This story finishes
off what I've come to think of as the Eirias Triad, coming after
'Tân' and
'Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau'. Perhaps the tale I've spun here isn't exactly
what I want for the characters,
but it is something that I could see happening. Many thanks to
those who have commented and
critiqued the stories presented here - it's a comfort to know
that I'm not alone in thinking of this
as one possible future for the boys.
Standard disclaimers
apply. Bran Davies, Will Stanton, and The Dark Is Rising
Sequence are
all copyright of the wonderful Susan Cooper.
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Diwrnod i'r Bren
(A Memorable Day)
By: Gramarye
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Will rather enjoyed the State Opening, in
all its archaic glory of wigs and crowns and black rods and
military men running about in silk stockings and buckled
court-shoes.
It was the perfect study for an
anthropologist, simply bursting with ritual and tradition. More
than once
during the Kings Speech, he caught himself privately
analysing some smaller aspect of the occasion
the traditional rowdiness of the MPs approaching the Lords
Chamber, or the long-standing practice of
the Palace holding a Government whip hostage during
the ceremony to ensure the monarchs safe return.
Remnants of a time when relations between the Crown and the
Commons had not been quite so benign,
as Will rightly knew. And though he would have been the last
person to demand that Parliament should
cling to tradition purely for traditions sake, he
nevertheless liked the sense of continuity that this
particular collection of traditions provided.
It was comforting to think that things didnt always have to change.
He quietly pushed those thoughts aside
before he could go too far down that particular path, and focused
his attention on the ceremony that was happening in the here and
now.
He was almost too successful in
that. Having fallen headlong into a brown study over the
socio-economic
significance of the stuffing in the Woolsack, he was so deep in
thought that he only belatedly realised that
the Speech had ended, His Majesty had departed, and the Royal
Gallery was beginning to empty out.
The peers who had been in the chamber were
slipping away to find something to eat before the
afternoons
debate on the Speech, and Will knew that if he didnt act
now, hed never have the chance. So he collected
his overcoat and scarf and hurried out of the gallery, pushing
through the crowd as quickly as he could with
murmured pardons and excuse mes, and
managed to catch hold of his quarry just before the ermine-
trimmed robe was swallowed up by the press of people on either
side.
Hed meant to say
congratulations or well done or something
equally pleasant and banal, but instead
what came out of his mouth was:
After all the years of you teasing me
about Convocation dress and sub fusc, I think Ive
earned the right
to say that you look utterly ridiculous.
And his quarry turned round, very slowly.
A pair of tawny-gold eyes blinked at him
from behind thin-rimmed spectacles, and then one white
eyebrow arched imperiously.
You may have earned that right,
Professor Stanton, Bran replied sonorously, with a gravitas
and
dignity that put the marble statues lining the corridors to
shame. For today, that is.
Oh, I may have earned that
right? For today? It was Wills turn to
raise an eyebrow, and one corner
of his mouth quirked in a near-smirk. Well, my most
humble duty to your lordship, then, for permitting
one such as I to speak so boldly. He took a step
backwards not an easy thing to do, with all the people
around and swept into a mock-formal bow, complete with
overly elaborate hand gesture.
Brans grave expression cracked at
that, and he reached over and thumped Will on the back with
his cane. Ynyftyn. Youre going to
do that to me for weeks now, arent you.
No, Will said as he straightened up, grinning. Only for as long as youre wearing fancy dress.
Ah. Bran glanced down at the
scarlet robe bedecked with gold lace and ermine trim, and
nonchalantly
brushed at an invisible spot on the hat that he held tucked under
his arm. It is a rather silly ceremony,
I must say. But it did go like clockwork, once they finally
got on with it.
Will chuckled. Im sure
theyve had enough time to practise. Theyve only
been doing it for a couple
of centuries or so.
I suppose, Bran admitted, almost
grudgingly. And I know how you English do love all
your
silly ceremonies. I never had to do half so much
oath-taking and speech-making in the Cynulliad
we sheep farmers and coal miners are a simple people, you
see.
Will rolled his eyes, and racked his brain
to come up with an equally sardonic reply, but before
he could say anything he noticed that Brans gaze was no
longer upon him he was looking over
Wills shoulder at someone or something on the other side of
the room, and after a moment a slight
frown creased his forehead.
Damn, he muttered under his
breath, and then looked up at Will, a faint flush creeping into
his cheeks. I promised Id give an interview to
S4C a few words on camera, nothing really.
Give me, say, ten minutes to get them off my back, and then I can
change out of this fancy dress
and we can get something decent to eat.
Will nodded, and wrapped his scarf around
his neck. Ill see about getting a taxi or
something.
With all these people around, Im sure thatll take
about ten minutes at least.
Diolch. Bran
sighed, shifting his cane to his other hand, and resettled his
spectacles on the
bridge of his nose. Even that simple gesture made him look
older, far more tired than before,
and Will realised that the length of the ceremony had taken more
of a toll than Bran cared to admit.
Ill come back for you when I
figure out whats what. He paused. He didnt
quite like to leave
so abruptly, and so he made one last-ditch attempt to bring a
smile back to his old friends face.
I suppose the press is going to miss calling you
Devolution Davies every chance they get, hm?
Bran did smile at that, a bit. Seeing
as how they've called me that for the last forty-odd years,
Ive no doubt theyll keep calling me that for the next
forty or so. My titles something of a
mouthful, after all.
Will kept his own smile firmly in place,
ignoring the fact that it suddenly felt oddly tight to him.
I almost couldnt believe it when I first saw what
youd picked. The Lord Davies of Carn March
Arthur calling it a mouthful is an
understatement. It wasnt quite so easy to keep his
tone light,
but he made what he thought was an admirable effort. Any
particular reason for choosing that
particular styling?
Well, theres this whole
rigmarole you have to go through, with a life
peerage. Bran tugged at
the collar of the robe, adjusting it to sit more comfortably on
his shoulders. Since thereve been
quite a few lords named Davies in the past, the College of Arms
says you have to distinguish
yourself with a specific place name. And they want you to
pick something that sounds suitably
dignified, so you cant name yourself after a road or a
bypass or anything like that. Not that
I was going to, of course, but I think Lord Davies of Carn
March Arthur sounds dignified
enough. He tilted his head slightly to one side, chin
uplifted in the coolly arrogant pose that
had been honed and perfected by countless televised press
conferences. Wouldnt you agree?
Will nodded, with his best scholarly expression. Very dignified.
And besides, Bran continued,
with an airy wave of his free hand, I could only think of
one other
possible place name, and I knew they wouldnt let me choose
that one.
Oh? And why is that?
Bran met his eyes, calmly and flatly.
Because you have to choose a place that actually
exists.
And I wasnt about to explain to the College of Arms why I
wanted to be known as Lord Davies
of Cantrer Gwaelod.
And Will froze, somehow still with a smile on his face.
At that moment, the bells of Westminster
began to toll the three-quarters of an hour. The sound
was distinct but muffled, reverberating thickly against the old
stone walls.
Most of those who were still in the hall
paid no attention to the chimes, for the noise was part
and parcel of everyday life in the Westminster village, regular
and unchanging like the clockwork
it came from. But Will wasnt hearing the same set of bells
that they were. His head was filled
with echoes from another set of bells, faint and ghostly, ringing
out across the sea. The bells of
the land lost beneath the waves the Lowland Hundred.
Cantrer Gwaelod.
As the echo of the bells faded away, the
silence stretched out between them long and thin and
tangible, surrounded by the garbled din of other voices. The
silence only lasted for a second or
two, a heartbeat or two, but that was all the time it took for
Wills entire world to narrow into
Brans unblinking gaze.
N-no, he said at last, rasping out the word. No...it wouldnt have been easy to explain that.
There was a long pause before Bran said, quietly, You see my point, then.
Will nodded, dumbly. His mouth had
gone dry, too dry to form words and even if he had been
able to speak, he wouldnt have had anything to say.
Bran regarded him for a moment longer, and
then thumped his cane on the carpeted floor
making Will start nervously as he leaned forward to steady
himself.
Right, time to feed the journos,
he said, using what Will had once referred to as the voice
that makes the Welsh Office tremble. They start
to eat each other if you dont feed them
regularly, and we cant have that, can we? See you in
ten, boyo.
He gave Will a wry little grin, half-amused
and half-exasperated, and strode off without
another word, scarlet robe fluttering behind him.
Will did not could not watch
him walk away. But he was very, very careful to wait until
Bran was well out of hearing before he finally spoke out loud.
...yes, my lord.
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Notes on the Welsh:
- Ynyftyn means imbecile or idiot.
- Cynulliad is short for Cynulliad Cenedlaethol Cymru, the devolved National Assembly for Wales.
- S4C is Sianel Pedwar Cymru (Channel 4 Wales), a Welsh-language television channel.
- And the literal translation of the idiom diwrnod i'r bren is a day for the king.
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Gramarye
gramarye@postmaster.co.uk
http://gramarye.freehosting.net
26 May 2005
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