“But he must know it was simply an accident,” my mam said worriedly when I did manage to see her and ask what was going on.
This was when we were finally camped around a village where the King could stay in a manor house that was big enough for the wizards to perform an autopsy on the Merlin. There Grundo and I were sent hurrying with messages to other wizards, to the army HQ bus, the media tent, to the Waymaster’s office and the Chamberlain’s, and, after a day or so, to the village hall, where the judicial inquiry was being held. So much was going on. There was a nationwide hunt for a new Merlin, with most of the wizards involved, while the rest were busy with the inquiry. It seemed that the postmortem had shown that there were traces of a spell hanging round the Merlin, but no one could tell what kind. It could even have been one of the Merlin’s own spells.
Dad was called into the inquiry. For a whole day it looked as if he might be accused of murder. My heart seemed to be filling my ears and drumming in my chest that entire time. Mam went around white as a sheet, whispering, “Oh, they can’t blame him, they can’t!” The trouble was, as she pointed out to me, everybody else who was close to the Merlin when he died was either royal or very important, so poor Dad got the full blast of the suspicion.
I can’t tell you how frantic everything was that day.
Then everything calmed down.
As far as I could tell, it was Grandad’s doing. He turned up that evening, shortly after Dad had come out of the village hall looking as if he had spent several sleepless weeks on a bare mountain. Grandad brought the new Merlin with him, and they went straight to the King together. We didn’t see Grandad until quite late that night, when they all came out onto the village green: Grandad, the King, the Merlin, the judges, Prince Edmund, and a whole string of the wizards who had been tearing about and fussing over finding the new Merlin. The new Merlin was a skinny young man with a little pointed chin and a big Adam’s apple, who looked a bit stunned about his sudden jump to fame. Or maybe he was in a trance. Prince Edmund kept looking at him in an astonished, wondering way.
Meanwhile, the Waymaster’s office had acted with its usual efficiency and cordoned off a big space on the green, while the Royal Guards jumped to it and built a bonfire in the center of it. We were standing watching, waiting, wondering what was going to happen, when Grandad came up to us. Mam flung herself on him, more or less crying.
“Oh, Maxwell! It’s been so awful! Can you help?”
“Steady,” Grandad said. “All’s well. Dan’s in the clear now. Had to tackle it from the top, you see, on account of the family relationship.” He slapped Dad on the shoulder and gave me one of his quick, bony hugs. “Roddy. Hallo, Grundo,” he said. “I think I’ve got the whole mess sorted. Have to wait and see, of course, but I think they’ll end up deciding it was nobody’s fault. Lord! Poor old Merlin Landor must have been in his eighties at least! Bound to drop dead at some point. Just chose a bad moment to do it. No need for national hysteria about that.”
You know that marvelous moment when your mind goes quiet with relief. Everything was suddenly tranquil and acute with me. I could smell the trampled grass and motor fuel that I had not noticed before this, and the sweet, dusty scent of hay from beyond the village. I could hear the crackle of the bonfire as it caught and the twittering of birds in the trees around the green. The small yellow flames climbing among the brushwood seemed unbelievably clear and meaningful, all of a sudden, and my mind went so peaceful and limpid that I found myself thinking that yes, Grandad could be right. But Sir James had known the old Merlin was going to die. I looked round for Sir James, but he was not there. When I thought, I realized I had not seen him for some days, though Sybil was there, in among the other wizards.
As soon as the bonfire was blazing properly, the senior wizard stepped forward and announced that we were here to present the new Merlin to Court and country. Everyone cheered, and the young Merlin looked more dazed than ever. Then one of the judges said that the question of the late Merlin’s death was now to be settled. He bowed to the King and stepped back.
The King said to the Merlin, “Are you prepared to prophesy for us?”
“I—I think so,” the Merlin said. He had rather a weak, high voice.
“Then,” said the King, “tell us who, or what, caused the death of the last Merlin.”
The young man clasped his hands together with his arms pointing straight down, rather as if he were pulling on a rope, and he began to sway, round and round. The bonfire seemed to imitate him. It broke into long pennants of orange flame that roared and crackled and sent a great spiral of smoke and burning blobs high into the evening sky. The extra light caught and glistened on tears pouring down the Merlin’s small, pointed face. He started to give out big, gulping sobs.
“Oh, Lord! He’s a weeper!” Grandad said disgustedly. “I wish I’d known. I’d have stayed away.”
“A lot of the Merlins have cried when they prophesied,” Dad pointed out.
“I know. But I don’t have to like it, do I?” Grandad retorted.
The Merlin started to speak then, in high gasps, but what with the roaring and snapping from the bonfire and the way he was sobbing, it was hard to hear what he was saying. I think it was “Blame is—where blame lies—blame rests—where dragon flies.”
“And what’s that supposed to mean?” my grandfather muttered irritably. “Is he accusing Wales now or what?”
While Gr
andad was mumbling, the King said in a polite, puzzled way, “And, er, then, have you any words that might guide us for the future?”
This brought on a new bout of weeping from the Merlin. He bent this way and that, choking and sobbing, still with his hands clasped in that odd way. The bonfire gusted and swirled, and golden sparks rained upward. Eventually the Merlin began gasping out words again, and I found these even harder to catch. They sounded like “Power flows—when Merlin goes—world sways—in dark ways—a lord is bound—power found—land falls—when alien calls—nothing right—till dragon’s flight.”
“I suppose this means something to him,” Grandad grumbled.
Several of the wizards were writing the words down. I believe they all wrote different versions. I can only put down what I thought I heard—and the creepy thing is that the prophecy was quite right, now that I understand what it was about.
After that, it seemed to be finished. The Merlin unclasped his hands, fetched out a handkerchief, and dried his eyes on it in a most matter-of-fact way. The King said, “We thank you, Merlin,” looking as mystified as the rest of us. The bonfire fell back to burning in a more normal way.
The Household staff came around with glasses of warm spiced wine. I do take my hat off to these people. They have an awful job obeying all the instructions for camping that come from the Waymaster and the Chamberlain, or setting up house if the King decides to stay under a roof somewhere, and then providing meals fit for a King at all times and in all weathers, and they nearly always get it exactly right. That wine was exactly what everyone there needed. The fine weather that Dad had provided was still with us, but it came with a chilly wind and heavy dews at night.
We took our glasses and went to one of the benches at the edge of the green. From there I could see the Merlin pacing awkwardly about near the bonfire while Prince Edmund talked earnestly to him. The Prince seemed fascinated by the Merlin. I suppose they were the same age, more or less, and this Merlin was likely to be the one the Prince would have to deal with all through his reign when he got to be King. I also noticed Alicia hanging about near them, looking very trim in her page’s uniform. She was making sure that the Merlin got twice as much of the wine and the snacks that were going round. Doing her duty. But, well, she was sixteen and quite near the Merlin’s age, too—not that he seemed to notice her much. He was listening to the Prince mostly.
My parents were asking Grandad how he had managed to find the new Merlin when nobody else could, and he was making modest noises and grunting, “Magid methods. Not difficult. Had my eye on the chap for years.” I don’t quite understand what it means that Grandad is a Magid, not really. I think it means that he operates in other worlds besides ours, and it also seems to mean that he has the power to settle things in a way that ordinary Kings and wizards can’t. He went on to say, “I had to have a serious talk with the King, told him the same as I told the Scottish King. It’s vitally important that the Islands of Blest stay peaceful. Blest—and these islands in particular—keep the balance of the magics in half the multiverse, you see.”
“How old is the Merlin?” I interrupted.