CHAPTER ELEVEN
“I have raised up one from the north, and he
is come . . . and he shall come upon rulers as upon mortar, and as
the potter treadeth clay.”
ISAIAH 41:25
MORGAN stood absolutely motionless for perhaps ten
heartbeats, Deryni defenses raising automatically as he cast about
for danger. The moonlight was still very dim, and the shadows were
long, but there was definitely something brilliant in the darkness
to the left. He considered calling out, for it could be
Duncan.
But, no. His heightened senses would have
identified Duncan by now. If there was someone lurking in the
shadows, he was not known to Morgan.
Cautiously, and wishing he had thought to bring his
sword, Morgan eased his way left across the nave to investigate,
fingertips trailing the outer wall as he glided down the clerestory
aisle. The flicker had disappeared when he moved, and he could see
now that there was nothing extraordinary about that particular
corner of the ruins, but his curiosity had been piqued.
What could have shone that brightly after all these
years? Glass? A chance reflection of moonlight on standing water?
Or something more sinister?
There was a faint scuttling sound from the
direction of the ruined altar, and Morgan whirled and froze,
stiletto flicking into his hand in readiness. That had not been
imagination, or moonlight on standing water. There was something
there!
Sight and hearing at full extension, Morgan waited,
half expecting the spectral form of some long-dead monkish spirit
to rise out of the ruined altar. He had almost decided that his
nerves were, indeed, playing tricks on him when a large gray rat
suddenly broke from cover in the ruins and headed directly for
him.
Morgan hissed in surprise and leaped out of the
animal’s path, then exhaled with a sigh and chuckled under his
breath as the rat fled. He glanced back at the ruined altar,
chiding himself for his foolishness, then began moving confidently
down the aisle again.
The corner that had originally attracted Morgan’s
attention was still partially roofed, but the floor was rough and
littered with rubble. A narrow altar-shelf had been set into the
back wall and remained, though the edge was battered and cracked as
from heavy blows. Once there had been a marble figure in the niche
in the wall behind.
Only the feet of the statue remained now—those and
the cracked slab and the shards of glass and stone—mute relics of
that terrible day and night when rebels had sacked the monastery
two centuries before. Morgan smiled as his gaze passed over the
feet, wondering who the ill-fated saint had been whose sandaled
feet still trod the broken dreams of this place. Then his eyes
focused on a sliver of silvered glass still affixed to the base
below the feet, and he knew he had found his elusive light.
There were more shards of silver and ruby embedded
in the layer of mud on the slab below, fragments of a shattered
mosaic that once had covered the pedestal directly above the altar.
The looters had smashed that, just as they had shattered the
statues, the stained glass in the high windows, the marble and tile
floorings, the precious altar furnishings.
Morgan started to reach for his stiletto to pry out
the elusive piece of glass, but then thought better of it and
replaced his weapon in its wrist sheath, shaking his head. That one
shard of silver, still clinging in its original place, had defied
rebels, time, and the elements. Could the unknown saint in whose
honor the glass had been placed make the same claim of his human
adherents? Morgan thought not. Even the saint’s identity was lost
by now. Or was it?
Pursing his lips thoughtfully, Morgan ran his
fingers along the battered altar edge, then bent to inspect it more
closely. As he had suspected, there were letters inscribed in the
stone, their intricate whorls almost obliterated by the fury of the
looters centuries past. The first two words were readable if one
used a little imagination—JUBILATE DEO—a standard
inscription for such an altar.
But the next word was badly damaged, and the next.
He was able to trace out the letters S - - C T V -—,
probably SANCTUS, saint. But the final word, the saint’s
name...
He could make out a damaged C, an A, a shattered S
on the end. C A - - - R - S. CAMBERUS? Saint Camber?
Morgan whistled lightly under his breath in
surprise as he straightened. Saint Camber again, the Deryni patron
of magic. No wonder the looters had done such a thorough job here.
He was amazed they had left as much as there was.
He backed a few steps and glanced around
distractedly, wishing he had the time to stay and explore further.
If this had, indeed, been a corner of the church dedicated to Saint
Camber, the odds were very good that there had been a Transfer
Portal not far away. Of course, even if it still functioned—and
that was doubtful after so many years of disuse—he had no place to
go with it anyway. The only other Portals he knew of were back in
Rhemuth, in Duncan’s study and in the cathedral sacristy, and he
certainly didn’t want to go there. Dhassa was their
destination.
It was probably a ridiculous notion anyway. A
Portal would have been destroyed long ago, even if he could find
it. Nor could he spare the time to look.
Stifling a yawn, Morgan took one final look around,
waved a casual salute to the feet of Saint Camber, then began
crossing slowly back to camp. Tomorrow there would be answers to
many problems, when they confronted the Gwynedd Curia. But for now,
it had begun to rain again. Perhaps that would help him to
sleep.
BUT there would be no sleep for another man abroad
that night.
In the woods not many miles from where Morgan and
Duncan slept, Paul de Gendas squinted into the driving rain and
slowed his mount to a walk as he approached the hidden mountain
camp of Warin de Grey. His lathered horse blew noisily, sending
twin plumes of steam into the cold night air. Paul, himself
mud-spattered and soaked to the skin, swept off his peaked hat and
sat taller in the saddle as he came adjacent to the first guard
outposts.
The slight increase in his discomfort was worth the
extra effort. For the sentries with their hooded lanterns would no
sooner materialize out of the darkness to challenge than they would
recognize the bedraggled rider and melt back into the shadows.
Guttering torches ahead showed the dim outlines of tents in the
rain. As Paul approached the first tent at the perimeter of the
camp, a young lad wearing the same falcon badge as Paul came
running to take his horse, rubbing sleep from his eyes and looking
at the rider in puzzlement.
Paul nodded greeting as he slid shivering from his
horse, and he scanned the area of torchlight impatiently as he
pulled his drenched and muddy cloak around him.
“Is Warin still about?” he asked, slicking wet hair
out of his face before replacing his hat.
An older man in high boots and hooded cloak had
approached as Paul asked the question, and he nodded gravely to
Paul and signaled the boy to be off with the weary horse.
“Warin is conferring. He asked not to be
disturbed.”
“Conferring?” Paul stripped off his soggy gloves
and began moving along the muddy path toward the center of camp.
“With whom? Whoever it is, I think Warin will want to hear what
I’ve found out.”
“Even at the risk of offending Archbishop Loris?”
the older man asked, raising an eyebrow and smiling with
satisfaction as Paul turned to gape. “I think the good archbishop
is going to support our cause, Paul.”
“Loris, here?” Paul laughed unbelievingly, a
grin splitting his rugged face from ear to ear, then pummeled his
companion enthusiastically on the back. “My brother, you have no
idea of the uncanny good fortune of this night. Now I know
Warin will welcome the news I bring!”
“YOU understand my position, then,” Loris was
saying. “Since Morgan has refused to step down and recant his
heresies, I am forced to consider Interdict.”
“The action you propose is perfectly clear,” Warin
said coldly. “You will cut off Corwyn from all solace of religion,
doom untold souls to suffering and possible eternal damnation
without benefit of sacraments.” He glanced at his folded hands. “We
are agreed that Morgan must be stopped, Archbishop, but I cannot
condone your methods.”
Warin was seated on a small portable camp stool, a
fur-lined robe pulled loosely around him against the chill. In
front of him, a well-tended fire blazed brightly in the center of
the tent, the only portion of the floor not covered by tan ground
cloths or rugs. Loris, his burgundy travel garb stained and damp
from his ride, sat in a leather folding chair to Warin’s right—the
chair usually reserved for the rebel leader himself. Behind Loris
stood Monsignor Gorony in stark black clerical attire, hands hidden
in the folds of his sleeves. He had only just returned from his
mission to Corwyn’s bishop, and his face was inscrutable as he
listened to the exchange.
Warin intertwined long fingers and rested his
forearms lightly against his knees, then stared dourly at the rug
beneath his slippered feet.
“Is there nothing I can say to dissuade you from
this action, Excellency?”
Loris made a helpless gesture and shook his head
solemnly. “I have tried everything I know, but his bishop, Ralf
Tolliver, has not been cooperative. If he had excommunicated Morgan
as I asked him to do, the present situation might have been
avoided. Now I must convene the Curia and—”
He broke off as the tent flap was pulled aside to
admit a travel-stained man wearing the falcon badge on his muddy
cloak. The man swept off his dripping hat and saluted with right
fist to chest, then nodded apologetically in the direction of Loris
and Gorony. Warin looked up distractedly and frowned as he
recognized the newcomer, but he got up immediately and went to the
entryway.
“What is it, Paul?” Warin asked. “I told Michael I
didn’t want to be disturbed while the archbishop was here.”
“I don’t think you’ll mind this particular
interruption when you hear the news, lord,” Paul said, controlling
a smile and instinctively keeping his voice low so that Loris could
not hear. “I saw Morgan on the road to Saint Torin’s just before
dark. He and one companion made camp in the ruins of old Saint
Neot’s monastery.”
Warin grabbed Paul’s shoulders and stared at him in
amazement. “Are you certain?” He was obviously excited, and his
eyes gleamed as he searched Paul’s. “Oh, my God, right into our
hands!” he murmured almost to himself.
“It’s my guess he’s on his way to Dhassa,” Paul
said with a grin. “Perhaps a suitable reception could be
arranged.”
Warin’s eyes glittered as he whirled to face Loris.
“Did you hear that, Excellency? Morgan has been seen at Saint
Neot’s, on his way to Dhassa!”
“What?” Loris stood abruptly, his face livid with
rage. “Morgan on his way to Dhassa? He must be stopped!”
Warin seemed not to hear, had turned to begin
pacing the carpet agitatedly, his black eyes gleaming in
concentration.
“Do you hear me, Warin?” Loris repeated, staring at
Warin strangely when the rebel leader did not answer. “This is some
Deryni trick he has devised to deceive us. He means to disrupt the
Curia tomorrow. With his Deryni cunning, he may even be able to
convince some of my bishops of his innocence. I know he does not
mean to submit to my authority!”
Warin shook his head, a small smile playing on his
lips, and continued to pace. “No, Excellency, I do not think he
means to submit either. But neither is it my intention to allow him
to disrupt your Curia. Perhaps it is time we met face to face,
Morgan and I. Perhaps it is time to discover whose power is
stronger—his accursed sorceries, or the might of the Lord. Paul,”
he turned back to the man in the entryway, “you are to hand-pick a
group of about fifteen men to ride to Saint Torin’s with me before
dawn.”
“Yes, lord.” Paul bowed.
“And once His Excellency leaves, I shall not wish
to be disturbed again unless it is absolutely vital. Is that
understood?”
Paul bowed again and slipped out of the tent to do
Warin’s bidding, but Loris’s expression was perplexed as Warin
turned to face him again.
“I am not certain I understand,” Loris said, taking
his seat and preparing to wait until he received some explanation.
“Surely you don’t intend to attack Morgan?”
“I have been awaiting such an opportunity to
confront the Deryni for many months,” Warin said softly, staring
down at Loris through hooded eyes. “At Saint Torin’s, through which
he must pass if he is to reach Dhassa, there is a way I might be
able to surprise him, even take him captive. At worst, I think he
will be dissuaded from interfering with your Curia. At best—well,
perhaps you will not have to worry about this particular Deryni
again.”
Loris scowled, troubled, then began pleating folds
of his robe between uneasy fingers. “You would kill Morgan without
a chance to repent his sins?”
“I doubt there is hope in the Hereafter for the
likes of him, Archbishop,” Warin said sharply. “The Deryni were
spawn of Satan from the Creation. I do not think salvation is
within their grasp.”
“Perhaps not,” said Loris, standing to confront the
rebel leader with his hard blue eyes. “But I do not think it is our
place to make that decision. Morgan must be given at least a chance
to repent. I would not deny that right to the Devil himself,
despite the many reasons I have to hate Morgan. Eternity is a very
long time to doom a man.”
“Are you defending him, Archbishop?” Warin asked
carefully. “If I do not destroy him while I have the chance, it may
be too late. Does one give the Devil a second chance? Does one
deliberately expose oneself to his power if one has the chance not
to? ‘Avoid the occasion of sin,’ I believe someone once
said.”
For the first time since they had entered, Gorony
cleared his throat and caught Loris’s eye.
“May I speak, Excellency?”
“What is it, Gorony?”
“If Your Excellency will permit, there is a way
that Morgan could be made helpless so that one could ascertain the
worth of his soul. He could be kept from the use of his powers
while it was decided how best to deal with him.”
Warin frowned and stared at Gorony suspiciously.
“How is this to be?”
Gorony glanced at Loris and then continued. “There
is a drug—merasha, the Deryni call it—which is effective only
against those of their race. It muddles their thinking and renders
them incapable of using their dark powers while under its
influence. If some of this merasha could be procured, might it not
be used to immobilize Morgan?”
“A Deryni drug?” Loris’s brows furrowed in
concentration, and he frowned. “I like not the sound of it,
Gorony.”
“Nor I!” Warin spat vehemently. “I will have no
traffic with Deryni trickery to trap Morgan. To do so would make me
no better than he!”
“If your lordship will permit,” Gorony said
patiently, “we are dealing with an unorthodox enemy. Sometimes one
must use unorthodox methods to defeat such a one. It would, after
all, be in a good cause.”
“This is true, Warin,” the archbishop agreed
cautiously. “And it would materially reduce the risk to you.
Gorony, how do you propose to administer this drug? Morgan surely
will not stand by while you drug his drink or use some other
subterfuge.”
Gorony smiled, and his benign and nondescript face
suddenly took on faintly diabolical overtones. “Leave that to me,
Excellency. Warin has spoken of the shrine of Saint Torin as an
ambush spot. I concur. With Your Excellency’s permission, I shall
ride immediately to procure the merasha, and then on to rendezvous
with Warin and his men at the shrine at dawn. There is a certain
brother there who will aid us in setting the trap. You, Excellency,
should return to Dhassa with all haste, so that you may prepare for
the meeting of the Curia tomorrow. If, by chance, we should not
succeed, you would then be obliged to continue with the Interdict
proceedings.”
Loris considered the proposal, weighing all the
ramifications, then glanced sidelong at the rebel leader.
“Well?” he asked, raising an inquiring eyebrow.
“How say you? Gorony stays to aid you in Morgan’s capture, stands
by to hear his confession, should he decide to recant, and then he
is yours, to do with as you see fit. If either of you succeeds,
there will be no need to lower the Interdict on Corwyn. You would
be able to claim the credit for averting disaster in Corwyn—would,
in all probability, be acclaimed as their new ruler. And I—I would
be free of the necessity to subject an entire duchy to the censure
of the Church because of the evil of one man. The spiritual
well-being of the people is, after all, my chief concern.”
Warin stared at the floor thoughtfully for a long
moment, then slowly nodded his affirmation.
“Very well. If you say I shall suffer no taint by
using the Deryni drug to trap Morgan, I am obliged to accept your
word. You are, after all, Primate of Gwynedd, and I must accept
your authority in such matters if I am to remain a true son of the
Church.”
Loris nodded approvingly and got to his feet. “You
are very wise, my son,” he said, signaling Gorony to withdraw. “I
shall pray for your success.”
He held out his hand with the amethyst signet, and
Warin, after a slight pause, dropped to one knee and touched his
lips to the stone. But the rebel’s eyes were stormy as he got to
his feet again, and he kept his eyes averted as he escorted Loris
to the tent’s entrance.
“The Lord be with you, Warin,” Loris murmured,
raising his hand in benediction as he paused in the entry.
Warin bowed his head and crossed himself in
response to the archbishop’s blessing, watching him leave, then
turned and scanned the inside of the tent: rough tan walls, the
wide camp bed covered with a gray fur throw, the folding camp chair
and stool beside the fire, the hide-bound chest against the other
wall, the stark wooden prie-dieu in the corner, its kneeler
gleaming hard and well-worn in the dancing firelight.
Warin walked slowly to the prie-dieu and touched a
heavy pectoral cross and chain draped across the arm rest, then let
his hand tighten convulsively around the mass of silver.
“Have I done right, Lord?” he whispered, clutching
cross and chain to his breast and closing his eyes tightly. “Am I
truly justified in using Deryni aids to accomplish Your purpose? Or
have I compromised Your honor in my eagerness to please You?”
He dropped to his knees on the hard wooden kneeler
and buried his face in his hands, let the cold silver slip through
his fingers.
“Aid me, O Lord, I beseech You. Help me to know
what I must do when I face Your enemy tomorrow.”