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The Sword of Aradel

The Sword of Aradel

By Alexander Key

 

1

 

Fight

at

St. Martin's

 

BRIAN, THE PALE-HAIRED STABLEBOY AT St. Martin's Abbey, crawled from his bed of straw in the hayloft that morning with an unpleasantly cold feel­ing in the pit of his stomach. The feeling was a sure sign of coming trouble, and he knew from unhappy experience there was very little he could do to avoid it. Unless, of course, he could find the courage to run away.

As he felt his way down the ladder in the predawn darkness, he wondered what his chances would be if he actually did leave the abbey and go out into the world. Surely he was old enough to try it now. And, thanks to the secret instruction of Brother Benedict, he could read and write in the three languages, and probably hold his own with any of the titled students at the abbey school. Only, where could he go? What could he do?

Outside in the courtyard he dusted the straw from his ragged jerkin, stopped just long enough at the watering trough to wash his face, and then hurried over to the hidden corner between the smithy and the great outer wall. Brother Benedict had not yet arrived. Turning, he peered through the shrouding curtain of grapevines at the buildings across the courtyard.

The abbey was like a walled village, complete in itself, with workshops and storehouses. In the cen­ter, surrounding the spired cathedral, were cloisters, dormitories, refectories, two kitchens, and a chapel. At this hour all the buildings were dim silhouettes against an uninviting sky that was becoming streaked with an angry red.

The sight of the sky did nothing to ease Brian's state of mind. Suddenly he hated the abbey and his lowly station, and more than ever he hated the students, all of them the arrogant sons of noblemen who thought nothing of kicking him around like a worthless slave. Even some of the monks, who treated the peasants as if they owned them, were more brutal than pious, and Brian was seldom with­out a bruise to remind him of the fact.

“But why?" he wondered aloud. "Has it always been this way? What right have the high to beat the low?"

"No right," came the cool and curiously decisive voice of Brother Benedict. "By my faith, no right whatever."

Brian spun about and saw the burly form of the monk emerging from the smithy. In the reddening dawn light he could just make out the broad face with its scars, as from old sword cuts, and the tight mouth as grim as a river turtle's. As much as Brian loved him, he couldn't shake the belief that Brother Benedict was not entirely the man of God that he appeared to be. Under that gray robe was a very strange person. Who would dream that a master of the sword and quarterstaff would also be a master of languages and philosophy? Yet no one seemed aware of these attainments, for Brother Benedict managed to remain quietly in the background, and was known only as the abbey blacksmith.

"It has not always been this way," the monk added. "Nor will it continue for long. But I speak too much. Let us get on with our practice before this place awakens."

Brian caught the quarterstaff his teacher flung to him, then crouched, holding the seven-foot length of oak firmly on either side of the center. It was the poor man's weapon of defense, and one skilled in its use could down a swordsman. He tried to parry the blows that were now rained upon him, but this morning his heart was not in it.

Brother Benedict stopped. "What's wrong, son?"

"It—it's that awful feeling again. Something's go­ing to happen. You know how it was last time."

His teacher nodded. That last time Brian had been too slow in drawing water for the abbot's horse, and the prior had had him tied up by the thumbs till dark and given twenty lashes.

Brian added dispiritedly, "I—I just can't take any more of that. I've got to run away.”

Brother Benedict shook his head. "Not yet, son. I know how hard it is for you. But remember, all things change. You must be brave and suffer it a while longer."

"I don't see why."

“There are reasons.”

“What reasons?"

"You will learn in time."

“That's what you always tell me when I ask ques­tions. I don't understand why you even bother with me.”

"I bother with you, my son, because I happen to know you are worth it. You are worth a great deal of bother."

"But—but I'm nobody! You know that."

"Never say you are nobody. Everyone is a person, private within himself. That makes everyone some­body."

The monk reached under the vines and produced a pair of rusty practice swords. “Let us work with these a bit, then you'd better see to your chores."

Brian took one of the weapons and began a ritual cut and thrust under his teacher's direction, but part of his mind was suddenly asking questions. Why was Brother Benedict always so secretive? Of course, these were not the best of times, and if you valued your head, you kept a guard on your tongue. Yet he was certain at last that his friend was involved in a matter that could be highly dangerous. What could it be? Not only that, but it was beginning to seem that Brother Benedict knew something about him that he didn't know himself.

But that was impossible, he thought. He was just another woodcutter's son; his father, old Harle, used to get wood for the abbey. The hut where he was born was hardly a league away; he could re­member every ugly detail of it. No, there was noth­ing in the life of Brian, son of poor Harle, that could be of the least interest to anyone. And yet . . .

There was that strange little strawberry girl.

He had a sudden sharp vision of the small cring­ing figure in the ragged dress and shawl who had been bringing wild strawberries in to sell to the monks. He had supposed she was some peasant's child, but yesterday when she stopped at the smithy—she always managed to have a talk with Brother Benedict when no one was watching—a curious thing had happened. A nightingale had flown down and alighted on her hand. She had whispered to it, and the bird had sung a quick little song, and then had flown away.

Brian remembered his surprise, and then the shock that had gone through him as the nightingale flew off. For the girl had raised her head, and her shawl had slipped back and exposed her long golden braids. Nor did she have a peasant's face—it was far too bright and lively and full of mischief. He'd been carrying water from the well to fill the watering trough, and had stopped and stared. At the same moment her quick green eyes had caught sight of him, and she had smiled. Then she had jerked the shawl back in place and turned away, becoming the subdued little peasant figure she had seemed at first.

Brian's sword was suddenly flicked from his grasp, and Brother Benedict stepped back, shaking his head.

"No, my son! No! The first rule of self-defense is never to let your attention stray from your oppo­nent. What were you thinking about, anyway?"

"That—that girl who brings the strawberries," he admitted. "Who is she?"

The monk's hard face broke into a rare smile. "You are rather young to have girls on your mind. And she's hardly more than an infant."

"She—she's no infant," Brian retorted. "I saw her face yesterday, and she must be nearly as old as I am.  And that's not all-" He paused suddenly as a startling thought came to him. Yesterday he'd been close enough to overhear part of what she'd said to Brother Benedict. It wasn't the words he remem­bered so much as the language she'd used.

"She wasn't talking to you in the local French," he said. "It was Latin—good Latin. The kind we use.”

Brother Benedict raised his eyebrows. "Well?" he said mildly.

"But—but the peasants hardly know it."

"You're a peasant. Yet you are fluent in Latin. You have a gift for languages—I've taught you sev­eral. And you forget that Latin is universal—it is spoken by the educated all the way from Rome to the green isles of Britain."

Brian chewed on his lip a moment, then managed a grin. "You're trying to lead me around by the nose," he accused. "Let's get back to that strawberry girl. She's no ordinary person. She's pretending to be what she isn't. And she knows something about me.”

He paused again, thinking of the quick little smile she'd given him. A knowing smile. It had conveyed a world of information. “She knows a lot about me, he went on. "She practically told me so. Who is she?"

“You are very discerning, my son: I'm sorry.”

"Please. I—I've got to know about her."

"She is one of us," the monk said quietly. "That is all I can tell you now.”

Brian started to protest, but Brother Benedict held up his hand. "The less you know of some matters, my son, the safer you will be. I don't want you to die before your time, like your father."

Brian could only stare at him, mouth half open. So it was true. Something was going on. And he, Brian, son of poor old Harle who had lived in want and died ignobly in the last revolt, was in some unknown way concerned in it. Was another peasants' revolt being planned?

He was beginning to hear sounds of life around him and was all at once aware that the ugly red of dawn had spread entirely across the sky. It was a frightening sight. The chill in the pit of his stomach had become a cold clutching, and he was tempted to gather up his few possessions and leave in spite of being urged to remain.

“You'd better get that watering trough filled," Brother Benedict reminded him. "If the prior happens to come out before breakfast…”

Brian sighed and started around the smithy for the well. But he had taken only a few steps when he was stopped in his tracks by the sudden blare of trumpets somewhere in the distance. The sound seemed to come from the edge of the forest where the road from the castle ran past the fields and the sprawling village.

He had heard the signal of the trumpets often enough to know that it announced the arrival of visitors of importance who had come from the cas­tle. But trumpets at this hour? It was unheard of. He had about decided that his ears had tricked him when the trumpets sounded again, nearer, louder, demanding. It was an order for the drawbridge that spanned the moat to be lowered immediately.

St. Martin's Abbey came abruptly to life. Gray-robed monks and velvet-clad students of the abbey school, some of them still hastily pulling on their clothing, swarmed into the courtyard. There were shouts from the lookout tower above the gate, and then Brian could hear the creaking of the blocks as the drawbridge was lowered.

"What—what could have happened?" he asked, almost in a whisper.

Brother Benedict growled an oath that was decid­edly unmonklike. “Something devilish," he mut­tered. "You may bet on it. And you may bet all the gold in Aradel that Albericus is behind it."

Brian had never seen the hated Albericus, but the very name of that witch-hunting monk brought a chill to his spine. Then he heard the quick clatter of hooves as an advance messenger raced over the drawbridge. It was a page wearing the green and gold of Aradel.

The page drew rein in the center of the courtyard. He slid from the saddle, breathless, and managed to gasp, "The duke is dead!" Then, catching his breath, he cried out, "Long live the duke!"

There was a moment of stark silence followed by a quick murmuring. Suddenly wild shouts broke out among the students as every eye in the courtyard turned toward a gangling youth with a long jaw and a thin mouth. Until now, he had been merely Rupert of Cloyne. All had known there was a chance—if an evil temper did not bring him to an early end—that he might possibly become the next duke. But only, of course, if his uncle, the crown-seeking Frederick, happened to die before having a son. No one dreamed it would actually happen this very spring.

Beyond the abbey walls came a quick, final flourish of the trumpets. Now horsemen began pouring across the bridge—men-at-arms in glittering coats of mail, barons in bright plumes and velvet, pages and squires bearing pennants and banners; and in their lead, on a great black mule, a towering grim-faced monk in a black robe.

Brian chilled as he stared at the black-robed figure, then all his attention went to the silken cush­ion the monk carried across his saddle. On the cush­ion, gleaming with jewels, lay a sword. At the sight of it his eyes widened and he felt a curious prickling at the back of his neck. Was that the fabled sword he'd heard so much about? The magical sword of the fairy folk, said to have been forged ages ago for the first ruler of Aradel?

In spite of some of the whispers he'd heard, it almost had to be. All the rulers of Aradel had worn that sword, and all men respected it. There was power in that ancient blade, and a puppet like Fred­erick couldn't have ruled without it.

Now Frederick was dead, and here was Albericus, who pulled all the strings, bringing the sword to Rupert. But why at this hour?

"They must have been riding half the night to get here," he whispered to Brother Benedict.

"Of course. Look at them! They make a show, but they are tired and hungry. Yet if they were twice as tired, they'd do no tarrying here. Albericus will have them racing back to Rondelaine the moment he gets Rupert on a horse."

"But—but why the haste?"

"So that black-robed Lucifer can keep his claws on the kingdom. He's lost his puppet, and he must install another in a hurry. If he doesn't, there'll be trouble."

"You mean the peasants might rise against the barons again?"

His teacher grunted. "Not exactly, but surely they'd rise against those you see yonder. They're the ones Albericus made. And if that happens, another outsider will come in and claim Aradel."

Brian nodded, though he did not entirely under­stand. All he knew of Aradel and the world was what he had learned here in the abbey, and from the books Brother Benedict secretly brought him from the library. It seemed he ought to know far more about some things than he did, but his memory had a curious way of failing when he tried to think back beyond a certain time.

Frowning, he peered through the grapevines at the assembly that was drawing up in a semicircle in the courtyard. The riders dismounted, and now he saw the tall Albericus, who wore a curious headless cross at his waist, slowly approach young Rupert with the cushioned sword in his outstretched hands. Rupert, visibly swelled, stepped forward and grasped the fabled weapon and buckled it about his waist. Finally everyone knelt to show allegiance to the new ruler.

All at once Brian became aware that several of the horses, reins dangling, had edged over to the watering trough and were beginning to drink thirstily.  The trough was fast emptying. Then he was hor­rified to see a long-nosed monk moving around the edge of the assembly, heading for the stable. It was the prior.

"I—I've got to fill that trough!" he whispered, and started to slip through the vines.

Brother Benedict jerked him back, “No! Not the way you are. You must hide that pale hair—it could be the death of you!" The burly monk slipped into the smithy and quickly returned with an old leather cap in his hands. "Pull this down over your ears," he ordered. "Let no one see what lies under it,"

It was an odd thing for Brother Benedict to insist on, but there was no time to ask the reason for it. Then the sudden memory of his last beating drove all questions from his mind. He jerked the shapeless cap over his head and ran out to the well.

No one noticed him at first. He managed to draw two buckets of water and pour them into the trough, and was hurrying across the corner of the courtyard with the third when the prior and another monk came from the stable with young Rupert's horse.

Brian saw the prior and the horse, and he glimpsed the swaggering Rupert moving impa­tiently forward to take the reins, He veered quickly to avoid Rupert, and failed to note the little move­ment of one of the titled students who slyly thrust a foot in his path. It was an old trick, too often used on him.

He tripped and went sprawling. The bucket slammed out of his grasp, and most of its contents splashed over Rupert's bright hose and pointed boots.

Brian got up cringing, stammering apologies. He was met instantly by a furious blow to the head that knocked off his cap and sent him reeling to the cobblestones.

For brief seconds he was aware of the great, gaunt Albericus staring at him, merciless eyes regarding him oddly. Then he saw the convulsed face of the advancing Rupert. He could hear Rupert's curses, and almost feel the vicious kicks that in the next breath would send him writhing in pain. But in that tiny moment out of time something turned over in him. Old hates came to a boil. Even if it killed him, he knew he had taken all he would ever take from Rupert or his kind.

Just before the first kick reached him he rolled aside and sprang up with clenched fists and smashed Rupert in the mouth. It did little more than bring gasps from the onlookers and send the much stronger Rupert staggering back in a fury, reaching for the fabled sword.

Brian had not counted on this. Fear went through him. The sword was invincible. "For shame!" he cried. “That sword has never been drawn against a peasant of this land, or an unarmed person. For shame!”

"That sword is for destroying enemies!" Al­bericus said harshly. "Use it! Run the rascal through!"

Brian leaped back as the shining blade flashed toward him. He looked wildly around for an avenue of escape, but other swords suddenly barred the way. He was praying for some means of defense when one came sailing magically through the grape­vines. It was a quarterstaff.

He caught it expertly and immediately attacked, more in desperation than in hope. How could he possibly triumph over that incredible weapon? Yet, even if he was fated to die this morning, he was grimly determined to take his opponent with him.

But after only two quick passes with the staff he realized with a shock that something was wrong. Either the sword had lost its magic, or Rupert had no skill whatever in handling it.

Hope rose in him. He attacked furiously with all his strength, driving Rupert back. Suddenly one end of the whirling staff caught the sword on the hilt and sent it flying. While it was still in the air he managed to give Rupert a resounding crack on the head that instantly crumpled him.

For a moment Brian stood trembling, hardly be­lieving what he had done. Then, in a language he did not know he knew, someone shouted to him to run.

He turned and made a dash through the encir­cling men-at-arms.

 

 

2

 

Merra

 

IT WAS ONLY BECAUSE EVERYONE IN THE COURT­YARD was in a momentary state of shock that Brian was able to reach a corner of the smithy without being stopped. The line of knights and squires, who had been closing in on him during the fight, could have cut him down easily, for their swords were already drawn. But they seemed paralyzed by his incredible victory. Not only was their new ruler lying motionless before them, but the invincible sword of Aradel had been vanquished by a ragged stableboy with a quarterstaff.

Brian's first impulse was to race for the main gate under the drawbridge tower. If he could get through and make it across the drawbridge, there was a good chance he could reach the fringe of forest beyond the road.

But he had taken only a few strides when he heard Albericus giving orders. "Close the gate and raise the bridge!" the gaunt monk shouted. "Shoot him, you bowmen! Kill the wretch! Don't let him get away!"

A whistling arrow made Brian whirl in his tracks. He dodged behind the smithy, saw no one, and began running as fast as he could along the rear of the stable. There was a door ahead where a part of the stable joined the abbey wall. If he could get through it without being seen, he should have time to catch his breath while he planned his next move.

The door opened almost in his face, and a big hand caught his arm and jerked him inside. It was Brother Benedict.

"Follow me," said his burly friend, and began running with surprising speed past a row of stalls and across an open storage area beyond. At the rear of it, where the roof met the abbey wall, the monk slid behind a stack of heavy timbers leaning against the masonry. Here in the shadows Brian made out a small wooden door,

"Better leave your staff," he was advised. "You will not need it, and it will just be in your way.”

With some reluctance Brian thrust his quarterstaff among the timbers, and followed his guide. After the door was secured behind them they were in total darkness.

"We have fifty paces to go," Brother Benedict said. "Hold to my robe, and keep in step with me."

Wondering, Brian did as he was told. They seemed to be in a narrow passageway that led in a long curve through the wall. He had heard that this portion of the abbey had once been a fort, built in Roman days. Could this possibly be an old escape route?

"Here we are," Brother Benedict said finally, as a sliver of light outlined one arm. Stooping, he pulled a rough wooden cover away from an opening just large enough to crawl through.  Brian peered out at the brightening day.             

His view of the moat and the world beyond it was partially obscured by a small tangle of willow shrubs that screened the spot. The moat, nearly covered with lily pads here, was only a few feet below him. Directly opposite, a larger thicket almost hid the embankment that bordered a small field.

"Now you are in on our little secret," Brother Benedict said. "Only a few of us know of this way out of the abbey."

"But the moat—how does one cross it?"

His guide chuckled. "On sunken planks below the lilies. Walk them carefully, or you will slip into the water as I did one night. When you have crossed and reached the field, keep your head down and follow the embankment till you come to the trees. Have no fear of being seen. There's no one on this part of the wall at this hour, and I doubt if there's a worker in the field, for it's been put to pasture."

Brother Benedict paused a moment, listening. Brian knew that a thorough search was being made for him on the other side of the wall, but he could make out no sounds of it here.

Carefully the monk drew something from a fold of his robe. It was the sword Albericus had brought to Rupert.

Brian gasped. "Where—where did you get it?"

"I picked it up near the smithy, where it fell. No one saw me. Take it, son. It may not be all that it is supposed to be—but it happens to be the very finest of weapons, and you won it fairly against great odds. I'm proud of you!"

Brian experienced a sudden thrill as he grasped the jeweled hilt. As a weapon, it was too long and much too heavy for him, but he had no doubt of his ability to use it should the need arise. It suddenly seemed strange that Rupert, who was far taller and stronger, had been so clumsy with it.

"By doing what you did,” Brother Benedict went on, "you upset many plans, and set something in motion. But there isn't time to explain it to you here. You must be well on your way before Albericus decides you must have escaped from the abbey. He'll surely send men after you—but do not worry about them. Merra will hide you well."

"Merra? Who—where-"

"In the forest, son, a full three leagues downstream from the Roman crossing, there flows a crys­tal spring from the foot of a mighty oak. It is a sacred spot, and something in you will know it when you see it. You will find Merra waiting for you there."

"I—I don't understand," Brian said. "How can anyone possibly know I'm coming?"

"She will know. On your way now—and may the merciful God protect you!"

 

Brian experienced a frightening minute as he waded the moat on the submerged planks. He was exposed to anyone who might have gone to the top of the wall to search, and with every step he almost expected to hear the snap of a bowstring and the quick hiss of an arrow. Yet he dared not hurry, for the planks were so slippery he could only slide along a foot or two at a time while he carried the sword carefully over his shoulder.

Then at last he was across, with the thick growth of willows on the embankment hiding him from any chance observer. When he glanced back he was re­lieved to see no one, nor could he make out the opening to the secret passageway.

As he hurried along the edge of the field behind the embankment, he was astonished to see the sun rising above the line of forest ahead. It seemed that hours must have passed since he had first heard the trumpets. How could so much have happened in the short space between dawn and sunup?

Before the sun was a hand's breadth high, he had gained the Roman crossing—a stone bridge built by Caesar's men—and was beginning to pick his way through the tangle along the edge of the stream.

Three leagues downstream, Brother Benedict had said. That was a long, long hike, and he would do well to make it by midday. But why, he wondered, would anyone want to live in so remote a spot? As nearly as he could remember from a map Brother Benedict had at the smithy, that section of the stream was entirely wild, far from any road or village. A few old trails had been dotted on the map, along with a scattering of symbols showing the location of several ruins and a chapel.

Suddenly Brian halted, thinking of those symbols. A cross had marked the location of an early chapel, but there had been another cross deep in the forest just about three leagues from the Roman crossing. Only the second cross, unlike the first, had a circle behind it. What did that mean?

And who was Merra?

Puzzled, he hurried on, swinging the sword occa­sionally to clear a way through the growth. It seemed that he should know the answers to both questions. And there was that curious matter of the person who had shouted to him right after he'd downed Rupert. Had it been Brother Benedict who had shouted, using a strange language so that no one who had come with Albericus would recognize either the voice or the words?

Then why had he, Brian, son of Harle the wood-cutter, understood the words when he didn't even recognize the language?'

At that moment a horrible thought came to him.  Did he, without realizing it, know the forbidden language? The language that meant death if you were caught using it? It was supposed to be the tongue of the witches, although heretics used it also. The penalty for speaking it—just like the penalty for being caught with a Bible, which was also forbidden—was death by burning.

He had never seen a real Bible, and he had once asked Brother Benedict why it was forbidden. The burly blacksmith had peered around carefully, then said in a low voice, "Watch your tongue on that subject, lad. Now, to boil it all down, it's just a matter of power. Those who have it are always fighting to keep it. Those who don't have it are always oppressed. You see?"

“I'm beginning to. I've heard that the Bible is full of magic, which was put in there by the devil. Is that true, and is that really why it's banned?"

"It is full of miracles and magic, but the devil didn't put them there. That is a great lie, told by the righteous rascals in power. To keep their power, they must destroy those who know the truth."

"Then—then there really is magic?"

"There is, and there are those among us who are able—but no. You are too young to know more. I have told you enough. For your life's sake, and mine, forget what I have said,"

That had been years ago, Brian remembered, not long after he had come to the abbey. Today he had fled from it, with more questions than ever unan­swered.

Why, for one thing, had Brother Benedict been so anxious for him to cover his pale hair? What was there about pale hair that should be hidden?—and why had Albericus stared at him so strangely when his cap was knocked off?

Then there was the matter of defeating Rupert so easily. Had he really handled the quarterstaff so skillfully—or had someone put a spell on Rupert?

In spite of what Brother Benedict had once told him, he had never really believed in spells and magic. But now he was beginning to wonder.

 

As he trudged deeper into the forest, following a game trail that wound along the stream, the under­growth gradually vanished and the trees became immense. Several times herds of deer faded into the shadows, and once he saw a great wolf regarding him with a sort of cold but speculative interest from the other side of the stream. It gave him a moment of sharp fright. The sword, which he had been carry­ing over his shoulder, was swept down instantly to a ready position. But the wolf did not move, and he hurried thankfully on his way.

Having eaten no breakfast, and only a bowl of thin gruel the night before, he was very hungry by midmorning. But he knew little of the woods and...

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