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    Song of the Sparrow

    Page 9
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      Why does it have to be him? Of all men?

      My best friend.

      She should be mine.

      But I will never have her.

      Never. His voice breaks.

      My little sparrow returns,

      fluttering, frightened.

      She beats as hard as my heart,

      and I feel I might burst.

      You could have me, I whisper.

      The words just slip out.

      I gasp and feel the blood drain

      from my cheeks. I cannot believe

      how I have spoken.

      You? he asks, and his eyes are cold,

      cruel. You are naught but a child, Elaine.

      You would not understand.

      My heart, what was left of it,

      shatters. A thousand little pieces,

      shattered and scattered over this

      wild moor, seeded in the grasses.

      I gasp, and turn away.

      My body feels wooden and dead.

      Lancelot does not turn to watch me.

      He just stares out

      into the distance.

      Then I turn and run.

      I run back to the river,

      as if a wolf chases me for my life.

      I imagine great, slavering fangs

      nipping at my heels, and almost

      wish it would devour me, but

      I strip off my dress, loosening the

      ties that bind it, and throw it to the ground,

      and I dive into the river, letting the cold

      water cover me. I push myself

      down to the bottom, until I feel the slimy

      rocks and silt dancing beneath my toes.

      I puff out my cheeks and keep my breath

      close, until I can hold it no more.

      Then I glide upward to the surface and

      take in a great mouthful of air.

      As I turn to look around at the willow tree,

      I notice a figure on the camp-side shore.

      Gwynivere.

      She is watching me closely, her cornflower eyes

      squinting against the sunlight.

      What were you and Lancelot

      talking about? she asks, her voice

      filled with poison.

      What do you care? I answer,

      surprised by the loathing

      in my own tone,

      surely, it is none of your

      concern.

      You really are a beast,

      Elaine, taking off your gown

      and swimming like

      some wild thing.

      I flip onto my back and begin to

      kick, propelling myself close

      to where she stands and kicking

      harder, splashing water

      onto her feet.

      Oh! You are horrid! she screams.

      Yes, I reply, I know. A wild beast.

      And I kick some more,

      sending water droplets onto her dress.

      Gwynivere moves backward a pace,

      then sticks out her tongue at me

      and runs back to camp.

      Some lady you are! I call after her.

      I swim to the opposite shore, and

      shake the excess water from my arms

      and legs. I pull on my dress,

      which clings damply to my body,

      then find my way back to the stepping-stones.

      And I laugh to myself,

      all the way to our tent,

      until I remember that I did not bring

      back any milfoil.

      The pile grows daily.

      Every man in the camp

      has brought me at least one piece

      of clothing to mend.

      I have no choice now,

      but to ask for help.

      To ask Gwynivere for help.

      I try to string the right

      words together, then

      rehearse what I will say.

      Gwynivere, I have too much

      mending, and I fear —

      No, I do not want to admit fear

      to her.

      I have much mending to do,

      and need your help —

      No, I do not want to admit to

      needing her.

      I approach her tent and

      cough, hoping that will attract

      her attention.

      Who is there? Lance —

      Her eyes, at first bright with

      a smile, turn fiery.

      Oh, it is you. What do you want?

      Gwynivere, I do not know why

      you hate me, but there is

      too much mending to do for one person.

      Will you help me?

      She looks at me coolly, as if

      weighing her options.

      No, I do not think I will.

      I care not for sewing, and find it

      beneath me. Unless it is sewing a standard

      for Arthur to bear into battle, do not

      speak to me again of sewing.

      She turns and lets the tent flap

      fall closed in my face.

      Fury heats my blood,

      and I want to scream.

      No one, not even Lavain,

      has ever spoken to me the way she does.

      No one.

      Oh, how she fools all the men

      with her pretty looks, her

      fair skin and soft hands and

      luminous eyes.

      A gown woven by faeries

      could not disguise her cruel nature.

      But I do not know how to respond,

      and as these thoughts,

      and —

      and my jealousy

      yes, jealousy

      wheel through

      my mind, my tongue sticks

      in my mouth, as though a little

      jaybird has flow in and caught

      it like a worm.

      I hate her. My tongue is unloosed suddenly.

      I am shocked by this evil, black

      feeling that fills my gut.

      I have never felt such,

      such hate before.

      Whom do you hate? Tristan is beside me.

      Tristan, you are like a ghost! I hate how

      you sneak up on me, I snap.

      Instantly his friendly expression

      droops.

      I am sorry, I sigh. I just —

      Whom do you hate? he asks again,

      the smile returning to his eyes.

      No one, I grumble.

      No one with long yellow hair and

      gowns far too fancy

      for an army encampment?

      he teases.

      I can only stare at him agog.

      How did you know? I breathe.

      Well, I have never seen such an

      expression on your face, in all the years

      that I have known you.

      I see where you stand,

      and so, I figured, it must be

      the newest addition to our happy camp.

      I sigh. Yes, well,

      you guessed correctly. I

      do not understand it, Tristan. She is

      so remarkably cruel to me.

      I am seething again.

      Yes? Well, then I hate her too, Tristan says.

      What do I do? I cannot be her friend;

      she has no interest in friends, I shout.

      Unless that friend is Lancelot.

      Or Arthur, I suppose. I cannot

      catch my breath. But this I also

      do not understand: She flirts openly with

      Lancelot, yet everyone knows she is betrothed

      to Arthur. How can she behave so brazenly?

      My face is red, I can feel it.

      Tristan is suddenly serious again.

      I cannot tell how things will end, but

      this friendship — Gwynivere and Lancelot’s —

      it does not bode well. I like it not, he says.

      Though Arthur seems not to notice …

      or not to care, I add.

      Yes,
    I have noticed his not noticing, as well,

      Tristan says, thoughtfully. I cannot imagine

      how he could possibly be blind to it. Perhaps —

      perhaps there is another reason. Perhaps

      he does not care whether

      Lancelot and Gwynivere flirt under

      his own nose. Tristan strokes his chin.

      Well, anyway, what do we do about this

      would-be princess? Tristan asks, grinning wolfishly.

      What do we do? I ask, confused. What can we do?

      Oh, there are lots of things, he answers

      mischievously. Do we know what she

      is afraid of? We can give Lady Gwynivere

      a gift, a small token of our

      appreciation, if you will.

      Perhaps she likes frogs, or worms,

      or mice, or —

      Tristan looks around at the

      ground happily, as though searching

      for some creepy-crawly inspiration.

      How about a small, brown toad? I interrupt,

      thinking of how I felt the day I met her.

      In her bed? Tristan finishes.

      We look at each other, then turn around

      and head back to the river.

      When we have a small toad in our possession,

      trembling in Tristan’s closed fist,

      we sneak back to camp, ready to keep

      our prisoner in an improvised jail cell

      of sticks and leaves.

      But as we pass the Round Table, we

      come upon Arthur, Lodengrance, and

      Gwynivere in conference.

      Her tent is empty, Tristan whispers.

      Now is our moment. Come!

      We tiptoe over to her tent, and as

      Tristan holds back the flap, I

      enter, looking for a place to

      deposit the toad.

      How about on her pillow? Tristan asks.

      No! It will escape. We need a better

      place, I hiss, shaking my head.

      Ah, here! I find her small

      embroidery bag. This is perfect.

      Will she look in it tonight? he asks.

      I am sure of it, I answer.

      We slide our small, slimy soldier

      into the silken purse and draw the

      strings tight.

      Now he cannot hop away, Tristan

      murmurs, then he grabs my hand,

      and we race out of the tent into the

      evening air.

      We are laughing so hard now, that tears

      are streaming down my cheeks, and my side

      aches with cramps.

      I have not felt so light and

      carefree in days.

      Then a piercing scream shatters the

      gathering dusk.

      And Tristan and I begin to laugh again,

      harder, even, than before.

      Shhh, he gasps, taking my hand

      once more and pulling me toward

      the shiver of birches.

      We collapse to the ground together,

      still chuckling.

      Tristan’s eyes are closed and

      he still clutches my hand in his own.

      Tristan, I whisper, easing my hand from his grasp.

      Elaine? He opens his eyes slowly,

      and they are startlingly light, almost yellow.

      Did you know your eyes change colors?

      I ask him, bringing my hand to his temple,

      then staying myself.

      What am I doing?

      Did you know yours do too?

      They change from grey to green to brown,

      the colors of the forest,

      the colors of the sky,

      Tristan replies softly.

      I have never seen a green sky, I giggle.

      No? he asks, suddenly serious.

      Before a summer storm,

      the sky turns green, green like your eyes.

      He reaches a hand into his pocket. Elaine,

      he whispers, I — I wanted to give you something,

      before we left. I was not sure —

      Tristan’s voice grows rough.

      Here, these are for you.

      He grabs my hand again and turns

      it so my palm faces up.

      Then he lays something slick and heavy

      on it.

      I look down and gasp.

      Tristan, it is beautiful.

      A necklace, two strands

      of delicately carved wooden

      beads, gleams like ivory in the moonlight.

      It is perfect, I tell him. Thank you.

      You are welcome, Tristan mumbles quietly.

      He holds my gaze, then turns away abruptly.

      It grows late. Your father will wonder

      where you are. Come, I shall escort you

      to your tent.

      He pulls me to my feet, and we walk

      in silence as the night folds

      into a deep shade of violet around us.

      Good night, he whispers at the mouth

      of my tent.

      Tristan — ? I begin, but

      he is gone.

      I lay down to

      sleep, the beads resting

      beside me on my pillow,

      I stroke them. They are smooth

      and cool.

      I call up the sound

      of Gwynivere’s scream;

      it reverberates in my head.

      I behaved like a child.

      Worse, a cruel child.

      My mother would be so

      ashamed; I am so ashamed.

      I feel my face

      burning

      in the dark.

      I want to scream.

      I want to scream, because

      it is not me.

      This is not Elaine of Ascolat.

      She does not play mean, childish

      pranks.

      I reach for my shawl, my fingers

      shaking.

      I will walk in the night.

      Stars fill the black, black sky,

      dusty and brilliant.

      The air is cool and soft,

      like a mother’s hands,

      soothing.

      When I look up at the heavens,

      it is hard to believe that everything

      down here on this earth is changing,

      so fast, so terribly.

      Everyone I know and love is about to

      march into war, about to start a war.

      Finish it.

      How can they just turn their backs

      on me and march away,

      not knowing if they will ever

      come back

      to me?

      I plan to follow, yes

      but they do not know it.

      How can they do it?

      How can my brothers and my father

      leave me all alone?

      My vision is blurred as

      tears fill my eyes,

      and I clutch Tristan’s necklace

      in my hands, rubbing the

      beads between my fingers.

      Of course, they are men,

      and they do what is practical,

      without a thought for what

      or whom they leave behind.

      The birch trees loom ahead

      like a brotherhood

      of silver silent ghosts.

      Last year’s leaves smell fresh

      and I drift among the trees,

      myself a silver silent ghost in

      the moonlight.

      Everything in this world changes

      given the passage of enough time.

      And what will be if Arthur succeeds?

      I dare not even think on it.

      The peace that we all hope for,

      that they fight for,

      gathers on the horizon

      like a brewing storm.

      This peace would leave us

      scattered and apart.

      Will we Ascolats return to our

      island? We have no home

     
    ; left on Shalott.

      I do not even know where Lancelot

      comes from.

      Where will he go?

      And Arthur and Gwynivere?

      Still, the peace that we all pray for,

      it is our only hope.

      I scan the moon

      for a glimpse of the goddess face,

      for a sign of what is to come,

      but all I can see is

      Lancelot’s face, Arthur’s face,

      Tirry’s and Lavain’s and my father’s,

      Tristan’s face.

      And they look frightened.

      When everything changes,

      what will be at the end of everything?

      O Lord.

      O Mistress of the Moon.

      I know not whom to ask

      for guidance.

      At the end of all of this,

      will I find myself alone?

      Sunlight filters through the

      hide of the tent, wresting me from

      a dreamless slumber.

      Once again I am alone, and

      once my chores are finished,

      I carry an armload of clothes

      outside, down to the river,

      where I find a seat on a bed

      of clover, below the great

      elm tree.

      There, I take up my mending.

      It is better to do by the light

      of the sun than squinting in the

      gloomy shade of the tent.

      As I stitch a gaping hole in

      Gawain’s breeches, the river

      babbles and burbles past.

      All is quiet and still. There is

      no wind to move the tree’s branches,

      nor to rustle the grasses and reeds

      that line the river’s banks.

      Then a twig snaps, and I

      look up from my task to see

      Arthur striding toward me.

      His features are haggard,

      lines I never noticed before,

      standing out around his eyes.

      Hello, I call to him, letting

      the needle and pants fall into my lap.

      I thought I might find you here.

      You seem to favor the company of

      trees to men, these days. Arthur

      runs a quick hand through his curly

      brown locks, and looks at me,

      his eyes squinting,

      as though he gauges

      my mood.

      Trees are solid, dependable;

      they can be trusted, I reply.

      Unlike men, Arthur finishes, sitting

      beside me.

      Most men, I add.

      I do not know, Elaine.

      Even those of us with the best

      of intentions can be unreliable,

      weak. His eyes grow dark.

      Arthur, I say gently, let us not

      talk of such things. The sun

      shines and the sparrow sings.

      Uncertain days lie ahead,

      but for now, let us enjoy what

      is certain and wonderful.

      And he is silent,

      staring out over the river,

      lost in his own thoughts.

      There is no time for regrets

     


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