Page 23 of The Forest House


  "You might go and see the Procurator,” his father suggested. "You haven’t met his daughter yet.”

  "And if the gods are kind to me I never will,” Gaius returned abruptly to the present and sat up. His father looked pained.

  "Now, how could it possibly hurt you,” Macellius inquired, obviously holding on to his temper, "just to see the girl? I think she’s already fifteen years old.”

  "Father, I know she’s marriageable. How stupid do you think I am, anyway?”

  His father only smiled. "I haven’t said a word about marrying her.”

  "You don’t have to,” Gaius said sullenly. If he could not have Eilan, he was damned if he would marry any woman in Britain—let alone one his father suggested.

  "You don’t have to be rude,” his father said. "As a matter of fact, I was thinking of spending the holidays in Londinium, and—”

  "Well, I wasn’t,” Gaius said, no longer caring what his father thought of his manners. He did not know where he would go but it would be as far away from Londinium as he could possibly get.

  "I hope you’re not thinking of that British girl again,” Macellius commented, almost, Gaius thought, as if his father were reading his mind. If only he had left it at that. But Macellius went on to say, "I’m sure you’ve had the sense to put her out of your mind for good and all.”

  And that decided him. "As a matter of fact,” he said deliberately, "I was thinking of going to see Clotinus.” It had been after staying with the British lord, after all, that he had first met Eilan, and he could at least enjoy the memories.

  Gaius enjoyed the trip southward, thinking of Eilan, and of Cynric who might have been his friend and was lost to him, through no fault of their own. Spring was advancing like a conquering army, and the weather was beautiful; mornings clear and cold, making him glad to be warmly clad, and days warm, bright and almost dry except for a sprinkle of soft rain late in the day. Clotinus greeted him gladly and welcomed him, and although Gaius knew it was mostly that Clotinus wished to keep on the best of terms with the powerful Romans, he enjoyed it anyway. Gwenna had gone away to be married, so there was no one to trouble him.

  The household of Clotinus, he realized, was not at all a bad place to spend a vacation. The food was good, and even Clotinus’s remaining daughter, only twelve or so, was good company, and sympathetic enough when he told her that his father had tried to arrange a marriage for him with an unknown. She might well have been offering to console him on some subtle level but Gaius remembered—not before time, he thought—what his father had said about entangling himself with native women. If the girl was sending him any wordless signals, he pretended not to notice them.

  But except for prayers dimly directed at Venus, he could think of no way to approach Eilan. In sleep he ground himself against his blankets, moaning, and waking, knew that it was of Eilan that he had dreamed.

  I love her, he thought in self-pity, when the hopelessness of his situation overwhelmed him. It isn’t as if I meant to seduce and abandon the girl. I’d be happy to marry her if I could get the permission of all the people who seem to have made it their business to control our lives. After all, he was twenty-three, and an officer—though a very minor one—in his Legion. If that did not make him old enough to marry at his own will, how old would he have to be?

  One day when he was riding out under the excuse of hunting, he found himself traveling past the burned-out walls that once had been the house of Bendeigid, and he realized he must be somewhere in the vicinity of the Forest House. His leg ached a bit as he remembered the boar pit—it seemed to him very long ago—and the first time he had ever laid eyes on Eilan.

  I cannot stay here…he thought suddenly. Every tree and stone will bring back painful memories. He had thought he could bear it. Certainly seeing old Ardanos from time to time in Deva had not troubled his peace. Perhaps he should ride south to visit his mother’s people. It would not please Macellius, but he did not much care to please his father just now.

  That night before the fire he spoke of it to Clotinus, who urged him to remain another day or two.

  "There will be too many folk on the road till the festival,” Clotinus pointed out. "You should stay until that is past at least and then you can travel in comfort.”

  "People won’t bother me, but perhaps I should not travel in full uniform,” said Gaius. "I will make better time and attract less attention if I wear the common dress of a Briton.”

  "That’s true,” Clotinus grinned sourly. "You are, in a sense, one of us. I daresay I can come up with something that will serve.”

  The next morning his steward produced clothing which fitted Gaius well enough: tan breeches and a tunic dyed green, in new cloth, clean and decent but not particularly luxurious, and with them a voluminous dark brown cloak of heavy wool. "The nights are still chilly, lad,” Clotinus said. "You will need this when darkness falls.”

  When Gaius put it on his Roman identity seemed to fall away.

  "You are no longer Gaius Macellius Severus in this garb.” The old man eyed him oddly. Gaius grinned. "As I think I told you, my mother called me Gawen while she lived; now I look nothing else and I should use only that name.”

  Clotinus was quick to exclaim how well the clothing became him, yet somehow Gaius knew the man regretted the disappearance of his important-looking Roman guest.

  "If I attend the festival, I will be just another Briton,” Gaius went on. "Maybe I should have you send a message to Macellius that I am traveling in disguise!” He suspected his father would not be pleased, and the excuse of gathering information might justify this escapade.

  When Eilan woke on Beltane morning she had the oddest feeling that Gaius was somewhere near. Perhaps, she thought, he is thinking of me. It was Beltane, after all, and all their most significant meetings had been at that festival. It was natural, in any case, that her thoughts should turn to him on this day when, throughout the land, the hearts of men and maidens were turning to love.

  Here in the chaste sanctuary of the House of Maidens she should not be thinking of such things, or if she did, she should view them with the detached benevolence of one who existed far beyond such fleshly cravings. During the winter that had been easy. It seemed to her that the passion with which the Druid of her vision had touched her had been refined to a radiance as pure as an altar flame, and her vows of chastity no great sacrifice.

  But now, when the sap was rising in the trees and every bud was bursting into flower, she was beginning to wonder. When she thought about her vision, her body flamed, and at night she dreamed about lying with a lover who was sometimes the Druid and sometimes Gaius, and sometimes a stranger with the eyes of a king. My body is still untouched, she thought suddenly, but my spirit is virgin no longer. Goddess, how will I bear this sweet pain?

  "Eilan, are you helping Lhiannon prepare for this evening’s ritual?” Miellyn’s voice brought her back to the world and she shook her head. "Then why not come out with the rest of us this morning and enjoy the festival? It will do you good to get some fresh air.”

  "The rest of us” turned out to include Senara, who was entirely delighted to be out of doors. It was a crisp bright day, and in the hedges the hawthorn glowed as if the light of the sun had settled on the boughs. The people were jammed together in a way that made Eilan, used to the peace and quiet after her months of seclusion, tremble. How quickly she had grown accustomed to silence and peace, or perhaps her initiation had altered her. She had always been a little uncomfortable in crowds, but she felt now as if she were walking about without her skin.

  But Senara was in high spirits as she walked between them. She was fascinated by everything: a stall of round cheeses; a table where a seller of glass bangles had spread his glittering wares; and everywhere, the flowers.

  Eilan had not seen so many people since last Beltane when she had met Gaius again. It seemed to her that everyone in Britain or the islands must be here, jostling, laughing, eating, drinking; and every craft from the making
of cakes to rope-dancing.

  "Will Lhiannon be here during the day?” Senara asked.

  Miellyn nodded. "Ardanos will escort her. It is a part of her duty to show herself to the crowds at festivals.” Miellyn paused, and added, "And not the happier part. Between ourselves, I think she is very tired. Every year now, I wonder if it will be her last festival.”

  Seeing Eilan’s face grow pale, she added, "Does it frighten you? Death is as much a part of life as birth; as a priestess you should know that.”

  But the crowds were so thick she could hardly hear what Miellyn was saying. A group of people were watching a man with a dancing bear; Senara cried out that she wanted to see, and they pressed forward for a better view. As people glimpsed the blue linen dresses of priestesses from the Forest House they parted before them till they stood at the ringside, watching the animal dance—or, at least, lumber heavily in a circle on its hind legs, which she supposed was as near as such a beast could come to dancing. The bear’s muzzle was tightly wrapped with rope; she thought it looked miserable.

  "Poor thing,” she said, and Miellyn sighed.

  "Sometimes it comes to me that Lhiannon is like that bear,” the other priestess replied. "Always on display, never speaking her own words.” Eilan gasped at the thought of comparing the High Priestess to a trained animal.

  "And who leads her?” Senara giggled. "Miellyn, you should not say such things.”

  "Why not? Speaking the truth is usually considered to be a virtue,” Miellyn said stoutly, and Eilan was reminded of Caillean. Her grandfather’s treatment of the High Priestess seemed very different from the sovereignty that the Druid of her vision had proclaimed.

  "I speak the truth as I see it; and when I see Lhiannon growing so feeble, I wonder—”

  Miellyn did not finish her sentence, for at that moment the bear dropped to all fours and lumbered directly toward them. Senara shrieked and jumped away, but the crowd pressed in on every side. Eilan pulled back, stepping on a strange woman’s dress, and hearing it rip.

  "Watch where you are stepping!” the stranger said peevishly. Eilan apologized, trying to make herself smaller, and at that moment the bear surged forward again, his leading rope coming loose as someone cried out in alarm. The whole crowd pressed backward and when Eilan recovered her balance Miellyn and Senara had disappeared in the crushing crowd.

  It was the first time in years that Eilan had been alone. She had grown accustomed to the constant chaperonage of the Forest House. Now it occurred to her that the supervision had another purpose than propriety; the presence of her sisters had helped to keep people away both physically and psychically. Alone, the tumult of alien thoughts and emotions buffeted her like a strong wind. She tried to draw strength from the earth for protection, but the strange faces surrounding her filled her with confusion. How did Lhiannon stand walking among the people when she was already half-tranced and opened to the power of the gods? So hemmed in by the crowd and the press of strangers was she that she could see nothing familiar; not even the avenue of trees that led towards the Forest House, nor the mound from which they gave the Oracles.

  Once she glimpsed through the crowd what looked like a familiar blue gown; but when she neared it, it was the cloak of a complete stranger. Another time she thought she spotted a group of priestesses; but there were four of them, and by the time it occurred to her that her companions could have met with some others from the Forest House and that they could all be looking for her they had disappeared in the press of strangers again. The temporary landscape of the fair seemed as strange to her as the Otherworld. This is ridiculous—shielding myself from other people’s emotions was the first thing they taught us! I should simply ask someone, she kept telling herself, but vulnerable as she was, she dared not speak to a stranger; for what would they think of a priestess who could not find the way back to her own dwelling place?

  She moved through the crowds, trying to hold reasonless terror at bay. If she could just restore her defenses, she would ask someone in which direction the Forest House lay. Some day, no doubt, she would look back on this day with amusement, as an adventure. Only at the moment there could be no doubt that she was both lost and terrified.

  A sudden movement of the crowd swept her almost off her feet; she lost her balance and collided with a man in a dark cloak. He murmured something, then started. "Eilan! Is it really you?” Strong hands seized her elbows and a familiar voice demanded, "Where did you come from?”

  And Eilan looked up into the one face which of all the faces in the world she had least expected to see; the face of Gaius Macellius.

  Wordless, she clung to him. He felt her trembling and pulled her closer. Abruptly the confusion around her was stilled by the circle of his arms.

  "Eilan—” he repeated. "I did not dare dream I would find you here!”

  But I did, thought Eilan dimly. When I woke this morning my first thought was that you were near; why did I not trust it?

  His arms tightened around her; and in that moment she forgot all of Caillean’s words of warning, all her own misgivings and fears. She knew only that she was happy.

  She laughed a little shakily. "I’m afraid I lost myself; I was trying to return to the Forest House, or at least to the other priestesses who came to the festival, but I was not sure which way to go.”

  "The road is over there,” he began, and then at her involuntary movement, broke out, "Must you really go back at once? I came to this—this part of the world, only in the hope of seeing you—”

  She could hear, as clearly as if he had spoken, I cannot bear to let her go now!

  "If you go we may never meet again,” he burst out, his voice shaking as he spoke. "I think I could not bear it, to lose you again. Eilan…” His lips hesitated on the sound of her name like a caress; she felt it like a wash of cool fire across her skin. "You cannot leave me…” he murmured into her veil. "It is Fate that has brought you here, alone…”

  Not precisely alone! she thought, smiling at the surging crowds around them. But it was true; only Fate, or the Goddess, could have brought her here, to his arms. Deliberately she set aside the training that had required a sworn priestess in the company of a man who was neither father, grandsire or brother to keep her eyes modestly cast down, and looked at him.

  And what had she thought she would see? What could her eyes tell her, she wondered, seeing how strongly his hair still curled off his forehead, the stubborn jut of the jaw beneath the short beard he had grown on his last campaign, and the naked need in his dark eyes, that her heart did not already know? The inner and outer vision came abruptly together, and she saw at once the pinched face of the boy she had nursed four years ago, the strong features of the man he was becoming, and something else, a face battered by experience and discontent, its young promise being eroded by the years.

  My poor love, she thought, is that what you will be?

  "Must you really go?” he repeated, and she murmured, "No.”

  Gaius swallowed, and lifted her veil back from her forehead. She felt him stiffen then, and realized that he had noticed for the first time the blue crescent drawn between her brows.

  "I am a priestess,” she said quietly and felt him flinch in understanding. But he did not let her go, and she did not pull away.

  The very thought that she might not see him again was beginning to take the light from the sky. No doubt Caillean would have told her to leave him at once; but for once she would not do what the older priestess thought wiser, but what she wanted to do. And whatever came of it, this time, at least, Caillean could not be punished for it.

  Two drovers blundered into them and backed away, eyeing them oddly as they caught sight of Eilan’s blue robes. Gaius frowned and wrapped his brown cloak around her, pulling her veil back up to hide her bright hair.

  "Let’s get you out of this crowd, anyway,” he muttered. His arm was still around her, strong and steadying, and as they walked on, neither knew quite where they were going, only that they were toget
her, and it was away from the crowds.

  "Tell me how came you here. I had no notion that you were in this part of the world.”

  "I think I came to see you,” he began, and Eilan leaned against him, listening.

  "It was Fate, or perhaps my father. At least I was heading the opposite way to where he wanted me to go! Is little Valeria well?”

  "Senara—so we call her in the House of Maidens. Indeed, she is perfectly well, and happy.”

  "I am glad to hear it,” he answered, but she could tell that already Senara was forgotten. "Cynric is proscribed, did you know?” Gaius said then, "I met him before he left, and he told me to stay away from you…”

  His voice faltered. What did he want to hear from her? wondered Eilan. Maybe only the sound of her voice, to know she was thinking of him. Couldn’t he tell? She was aware of him with every sense in her body, every inch of her skin.

  "Maybe he’s right. My father has taken it into his head that I should marry some Roman girl, the Procurator’s daughter in Londinium—”

  "Will you obey him?” Eilan asked carefully, her blood pounding. Marriage! Why had he told her? She knew it changed nothing, but why should the thought give her such pain?

  Somehow they had reached the edge of the fairgrounds. Another step would hide them in the shelter of the hazel trees. Last night, men and girls had wandered these woods to gather greenery and flowers and to lie with each other on the new grass. The forest still remembered; Eilan could feel the memory of their passion like an echo around her, conflicting with the tumult of the fair.

  He turned to face her. "You know I will never marry anyone but you!”

  "I cannot marry,” she answered him. "My life is sworn to the gods…”

  "Then I will never marry anyone,” he said firmly.

  But you will…Even as the irrational burst of happiness surged through her, foreknowledge tolled in Eilan’s awareness. An image flickered in her mind of the woman who would be his wife. And why should Eilan resent her? Was she so selfish that she would wish Gaius to be alone for ever? Or had she wanted him to carry her away, to move heaven and earth to have her released from her vows? What words of men could erase the crescent set between her brows?