Gorfyddyd used no reins, but spoke to his horse that obediently stopped two paces away from Sagramor. Gorfyddyd rested his spear-butt on the ground, then forced his helmet’s cheek pieces aside so that his sour face showed. “You’re Arthur’s black demon,” he accused Sagramor, spitting to avert any evil, ‘and your whore-loving Lord shelters behind your sword.” Gorfyddyd spat again, this time towards me. “Why don’t you talk to me, Arthur?” he shouted. “Lost your tongue?”
“My Lord Arthur,” Sagramor answered in his heavily accented British, ‘is saving his breath to sing his victory song.”
Gorfyddyd hefted his long spear. “I’m one-handed,” he shouted at me, ‘but I’ll fight you!”
I said nothing, nor did I move. Arthur, I knew, would never fight in single battle against a crippled man, though Arthur would never have stayed silent either. By now he would have been pleading with Gorfyddyd for peace.
Gorfyddyd did not want peace. He wanted slaughter. He rode up and down our line, controlling his horse with his knees and shouting at our men. “You’re dying because your Lord can’t keep his hands off a whore! You’re dying for a bitch with a wet rump! For a bitch in perpetual heat! Your souls will be cursed. My dead are already feasting in the Otherworld, but your souls will become their throw pieces And why will you die? For his red-headed whore?” He pointed his spear at me, then rode his horse directly at me. I pulled back lest he saw through the helmet’s eye slit that I was not Arthur and my spearmen closed protectively around me. Gorfyddyd laughed at my apparent timidity. His horse was close enough for my men to touch, but Gorfyddyd showed no fear of their spears as he spat at me. “Woman!” he called out, his worst insult, then touched his horse with his left foot and the beast turned and galloped back towards his army.
Sagramor turned to us and raised his arms. “Back!” he shouted. “Back to the fence! Quick now! Back!”
We turned our backs on the enemy and hurried away and a great shout went up as they saw our twin banners retreat. They thought we were running and they broke their ranks to pursue us, but we had too great a start on them and we had streamed through the gap in the barricade long before any of Gorfyddyd’s men could reach us. Our line spread behind the fence while I took Arthur’s proper place in the very centre of the line where the road ran through the empty gap between the felled trees. We deliberately left the gap without any obstacles in the hope that it would draw Gorfyddyd’s attacks and thus give our flanks time to rest. I raised Arthur’s two banners there and waited for the assault.
Gorfyddyd roared at his disordered spearmen to make a new shield-wall. King Gundleus commanded the enemy’s right flank and Prince Cuneglas the left. That arrangement suggested that Gorfyddyd was not going to take our bait of the open gap, but intended to assault all along the line. “You stay here!” Sagramor shouted at our spearmen. “You’re warriors! You’re going to prove it now! You stay here, you kill here and you win here!” Morfans had forced his wounded horse a small way up the western hill from where he looked north up the vale, judging whether this was the moment to sound the horn and summon Arthur, but enemy reinforcements were still crossing the ford and he came back without putting the silver to his lips.
Gorfyddyd’s horn sounded instead. It was a raucous ram’s horn that did not send his shield-line forward, but instead provoked a dozen naked madmen to burst out of the enemy’s line and rush on our centre. Such men have put their souls in the Gods’ keeping, then fuddled their senses with a mixture of mead, thorn-apple juice, mandrake and belladonna, which can give a man waking nightmares even as it takes away his fears. Such men might be mad, drunk and naked, but they were also dangerous for they had only one aim and that was to bring down the enemy commanders. They rushed at me, mouths foaming from the magical herbs they had been chewing and with their spears held overhead ready to drive down.