'Stand before me that I
may see your faces again.'
Kyner and Cei obeyed. Tears filmed the chieftain's arctic-wolf
eyes as they gazed proudly from under his jutting browbone. Cei's
broad, thick, and beardless face looked pale and frightened.
'You must help me,' Arthor told them, looking urgendy
from one to the other. 'I did not expect this — this great
responsibility. I — I don't know what to do! Please, help me.
Y o u know me best of all men. If I am truly a king, as Merlin
says I am, then you are the king's best men. Please, do not leave
me alone with this fate. You must help me to fulfill now the
mission that God has set before me.'
Merlin's Counsel
Merlin took Arthor by the elbow and led him away from the
Celtic chieftain and his son, saying, 'I need to speak with the
king in private.'
Arthor strove to twist his arm free, but the wizard's grip
could not be broken. 'Whatever you have to say to me, Merlin,
say before these good men, my father and brother.'
'In private, my lord.' The stern look in Merlin's deep-set
eyes brooked no protest.
Arthor shrugged apologetically to Kyner and Cei and
allowed Merlin to lead him past the mammoth pylons of
the open gateway to the crowded interior of Camelot. Past a
clutter of benches and stools, the wizard brought the young man
to the central court. The enormous chamber was filled with the
canvas awnings and thatched canopies of masons' work sheds.
'From here, you will rule your kingdom,' Merlin said,
gesturing grandly with Excalibur at the soaring architecture.
'If you can unite Britain.' He suddenly noticed the sword in
his hand and passed it to the lad. 'Here, take this. It's yours -
and you'll need it.'
Arthor accepted the sword with both hands. In the mirror-
blue flat of the blade, he saw his blond face too young for
whiskers, the hackles of his badger hair sticking out in unruly
spikes. 'I am king?' He looked to Merlin with this question
sincerely held in his amber eyes. 'Why?'
'You are the son, the only child, of Uther Pendragon and
Ygrane, when she was queen of the Celts.' Merlin removed his
hat and revealed a horrid visage - a long, sallow skull and eyes
of shattered glass in bonepits deep as dragon sockets. 'I hid you
at White Thorn with Kyner so that you would be safe from
your enemies — especially your half-sister, Morgeu the Fey, who
would have killed you.'
Arthor's stomach winced at the mention of the enchant-
ress Morgeu. 'She came to me . . .' His voice sounded far
away to him.
'Yes, I know.' Merlin took the boy's shoulders in his
spidery hands and sat him down on a carpenter's bench. 'She
has told me.'
'She seduced me, Merlin.' The boy's already pale face had
drained to corpse-white. 'I did not know . . . I thought she was
someone else . . . I . . . I coupled with her in the night . . . it
was dark . . .'
'Listen to me, my lord.' Merlin bent close and his haggard
face filled Arthor's sight. 'What you did, you did unknowingly.
Yet the deed is done. Morgeu the Fey carries your child.'
'No!' The sword would have fallen from Arthor's grasp had
not Merlin caught it and pressed it back into the boy's hands.
'Be strong, my king. Be strong!' Merlin felt tempted to use
his magic on the youth, but he knew that would not avail for
long. 'This is the pain that goes with the truth of your destiny
as high king of Britain. The salvation of our people comes at
a price.'
'Why?' Tears brimmed in Arthor's eyes. 'Why has she
done this? Does she not realize that she has damned us both
to hell?'
'Oh, she realizes that perfectly well, my lord.' Merlin held
the boy's quavering stare with an icy gaze. 'And now you must
understand, young king, that whosoever would serve heaven
must first conquer hell.'
King Arthor's Retinue
Proceeding at a stately pace, two elephants, garishly painted
and oudandishly feathered, marched down the cobbled road,
leaving in their wake a modey procession of horn-blowers,
drummers, tumblers, jugglers, clowns, jesters, fire-eaters and
sword-swallowers. The noisy parade approached Camelot along
the old Roman highway that led from the Amnis, where they
had disembarked a gilded barge decorated with gorgon heads
and tinsel-scaled serpents. As they passed through the river
hamlet of Cold Kitchen flying their fairy-winged kites and
rainbow windsocks, they encountered the cortege of Severus
Syrax as he departed for Londinium. The revelers swept up his
followers in their jubilant march and carried them all back to
Camelot.
That had been Merlin's plan when he had first sent notice
to the courts of war-torn Gaul that Britain would crown a
monarch this summer. He had invited all accomplished court br />
performers who wished the protection of the new king to
assemble at Camelot and display their prowess. The spectacle of
the trumpeting elephants and the performers garbed in flagrant
silks and sequins amused even the batde-hardened troops of
Bors Bona, and the warlord signaled for his army to return to
the camp-grounds of Camelot.
Severus Syrax himself sat astonished atop his black Arabian
stallion. Fabulously vulgar and antic as the procession appeared
at first — with bears dancing at the roadside and jugglers tossing
hatchets and torches — he recognized the glory that flowed
past him toward Camelot - and toward the king. These were
denizens of the eternal carnival, the celebration of power that
had once belonged to Rome and that now gave themselves
freely to the boy-king. Syrax dared not turn his back on this
gala. The best hope of discrediting Arthor lay with these
merrymakers, whose edge of insanity might well cut through
the illusion of nobility Merlin strove to weave about the child
he had chosen as monarch.
Begrudgingly, Severus Syrax pulled his steed around and
signed for his followers to return to the camp-grounds.
Even the denizens of Cold Kitchen, who had become inured
to the coming and going of noble personages at Camelot during
the fifteen years of its continuing construction, stood beside
the highway marveling at the accomplished stilt-walkers and
serpent charmers whose every limb crawled with vipers. The
hamlet quickly emptied as its residents followed the parade of
merrymakers to the playing fields of Camelot.
Merlin stood with Arthor atop a wooden scaffold on the
colossal stone wall overlooking the broad campestral where the
two parading elephants had come to a halt and had knelt before
him. The boy gaped at the colorful throng of entertainers who
bowed in silent respect before their new lord.
'What manner of amusement is this, Merlin?' Arthor asked
through a look of widening wonder, taking in the harlequin
crowd of mummers, buffoons, contortionists, rope-dancers, and
gleemen among a boisterous slew of trained dogs, bears, and
bright-plumed birds.
Merlin feigned surprise at the lad's query, 'Why, my lord,
this is your retinue — a pageantry worthy of a king.'
Jokers, Ribalds, Vagabonds
King Arthor, with Merlin standing at his side, sat on a ponderous
throne of cedarwood set upon a platform beneath a purple