Page 4 of Boudicca
I could not tell how much time had passed. None of the forest I raced through was familiar and the strange light did not give
way to the sun. I only knew that I did not tire and had no trouble keeping up with the stag.
Eventually, he began to slow from run to trot, and then the stag broke stride completely and walked, picking through a grove
of oaks so ancient that their bottommost limbs brushed the fern-covered ground.
I did not gaze around the forest. I felt no inquisitiveness about the Otherworld we call Annwn. Dread and purpose filled me
and left no room for peaceful curiosity. I did find comfort in the solid presence of the hart. He walked so close beside me
that I could feel the warmth of his body and smell the sweetness of his breath. It made me feel close to my mother, especially
when the odd light caused the emerald eye of the pendant he wore around his muscular neck to flash.
Finally the creature halted. He lifted his muzzle, gesturing ahead of us, and I recognized something. Even in the mauve and
violet light there was no doubt that we were standing before the ancient grandmother oak that grew just beyond Andraste’s
altar and marked the edge of Tasceni.
The stag took a step back and, again, gestured with his muzzle.
Before I turned from my companion I reached out slowly, allowing him time to move away should he so desire. He held very still
as I pressed my palm against his forehead and stroked him gently. His coat was soft as water and through my hand I could feel
the power that radiated from him.
“Thank you. I do not fully know what is to come today, but if you could, please be close to my mother. She has faithfully
served your goddess, Brigantia, her whole life.”
The stag lifted his muzzle and blew his warm breath gently against my cheek before whirling and, with his tail up, fleeing back into the Otherworld forest of Annwn.
I drew a deep, steadying breath before I stepped from Annwn to the mortal realm.
Tasceni was still fogbound, though the pastels of morning were beginning to filter down from above. I ran. As I did I marveled
at how little time had passed since I’d left the village. It had seemed as if I’d spent the day in Annwn in the presence of
the goddess, but in the mortal realm it was as if I’d just left the village and entered the forest, changed my mind, and returned.
I was glad of the fog. It hid my bloodless face and stricken, terrified expression. Faster! Move faster! I gulped air, felt as if my legs would fail, and wished for the mighty hart in whose presence I had the stamina of an immortal.
Finally! My lodge materialized through the fog and I stumbled to a halt. Bent at the waist, I pressed a hand to my side to
stop the pain there as I panted and struggled to regain my breath.
“Herself?” Bryn’s deep voice called the question from the raised entrance to the royal lodge.
“Queen Boudicca!” Briallen leaped down the wooden stairs to me. “Are you injured?”
I shook my head and sucked in air. “No! I—I was in Annwn.” I spoke between gasps. “With Andraste.” Briallen paused at my pronouncement,
clearly not sure what to do. I wiped my sleeve across my sweating face and straightened. “The goddess warns that the Romans—”
An ominous, metallic clanking cut off my words. Frowning and confused, I peered past the lodge in the direction of the sounds, which came from the narrow path that snaked from the boggy fens to the rear entrance to the village. The dirt road was mostly used by the tribe’s fishermen, and the echoing sound was so foreign, so out of place, that even the two faithful members of my guard were, at first, more curious than alarmed. Then shapes emerged from the shrouding fog; the foremost of them was on horseback. Behind him more men appeared. They marched in a neat two-column formation. Above them they carried a standard displaying an eagle made of gold. On its breast was carved IX .
Briallen stepped in front of me as her brother took a defensive stance before the closed oak doors of the lodge.
“Ninth Legion! Halt!”
I recognized the man riding at the head of the soldiers as soon as he spoke. His nasal voice was unmistakable. I remembered
all too well how Prasutagus and I had made fun of Nero’s tax collector, the diminutive procurator Catus Decianus. He had been
a full head shorter than me and his arrogance had been fodder for our humor. He had represented the Roman emperor the day
the chief of the Iceni mistakenly signed half of our tribe away to the Romans.
Decianus glanced at Briallen. “You there! Servant! Wake your chief! Tell him Rome is at his door.” As with most Roman officials
who spent time with the tribes, he spoke our language, though his accent was heavy, turning the fluidity of our words cumbersome
and stilted.
I lifted my chin, stepped around Briallen, and answered him in the Latin all born to the royal houses of the tribes had learned
as more and more Romans infested our country. “I am Boudicca, wife to the Iceni chief, Prasutagus.”
The Roman looked down his straight nose at me. “You?” He barked a quick laugh and shrugged. “Each man has his own tastes,
to be sure, but I shall never understand the desires of barbarians. No matter. Wake your husband. Rome has business with him.”
“Prasutagus has been dead three full cycles of the moon,” I said. “He cannot be waked.”
Decianus cocked his head as he studied me. One short, thick finger pointed at my delicate golden torque. “I remember when last I saw your husband he wore something much like that cuff about your neck. It has been explained to me that it is the symbol of rank by you Brittani .” He pronounced the word as if it tasted foul. “Perhaps you might explain why a woman would wear such a symbol.”
I straightened my spine so that I stood tall and proud as I met his gaze. “I wear the symbol of chief because my husband named
me his heir. Our people supported his naming. The Druids consecrated my coronation. I am Boudicca, queen of the Iceni. This
torque reflects my rank.”
Decianus said nothing for several long moments. When he finally spoke, his voice was scornful. “And I thought Paulinus jested
when he told me Prasutagus had been replaced by a woman. I should have known better than to bet against that wily bastard.
Now I owe him a purse full of golden denarii.” The tax collector’s gaze slowly traveled from my mud-splattered skirts up to
my disheveled hair. Then he threw back his head and laughed so long and so heartily that several of the soldiers nearest laughed
as well. When he was able to control his mirth, he continued. “Well then, Queen Boudicca. It is to you I shall speak.”
I maintained my calm and replied as if he had not just mocked and insulted me. “Very well. I require you remain here so that
I might ready myself and my lodge for such an”—I paused, but not long enough for Decianus to take offense—“honor as your visit.”
“Of course. Of course. Take your time . We did come unannounced. The centuria and I shall await your pleasure, Your Majesty. ” The tax collector chuckled.
With Briallen on my heels, I nodded briefly in acknowledgment of Decianus’s response before I swept past the Romans and hurried
up the wide wooden stairway to the lodge. “A centuria,” I whispered urgently to Briallen. “How many is that?”
“No more than two hundred soldiers. No less than thirty,” Briallen said as she followed me inside. Her warrior brother remained
firmly planted before the door.
“And how many of our warriors remained here instead of going to the spring games?”
“Countin’ my brother and me—mayhap two dozen. Likely less,” Briallen said.
My stomach heaved. We were defenseless. “Get our people out of here and into the forest. Now.”
Arianell had dressed and was at her usual place before the hearthfire. My two daughters looked up as I entered, grinning sleepily
at me.
“Mama! Enfys said I cannot have strawberries with my cream today. Tell her I can!” Ceri, who had known ten namedays, fisted
her small hands at her waist and glared at her sister, who was three years her senior—and never let her forget it.
“I was just kidding! Don’t be a baby who runs to—”
“The Romans are in the village.” I cut off my daughters’ bickering as soon as Briallen closed the thick wooden doors behind
us. Quickly I slid the satchel that held Andraste’s precious gift over my head and hid it behind one of the tapestries that
covered the wall from floor to ceiling.
“Oh, goddess! What do they want?” Arianell stood so abruptly that she stumbled into Dafina, who had moved to stand beside
her mistress.
“Nothing good. Andraste warned me they were here. Mother, Dafina—get the girls out through the rear door.” As I spoke, I hurried
toward my bedchamber. Phaedra was standing just outside the thick deer-pelt curtain that served as the door, eyes wide, wringing
her hands. “I’ve stalled them, but they will not wait long. Get out now. Warn every villager you can. Tell them to leave immediately—fade
into the forest—meet at the Chief’s Barrow. The Romans are loath to trespass there.” Romans did not desecrate graves. They
knew the barrows were where we buried our dead, a place specially protected by our gods and goddesses, and thus they avoided
them.
I turned at the entrance to my chamber. “Briallen, go with my daughters. Protect them. Phaedra, help me change and put out
our second-best mead. Then follow the girls to the forest.”
Briallen frowned but nodded in acknowledgment of my command. “Come, Arianell, bairns, let us go with haste as Herself—”
The double wooden doors to the lodge burst open. Skewered by a Roman pilum, Bryn’s still-twitching body fell inside. Decianus stepped over him and spoke with a sneer. “I have waited long enough. This discourtesy is what happens when a woman thinks she can lead men.” Then he replaced his sneer with a wide, feral smile as he studied Enfys and Ceri. “The daughters of Prasutagus. How fortuitous that you are here to take part in this valuable lesson.”