Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
his throat.
“I have been asked to suggest you move your men on, my lord Arthur. You
would be more effective as a deterrent near Avaricum.”
“Effective? With the few men I have? My men, Sidonius, my Artoriani!
Where are the men I was promised by your Emperor? Men we British were
supposed to be joined with in this fight against Euric and his Goths? Where
are the horses I need? When will Syagrius be joining us? He was supposed to
have brought several thousand infantry to me last summer!” Arthur’s anger was
rising. Too many damned questions and never a satisfactory answer! “I have
been here a year around waiting to see this business done with, yet have done
nothing but scratch for lice and fleas!”
Sidonius retained a pleasant smile. He had been warned of this British king’s
foul temper. Euric a barbarian? Huh! It was in Sidonius’s experience that the
Goths were generous, mild mannered, and welcoming.
Not Euric personally, but his brother certainly had been. He had much
liked that brother, a firm, large man, given to much laughter and a pleasant
outlook on life. He had treated Sidonius like a visiting king. A pity Euric was
so different, had murdered him; but it was Riothamus, Sidonius was thinking,
who needed to be made an end of.
A ridiculous notion to bring him here in the first place. Nothing could hold
back Euric from obtaining his ambition, nothing and no one. Rome realised
that, these months on, there would not be the funding or the will to hold back
the encroaching tide of inevitability. Syagrius, King of Soissons, knew it, too.
The funding had dried up; there was little left in Rome’s vaults, little save dust
and empty coffers. Not even enough to send the British home.
Sidonius held his fixed, amiable expression. Arthur must never learn of that.
Must not learn that bringing him here had been an appalling mistake. God’s
truth, the anger that would be unleashed, the uproar…the cost of compensa-
tion! No, Arthur must be assured that reinforcements were on their way, that
5 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
later in the summer the ships would be waiting to take him and his men home
again. In the meanwhile, Arthur must be made to leave Juliomagus. The pres-
ence of his rabble of men could no longer be tolerated.
And with Fortuna’s blessing the problem would soon be solved. Euric would
have a hand in that, when eventually he decided to make his move. Either the
British would be wholly slaughtered, or at the least, there would be fewer of
them to need bother with.
Fifteen
Mathild stretched languidly, relishing the feel of a comfortable
mattress beneath her body; the absence of fleas and bedbugs and the
warmth of fine-woven, soft blankets. She lay, arms and legs limp, relaxed, her
eyes closed for fear this might all be a dream. If she opened them, she would
find herself back in that bug-hopping, faeces-stinking slave pen. Then the man
beside her moved, turning in his sleep, and she realised she was awake, this was
real, she had passed the night in the king of Britain’s bed. She had pleased him,
she knew—was this day not
Frigedeeg
, the Lady’s own day? A self-satisfied smile
crept over her face. Frig, wife to Woden, the Lady who blessed the union of
man and woman, who was most surely giving blessing to her daughter this day.
“That expression on your face can only be described as smug.”
With a snap, Mathild opened her eyes. Arthur was awake, watching her. She
blushed, feared he had read her erotic thoughts.
Happen he had, for his hand brushed over her breasts, her body responding
eagerly. Arthur chuckled. “You are no stranger to a man’s touch, my Saex
whore. Who taught you the art of pleasuring?”
About to say “my husband” Mathild choked back the truth. He was dead.
Slaughtered with the others, men, women, and children, by the Gauls when
they came to destroy the English who had lived peaceably, for many years,
on their island settlements along the Liger. And then they wondered why
Odovacer had called the men together! Wondered why they had marched to
take their revenge at that wicked day of burning, killing, and slave-taking! No,
she would not talk of the husband she had loved. Instead, she answered in her
own tongue of the English, “I am a noble-born, a daughter of the goddess Frig.
Her gentle hand guides my Wyrding.”
To her great surprise Arthur understood. “So, your fate is decreed by the
Lady.” His hand was stroking lower, more intimate. “Not so, my expensive
whore. From now, I command your future.” He spoke also in English, was
5 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
amused at her wonderment. Returning to Latin, he explained, “I find it most
useful to understand what my enemies have to say about me.” He laughed. “Or
what my whore may whisper in my ear.”
She was as eager as he for the sharing of pleasure. Her husband she had
missed with great sorrowing. To be used as nothing more than a receptacle for
need by the men who had taken her as slave had been hard to endure these
past two years. Mathild had pride for herself and her people, had accepted what
fate, the Wyrding, her goddess, the Lady, had sent. But oh! How much more
pleasant, how much more worthwhile, to become the bed-mate of the British
king, Arthur Riothamus, the Pendragon! She would make an effort to please
him, would serve him well. Her task all the easier from the intimate delight she
was receiving from him.
Later, she announced into the night-dark tent, “I have many whispers I can
tell to you.”
Arthur lay still. His heartbeat, after the exertion of love-making, easing. He
was tired, wanted to sleep. Outside, beyond the leather walls of his command
tent, he heard the voices of the night watch changing. Day would be here soon,
not much chance for more sleep. “And what whispers would they be?” He
asked through a casual yawn.
“Syagrius of the Romano-Gauls and his allied Franks have no intention of
coming to join you. Rome will continue to play games with you before Euric
of the Goths chooses his own time to slaughter your British in a bathing of
blood.” She paused, then added, her voice hard, the anger as bitter as sour fruit.
“Cerdic, your son, has become Lord of the Elbe and is gathering warriors to
his hearth.”
Arthur attempted to sound disinterested, as if all this was old, long-known news.
“You hear many whispers, my Saex whore. From where do they come?”
Mathild smiled, the indifference did not fool her for his body had stiffened,
his breathing had quickened. Ah! Mathild knew many things! She was a woman
of learning, could read and write both the Latin and Greek styles as well as her
own English runic lettering. She knew, too, how to read a person’s thoughts
from the movement of eye or muscle or limb. She had seen the splendours of
Rome and the wonders of the dancing lights that shimmered in the sky up in
the clear coldness of the North Way, for she had travelled those many miles as
a child and young woman with her mother’s brother, Leofric of the Elbe. How
she had loved the thrill of his fast, splendid longships that sped like swans over
the seas! She had even set foot in Arthur’s land, once, had seen the crowds and
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 7
bustle of the city of Londinium, as it had been then, when she was younger. It
had gone now, she had heard, that town, fallen into disuse and disrepair, save
for the few peasant-folk who had built their poorly made bothies among the
crumbling houses and falling walls. She had seen Arthur there when he had
been serving as an officer under the then king of the British, Vortigern. She had
been a child, but had seen and recognised the gleam of ambition in that young
Pendragon’s eyes. She had seen Winifred, his wife, also. Seen and disliked her.
As she now disliked her arrogant, power-grasping son, Cerdic.
And so, in answer to his question she said, “I hear many things on the wind.
A slave is considered to be mute and deaf, with no sense between the ears.”
She shrugged. “It is a pose worth adopting.” Then she paused, followed in a
rush, “I have never met Cerdic, yet I dislike him. He has that which should not
be his! My uncle was tricked into leaving his land to Winifred’s brat; he was
murdered for his wealth and title. Leofric was a respected man. What was his
should, by all rights of inheritance, be mine.” Mathild lay rigid. It was not for a
whore, a slave, to speak so forthright, so bitterly. She had no rights to anything,
not freedom of thought or life, no right to go where she pleased, to own any
possession, not even the clothes she wore. She had a slave ring around her neck;
belonged to the man who had paid a garnet ring for her.
But no man could take her mind, her past; no matter how ill she was used or
beaten or starved. Both her mother and father were children of noble-born men.
Her own husband had been a thegn, one of Odovacar’s bodyguard. And no man,
not even the Supreme King of Britain, Arthur the Pendragon, could take away
her determination to one day, one day, reclaim all that was rightfully hers.
In the darkness she did not see the slow, calculating smile that accompanied
the fast-forming thoughts rapidly scheming in Arthur’s mind. He had intended
to make use of her only this one night, for all the love he had for Gwenhwyfar,
aye and all the assurances he had given her, he was a man who needed the
comforts of intimacies. A few short months away from his wife he could endure,
but within the turn of a few weeks it would be nearly the year around since
he had left Britain—and the pleasures he gave and received with Gwenhwyfar
were becoming desperate to be sated.
Mathild would serve a passing purpose in that area, for she was pleasing enough—
but for certain, Fate, Wyrd, or the Roman Fortuna, some benevolent goddess by
whatever guise she wore, had surely set this woman Mathild on his path.
When this thing was sorted here in Gaul, when Rome finally shifted its arse
and decided either to let him and his Artoriani fight or find suitable shipping
5 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
home, he might just undertake another voyage after seeing to matters in
Britain. Take a few of his men, two, three turmae ought be sufficient, and
escort Mathild back to her dead uncle’s land along the Elbe River, aid her in
claiming her inheritance.
Arthur wriggled deeper beneath the bed covering, brought Mathild closer
for her voluptuous warmth. He would need write to Gwenhwyfar soon. Ought
he tell her of the whore he had bought for the price of a garnet? She would be
angry. Rather he would word it,
I have purchased a lawful way of removing Cerdic
.
That would please her, and happen, would set her understanding better over
this need for another woman while he was so long away.
Sixteen
March 469
Hit it, man!” Bedwyr bellowed, “It’s a bloody sword you’re using,
not a pitchfork!” Exasperated, he turned, swivelling at the waist, to face
Arthur who stood a yard or two behind. He spread his arms. “Jesu’s love,
cousin, these mud-wallowers are hopeless!”
Thrusting his fingers through his leather baldric strap, the Pendragon, masking
his own frustration, merely shook his head. “They are all we have, Bedwyr, we
must make fighting men out of them.” Added ruefully, and slightly under his
breath, “Somehow.”
Another rider made a pathetic attempt to cut at the straw-filled man with his
sword. He pushed his horse into a canter, going too fast too soon. The horse,
realising the uselessness of the man on its back stopped abruptly to crop grass
three feet before the target. The rider, leaning forward, urging the horse on
with frantic kicking legs and flapping arms, tumbled in a haphazard heap over
the horse’s shoulder.
“Oh Christ’s patience!” Bedwyr roared, striding forward to pick him up by
the neckband of his tunic. Shaking the poor man as if he were a rat, Bedwyr
scolded with his tongue. “Call yourselves riders? Horsemen? God’s blood,
you’re nothing but a bunch of plough-pushers!”
The faces of the ninety or so trainees fell longer, more disillusioned. They
had come to join the Artoriani, filled with the hopes and dreams of glory—
fight with Arthur, make a name for yourself! Half of this group were from
Juliomagus, others from Caesarodunum or Condivicnum, coming from the
towns, settlements, or farmsteadings, drawn to Arthur’s cavalry like ants
to spilt honey. All young men who were sick of Rome’s apathetic atti-
tude towards the threat of the Goths. Arthur had accepted them, enrolling
them as Cymry—only the best, the elite, became Artoriani, but Cymry,
comrade, brother, was enough. To fight under Arthur’s Dragon Banner
was enough.
6 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Bedwyr took a long, slow, deep breath. He and Arthur’s officers had to
make soldiers out of these lumps. If Syagrius were to come, as promised, there
would be no need to recruit these imbeciles, no need to count on the inane.