The Four Corners of the World - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Now once more the soldiers march through Anderida.
Gleva (_holds up her hand_): Listen!
[_A pause. The sound of marching is heard quite clearly, but at a distance_.]
Bran: It does not stop, Princess.
Gleva: All yesterday, all through last night, all through this long day! Listen to it, steady as a heart beating, steady and terrible.
(_She speaks with great discouragement, moving apart, L., and sitting on tree bole_.)
Caransius (_lighting fire_): I crept to the edge of the forest to-day.
I lay very quiet behind the bushes and looked out across the clearing to the road.
Gleva: You!
[_A general exclamation of astonishment._]
Caransius: Oh, it's not easy to frighten me, I can tell you. I fought at Verulanium with the Iceni. I know. I carried a sling. (_He nods majestically at his companions._) And there you have it.
Gleva: Yes, yes, good friend. But which way did the soldiers march?
What of the road?
[_She goes over to him._]
Caransius: Mistress, there wasn't any road. There were only soldiers.
As far as my eyes could see, bright helmets and brown faces and flas.h.i.+ng shoulder plates bobbing up and down between the trees and a smother of dust until my head whirled.
Bran and Both Attendants: Oh!
Gleva: But which way did they go?
Caransius: I lost my dog, too--the brute. He ran from me and joined the marching men. I dared not call to him.
Bran: Yes, that is the way of dogs.
Gleva: Did they go north towards the Wall? (_She shakes him._)
Caransius (_who has been blowing on the fire, now sits up comfortably and smiles upon Gleva, who is tortured with impatience_): G.o.d bless you, mistress, there isn't any Wall. I know about the Romans; I know!
I fought at Verulanium. Now!
[_Gleva turns away in despair of getting any sense out of him. A trumpet sounds on the top of Bignor Hill, faintly. All turn swiftly towards it_.]
Gleva: Ready!
[_A sound of armed men moving, a clash of s.h.i.+elds is heard from the top of Bignor Hill._]
Now fire the torch. Give it me! (_She springs on to the bank and waves it three times from side to side, steps down, and gives it back to an attendant, who puts it out._)
Caransius (_continuing placidly_): No, there's no Wall. There are a great many mistakes made about the Romans. They are no longer the men they were. I carried a sling at Verulanium, and there you have it.
I'll tell you something. The soldiers were marching to Regnum.
Gleva: To Regnum? Are you sure?
Caransius: Yes. Up over the great Down they went. I saw their armour amongst the trees on the side of the hill, and the smoke of their marching on the round bare top.
Gleva: They were going to Regnum and the sea. (_She speaks in despair._)
Third Attendant: I am afraid.
Gleva (_turns on him scornfully_): You! Why should you fear if they are marching to the sea?
Third Attendant: I have been afraid ever since yesterday. The noise of the marching scattered my wits.
[_Gleva and the others laugh contemptuously._]
And because I was afraid--I killed. (_A low cry of consternation bursts from Bran and Caransius._)
Bran: Madman! Madman!
Gleva: You killed one of the Romans!
Third Attendant (_stands before her_): I was afraid. It was by the old forge in the forest. There's a brook by the forge.
Bran: Yes.
Third Attendant: He had fallen out of the ranks. He was stooping over the brook. I saw the sun sparkle upon his helmet as he dipped it into the water, and his strong, brown neck as he raised it. I crept close to him and struck at his neck as he drank.
Caransius: That was a good stroke.
Bran: A mad stroke.
Third Attendant: He fell over without a cry, and all his armour rattled once.
Bran: It will be the fire for our barns, and death for every tenth man of the tribe.
Third Attendant: No one saw.
Gleva: Stand here!
[_The third attendant stands before her._]
I gave an order.
Caransius: Yet, mistress, it is better to strike against orders than to leave one's friends and, like my dog, follow the marching men.
[_A cry bursts from Bran. He seizes Caransius. Gleva stands with her hand upon her knife. Then she turns away, and buries her face in her hands. A whistle is heard from the hillside above her on the left. She looks up, and her face changes. She turns to third attendant._]
Gleva: Go up the hill--close to the camp, as close as you can creep, and watch. So may you earn your pardon. (_He goes off_.) You two stand aside--but not so far but that a cry may bring you instantly.
Bran: We will be ready. (_Exeunt R._)