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Authors: Kathryn Lasky

BOOK: Hawksmaid
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Chapter 9
FIRST FLIGHT

There is that moment for every falconer that is the most difficult when the jesses are released and the hawk is first tried. Will the hours, the weeks, the months result in not simply a bird ready to hunt but a bird with whom a trust has been built? The bird will fly off for the prey, but the real question is will it return to its master?


C
hwap chawap ptutch
.” (Lark wings delicious.) Two days after Marigold's unhooding, Matty stood in the middle of the bailey in front of the old mews. She held a length of cord to which a pair of bloody lark wings was attached. As Matty swung the lure, she cajoled and encouraged Marigold, who was tethered on a creance, or training line, several yards away. She wanted the merlin to fly to the lure. “
Phryn,
darm
. You are a lovely, strong merlin. You will be a wonderful hunter.”

Matty watched Marigold carefully. She saw the dark eyes with the tiny gold flecks tracking the swing of the lure. The merlin roused her wings and made a quick, low-skimming flight, striking the lure with her talons.

From the window high in the keep Lord William observed this scene and marveled at his daughter. Her skills were unbelievable. A merlin, no less, and she had the bird flying to the lure faster than he had ever taught any hawk to do anything. But it was not just her obvious talent for communication. She had fed this bird perfectly. Every bird needed a little bit of fat. Figuring out a bird's ideal weight was difficult. Too light and without enough fat the bird could appear quite healthy but might not have the energy to hunt successfully.

The late afternoon shadows stretched across the bailey, but Matty and her bird seemed to sparkle even in the dwindling light of the day. “She's ready, Matty!” Lord William called down. “She's ready!”

Matty tipped her head up. “You really think so, Father?”

“I know so!” Lord William exclaimed.

 

With any luck the larks would be out today, Matty thought as she walked toward the meadow with Marigold on her shoulder. It was dry and sunny. The warm columns of air would be rising, making the wonderful updrafts that birds loved, for they could soar and hardly needed to flicker a wing for a good ride. She was excited and she hoped she didn't run into Fynn or Rich and the others. She did not want any spectators around for Marigold's first free flight. The bird was beautiful now. Her plumage was an amazing rich brown, and if one looked closely one could detect dark purple undertones, the color of summer plums.

Matty's first instincts about Marigold had been right. This merlin was going to be a hawk among hawks, a hawk for kings and emperors. But Marigold was
her
merlin.

Matty felt the puff and shiver of the little hawk on her shoulder as soon as they approached the meadow. It was a sign of excitement. Although no larks were immediately visible, Marigold must have sensed them nearby. Then one darted out of a hedge and three more followed.

At the first sight of the larks, the taste of bloody
wings flooded through the bird's crop, the sac deep in a bird's throat where its prey is first digested. “
Hulla hulla mwatch…Chwap chawap ptutch.
” Matty spoke softly while she loosened the jesses. The words like small burrs caught in the air between them as she moved her mouth to within inches of Marigold's beak.

“Sweet
tsha. Ptschaw chu chu,
beauty Marigold.
Cha ka? Chu sho mwap. Mrrru shru cha ptschaw.

The leashes were off. Matty knelt on the ground, for she wanted Marigold to take off low, which would give her a long horizontal flight and time to discover for herself that she was truly free in the outdoors. Matty raised her arm and gave the command. Without a moment's hesitation Marigold lifted off, at first skimming the ground and then rising in an aggressive flight to track the singing larks. Matty waited with her hands clasped at her breast. She could feel her heart beating through the stiff leather of the falconer's glove. She could almost feel the thrill of the bird's own beating heart. Marigold had not looked back. She was drunk with freedom. Matty watched as Marigold caught the changing angle of the breeze that curled around the treetops. The larks sensed her presence even though she flew high above them. Nervously twittering, they
made desperate dashes against a sudden headwind. Just as the fattest of the birds was right over the middle of the field, Matty saw Marigold begin to plunge toward the earth. Her legs flattened backward against her half-closed tail; her wings folded close to her sides; the sharp little beak cut the air. She hurled down like a dart. There was a spray of feathers, then a splattering of blood. It had all happened so fast that it took Matty a moment to catch her breath.

Next she wondered what every falconer wondered on the occasion of a bird's first free flight. Would the merlin—besotted with freedom—fly away forever? Would Marigold return when Matty whistled? Or would she lose her?

But Marigold did return. The little hawk had hardly settled back on Matty's shoulder when a shiver ran up Matty's spine. Someone was watching her. She felt strange eyes drilling into her back, but she dared not turn around to look. Fear flooded her.
Would that I were a bird and could fly from this earth!
Was this an idle wish? It seemed to Matty as if she had suddenly struck upon a truth at the core of her being.

Finally, her fear lessened. She felt she had been released from the staring eyes that had locked on
her. But she waited. Marigold sensed her mistress's caution. She cocked her head, to pick up any sounds. Matty listened, too. She knew the natural noises of the forest. The tread of a deer was different from that of a fawn. The owl flew sheathed in silence, but the wind curled off the edges of a hawk's wings in a muffled roar. Matty crouched near the trunk of a gnarled oak tree with Marigold on her shoulder and listened for the sound of human footsteps. But finally, when all felt quiet, Matty stood up and began the long walk back to the castle.

That evening after Matty returned to the mews, she felt a mixture of joy and apprehension. Someone had been spying on her, she was sure. She could not shake the shreds of that fear that had so suddenly invaded her entire being. Sleep was hard to come by as the moon, now broad as a curved blade, rose in the night. Matty felt her eyelids grow heavy. But in the last few months—particularly in the weeks since she had found Marigold and all the hours she had to stay with her when normal sleep had been impossible—she was aware that it was not exactly in sleep that she sometimes experienced a kind of rest that was more like a waking dream, a trance.

Tonight Matty was very much aware of being in this peculiar condition. Perhaps she had been in this state since Marigold's flight that afternoon. She opened her eyes wide and seemed to find herself at a slight remove from her own body as if she were on a perch. She felt an odd stirring in her shoulders, and when she looked down she could see a tiny ant crawling in a crack in the floor. She blinked and looked around, seeing not just a spider in its web but the tiny hairs on each of its eight legs. Her eyes had never seen with such sharpness, such astounding clarity. And suddenly she sensed that her arms no longer felt like arms. What was happening? She was out of her own body but not quite in another. She felt part girl but part not girl. She experienced a faint pull in her head, as if she were being drawn elsewhere.
Am I becoming a hawk?
But the instant the thought occurred to her she was back in her own bed. She was not frightened in the least…perhaps a bit wistful. For there was a sense of loss for what had just vanished.

1191

Chapter 10
THE PRIORY AT BARNSDALE

For a true falconer a well-taught bird is never a captive but a partner.

I
T WAS
S
UNDAY MORNING
and Matty was sitting by her father in the pew of the chapel of the priory of Barnsdale when she felt a ping on the back of her neck. She knew immediately what it was even before she saw the little needle of thistle land on her shoulder. Fynn must be sitting behind her. He was almost as good a shot with a thistle and a hollow reed to blow through as he was with a bow and arrow. Matty turned around. She was struck suddenly by how tall he appeared—even sitting in the pew—and how broad his shoulders had become. There were even the first signs of a mustache! They had never spoken of that
day when Matty had found Marigold and Fynn had declared the merlin a match for its mistress. She had never forgotten his expression and the play of light in his eyes when he had spoken those words. She counted back and realized that she had known Fynn for nearly half her life. She was thirteen now and he was well past fourteen but still acted like a mischievous boy. Well, she was hardly a lady herself.

Another thistle leaf hit the back of her neck. She turned again to look at her assailant. Fynn attempted to suppress a smile and maintain a solemn look, but his eyes sparkled with sly humor. He nodded toward the aisle. She cautiously slid her gaze to the side. Hubie was actually tying a fishing fly in church. If this wasn't sacrilegious she didn't know what was. But it made Matty laugh. Luckily the nuns had just begun the loudest part of their hymn, the part that led up to the Eucharist. Father Percival was getting ready to lift the holy bread. This was the moment when the Real Presence of Lord Jesus was to be recognized.
Fly tying at a moment like this!
Matty bit the insides of her mouth to keep from laughing aloud and prayed not to burst out into a storm of giggles. Was that a horrible thing to pray for? Thank heavens the nuns were
trilling loudly and Father Percival was chanting in a thunderous voice. There was enough noise for some cover. But Hubie! So cocky, so pleased with himself. She looked again, and Will gave her the signal to wait after church.

Between Hubie's fly tying, Will's signal, and two more thistle leaves blown on her neck by Fynn, there was precious little time to concentrate on the service or the other people in the church. Several of the sheriff's men were present as were some richly clad gentlemen who could only be courtiers of the prince.

Standing next to the old abbess from the nearby Abbey of St. Michael was a younger woman who also wore an abbess's cross. Matty kept looking back at her. She was large with a heavy brow. There was something odd about her eyes—they were the kind of eyes that could pierce you. Matty shivered. They reminded her of something. She was not sure what, but she did not want this woman looking at her. She sank down a bit in the pew but tried to swivel her head and slide her eyes over for another glance.

In the shadow of the larger woman, the older abbess seemed to have shrunk and withered since last Sunday. What was happening? And who was this large lady?
What was it about her eyes that so disturbed Matty? Was it like trying to stare into the sun? But they were not bright. The eyes seemed colorless, empty. And yet they had a power. Matty did not want to look at them, but she was drawn, as one might be drawn to the edge of a cliff, to peer into a deep chasm. Matty finally tore her eyes away and shook her head. She felt an overwhelming sense of threat. She wanted to get out of the church. Would the services never end? Father Percival could drag out a prayer longer than any person she knew.

Finally Matty heard the words of the benediction and the church service concluded. As she left, she brushed by the young abbess but kept her head down as if studying the stone pattern of the floor with great intensity. Outside, Fynn was looking about furtively. “What is it?” Matty said, coming up to the boys.

“The sheriff's men are gone,” Will said. “They don't like church much more than we do.”

“We have to meet this evening, dusk. The big rock by the creek,” Fynn said. “Now scatter. We can't be seen together.”

Chapter 11
THE EYES

Like all wild things hawks can smell fear. Therefore, it is best when dealing with birds of prey to keep one's wits and stay calm. In this way a hawk will come to you.


I
T WAS HER EYES.
” Matty looked around the circle of boys.

“What do you mean, her eyes?” Fynn leaned forward on the staff he had made from a limb of an alder.

“Fynn, they were transparent!”

“Transparent!” Will exclaimed. “How can eyes be transparent?”

“Hers were, I tell you, and it was the most terrible thing I ever saw.” Matty paused. “It was as if…” She hesitated, groping for the right words as she tried
to remember the terrible cold feeling that had crept through her when she had seen the abbess. “It was as if they looked not just through you, but you could see through them and into her. And there…there was nothing…nothing human—nothing living inside! Yes, that's it. It was as if those eyes belonged to nothing human or living on earth. They were eyes from the realm of the dead.” She looked directly at the boys, who drew in closer as she spoke. “And they reminded me of something. I can't explain, but I felt they had seen me before.”

“The eyes had seen you before?” Rich asked, confused. “Are you trying to say she recognized you or you recognized her?”

“I—I…” Matty shook her head. “I don't know. It just all felt very queer to me.”

“So you think,” Rich continued, “that she could be taking over from the old abbess?”

“No,” Fynn said. “I heard my father say that there is a new abbess at the big abbey in Nottingham and that's just my point, lads.”

“What's the point?” Matty said.

“It's why Hubie called the meeting, isn't it, Hubie?”

“Well, yes, but—” Hubie started to speak then Rich interrupted.

“Oh, this is the missing chalice thing,” Rich said.

“The missing chalice thing!” Fynn mimicked with undisguised contempt. “It's real, Rich. Don't make fun of it.”

“My mum noticed it was gone. But she wasn't sure of its value,” Hubie offered.

“I noticed it was gone, too. Since three Sundays ago, right?” Matty said.

“Are you talking about the chalice with the rubies?” Will interrupted.

“Exactly,” Fynn said. “It hasn't been there in its niche for these past three Sundays!”

“So what's the point?” asked Rich.

“The point is this,” Fynn said more quietly. “Prince John has King Richard just where he wants him—miles away. Right now Prince John is the most powerful man in England and pretty near the richest. But there is still also one powerful man who stands in his way and has remained loyal to King Richard.”

“Who's that?” Rich asked with sudden respect.

Matty watched Fynn carefully. He could certainly command attention when he wanted to. There was a
force to the way he spoke. In a mews there was always one hawk who emerged as the leader. In hers it was old Moss whom the others, even the arrogant Morgana, regarded highly. Fynn was definitely the leader here. He did not have to be called that. He simply was.

“Go on, Fynn,” Matty said softly. He cast her a quick glance. “Who is it?”

“The Bishop of Ely, William Longchamp. He is the only high churchman who has been honest, faithful to his king and his flock. And he is the chancellor. That means that he is supposed to be the boss while Richard is away. He's meant to keep an eye on Prince John, I'll wager.”

“But what does this have to do with the church, except that he is a bishop?” Will asked.

Fynn lowered his voice to a whisper. “The church is rich. John has drained the nobles of every penny. On top of that, there are these new taxes for the Crusades. Now you watch, Prince John will turn more and more to the church. Its treasures could raise him an army. I'll wager the Bishop of Ely is going to make it more difficult for him to get what he wants. Probably already has.”

“But the Bishop of Ely is far from here and from
this church. I'm sure he doesn't know that the chalice has gone missing,” Rich said.

“But there are rumors about another bishop, a bad one who is closer to here, to Barnsdale—the Bishop of Hereford,” said Hubie. “He's Prince John's supporter.”

“And,” Will added, “he works closely with Prince John's chief bully, Sir Guy of Gisborne.”

Matty turned pale at the mere mention of Sir Guy. The memory of him standing in the bailey holding up her mother's necklace with its Star of Jerusalem sapphire dripping blood was still vivid in her mind's eye.

“You all right, Matty?” Fynn asked with sudden concern. She blinked rapidly and shook her head as if to banish the horrible image. “I wonder sometimes,” she said slowly, “whatever happened to my mother's necklace.” The boys looked at one another.

“What necklace?” Will asked.

“A necklace my father gave her at the time of my birth. It held a blue star sapphire called the Star of Jerusalem. Very rare. She wore it as a pendant.”

“Well, if Gisborne has it, I'm sure he's holding it for Prince John. A bargaining chip to buy loyalty,” Rich said.

“Prince John,” Fynn continued, “needs many for his plans—traitors, schemers, varlets—all kinds. Not just the sheriff and Gisborne. Like Hubie said, he's got the Bishop of Hereford, as corrupt a man as any. And I'll bet you the abbess is connected to
him
.”

Rich stood up suddenly. He was an astute lad with a sense of political maneuverings. On first glance, Rich looked as plain as a potato. His hair was a dusty brown and tiny freckles were scattered across his cheeks. His eyes were a very ordinary gray until he got an idea. Then they sparkled. “That makes sense. I heard, too, that there was a new abbess in the Nottingham abbey. How convenient for her to work with the sheriff. And the sheriff is owned by Prince John, who wants to own the church. Oh, yes, it all begins to fit neatly, doesn't it? A devilish design of scoundrels and tyrants and rotten men of the cloth!”

“And women,” Matty said softly. “It's like a giant chess game, isn't it? Bishop against bishop, knights and rooks for the prince—like Gisborne and the sheriff. The king virtually checkmated in the Holy Land. And all of us are the pawns, of course.”

There was a deep silence. Then Rich said, “But there's more to this—this…” He hesitated.

“This game,” Fynn said.

“More?” Hubie said. His large round face was flushed, and an anxious look clouded his green eyes.

“Yes.” Fynn began to pace in front of the rock where they had gathered. “My father was saying last night that more forest land—it's not only Barnsdale but also Sherwood Forest—has now been forbidden to hunters, save for the prince's and the sheriff's men.”

Hubie sighed. “There's not going to be a thing to be had to eat if on top of all these taxes people can't hunt anywhere. I don't know what my mum's going to do. When I deliver to the alehouses, I have to pay the gate tax. It's doubled in the past year. It really cuts into our profits.”

“The millers' taxes have gone up, too,” Rich said. “The customs officers used to come once a year, but now they come every four months. They think we're so stupid. They say they are charging us less, but I said to me da, ‘Tell them we can multiply, Da. If they be charging us one pound three times a year, that is three pounds instead of the two pounds once a year we used to pay, plus the four bags of milled grain they now add.'”

“What did your da say?” Matty asked.

“He said, ‘Don't question, don't argue. We don't want trouble from them.'”

“You see,” Fynn continued, “every time you turn around, they are claiming more, be it land or taxes, in the name of the king. But we know John isn't claiming it for King Richard. And now that the people have been bled, he turns to the church. Can't tax the church, but why not steal from it?” Fynn paused and let that sink in.

“So what are we to do?” Matty asked.

“I'm not sure,” Fynn said, “but the chalice is gone. It must be somewhere.”

 

Exactly a week later, when the boys and Matty took their places in church, the chalice was back in its niche. Matty noticed it first and nudged Hubie, who was on his knees beside her praying. He opened his eyes wide, then blinked, then nudged Fynn, who blew a thistle leaf through a reed at Rich. Rich turned around and mouthed, “Unbelievable!”

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