Read The Quest for Saint Camber Online
Authors: Katherine Kurtz
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Also by Katherine Kurtz
The Deryni Novels
The Chronicles of the Deryni
Deryni Rising
Deryni Checkmate
High Deryni
The Legends of Camber of Culdi
Camber of Culdi
Saint Camber
Camber the Heretic
The Histories of King Kelson
The Bishop's Heir
The King's Justice
The Quest for Saint Camber
The Heirs of Saint Camber
The Harrowing of Gwynedd
King Javan's Year
The Bastard Prince
The Childe Morgan Trilogy
In the King's Service
Childe Morgan
The King's Deryni
Other novels
King Kelson's Bride
The Quest for Saint Camber
The Histories of King Kelson, Volume Three
Katherine Kurtz
For
Chevalier Scott Roderick MacMillan, GCJJ
“Steel True,
Blade Straight,
A Knight.”
C
ONTENTS
P
ROLOGUE
Behold, thou hast instructed many, and thou hast strengthened the weak hands. â
Job
4:3
I Â I will make him my firstborn.
âPsalms
89:27
II Â Open thy mouth, and drink what I give thee to drink. â
II Esdras
14:38
III Â Many seek the ruler's favor.
âProverbs
29:26
IV Â It is good to keep close the secret of a king.
âTobit
12:7
V Â A feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry.
âEcclesiastes
10:19
VI Â For he offereth the bread of thy God; he shall be holy unto thee. â
Leviticus
21:8
VII Â Ye have set at naught all my counsel.
âProverbs
1:25
VIII Â Teach me, and I will hold my tongue.
âJob
6:24
X Â A day of darkness and of gloominess, a day of clouds and of thick darkness. â
Joel
2:2
XI Â We will return and build the desolate places. â
Malachi
1:4
XII Â The way of a fool is right in his own eyes.
âProverbs
12:15
XIV Â Yea, his soul draweth near unto the grave. â
Job
33:22
XV Â I am clean without transgression, I am innocent.
âJob
33:9
XVII Â And they shall mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son.
âZechariah
12:10
XVIII Â The way of the wicked is as darkness: they know not at what they stumble.
âProverbs
4:19
XIX Â Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.
âProverbs
9:17
XXI Â They have pierced my hand.
âPsalms
22:16
XXII Â If I wait, the grave is my house.
âJob
17:13
XXIV  And his brightness was as the light ⦠and there was the hiding of his powers.
âHabakkuk
3:4
XXVI Â In a dream, in a vision of the night, when deep sleep falleth upon men.
âJob
33:15
XXVII Â Ask now the priests concerning the law.
âHaggai
2:11
Appendix I: Index of Characters
Appendix II: Index of Place Names
Appendix III: Partial Lineage of Haldane Kings
Appendix IV: The Festillic Kings of Gwynedd and Their Descendants
Appendix V: Partial Lineage of the MacRories
P
ROLOGUE
Behold, thou hast instructed many, and thou hast strengthened the weak hands
.
âJob 4:3
Thunder rumbled not far away, low and ominous, as Prince Conall Haldane, first cousin to King Kelson of Gwynedd, pulled up with his squire in the meager shelter of a winter-bare tree and huddled deeper into his oiled leather cloak, squinting against the spatter of increasingly large raindrops.
“Damn! I thought we'd finished with storms for a while,” he muttered, jerking up his fur-lined hood. “Maybe we can wait it out.”
Conall's comment was more a wishful aside than a statement of real belief, for March in Gwynedd was notorious for its unpredictable weather. An hour before, when the two young men rode out from Rhemuth's city gates, the sky had been reasonably clear, but all too quickly fast-moving clouds had closed the countryside in a flat, grey gloom more appropriate to dusk than noon, plummeting the temperature accordingly. As thunder rolled closer and shower turned to deluge, Conall could taste the acrid bite of lightning-charged air moving just ahead of the storm. Had it continued only to rain, Conall still might have borne the situation with reasonable good humorâfor the day's outing was one of Conall's choosing, not someone else's notion of royal duty. But his fragile forbearance quickly evaporated as the icy downpour turned to hailstones the size of a man's thumbnail, pelting prince, squire, and horses hard enough to sting.