The Bishop’s Heir
Dhugal thought about what Istelyn had said as he followed the servant into the bishop’s great hall, his spirits temporarily dampened by the heavy weight of duty, but he had all he could do to keep his wits about him once he sat down to supper. They put him at the far end of the high table with a man-at-arms to watch as well as serve him, and he knew that many others watched for errors as well.
Increasingly conscious of the dangerous charade he played, he kept his peace and did his best to stay wide-eyed and awed-looking in the presence of the Mearan Court. No one seemed to remember that he had been fostered to a finer court in Rhemuth, but if anyone had, Dhugal planned to shrug it off as time ill spent for a borderman. In fact, he had not been at court for several years, so it took little effort to slip into the more relaxed border manners common in his father’s hall: loud and boistrous, hearty in appetite and more uninhibited in behavior than would have been seemly in Rhemuth.
Once he got into his role, however, maintaining it was easy. He was soon introduced to his cousins, Ithel and Llewell, both about his age, and the stunningly beautiful Sidana.
“I don’t suppose you see many ladies to compare with this in Transha,” Prince Ithel said proudly, pouring his sister another cup of ale. “Meara will be the center of the civilized world when we’re done—you’ll see.”
He was just drunk enough to mistake Dhugal’s nervous laughter for awe, Sidana also joining in the mirth.
Only Llewell kept himself aloof, staring furtively at Dhugal when he thought Dhugal didn’t notice and brooding over his cup. Ruthlessly Dhugal set about to win all their confidence, drawing out the taciturn Llewell, hearing accounts of the princes’ martial exploits with feigned awe, and eventually joining in the good-natured teasing which Sidana endured from her older brothers. He was nearly one of them by the time dinner was over.
One of the children, however—not one of the men. Over stronger wine, after the ladies had retired, a possibly intoxicated Sicard drew his stool close beside Dhugal’s and began sounding him out about old Caulay’s politics, hinting that once Caulay was gone, Meara was in a position to better Dhugal’s lot considerably.
Dhugal suspected his uncle was far more sober than he seemed. He hid his true feelings well, however, even pretending pleased interest in Sicard’s offer of a dukedom when the secession was accomplished. He gathered that he gave the right answers. He drank with Sicard and his sons for another hour, somehow managing to consume far less than they thought he did. Ithel, a tipsy Llewell, and the watchful and still sober man-at-arms walked him to his room when the reveling was done, the two princes singing him a noisy salute as future Duke of Transha before giving him a playful buffet through the doorway of his room.
Istelyn was still cold to him, however. Dhugal found him on his knees in the little oratory, but the bishop would not look at him after an initial, disdainful sweep of him from head to toe, turning a contemptuous back on him after that. Nor could Dhugal elicit any verbal response.
He crept under the sleeping furs on his pallet feeling like a snake, tears streaming silently down his cheeks until he at last slipped into uneasy sleep. His dreams edged almost immediately into nightmares:
Judgment Day. Naked and afraid, he cowered at the foot of the great golden Throne of Heaven as a wrathful Istelyn raised one hand toward the Light in mute appeal, stabbing accusingly at Dhugal with the other. Hosts of weeping angels bore the supine form of Kelson before the throne, his body bleeding from a dozen wounds.
Frantic, Dhugal tried to explain. Kelson could not be dead, and Dhugal certainly was not to blame. But the king suddenly lifted his head and raised one gory hand to also point in Dhugal’s direction, the flesh melting from the bones as Dhugal watched in horror, the eyes but empty sockets in a masklike skull.
The nightmare wrenched Dhugal out of sleep. Gasping for breath, he woke in a cold sweat, terrified that it was real, that he had already killed his brother and his king.
But the room was dark, Istelyn no longer kneeling in the oratory but wrapped in his sleeping furs on the other side of the room, his back to Dhugal, only a dark blur in the dim light of dying fire. It had only been a dream after all.
Dhugal’s head pounded from the wine, however, even after the terror of the dream had passed, and he slept no more. Nursing his apprehensions and his hangover, he searched his conscience all through the rest of the night, hands clasped to his lips in intermittent prayer. The hours seemed to crawl until grey dawn at last streaked the sky and he could rise to wash and dress, a much sobered young man.
The object of Dhugal’s prayers also saw the dawn that morning, a day’s hard ride south of Ratharkin. Letting his horse blow at the top of a high pass, Kelson hunched down in his fur-lined cloak and gnawed on a lump of tough brown journey bread, glancing aside as Morgan drew rein beside him. They had been riding this leg of the journey since midnight, and planned no further pause until they reached Ratharkin. The rain had given way to a light snow during the night, with promise of more to come. Behind them, stretching back along the trail by twos, the hundred knights of their escort adjusted girths and bridle buckles and took advantage of the brief stop to eat or sleep or relieve themselves. Conall dozed on his horse behind and to Kelson’s left, nodding in the saddle.
“He has to be alive,” Kelson murmured, so low that even Morgan barely could hear him. “He has to be. If he were dead, I’d know—wouldn’t I?”
“I honestly don’t know, my prince.”
“But we’re closer now!” Kelson protested. “If he’s still alive, shouldn’t I have been able to touch something during the night? We were so close that night in Transha.”
“Until you triggered the shutdown of his shields,” Morgan reminded him gently. “You also had physical contact that time—and you know how much more difficult it is to establish rapport without it. A deliberate shielding—”
“It isn’t deliberate. Not from me.”
“Very well—not from you. But if he is shielded …?”
“Are you saying he isn’t?”
Morgan sighed patiently. “Touchy this morning, aren’t you? Kelson, I haven’t even seen the boy since he was—what?—nine or ten? How would I know?”
Shaking his head, Kelson shrugged again dispiritedly. “That long ago, how would either of us have known? He has shields now, though.”
“Very well. And that’s undoubtedly the reason you haven’t been able to reach him.” Morgan reached across to clap the king’s shoulder in reassurance. “In any case, we should know something soon. We’ll be at Ratharkin before dark.”
“Before dark—yes. But will it be in time?” Kelson wondered.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
They fall into many actions and businesses, and are void of sense, and when they think of things pertaining unto God, they understand nothing at all.
—II Hermas 10:12
The sparse noonday sun turned the stained glass of Saint Uriel’s to darkly glowing jewels, but the cathedral’s glory brought little comfort to Dhugal, kneeling meekly in the choir with the Mearan royal family. The consecration of Judhael as Bishop of Ratharkin was about to begin—and there was nothing Dhugal could do to stop it.
Nor could Henry Istelyn. He had spoken not a word on his awakening, to Dhugal or to the priest sent to inquire a final time whether he would assist with Judhael’s consecration. Later he still stood mute as two deacons vested him, not resisting their ministrations or the cup which a cold-eyed Gorony commanded him to drink when they had done. Dhugal could see the drug’s effect in Istelyn’s eyes even as the two deacons walked him out of the room between them, Gorony following, and thought he knew what they had given him. He could expect no help from Istelyn for many hours, if then.
Dhugal was alone, then. He could depend on no one’s resources but his own. Those kneeling around him claimed to have accepted him as family, and promised much in return for his support, but he knew they did not trust him yet; he had given them no cause to trust him other than the face value o
f his apparent opportunism. His very position in the seating, between Sicard and Llewell, the younger prince, placed him where he could be easily and quietly subdued, should he attempt a disruption despite his word. Dressed in the princely raiment they had brought him that morning—Ithel’s, by the length of the richly embroidered cloak—he did look like one of them. Even his borderman’s braid did not set him much apart, for Sicard and several of his personal attendants wore them as well, even if the two princes did not.
Far at the back of the cathedral, the choir began to chant the entrance antiphon. The nave was packed. Great liturgies of state were always popular with the common folk, with their chance to at least glimpse the rich and the highborn, and the appetites of Ratharkin’s citizenry had been whetted not a fortnight before, when Istelyn had been installed. Dhugal wondered whether they had flocked in such numbers for their rightful lord as they did for a usurper’s kin. But perhaps they did not know.
As the procession entered the church and headed down the aisle, those around Dhugal stood, so he did likewise. Slowly the clergy approached them, led by a thurifer, incense bearer, servers with candles, and then a processional cross and the choir. A second thurifer came after them, followed by the entourages of the various bishops assisting in the ceremony, each preceded by his crozier bearer and followed by two boys with candles. Dhugal could not identify any of the bishops preceding Judhael by sight, but he had been told that one of them was Bishop Calder—brother of his mother and, therefore, another uncle. He had not expected that.
The prelates escorting the new bishop-elect were quite unmistakable, however: the forsworn Creoda, whom Kelson had trusted, and Belden of Erne, the youngish Bishop of Cashien, come up from the south. Dhugal knew him by the arms emblazoned on the back of his white cope, and wondered whether Kelson had suspected his betrayal any more than he had Creoda’s, or the others.
And Judhael himself, yet another of Dhugal’s hitherto only legendary Mearan cousins. The young bishop-elect glanced neither right nor left as he approached the high altar, but a tiny smile of satisfaction played about his lips—unseemly even in a righteous man on his way to his sacring, Dhugal thought. Bishop’s purple showed slightly at throat and hem, but he was vested with a priest’s alb and stole beneath his white cope, hands joined piously before his breast. Dhugal wondered how he had the courage to come before the altar thus, knowing that his election was against the will of the rightful primate and the king. Perhaps God would smite him for his insolence. Dhugal wished He would.
And if not Judhael, then certainly the despised Loris, following in the full habiliments of his usurped office, precious mitre sparkling like a crown above his costly golden cope. Servers bearing candles and his crozier preceded him, and close behind came Istelyn, leaning heavily on the arms of the two deacons Dhugal had seen before. Istelyn appeared still to be moving under his own power, but his eyes were heavy-lidded and vague; Dhugal suspected he would nod off despite any other intentions, once they sat him on his throne. The treacherous Monsignor Gorony brought up the rear.
Dhugal had never seen a bishop made before, so he was not sure when the ceremony departed from the form of the simple Mass he knew. It was difficult to follow the actions of half a dozen priests when he was accustomed to watching only one; and once-familiar words took on odd accents and emphasis when chanted by a full choir. Taking his cues from those around him, he stood and knelt when they did, swallowing his disgust and outrage when the traitorous bishops gathered before the throne Loris had no right to occupy and the chiefest traitor of them all delivered a short instruction on the responsibilities of a bishop. Judhael was then brought before Loris to respond to formal questions.
“Dearly beloved brother,” Loris intoned solemnly, “ancient custom dictates that bishops-elect are to be questioned before the people on their resolve to keep the faith and discharge their duties justly. I therefore ask thee, Judhael of Meara, whether thou art resolved by the grace of the Holy Spirit to discharge to the end of thy life the office entrusted to us by the apostles which is about to be passed on to thee by the imposition of our hands?”
“I am,” Judhael answered.
“And art thou resolved to be faithful and constant in proclaiming the gospel of Our Lord?”
“I am.”
The ritual dialogue went on, but Dhugal had no stomach to listen closely. Whatever promises Judhael made under these circumstances, and however pious a man he might have been before the advent of Loris’ plotting, Dhugal was as certain as he was of his own simple faith that Judhael of Meara was damned for participating in this mockery of holy rite. Why did God not strike him dead? Was there no justice, even in the very House of God?
He feared greatly for Istelyn, too, though it was the man’s body which gave him greater concern than the man’s soul. He could not but admire the man’s courage—forced to condone the affair by the presence of his body but unyielding in his resolve that he would not support it in his heart—but Dhugal was made of more practical stuff. He did wonder whether he himself had taken the easier way, by pretending to go along with those he knew to be wrong—and whether Istelyn was right: that Dhugal was dishonored by going as far as he had gone already. And as for how far he intended to go, if there were opportunity—
“Beloved brothers and sisters,” Loris chanted, standing to face the congregation, “let us pray for this man chosen to provide for the needs of God’s Holy Church. Let us pray that Almighty God in His goodness will fill him with abundant grace.”
Dhugal knelt with the others at that, watching the forsworn Judhael prostrate himself before the altar while the rest of the bishops knelt around him, even Istelyn being propped kneeling at his faldstool to the side. The choir sang a Kyrie, familiar to Dhugal even in its embellished form, then shifted deftly into a litany of angels and saints invoked to bless the man being consecrated.
“Sancta Maria …”
“Ora pro nobis.”
“Sancte Michael …”
“Ora pro nobis.”
“Sancte Gabriel …”
“Ora pro nobis.”
“Sancte Raphael …”
“Ora pro nobis.”
“Sancte Uriel …”
“Ora pro nobis.”
“Omnes sancti Angeli et Archangeli …”
“Orate pro nobis …”
The litany went on and on, the cadences lulling the senses, and Dhugal let his mind drift back to his own dilemma. Though he had given his word he would not try to escape, his duty to Kelson dictated otherwise, despite the terrible oath Loris had made him swear on holy relics. He knew Istelyn did not approve, and counted an oath on oath, regardless of the circumstances under which it was made—and perhaps he was right. Perhaps there was no compromising with evil.
But the greater evil, if Kelson did not learn of what was happening here today, seemed to Dhugal to outweight the niceties of semantics. If he could escape, it was his duty to do so, regardless of his sworn oath. Time enough, if he succeeded, to seek absolution. He would not betray his brother.
Increasingly angry and indignant, he watched the traitor bishops go through the form of consecrating Judhael: the imposition of hands, the anointing with sacred chrism, the giving of ring, mitre, and crozier, the bringing of the gifts of eucharistic bread and wine by his family—Caitrin and Sicard and their children. At least they did not ask him to assist them.
But he was expected to go forward and receive communion with the rest of them, after the new bishop had ordained a deacon and concelebrated Mass with his new brothers. And he was spared receiving it from Judhael only to have Loris himself lay the consecrated wafer on his tongue. Dhugal had all he could do not to choke on it as he returned to his place with folded hands and downcast eyes, hating the hypocrisy which forced him to pretend the same traitor’s game which they played in earnest. He prayed as he had never prayed before that God would forgive him for receiving the Sacrament with as much loathing in his heart as he felt for the treacherous Loris.
The final strains of a solemn sung Te Deum followed them out onto the cathedral porch when it was over. Surrounded by senior clergy and his family, the new bishop paused on the cathedral steps to impart his first episcopal blessings to the people outside. Dhugal was drawn along with them, by virtue of his kinship with Sicard, but surveillance seemed to have lessened in the general excitement of the event and he found it possible to ease into the background, almost blending in with the family’s lesser retainers. The bite of a coming storm was in the wind, so he pulled up the fur-edged hood of his cloak against it and began a casual survey of the cathedral square while he pretended merely to savor the fresh air. Other than to enter the cathedral a few hours before, he had not been out of doors since his arrival in the city.
From what he could see, the physical layout was not entirely impossible. He did not know Ratharkin at all, but movement in and out of the square appeared to be unhampered and unregulated. The south gates of the city lay less than half a mile beyond the mouth of a narrow street opening off west of the square. He had marked the way well in his mind as they rode here this morning, and a possible alternate route through another side street.
Of more important immediate concern was the help or hindrance Dhugal might expect from the milling citizens, many of whom were making their way closer to kneel for the new bishop’s blessing. From what he had overheard, no one seemed to see Judhael’s creation as Bishop of Ratharkin as any encroachment on the recently installed Istelyn, for Istelyn was Bishop of Meara. Besides, was not Bishop Istelyn standing at the new bishop’s side, affirming the new bishop’s legitimacy, by his mere presence? Clearly, Judhael was meant to assist the bishop installed by archbishops and king a fortnight before—and who would have informed them otherwise?
The presence of Caitrin and her family, standing beneath a banner in the Mearan royal colors, only added local interest, for who of the common folk knew what lord had placed his hands between whose? If Meara’s senior royal was here, publicly witnessing the elevation of her nephew in the presence of the king’s duly appointed and enthroned representative, Bishop Istelyn, who could say she was not entitled? And a prelate of Mearan royal blood could not but please most residents of this ancient Mearan city, regardless of the lip-service professed to the Crown of Gwynedd.