Chapter One
The girl looked as if she were merely resting
among the bracken, lying with one arm thrown carelessly behind her
head, the other extended at her side. Her pale, attractive features
seemed relaxed; the eyes, with their dark lashes, were closed; the
lips were partially opened showing fine, white teeth. Her dark hair
formed a sharp contrast to the pallid texture of the skin.
It was only by the thin line of blood, which had
trickled from the corner of her mouth before congealing, and the
fact that her facial skin seemed discoloured, mottled with red
fading into blue, that one could see she was not resting naturally.
From that, together with her torn, bloodstained, dirty clothing, a
discerning observer might realise that something was clearly
wrong.
The youth stood before the body, gazing down at
it without expression. He was thin, wiry, with ginger hair and a
freckled face, but carrying a tan which seemed to indicate that he
was used to being outside in most weathers. His lips were too red
and full, making his features slightly ugly by the imbalance. His
pale eyes were fixed on the body of the girl. He was dressed in a
sleeveless sheepskin jacket, fastened by a leather belt. Thick
homespun trousers and leather leggings gave him the appearance of a
shepherd.
A deep, long sigh came from his parted lips; a
soft whistling sound.
‘Ah, Mair, why? Why, Mair?’
The words came like a curious sob yet his
expression did not alter.
He stayed there with fixed gaze for a few more
moments until the sound of shouting came to his ears. He raised his
head sharply, tilting it slightly to one side in a listening
attitude, and his features changed. A wild, hunted expression came
on his face. People were moving in his direction. Their cries came
clearly to his ears, moving closer and closer through the
surrounding trees. He could hear them beating through the gorse and
bracken.
The youth glanced once more at the body of the
girl and then turned quickly away from the approaching
sounds.
He had gone barely ten or twenty metres when a
blow across the shoulders felled him to the ground. The momentum of
the blow caused him to pitch forward. He dropped on his hands and
knees, gasping for breath.
A burly man had emerged from concealment behind
a tree, still holding the thick wood cudgel in his hand. He was
dark, thickset and full-bearded. He stood, feet apart, above the
youth, the cudgel in his hands, ready and threatening.
‘On your feet, Idwal,’ the man growled. ‘Or I
shall strike you while you are still on your knees.’
The boy looked up, still smarting from the pain
of the blow. ‘What do you want with me, lord Gwnda?’ he wailed. ‘I
have done you no harm.’
The dark-haired man frowned angrily. ‘Don’t play
games with me, boy!’
He gestured back along the path, towards the
body of the girl. As he did so a group of men came bursting through
the trees onto the forest path behind them. Some of them saw the
body of the girl and howls of rage erupted from them.
‘Here!’ yelled the dark-haired man, his eyes not
leaving the youth, his cudgel still ready. ‘Here, boys! I have him.
I have the murderer.’
The newcomers, voices raised with fresh anger
and violence, came running towards the kneeling youth who now
started to sob as he saw his death in their expressions.
‘I swear, by the Holy Virgin I swear I did
not--’
A sharp kick from one of the leading men landed
on the side of the boy’s head. It sent him sprawling and,
mercifully, into unconsciousness because several others among the
new arrivals started to kick viciously at his body.
‘Enough!’ shouted the dark-haired man called
Gwnda. ‘I know you are full of grief and anger, but this must be
done according to the law. We will take him back to the township
and send for the barnwr.’
‘What need have we of a judge, Gwnda?’ cried one
of the men. ‘Don’t we have the evidence of our own eyes? Didn’t I
see Idwal and poor Mair with voices raised in fierce argument only
a short time ago? There was violence in Idwal, if ever I saw
it.’
The black-bearded man shook his head. ‘It shall
be done according to law, Iestyn. We will send for the barnwr, a learned judge from the abbey of Dewi
Sant.’
The monk was young and walked with that
confident, rapid stride of youth along the pathway through the
encompassing forest. He wore his winter cloak wrapped tight against
the early morning chill and his thick black-thorn staff was carried
not so much as an aid to walking but to be turned, at a moment’s
notice, into a weapon of defence. The woods of Ffynnon Druidion,
the Druid’s well, were notorious for the highway thieves who lurked
within their gloomy recesses.
Brother Cyngar was not really worried, merely
cautious in spite of his confident gait. Early dawn on this bright
autumnal day was, he felt, a time when all self-respecting thieves
would still be sleeping off the excessive alcohol of the previous
evening. Surely no thief would be abroad and looking for victims at
such an hour? Not even the infamous Clydog Cacynen who haunted the
woods; Clydog the Wasp, he was called, for he stung when least
expected. A notorious outlaw. It was fear of meeting Clydog Cacynen
that caused Brother Cyngar to choose this hour to make his way
through the wood, having spent the previous night at a woodsman’s
cottage by the old standing stone.
There was frost lying like a white carpet across
the woodland. Behind the soft white clouds, a weak winter’s sun was
obviously trying to extend its rays. The woodland seemed
colourless. The leaves had fallen early for there had been several
cold spells in spite of its not being late in the season. Only here
and there were clumps of evergreens such as the dark holly trees
with the females carrying their bright red berries. There were also
some common alders with their brown, woody cones which had, only a
short time before, been ripened catkins, and a few silver birch.
But everything was dominated by the tall, bare and gaunt sessile
oaks.
Now and again, along the track that he was
following, Brother Cyngar espied crampball clinging to fallen
trunks of ash; curious black and inedible fungi which he had once
heard prevented night cramp if placed in one’s bed before sleeping.
Cyngar had the cynicism of youth and smiled at the thought of such
a thing.
The woods were stirring with life now. He saw a
common shrew, a tiny brown creature, race out of a bush in front of
him, skid to a halt and sniff. Its poor eyesight was made up for by
its keen sense of smell. It caught his scent at once, gave a
squeak, and then disappeared within a split second.
As it did so, high above came the regretful call
of a circling red kite who must have spotted the tiny, elusive
creature even through the canopy of bare branches and, had it not
been for Brother Cyngar’s appearance, might have taken it as its
breakfast.
Only once did Brother Cyngar start and raise his
stick defensively at a nearby ominous rustling. He relaxed almost
immediately as he caught sight of the orange-brown fur coat with
white spots and broad blade antlers that denoted a solitary fallow
deer which turned and bounded away through the undergrowth to
safety.
Finally, Brother Cyngar could see, along the
path ahead of him, the trees gradually giving way to an open
stretch of bracken-strewn hillside. He began to sense a feeling of
relief that the major dark portions of the wood were now behind
him. He even paused, laid down his stick and took out his knife as
he spotted an array of orange at the edge of the footpath. He bent
down and carefully inspected the fungus with its white, downy
underside. It was not difficult to recognise this edible species
which many ate raw or soaked in honey-mead. The little harvest was
too good to miss and Brother Cyngar gathered it into the small
marsupium he wore on his belt.
He rose, picked up his stick again and began to
walk on with the renewed energy which comes with knowing one’s
objective is almost in sight.
On the far side of the next hill lay the
community of Llanpadern, the sacred enclosure of the Blessed
Padern, where nearly thirty brothers of the faith lived and worked
in devotion to the service of God. It was to this community that
Brother Cyngar was travelling. He planned to seek hospitality
there, an opportunity to break his fast, before continuing his
journey on to the famous abbey of Dewi Sant on Moniu, which some
Latinised as Menevia. The abbey was the authority over all the
religious communities of the kingdom of Dyfed. Brother Cyngar had
been entrusted with messages for Abbot Tryffin by his own Father
Superior. He had left on his journey shortly after noon on the
previous day and hence his overnight stop at the woodsman’s
cottage, after completing nearly twenty kilometres of his journey,
before venturing through the notorious woods of Ffynnon Druidion.
He had left the woodsman’s cottage too early for breakfast but,
knowing that the hospitality of Llanpadern was a byword among
pilgrims journeying south to Moniu, he did not mind delaying his
morning meal.
Brother Cyngar walked entirely at ease now. The
sun, while not exactly breaking through the clouds, was warm enough
to dispel the early morning frost. Birds wheeled and darted about
the skies on their many food-gathering tasks and the air was filled
with their cacophony; plaintive, angry, argumentative, depending on
their natures.
He came over the shoulder of the bare rocky hill
called Carn Gelli. On its height stood a heap of stones, one raised
upon another, to denote an ancient grave, which gave the place its
name. Brother Cyngar halted and, from the vantage point, peered
down into the valley beyond. A short distance below him was the
grey stone complex of buildings. Smoke drifted reassuringly from a
central chimney. He walked down the pathway, his speed increasing,
his body propelled more by the steepness of the path than a desire
to reach the gates in a hurry.
As he followed the path to the main gates of the
community he noticed, surprisingly, that they stood open and
deserted. This fact made him frown. It was unusual, even at this
early hour, for it was the custom of the brethren of Llanpadern to
be out in the surrounding fields, beginning their work at first
light even on such a cold autumnal day as this one. There was
usually some activity about the gates and the fields.
He came to a halt at the gates, compelled by a
sudden feeling of unease. No one stood in attendance. After a
moment’s delay, he went to the wooden pole to ring the bronze bell
which hung there. The chime echoed eerily but there was no movement
in answer; no responding sound followed the dying peal; there was
no sign of anyone beyond.
Brother Cyngar waited a few moments and then
caused the bell to send out its clanging demand again, this time
ensuring that its peal was long and insistent. Still there was no
response.
He moved slowly inside the deserted courtyard
and looked round.
Everywhere was as quiet as a tomb.
In the centre of the courtyard stood a great
pyramid of branches and logs piled high as if waiting to be ignited
into an immense bonfire. The dry wood was structured so that it
stood fully four metres or more in height. The young man rubbed his
chin thoughtfully as he examined it.
He suppressed the shiver that threatened to send
its icy finger down his spine. He marched across the quadrangle to
the chapel door and swung it open. The chapel was shrouded in
gloom, in spite of the brightness of the morning. Not even the
altar candles were alight. He could discern nothing among the
shadows.
Having been a visitor to the community on
several occasions, Brother Cyngar knew the layout of the
community’s buildings, and turned through a small door which he
knew led to the main living quarters. The brethren shared one large
dormitory that now stretched before him. The beds were all neat,
tidy and undisturbed. Their occupants had either risen very early
and made them or not slept in them at all during the previous
night.
Brother Cyngar’s lips had become slightly dry
and his feeling of disquiet began to grow as he walked between the
rows of empty beds. Some unconscious prompting caused him to move
lightly on the stone-flagged floors, trying not to let his leather
sandals make a sound.
Beyond the dormitory was the refectory, the
communal dining room.
It was deserted, as he now expected it would be.
But he was not expecting the manner of its desertion. It was lit by
several flickering, smoking candles and, to his amazement, Brother
Cyngar observed that each place was laid, each platter contained a
half-eaten meal. By these platters, knives and spoons were laid
down as if the eater had been disturbed. Jugs and beakers
containing water and wine stood at each place setting.
A sound made him start nervously and drop his
black-thorn stick with a loud clatter on the floor. A few feet away
on the table, a black rat dragged a piece of food from a platter
and went bounding away with it. With mouth firmly compressed to
keep his lips from trembling, Brother Cyngar bent down to retrieve
his stick.
There seemed no disarray anywhere to explain why
the meal appeared to have been deserted halfway through the eating
of it. Stools and benches were pushed back as if everyone had
risen, but he saw nothing that indicated any confusion or panic. He
walked up and down the tables searching for something to account
for the scene that met his incredulous eyes.
He realised that the candles were burning low
and deduced that they must have been alight for a long time before
he arrived because, in one or two places, the candle grease had
spilled onto the wooden table top. This must have been the evening
meal and, so it seemed to Brother Cyngar, at a given moment, before
the meal had ended, the brethren had simply stood up, leaving
everything in an orderly manner, and . . . and vanished! Brother
Cyngar exhaled sharply. This time he could not suppress the
shiver.
Steeling himself, he turned and began to explore
the rest of the buildings of the community, one by one. The
quarters of the Father Superior were neat and tidy, the bed not
slept in, and, again, there was no sign of any commotion to account
for the disappearance of the occupant. The tiny scriptorum was also undisturbed, the books arranged
neatly on the shelves. Outside, across the quadrangle, in the
storerooms, nothing was out of place, and when Brother Cyngar went
to the animal sheds he found all in order.
It was only when he had returned halfway across
the flagged courtyard on his way back to the chapel that he
realised the significance of this. There were no animals in the
barns; no chickens, no pigs, no cows nor sheep, not even one of the
two mules which he knew the community kept. They, like the
brethren, had vanished.
Brother Cyngar prided himself on being a logical
young man and, having been raised as a farmer’s son, he was not
frightened of being alone. He was not one given to easy panic. All
the possible facts and explanations should be examined and
considered before one gave way to fear. He walked carefully to the
main gate and gazed intently at the ground in search of any signs
indicating a mass exodus of the community with their animals. Cows
and mules in particular would leave tracks in the earth
outside.
There was no sign of the earth being
unnecessarily disturbed by the passage of men or animals. He did
note some deep cart ruts, but that was not unusual. Plenty of local
farmers traded regularly with the community. The roadways to the
north and west were stony, so the tracks soon vanished. He could
see a few traces of the flat-soled sandals used by the monks but
there were few other signs. Without an alternative to consider, he
return to the conclusion that the community had vanished like a
wisp of smoke dispersed in the wind.
At this point, Brother Cyngar felt the
compulsion to genuflect and he muttered a prayer to keep all evil
at bay, for what could not be explained by Nature must be the work
of the supernatural. There was no temporal explanation for this
desolate scene. At least, none he could think of.
Could Father Clidro, the Father Superior of
Llanpadern, and his fellow monks have stood up in the middle of
their meal, left their candles burning, gathered all the animals
and then . . . then what? Simply disappeared?
As a conscientious young man, Brother Cyngar
forced himself to return to the refectory and extinguish the
candles before going back to the main gates. He gave a final glance
around and then swung them shut behind him. Outside, he paused,
uncertain of what he should do next.
He knew that a few kilometres to the north lay
the township of Llanwnda. Gwnda, the lord of Pen Caer, was supposed
to be a man of action. Brother Cyngar hesitated and wonder if he
should proceed in that direction. But, as he recalled, there was no
priest at Llanwnda, and what could Gwnda and his people do against
the supernatural forces of evil which had caused the brethren of
Llanpadern to vanish?
He concluded that there was only one thing to
do.
He should continue as quickly as possible to the
abbey of Dewi Sant. Abbot Tryffin would know what to do. He must
inform the abbot of this catastrophic event. Only the brethren of
the great abbey founded by Dewi Sant had the power to combat this
enchantment. He found himself wondering what evil sorcery had been
unleashed on the poor community of Llanpadern. He shivered almost
violently and began to hurry away from the deserted buildings,
moving swiftly along the stony road towards the southern hills. The
bright, autumnal day now seemed gloomy and heavy with menace. But
menace of . . . of what?