‘I will have you all with me,’ said Samildanach. ‘I will carry the strength of your souls.’
Joanin leaned forward. ‘Is all well with you? You have not seemed… at ease since you returned from the King?’
‘At ease? No. You are correct, Joanin. I think we all need to return to the Vyre. As soon as Elodan is dead and the rebels routed, we will go home. Now, I have need of your strength for the combat ahead.’
The Knights bowed their heads and Samildanach felt their souls flowing into his body. A long time ago the transfusion would have filled him with many emotions — now he felt only the rawness of power. Rising, he moved to the tent entrance. The sun was rising. He looked back at the silent, still figures; their lives depended now on his skill.
Across the valley Elodan sat with Llaw, Errin, Ubadai and Manannan. Lamfhada moved to join them.
‘I thank you for this miracle,’ said Elodan. ‘Even if I die today, it will be as a whole man.’
‘I am glad for you,’ said Lamfhada uneasily. ‘I hope it was the right deed.’
‘Why should it not be?’ Manannan asked. ‘It gives us hope in the battle with the demon.’ Lamfhada opened his mouth to speak, but the words would not come.
‘Tell us, Manannan,’ said Llaw. ‘What will Samildanach be doing now?’
‘He will be preparing, as we are preparing — and he will enter the field as The One.’ Glancing at the faces around him, he saw they did not understand him. ‘It is a mystic ritual. All his Knights give him their souls, their strengths, their beliefs; the very essence of themselves. If he dies, they all die.’
‘And this makes him stronger?’ asked Llaw.
‘Of course.’
‘Then should we not do the same?’ suggested Errin.
‘You do not know how, and I do not have the years to teach you,’ replied Manannan.
Lamfhada rose to his feet. ‘I can help you with that,’ he said softly. ‘I can join you. But the risks are very great.’
‘Do it,’ Manannan told him.
‘No!’ cried Elodan. ‘It is a burden I could not bear. To risk death myself is one matter, but to know that all of you could die? No, I will not agree.’
‘I am not a brave man,’ said Errin, ‘but the cause is more important than the lives of five men. And if we can give you strength, then let us do it.’
Elodan looked from one to another. ‘Only if all are agreed,’ he said, switching his gaze at last to Ubadai. ‘You speak, my friend. Always you are silent at our meetings. And yet, when Errin led his troop into the enemy camp, you insisted on going with him. You never shirk danger. I would value your counsel.’
Ubadai grinned. ‘I say no, and it is no?’
‘Exactly,’ said Elodan.
The Nomad turned to Errin. ‘You want this?’
‘I do.’
‘You too?’ Ubadai asked Llaw.
The warrior shrugged. ‘I don’t know what extra strength I can supply — but, yes, I am willing.’
‘All is madness,’ said the Nomad. ‘But I am mad too. Angry mad. Let us kill the whoreson together.’
Lamfhada walked to the centre of the circle and sat down. ‘I want you all to join hands,’ he said, ‘then close your eyes and picture Elodan in your minds.’ Lamfhada’s spirit rose from his body; he covered the circle in a glowing sphere of Gold and moved to Manannan, then to Llaw and Errin, and finally to Ubadai.
Elodan felt the influx of power from the Once-Knight in a surge of confidence that bordered on arrogance. The strength of a man who had never been bested in battle flowed through him. But he rode above it — for he had lost, and in that knowledge of despair lay strength. Llaw’s soul came next and with it the extraordinary endurance of the common man — born without wealth or privilege, yet possessing the ability to withstand the many and varied perils of this bloody time. Like an oak was Llaw, deep-rooted and enduring. Errin followed. Nobility of spirit and the courage to overcome his fears flowed with him. Lastly the Nomad Ubadai, fiercely loyal to the master he loved and ready to die to protect him.
Elodan’s eyes opened and he gazed at Lamfhada. ‘You did well, Armourer,’ he said. ‘I thank you.’ The other Knights were lying back on the grass, scarcely breathing.
Rising, Elodan said, ‘It is time, I think.’
‘The Source of All Life be with you, Elodan,’ said Lamfhada.
Elodan strode to his stallion and mounted. He saw Samildanach waiting, and behind him the army of the King stretching across the valley.
Touching spurs to his mount, the Lord Knight of the Gabala rode down the long hill.
Samildanach watched as the Lord Knight of the Gabala cantered his mount towards him. He had been prepared for combat, but had not anticipated the tremendous shock of seeing his own armour on another man. Worse, he had the impression that he was watching himself ride out to battle. He remembered the sense of pride he had experienced when first he donned the silver helm.
Images ripped through his mind: Morrigan in the garden, andj then dying on the floor of the King’s bedchamber; Cairbre lecturing him on points of duty and honour, Cairbre in the pale coffin; Manannan debating the chivalric code, Manannan calling him a demon.
Somewhere deep inside him a chain snapped and he shook his head, fighting to force away the memories.
Ollathair, gentle Ollathair, smiling at the success of a golden bird as it soared under the sun; Ollathair sagging to the ground, Samildanach’s knife in his belly.
Stop it! Leave me alone!
Elodan dismounted and walked some yards to the left, drawing his sword and plunging it into the earth. From the forest all around them came the fighting men of the rebellion. Silently they marched down to sit facing the army of the King. Samildanach lifted his leg over the pommel of his saddle and slid to the ground. Kill him, he thought. Return to the Vyre. There they will tend your restless spirit.
The voice of the girl child as she was led into his chambers the first time he needed Nourishment came to him: ‘Please don’t hurt me! Please don’t hurt me.
‘Are you ready?’ Elodan asked.
‘Yes,’ Samildanach answered. ‘I am ready.’ Now Morrigan’s voice was echoing in his mind:
‘Can you not see what… we have become? Oh, Samildanach! We are corrupting everything we… touch… I loved you more than life. And now… I don’t even know what it means.’
‘Don’t talk. Let me bind your wrists; we can save your life.’
‘There is nothing to save. I died back in the City of the Vyre when I became one of the Undead — just like you, my love.’
‘What is wrong with you? Draw your sword,’ said Elodan.
The dark blade snaked into the air and Elodan blocked, but only just in time, and the combat commenced. He fought for his life against the greatest swordsman he had ever known. Cairbre had been more than talented, but Samildanach’s skill was astounding. Speed, balance and lightning reflexes confounded all Elodan’s attempts to attack. The dark sword crashed against his breastplate, smashing a hinge and severing the brass-edged leather straps. The armour sagged. Elodan ducked under a sweeping blow and thundered a stroke against Samildanach’s shoulder that ripped loose a crimson plate. Samildanach staggered back.
‘What happened to that glorious young knight?’ whispered Morrigan, from the caverns of his soul.
The dark blade flashed forward, but Elodan blocked it with ease and sent a counter that tore through a curved hip-plate, sending it spinning to the grass. Samildanach returned to the attack with a riposte of blistering speed, his sword ripping into Elodan’s helm. Stars exploded before the Lord Knight’s eyes and his vision swam. He hurled himself back and — more by luck than skill — blocked a sweep that would have torn his head from his shoulders. Samildanach moved in for the kill — and stopped.