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Authors: Lloyd Alexander

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BOOK: The Black Cauldron
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“Fflewddur! Doli!” Taran shouted. “To us! Adaon is wounded!”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 9

 

The Brooch

 

FFLEWDDUR'S HORSE REARED as the Huntsmen turned their attack against him. The death of one of their band had roused the enemy to even greater violence and frenzy. “Take him to safety!” cried the bard. With a mighty leap his steed cleared the bushes and streaked into the forest. The dwarf on his pony followed. With a shout of rage, the remaining Huntsmen pursued them.

Taran seized Lluagor's bridle and, while Adaon clung to the horse's mane, raced toward the edge of the clearing. Eilonwy ran to meet them. Between them, they kept Adaon from falling and tore their way into the undergrowth. Gurgi, leading Melynlas, hurried after them.

They ran blindly, stumbling through brambles and harsh nets of dead vines. The wind had risen, cold and biting as a winter gale, but the forest opened a little, and as the ground dipped, they found themselves in a protected hollow in a glade of alders.

From the back of Lluagor, Adaon raised his head and gestured for them to stop. His face was gray and drawn, his black hair damp on his brow. “Put me down,” he murmured. “Leave me. I can go no farther. How do the bard and Doli fare?”

“They have led the Huntsmen away from us,” Taran answered quickly. “We are safe here for a while. I know Doli can throw them off our trail, and Fflewddur will help him. They'll join us again somehow, I'm sure. Rest now. I'll fetch your medicines from the saddlebags.”

Carefully, they lifted Adaon from his steed and carried him to a hillock. While Eilonwy brought the leather water flask, Taran and Gurgi unharnessed Lluagor and set the saddle under Adaon's head. The wind howled above the trees, but this sheltered spot, by contrast, seemed warm. The driven clouds broke away; the sun turned the branches to gold.

Adaon raised himself. His gray eyes scanned the glade and he nodded briefly. “Yes, this is a fair place. I shall rest here.”

“We shall heal your wound,” Taran replied, hastily opening a packet of herbs. “You'll soon be comfortable, and if we must move, we can make a litter from branches and sling it between our horses.”

“I am comfortable enough,” Adaon said. “The pain has gone and it is pleasant here, as warm as spring.”

At Adaon's words, Taran's heart filled with terror. The quiet glade, the sun on the alders seemed suddenly menacing. “Adaon!” he cried in alarm. “This is what you dreamed!”

“It is much like it,” Adaon answered quietly.

“You knew, then!” cried Taran. “You knew there would be peril for you. Why did you not speak of it before? I would never have sought the Marshes. We could have turned back.”

Adaon smiled. “It is true. Indeed, that is why I dared not speak. I have yearned to be again at the side of my beloved Arianllyn, and my thoughts are with her now. But had I chosen to return, I would ever wonder whether my choice was made through wisdom or following the wishes of my own heart. I see this is as it must be, and the destiny laid upon me. I am content to die here.”

“You saved my life,” Taran cried. “You will not lose your own life for me. We shall find our way to Caer Cadarn and Gwydion.”

Adaon shook his head. He put his hand to his throat and undid the iron clasp at the collar of his jacket. “Take this,” he said. “Guard it well. It is a small thing, but more valuable than you know.”

“I must refuse,” answered Taran with a smile that ill concealed his anxiety. “Such would be the gift of a dying man. But you shall live, Adaon.”

“Take it,” Adaon repeated. “This is not my command to you, but the wish of one friend to another.” He pressed the brooch into Taran's unwilling hand.

Eilonwy had come with water to steep the herbs. Taran took it from her and knelt again beside Adaon.

Adaon's eyes had closed. His face was calm; his hand lay outstretched and open on the ground.

And thus he died.

 

WHEN THEIR GRIEF ABATED

a little, the companions hollowed out a grave, lining it with flat stones. Wrapping him in his cloak, they lowered Adaon into the earth and laid the turf gently over him, while Lluagor whinnied plaintively and pawed the dry ground. Then they raised a mound of boulders. In a sheltered corner of the glade, Eilonwy found handfuls of small flowers still untouched by the frost. These she scattered on the grave, where they fell among the crevices and seemed to spring from the rocks themselves. They remained there silently until nightfall, without a sign of Fflewddur or Doli. “We shall wait for them until dawn,” Taran said. "Beyond that, we dare not stay. I fear we have lost more than one gallant friend.

“Adaon warned that I would grieve,” he murmured to himself. “And so I do, thrice over.”

Too burdened with sorrow, too weary even to set a guard, they huddled in their cloaks and slept. Like his spirit, Taran's dreams were confused, filled with dismay and fear. In them, he saw the mournful faces of the companions, the calm face of Adaon. He saw Ellidyr seized by a black beast that sank its claws into him and gripped him until Ellidyr cried out in torment.

The restless images gave way to a vast sweep of meadow, where Taran ran through grasses shoulder high, desperately seeking a path he could not find. Overhead, a gray bird fluttered and spread its wings. He followed it and a path opened at his feet.

He saw, too, a turbulent stream with a great boulder in the midst of it. On the boulder lay Fflewddur's harp, which played of itself as the wind stirred the strings.

Taran was running, then, through a trackless marsh. A bear and two wolves set upon him and made to rend him with their fangs. Terrified, he sprang into a dark pool, but the water suddenly turned to dry land. The enraged beasts snarled and leaped after him.

He woke with a start, his heart pounding. The night had barely ended; the first streaks of dawn rose above the glade. Eilonwy stirred; Gurgi whimpered in his sleep. Taran bowed his head and put his face in his hands. The dream lay heavily upon him; he could still see the gaping jaws of a wolf and the sharp, white teeth. He shuddered. He knew he must decide now whether to return to Caer Cadarn or seek the Marshes of Morva.

Taran looked beside him at the sleeping figures of Gurgi and Eilonwy. In little more than a day, the companions had been scattered like leaves, and there remained only this pitifully small band, itself lost and driven. How could they hope to find the cauldron? Taran doubted they would even be able to save their own lives; yet the journey to Caer Cadarn would be as perilous as this quest, perhaps more so. Nevertheless, a choice had to be made.

He rose after a time and saddled the horses. Eilonwy was now awake and Gurgi was poking a tousled, twig-covered head from the folds of his cloak.

“Hurry,” Taran ordered. “We'd better get an early start before the Huntsmen overtake us.”

“They'll find us soon enough,” Eilonwy said. “They're probably as thick as burdock between here and Caer Cadarn.”

“We are going to the Marshes,” Taran said, “not Caer Cadarn.”

“What?” Eilonwy cried. "Are you still thinking about those wretched swamps? Do you seriously think we can find that cauldron, let alone haul it back from wherever it is?

“On the other hand,” Eilonwy went on, before Taran could answer her, “I suppose it's the only thing we can do, now that you've got us in the stew. And there's no telling what Ellidyr has in mind. If you hadn't made him jealous over a silly horse...”

“I feel pity for Ellidyr,” Taran answered. “Adaon once told me he saw a black beast on Ellidyr's shoulders. Now I understand a little what he meant.”

“Well,” remarked Eilonwy, “I'm surprised to hear you say that. But it was kindhearted of you to help Islimach; I'm really glad you did. I'm sure you meant well, and that's encouraging in itself. It does make a person think there might be some hope for you after all.”

Taran did not reply, for he was still anxious and oppressed, although the disturbing dreams had already begun to fade. He swung astride Melynlas; Gurgi and Eilonwy shared Lluagor; and the companions swiftly rode from the glade.

It was Taran's intention to head southward, hoping somehow to come upon the Marshes of Morva within another day; although he admitted to himself that he had no more than a vague idea of their distance or exact location.

The day was bright and crisp. As Melynlas cantered over the frosty ground, Taran caught sight of a glittering, dew covered web on a hawthorn branch and of the spider busily repairing it. Taran was aware, strangely, of vast activities along the forest trail. Squirrels prepared their winter hoard; ants labored in their earthen castles. He could see them clearly, not so much with his eyes but in a way he had never known before.

The air itself bore special scents. There was a ripple, sharp and clear, like cold wine. Taran knew, without stopping to think, that a north wind had just begun to rise. Yet in the middle of this he noticed another scent mingled through. He turned Melynlas toward it.

“Since you're leading us,” Eilonwy remarked, “I wonder if it would be too much to expect you to know where you're going.”

“There is water nearby,” Taran said. “We shall need to fill our flasks...” He hesitated, puzzled. “Yes, there is a stream,” he murmured, “I'm sure of it. We must go there.”

Nevertheless, he could not quite overcome his surprise when, after a short while, they indeed came upon a swift running brook winding its way through a stand of rowans. They rode to its bank. With a cry, Taran sharply reined in Melynlas. On a rock in the middle of the stream sat Fflewddur, cooling his bare feet in the water.

The bard leaped up and splashed across to greet the companions. Though haggard and worn, he appeared unwounded. “Now there's a stroke of luck, my finding you--- your finding me, rather. I hate to admit it, but I'm lost. Completely. Got turned around somehow after Doli and I began leading the Huntsmen a chase. Tried to make my way back to you and got lost even more. How is Adaon? I'm glad you managed to...” The bard stopped. Taran's expression told him what had happened. Fflewddur shook his head sadly. “There are few like Adaon,” he said. "We can ill afford the loss. Nor the loss of our good old Doli.

“I'm not sure what happened,” Fflewddur went on. “All I know is that we were galloping at top speed. You should have seen him! He rode like a madman, popping invisible and back again, the Huntsmen racing after him. If it hadn't been for him, they'd have dragged me down for certain. They're stronger than ever, now. Then my horse fell. That is to say,” the bard hastily added, as his harp strings tensed and jangled, “I fell off. Fortunately, by that time Doli had led them well away. At the rate he was going...” Fflewddur sighed heavily. “What has befallen him since then, I do not know.”

The bard bound up his leggings. He had walked all the distance and was quite pleased to be riding once again. Gurgi mounted behind him on Lluagor. Taran and Eilonwy rode Melynlas. The bard's news lowered Taran's spirits further, for he realized now there was little chance of Doli rejoining them. Nevertheless, he continued to lead the companions southward.

Until he should recognize a landmark, Fflewddur agreed this was the only course. “The trouble is,” he explained, “if we veer too far south, we'll simply end up in the sea and miss the Marshes altogether.”

Taran himself could offer no suggestions. Downcast, he gave Melynlas rein and made little effort to guide the stallion. The trees thinned out behind him and the companions entered a wide, rolling meadow. Taran, half-dozing in the saddle, his cloak wrapped around his shoulders, roused himself uneasily. The meadow, with its high grass stretching all around them, was familiar. He had seen it before; where, he could not quite remember. He fingered Adaon's clasp at his throat. Suddenly, with fear and excitement, he understood. His hands trembled at the discovery. Taran glanced overhead. A gray bird circled, glided downward on outspread wings, then flew rapidly across the fields and disappeared from sight.

“That was a marsh bird,” Taran said, quickly turning Melynlas. “If we follow this way,” he added, pointing in the direction of the bird's flight, “I'm sure we'll come directly to Morva.”

“Well done!” cried the bard. “I must say I never would have noticed it.”

“That's at least one clever thing you've done today,” Eilonwy admitted.

“This is not my doing,” Taran said with a puzzled frown. “Adaon spoke the truth. His gift is a precious one.” He told Eilonwy hurriedly about the clasp and the dreams of the night before.

“Don't you see?” he cried. “I dreamed about Fflewddur's harp--- and we found Fflewddur himself. It wasn't all my own idea to go looking for a stream; it just came to me and I knew we would find it. Just now, when I saw the bird--- that was in my dream. And there was another dream, a terrible one, of wolves... That's going to happen, too. I'm sure of it. Adaon's dreams were always true. He told me of them.”

At first Eilonwy was loath to believe him. “Adaon was a wonderful man,” she said. “You can't tell me it was all because of a piece of iron. I don't care how magical it is.”

“I don't mean that,” Taran said. “What I believe,” he added thoughtfully, “is that Adaon understood these things anyway. Even with his clasp, there is much I do not understand. All I know is that I feel differently somehow. I can see things I never saw before--- or smell or taste them. I can't say exactly what it is. It's strange, and awesome in a way. And very beautiful sometimes. There are things that I know...” Taran shook his head. “And I don't even know how I know them.”

Eilonwy was silent for a moment. “Yes,” she said slowly, “I believe it now. You don't even sound quite like yourself. Adaon's clasp is a priceless gift. It gives you a kind of wisdom,” she added, “which, I suppose, is what Assistant Pig Keepers need more than anything else.”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 10

 

The Marshes of Morva

 

FROM THE MOMENT the marsh bird appeared, Taran led the companions swiftly, following without hesitation a path which now seemed clear. He felt the powerful muscles of Melynlas moving beneath him, and guided the steed with unaccustomed skill. The stallion responded to this new touch on the reins with mighty bursts of speed, so much so that Lluagor could barely keep pace. Fflewddur shouted for Taran to halt a bit and let them all catch their breath. Gurgi, looking like a windblown haystack, gratefully clambered down, and even Eilonwy gave a sigh of relief. “Since we've stopped,” Taran said, “Gurgi might as well share out some food. But we'd better find shelter first, if we don't want to get soaked.”

“Soaked?” cried Fflewddur. “Great Belin, there isn't a cloud in the sky! It's a gorgeous day--- taking everything into consideration.”

“If I were you,” Eilonwy advised the puzzled bard, “I should listen to him. Usually, that's not a wise thing to do. But the circumstances are a little different now.”

The bard shrugged and shook his head, but followed Taran across the rolling fields into a shallow ravine. There, they found a wide and fairly deep recess in the shoulder of a hill.

“I hope you aren't wounded,” remarked Fflewddur. “My war leader at home has an old wound that gives him a twinge when the weather changes. Very handy, I admit; though it does seem a painful way of foretelling rain. I always think it's easier just to wait, and every kind of weather's bound to come along sooner or later.”

“The wind has shifted,” Taran said. “It comes from the sea now. It's restless, with a briny taste. There's a smell of grass and weeds, too, which makes me think we aren't far from Morva. If all goes well, we may reach the Marshes by tomorrow.”

Soon afterward, the sky indeed clouded over and a chill rain began pelting against the hill. In moments it grew to a heavy downpour. Water coursed in rivulets on either side of their shelter, but the companions remained dry.

“Wise master,” shouted Gurgi, “protects us from slippings and drippings!”

“I must say,” the bard remarked, “you foretold it exactly.”

“Not I,” said Taran. “Without Adaon's clasp, I'm afraid we'd all have been drenched.”

“How's that?” asked the perplexed Fflewddur. “I shouldn't think a clasp would have anything to do with it.”

As he had explained to Eilonwy, Taran now told the bard what he had learned of the brooch. Fflewddur cautiously examined the ornament at Taran's throat.

“Very interesting,” he said. “Whatever else it may have, it bears the bardic symbol--- those three lines there, like a sort of arrowhead.”

“I saw them,” Taran said, “but I didn't know what they were.”

“Naturally,” said Fflewddur. “It's part of the secret lore of the bards. I learned that much when I was trying to study for my examinations.”

“But what do they mean?” Taran asked.

“As I recall,” put in Eilonwy, “the last time I asked him to read an inscription...”

“Yes,” said Fflewddur with embarrassment, “that was something else again. But I know the bardic symbol well. It is secret, though since you have the clasp I don't suppose it can do any harm for me to tell you. The lines mean knowledge, truth, and love.”

“That's very nice,” said Eilonwy, “but I can't imagine why knowledge, truth, and love should be so much of a secret.”

“Perhaps I should say unusual as much as secret,” answered the bard. “I sometimes think it's hard enough to find any one of them, even separately. Put them all together and you have something very powerful indeed.”

Taran, who had been thoughtfully fingering the clasp, stopped and looked about him uneasily. “Hurry,” he said, “we must leave here at once.”

“Taran of Caer Dallben,” Eilonwy cried, “you're going too far! I can understand coming out of the rain, but I don't see deliberately going into it.”

Nevertheless, she followed; and the companions, at Taran's urgent command, untethered the horses and ran from the hillside. They had not gone ten paces before the entire slope, weakened by the downpour, collapsed with a loud roar.

Gurgi yelped in terror and threw himself at Taran's feet. “Oh, great, brave, and wise master! Gurgi is thankful! His poor tender head is spared from terrible dashings and crashings!”

Fflewddur put his hands on his hips and gave a low whistle. “Well, well, fancy that. Another moment and we'd have been buried for good and all. Never part with that clasp, my friend. It's a true treasure.”

Taran was silent. His hand went to Adaon's brooch, and he stared at the shattered hill slope with a look of wonder.

The rain slackened a little before nightfall. Although drenched and chilled to the bone, the companions had made good progress by the time Taran allowed them to rest again. Here, gray and cheerless moors spread before them. Wind and water had worn crevices in the earth, like the gougings of a giant's fingers. The companions made their camp in a narrow gorge, glad for the chance to sleep even on the muddy ground. Taran drowsed with one hand on the iron brooch, the other grasping his sword. He was less weary than he had expected, despite the grueling ride. A strange sense of excitement thrilled him, different from what he had felt when Dallben had presented him with the sword. However, his dreams that night were troubled and unhappy.

At first light, as the companions began their journey again, Taran spoke of his dreams to Eilonwy. “I can make no sense of them,” he said with hesitation. “I saw Ellidyr in mortal danger. At the same time it was as though my hands were bound and I could not help him.”

“I'm afraid the only place you're going to see Ellidyr is in your dreams,” replied Eilonwy. “There certainly hasn't been a trace of him anywhere. For all we know, he could have been to Morva and gone, or not even reached the Marshes in the first place. It's too bad you didn't dream of an easier way to find that cauldron and put an end to all this. I'm cold and wet and at this point I'm beginning not to care who has it.”

“I dreamed of the cauldron, too,” Taran said anxiously. “But everything was confused and clouded. It seems to me we came upon the cauldron. And yet,” he added, “when we found it, I wept.”

Eilonwy, for once, was silent, and Taran had no heart to speak of the dream again.

Shortly after midday they reached the Marshes of Morva.

Taran had sensed them long before, as the ground had begun to turn spongy and treacherous under the hooves of Melynlas. He had seen more marsh birds and had heard, far in the distance, the weird and lonely voice of a loon. Ropes of fog, twisting and creeping like white serpents, had begun to rise from the reeking ground.

Now the companions halted, and stood in silence at a narrow neck of the swamp. From there, the Marshes of Morva stretched westward to the horizon. Here, huge growths of thorny furze rose up. At the far side, Taran distinguished meager clumps of wasted trees. Under the gray sky, pools of stagnant water flickered among dead grasses and broken reeds. A scent of ancient decay choked his nostrils. A ceaseless thrumming and groaning trembled in the air. Gurgi's eyes were round with terror, and the bard shifted uneasily on Lluagor.

“You've led us here well enough,” said Eilonwy. “But how do you ever expect to go about finding a cauldron in a place like this?”

Taran motioned her to be silent. As he looked across the dreaded Marshes, something stirred in his mind. “Do not move,” he cautioned in a low voice. He glanced quickly behind him. Gray shapes appeared from the line of bushes straggling over a hillock. They were not two wolves, as he had thought at first, but two Huntsmen in jackets of wolf pelts. Another Huntsman, in a heavy cloak of bearskin, crouched beside them.

“The Huntsmen have found us,” Taran went on quickly. “Follow every step I take. But not a motion until I give the signal.” Now he understood the dream of the wolves clearly, and knew exactly what he must do.

The Huntsmen, believing they could take their prey unawares, drew closer.

“Now!” shouted Taran. He urged Melynlas forward and galloped headlong into the Marshes. Heaving and plunging, the stallion labored through the mire. With a great shout, the Huntsmen raced after him. Once, Melynlas nearly foundered in a deep pool. The great strides of the pursuers brought them closer, so close that in a fearful backward glance Taran saw one of them, teeth bared in a snarl, reach out to clutch the stirrups of Lluagor.

Taran spun Melynlas to the right. Lluagor followed. A shout of terror rose behind them. One of the men clad in wolfskin had stumbled and pitched forward, screaming as the black bog seized and sucked him down. His two comrades grappled each other, striving desperately to flee the ground that fell away under their feet. The Huntsman in bearskin flung out his arms and scrabbled at the weeds, growling in rage; the last warrior trampled the sinking man, vainly seeking a foothold to escape the deadly bog.

Melynlas galloped onward. Brackish water spurted at his hooves, but Taran guided the powerful stallion along what seemed a chain of submerged islands, never stopping even when he reached the far side of the swamp. There, on more solid ground, he raced through the furze and beyond the clump of trees. While Lluagor pounded after him, Taran followed a long gully toward the protection of a high mound.

Suddenly he reined in the stallion. At the side of the mound, almost a part of the turf itself, rose a low cottage. It was so cleverly concealed with sod and branches that Taran had to look again to see there was a doorway. Circling the hill were tumbledown stables and something resembling a demolished chicken roost.

Taran began to back Melynlas away from this strange cluster of buildings and cautioned the others to keep silent.

“I shouldn't worry about that,” Eilonwy said. “Whoever lives in there surely heard us coming. If they aren't out to welcome us or fight with us by now, then I don't think anyone's there at all.” She leaped from Melynlas and made her way toward the cottage.

“Come back!” Taran called. He unsheathed his sword and followed her. The bard and Gurgi dismounted and drew their own weapons.

Alert and cautious, Taran approached the low doorway. Eilonwy had discovered a window, half-hidden by turf and grass, and was peering through it. “I don't see anybody,” she said, as the others came up beside her. “Look for yourself.”

“For the matter of that,” said the bard, ducking his head and squinting past Eilonwy, “I don't think anyone's been here for quite some time. So much the better! In any case, we'll have a dry place to rest.”

The chamber, Taran saw, indeed seemed deserted, of inhabitants, at least, for the room was even more heaped up and disorderly than Dallben's. In one corner stood a wide loom with a good many of the threads straggling down. The work on the frame was less than half-finished and so tangled and knotted he could imagine no one ever continuing it.

Broken crockery covered a small table. Rusted and broken weapons were piled about.

“How would you like it,” asked a cheerful voice behind Taran, “if you were turned into a toad? And stepped on?”

 

 

 

 

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