“When you reach it, do not go to the monks who have their little church at the base of the Tor, but stop at the village of the fisherfolk who live in the marshes, and tell them that you are Eilan’s grand-daughter, and you wish to be taken to Avalon.”
She looked dubious, and I sighed, for in truth, I could not even guarantee that I would be admitted after so many years. And was I justified in taking Lena there? This vital young woman, whose cheeks were glowing despite the shadows a difficult night had painted beneath her eyes, was a very different creature from the fragile and frightened girl I had helped to escape from Treveri almost two months ago.
“The holy isle is a refuge where no king or emperor can follow. But you are not required to go there. If you and Crispa take new names, I think it likely that you will be able to live in perfect safety here in Londinium.”
The winged brows drew down. “Don’t you want us to come with you?”
“Lena, do you not understand how I have come to love you? That is why the choice must be yours. I only know that I have to go there, or try.”
I recovered slowly, and it was October before I was strong enough to attempt the journey. The carriage in which we had travelled from Dubris was fitted with a soft mattress and loaded with provisions. But before departing Londinium there was one last task.
I had seen how swiftly, with Constantine’s favour, Christianity was becoming the religion of the Empire. I could foresee a time when its shrines and symbols would displace those of the old religion entirely, reinventing Britannia as a Christian land. In the time that was coming, there would be few to understand that it was possible to honour both the Goddess and the God.
It pained me to think that my carving of the Mothers might one day be mocked by folk who no longer saw it as holy. And so workmen were summoned to remove it from the wall and load it into a barrow, and in the night, when the men had gone home, Lena and Cunoarda pulled it to the stream that ran through the fields behind my dwelling, and tipped the carving in. Hidden in its depths, the Mothers would bless the city through which its waters ran.
“Tell me about when you were a little girl on Avalon…” Crispa had elected to ride for a while inside the carriage with Cunoarda and me, though I knew she would want to sit with Lena, who was driving, before long.
“I had a white dog called Eldri—”
“Like Leviyah?” Crispa pulled back the curtain to point to the dog who was trotting beside us, head up to catch all the scents of this new land.
“Smaller, with curly fur. A boy at the Lake village gave her to me, and said she was a faerie dog, and I think it was true, because she guided me once to a land even farther from this world than Avalon, and brought me safely back again.”
Cunoarda’s lips quirked, and I could see that she thought I was telling the child a fairy story. I found it strange that she, who had been born in Alba, found it harder to believe in Avalon than Lena, the child of a thoroughly Romanized Gallic aristocracy. But perhaps Cunoarda still needed the walls she had erected to protect her from the pain of her loss, and did not dare. I knew that she had found great comfort in Christianity, and when we were in Londinium, she had attended the rituals at the Church of Saint Pancras which I had long ago endowed.
“Did you have other girls to play with?”
“I lived in the House of Maidens,” I answered, remembering the murmur of girls’ voices in the darkness with a sudden overwhelming clarity. “I had a little cousin called Dierna, with hair as red as Cunoarda’s. I believe that Dierna is the Lady of Avalon now.”
I realized with a flutter of anxiety that I did not know. I remembered dreaming Ganeda’s funeral—would I not know it if Dierna, whom I had loved, had also died?