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    Song of the Sparrow

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      My friend.

      And you, too, my sister!

      I call softly.

      I press my hand to the wall of the

      tent, then turn.

      I must attract the Saxons’

      attention and lead them away

      from the mountain. Then I must

      switch courses and run back to the

      mountain.

      I take a deep breath.

      My sparrow is flitting and

      dancing in my chest. She swoops and

      does loops and circles in my belly.

      Give me your wings, I pray.

      Another breath.

      My hands and legs feel shaky.

      One more breath, then I run.

      I run, circling the tent, and fly

      past the guard. His eyes open

      wide and he gives his head a little

      shake, as though he cannot believe

      what he sees.

      Then he drops the cup he was

      holding and begins to shout.

      He starts to speed after me,

      raising his ax and brandishing

      it in the air. I cannot look back

      at him, I must run and run.

      I swerve and weave through the

      tents, leading what is now a pack

      of Saxon warriors on my heels, south of

      the mountain, and they are hollering and

      waving their instruments of war at my back.

      I am fast, but they are more powerful, with

      longer legs. I can feel their hot breath on

      my back, the stench of their unwashed

      bodies urging my legs on.

      I am unaware of breath, of pain.

      I feel only the wind at my feet and the heat

      of their bodies on my neck.

      Run! the wind calls.

      Run! I beg of Gwynivere in my mind.

      I am darting and weaving like a fox,

      but suddenly something whistles past

      my ear in a cool rush of air.

      I see the white feathers in the moonlight.

      An arrow.

      Out of the corner of my eye

      I spy a figure moving toward

      the mountain.

      Gwynivere.

      Her golden hair streams out

      behind her, like one of Arthur’s

      battle standards.

      She goes and no one follows.

      I turn and race behind a tent.

      Another arrow hurtles past me.

      I catch sight of the moon,

      half revealed in all her splendor.

      Please, please help me, I pray silently.

      I look around, but Gwynivere is nowhere

      in sight. I change direction and begin to head

      for Mount Badon.

      In the distance, I can see the sparkle of the moon

      glinting off the watery surface of the river.

      I can make it, I tell myself.

      The Saxons are closing in, and arrows are

      now flying as fast as the beat of a

      hummingbird’s wings.

      My legs and my lungs are burning,

      but I keep moving.

      There is no choice.

      I have no choice.

      As I round the base of the great hill,

      I can see the river curving,

      carving through the land just up ahead.

      There are dark figures like teeth

      or men

      looming before me.

      My heart sinks with dread.

      The Saxons, they must have

      guessed our purpose and headed

      off Gwynivere, and now they wait for me.

      But my legs do not stop moving.

      Let them try to take me!

      A wild laugh parts my lips,

      my mouth is dry and my eyes water.

      As I near the river, the dark shapes grow

      larger. They are too tall to be people.

      Closer now, closer!

      My heart beats an angry tattoo.

      My own drum of war.

      They are not Saxon soldiers after all!

      Boats!

      I fly toward them, and the intricate

      carvings on the stern of the nearest boat

      become clear in the moonlight.

      What a beautiful vessel,

      a beautiful vessel to carry me home!

      Another giggle laced with fear and

      an edge of lunacy.

      I run to the craft and begin to push,

      willing it to slide into the water.

      I turn and drive my back against

      the boat’s massive weight.

      Suddenly there is a hissing sound, and

      my mind is stunned as a burning pain

      explodes in my body.

      I look down and there, lodged in the soft flesh

      between my shoulder and my chest, the wooden

      shaft of an arrow, silvery feathers tracing

      the end.

      Like an animal made wild with fear,

      I thrust myself against the boat once more,

      and it shakes loose and rolls

      into the water.

      I stagger down the bank

      of the river, dizzily brushing aside the

      reeds waving in the wake of the boat’s

      sluggish track.

      Somehow, I catch hold of the craft

      and roll myself over its side,

      careful not to land on the

      arrow buried deep in my chest.

      Careful not to look down and

      see the blood, the blood that is

      warm and sticky on my hands, my face,

      that now coats the bottom of the boat.

      The Saxons have lined up on the shore,

      frozen, as if stunned, and watch me

      float away.

      The last thing I remember,

      before the grey mists

      at the edges of my eyes veil

      my vision wholly, is thinking

      they must believe me dead.

      The boat sways and rocks gently,

      drifting lazily along

      with the river’s current.

      The moor …

      the moor is green and pregnant

      with clover and wildflowers,

      and I feel the feathery grasses

      brushing the palms of my hands,

      vivid pink and purple flowers and

      the sky is a strange shade of green,

      without a hint of a storm.

      Suddenly my hand is filled with

      beads, cool, ivory-colored beads,

      with intricate scrolls and knots

      etched into them. They fill my hands

      and they fill a basket that hangs from

      my arm, and somehow I know

      I am richer because of them.

      Then a wolf with green-golden eyes

      and tawny fur comes to stand beside me.

      I am not afraid, for the wolf is my friend.

      He nudges my hand with a cold nose

      then bounds away, and I chase him

      through a shiver of silvery birch trees.

      As the wolf and I wind between the

      slender trunks, the wolf vanishes,

      and as I feel I am losing my breath,

      my strength sapping away

      Tristan steps from behind a tree

      and offers his hand. I take it

      and suddenly I feel wings beating

      at my back, and Tristan and I turn into

      a pair of sparrows.

      Sometime, when the moon is high overhead,

      I wake from a fog-filled sleep and

      run my fingers over the arrow.

      I have not the strength nor will

      to pull it out, but I know I must.

      Slowly I wrap my fingers around

      the base of the shaft, feeling too

      weak even to keep my fingers from

      trembling. Then I pull; the

      last drops of strength
    drain from me,

      as a pool of dark blood wells

      over my chest.

      I fumble with the pouch at my neck,

      and manage to ease a pinch of calendula petals

      free, and place them in my mouth.

      I chew weakly, then place the sticky

      clump into the hole left by the arrow.

      My eyes grow heavy again.

      Has Gwynivere reached Arthur?

      I wonder hazily. Has she warned the men?

      Will I die here, in this Saxon boat?

      And darkness envelops me again.

      I still feel the rocking

      of the boat and the river.

      A faint light buzzes behind my eyelids.

      But I cannot open them.

      There is a pressure on my chest,

      a terrible weight.

      Fear is thick in my mouth,

      on my tongue, sour and acidic.

      I am alone and dying.

      The point of light

      grown smaller,

      ever smaller now,

      ever more distant now.

      Does she wake?

      Her eyes flutter!

      Delirium before death.

      Elaine?

      My mother calls to me.

      Truly, I die.

      Elaine! Wake up!

      Elaine!

      Why would my mother shout at me?

      I have not seen her in so many years.

      And she shouts at me?

      Is she not happy to receive me in heaven?

      Elaine!

      Mother?

      The film of dirt encrusted

      on my eyes tears at my lashes

      as I force myself to open them.

      The soothing motion of the boat stops,

      the peace I felt as I slipped away,

      into the darkness, fades.

      I am not on a boat.

      Nor am I dead.

      As the world and my life

      swim slowly into view,

      faces loom against

      an overpowering brightness.

      I am in a sun-filled tent, and

      my father’s face, wrinkled,

      drawn, and pinched with worry,

      grows clear. He kneels

      beside my head, and as I look at him

      and ask, disbelievingly, I live?

      a smile widens, smoothing the creases

      at his brow and mouth.

      Beside him, Lavain sits, his eyes

      rimmed in red, as though

      he has been weeping.

      And Tirry paces behind them, wringing

      his hands, his knuckles white,

      his face white too.

      Tristan sits beside Lavain,

      his golden eyes so filled

      with fear, his face haggard

      and fraught with shadows.

      Elaine, he breathes, thank God.

      Tirry stops pacing and stares at me intensely.

      He closes his eyes, his lips

      moving in what I guess are words

      of silent thanks.

      I reach for my father’s hand.

      It is rough and warm.

      Yes, he murmurs, you live.

      And we live because of you.

      What — what happened? I ask,

      feeling a drowsiness closing in.

      I fight it off and struggle to sit up,

      but Lavain gently pushes me

      down against the pallet on which

      they have laid me.

      Do not try to sit up, Lavain says,

      his voice so gentle and soft.

      I think of small green turtles

      on their beds of moss;

      he was gentle then too.

      There was a battle.

      Arthur’s voice startles me,

      and I turn to see him standing

      beside Gwynivere at the foot of my bed,

      his arm just brushing her shoulder.

      Gwynivere reached us and told us

      of the Saxons’ plan to attack us

      while we slept; she told us of your —

      your deeds.

      And we readied for battle, praying

      you would return to us, knowing we

      fought not just for Britain, but for you,

      for your bravery. We fought to honor you.

      And we pushed back the Saxons, he says

      solemnly, his eyebrows knitted together.

      We slaughtered them, Lavain breaks in.

      And they ran, ran for their boats and they

      will not be back for a very long time.

      I look to Arthur, then Tirry and Father,

      and they nod solemnly.

      You were victorious? I ask wondrously.

      We were victorious, Arthur affirms.

      And now the dawn of peace

      tolls throughout all this land.

      I cannot believe it.

      Gwynivere did it, our plan worked.

      Then I notice Lancelot, lurking

      behind Arthur. He catches

      me looking at him and looks away.

      My father rises to his feet, grasping

      Lavain’s shoulder for support.

      Come, my sons, let us leave her

      in peace. She needs to rest.

      Tristan comes to stand where

      my father was, and looks into my eyes.

      I will be back, he whispers gruffly,

      and he squeezes my hand then turns

      to follow my brothers.

      Arthur kneels beside me, then.

      His voice is thick. You will never know

      how grateful to you I am. How much

      I admire you.

      How proud I am to call you friend.

      He straightens. Your father

      is right, you must rest.

      And I do not wish to earn

      his ire, nor that of your

      diligent nurse, he says,

      smiling at Gwynivere.

      He presses his lips to my forehead

      and goes, the tent flaps rustling behind him.

      Gwynivere looks at me anxiously,

      and moves to follow Arthur.

      But I must speak with her.

      Gwyn! I call weakly.

      Oh, Elaine! she cries and rushes to my side,

      throwing her arms around my neck.

      How do you feel? she asks.

      Awful, I reply, smiling.

      As though an arrow has pierced my chest.

      It has, she giggles.

      We did it, Gwyn, I whisper in the wilderness

      of her thick, flaxen hair.

      We did, she agrees, her face

      shining with tears. Elaine, she begins again,

      you will be so proud of me.

      When Tirry found the hole in your chest,

      I knew to put milfoil on the wound, because

      there was so much blood —

      her face drops, as though a cloud falls over it

      — so much blood. But the milfoil

      stanched the flow, and then I

      used the red clover to draw away

      inflammation.

      She smiles again, her eyes full of question.

      Thank you, I whisper, reaching for her hand.

      Thank you for saving me.

      It is astonishing how everything is so

      different from just one half moon ago.

      I have come to care for Gwynivere,

      greatly, and she for me.

      She squeezes my hand,

      as though to say she is filled with the

      same wonder.

      Gwynivere sits with me awhile longer,

      until I tell her I am tired.

      When you wake, I will bring you

      some broth to sip, she says,

      reluctant to leave.

      My eyelids grow heavy once again,

      and a dreamless slumber descends.

      Time moves in strange ways during

      these days and nights of my healing.

      It slithers like a snake, slippery and sl
    y;

      then night falls like a blanket,

      muffling and smothering the pain.

      The pain moves in strange ways, too,

      like the current of the River Usk,

      scratchy and warm as silt,

      and when I allow myself to remember the

      arrow standing out from my chest,

      the heavy throbbing overwhelms me,

      then it drifts away again, like the

      tide beneath a full moon.

      My father and brothers come to sit with me,

      they hold my hand and sing me

      songs of battle and glory.

      And they whisper that the glory is mine.

      They whisper of the glory of

      the Lady of Shalott.

      My glory.

      I think of that great oaken loom,

      gleaming gold in a patch of sunlight,

      and the stories my mother would weave

      into her tapestries. When I recover,

      I will build myself a new loom and weave

      my own story, the story of my family

      and my friends, this land

      and the glory that we shared.

      As long as I must lay flat on my back,

      Gwynivere comes each day and

      feeds me broth, bringing the spoon

      slowly to my lips, allowing me to

      sip the warm soup, until my strength

      returns and I can sit up.

      It is odd to be the patient.

      I do not enjoy it, but I use the time

      to teach Gwynivere what I know of healing.

      She is an eager student, and

      she sings me songs, too,

      sweet songs of love, and

      I notice a change in her. Her face

      has softened, and there is a peace

      in her eyes.

      Gwynivere, you look different, I remark

      one day. Tell me what has happened to you.

      Is it Lancelot? I ask.

      No, it is not Lancelot, she replies. It is

      Arthur. And a smile breaks over her

      face like a sunrise. Then her forehead

      creases. Before you returned to us,

      before the boat that bore you floated

      down the river, into the camp,

      when I told Arthur all that we had heard,

      and when I told him what you had done,

      I saw such a look of fear on his face.

      He was so scared, Elaine. Scared for you,

      scared for all of us. It was as if all of his beautiful

      humanity was revealed in that singular expression

      of fear and love. And at that moment,

      I think, I began to love him.

      Her face is radiant.

      I did not choose him, in the beginning,

      but that night, she pauses to draw a breath,

      that night I made a choice, and it was

      the right one. When Arthur returned from

      battle, he and I spoke

      as we watched over you.

      He told me that I did not have to marry him

      if I did not want to. He told me —

      he told me it was for me to decide.

      In that moment, I knew. I knew that he

     


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