Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
the fight those few miles inland.
“No good-byes,” Natanlius said to Archfedd. He reached up, ruffled his
second son’s hair. The lad sat before his mother, eyes wide and frightened, his
arms tight around her waist, ropes securing him to her as added precaution.
They would be riding fast when those gates opened; they could not guide
horses or fight their way out and also hold onto the boys. Gwenhwyfar had the
eldest, Constantine. A Decurion sheltered the baby.
The roar beyond the closed gates was increasing, the flames licking at the resistance
of the oak timbers, bil owing acrid smoke, spreading through the piles of brush and
carcasses, both animal and man; the stink of burning covered everything.
“No good-byes,” Natanlius said again with a loving smile. He squeezed
Archfedd’s knee, took a last look at her. They called her the Lioness, many of
his people of Caer Morfa, as a term of respect. There were a few from further
away who thought her too headstrong, too determined to stand firm for the
things her father advocated; mostly, those of the Church. Those few used the
title as a curse, but she did not object. It added to the remembering that she was
daughter to the Pendragon.
“No good-byes,” she repeated back. She tried to smile but the tears would
not stop coming. They had been so happy together, this short while.
Natanlius would have swept her off that horse, called a halt to this whole,
foolish idea. He turned, and went quickly to the head of the phalanx of men
waiting this side of the gate with swords drawn, spears ready. This way, she had
a chance. The other, for her and his sons there would be nothing except slavery
or a cruel death.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 1 5
Ider took his place beside him. There would be fierce fighting when those
gates opened; they would need the best men. He glanced around, only the
once, at Gwenhwyfar. She had hurriedly dressed herself as they would expect
a warrior queen to be. Her red cloak, white padded under tunic, with the
thicker, protective leather and bronze studded tunic above. Leather doe-hide
bracae. Boots. She had her sword out, a dagger ready in her belt, a shield. Her
hair she wore tied at her neck, a thick single plait of grey-streaked copper.
Around her neck, the royal torque. She caught Ider’s glance, raised her sword,
with the blade touched her forehead in salute.
And the gates were open, fast, hurling inward, the men leaping forward,
screaming, yelling, to meet the Saxons who rocked backwards at the unex-
pected manoeuvre. They cut a swathe through, those brave British, scything a
path through the formidable press of the Saex.
Virtually every man from inside the stronghold formed a protective barrier,
and, not understanding what was happening, the Saex reacted too late. The
burst of horses thundered through and away. The Saex slammed their spears
at them, tried to rush forward, cut them off; a few arrows were loosened. One
or two horses were hit, brought down, their riders hacked, unmercifully, the
horses butchered. But they got away, Gwenhwyfar and Archfedd. And two of
Arthur’s grandsons.
Fifty-Seven
What did he do? Damn it, what could he do! The Artoriani had
broken through the shield-wall. One more heavy thrust and they
would have them all running, or dying. But he could not let Caer Morfa
fall, not while…Arthur thrust the protest from his mind. He was a soldier,
a battle-hardened warlord, could not let personal love come into this thing.
Gwenhwyfar and Archfedd had insisted on staying. They knew the risk they
took, knew what could sit before them. All the same…
He had the reserves and two turmae to send in up the hill. Yellow Turma
and his own King’s Troop. A good leader needed the ability to think quickly, to
change plan, alter direction with fast-made decisions for the sway of battle could
alter as swiftly as a peregrine’s dive. He yelled for Yellow Turma’s Decurion to
come forward, told him briefly, concisely he was to ride to the stronghold, see
what help he could reasonably give.
“Reasonably,” Arthur repeated, ensuring his trusted officer under stood. The
Decurion nodded. If his small force would make no difference, if the stronghold
had already fallen, the men were needed here, for it was Cerdic they must put
an end to.
Through the day Arthur had been cursing that Bedwyr was not here with
him. Bedwyr as second-in-command had been needed, but was it not ironic
that even if he were here, he could not have sent him to the Caer?
Arthur raised his arm, gave the command his men were waiting for. To
charge the remaining solidity of the shield-wall, finish it.
Bedwyr would have led his men into certain death for Gwenhwyfar.
“
Whatever happens
,” she had said to Arthur as they lay together last night—
Mithras! Was it only last night? “
Whatever happens, you must close your eyes and
ears to what is around you, fight Cerdic, and only Cerdic. For until he is finished, this
thing will not be ended.”
“
There is the boy Cynric
,” he had pointed out.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 1 7
“
Cynric
,” she had answered obligingly, “
is Mathild’s son. Not Cerdic’s.
”
Twenty yards from the shield-wall Arthur released the tight hold on the
reins, shifted his grip to his sword, used his heels on Brenin’s flank, and let the
stallion plunge forward into a gallop.
He only hoped Gwenhwyfar was right, for it was Cynric who led the
command down at the inland sea. Cynric who was besieging Caer Morfa.
Fifty-Eight
He stood before his father, enraged, his fists clenched, nostrils
flared, jaw clamped. The passion of anger so overwhelming in Cynric
that he could feel the desire rising up in him to take an axe and plunge it into
his father’s brain. The blood of war was still spattered on his clothing and skin,
even his sword had not yet been cleaned.
“They were good men,” he stated through clenched teeth. “And there was
no need for the slaughter of women and children.”
“Are you, then,” Cerdic spoke through one side of his mouth, the other
being puffed and swollen, the eye black and disfigured, “disagreeing with the
action taken by two of my most supportive allies?”
For a wound, a blow to the face by a club was nothing glamorous, but for
Cerdic the pain went deeper than anything marked on the surface. The broken
bone of his nose would be permanently disfigured, and the blood that had
gushed from him surely almost led to him bleeding to death. They had assured
him it was all superficial, but what did these medical people, those imbeciles,
know of the needs of a man who had Woden for ancestor? A known fact that
kings had greater feeling than peasant folk.
“I was in command!” Cynric hurled back at him. “Not your friends, Stuf
and Wihtgar. I ordered the British men to be taken prisoner, the innocents to
be treated with respect. Orders ignored by their men.”
“Innocents? Fah! They were poxed British. At least they met death swiftly. I
would have let the men use the women and girls, first.”
“
Ja
, you would have done.” Cynric began to turn away from his father, the
disgust blatant on his face. “But then, you too are a bastard whore-son.”
Cerdic leapt to his feet, overturning the chair, knocking aside the table that
had been placed at his right hand, scattering the bowl of fruit, the wine. He ran
the few paces separating them, caught hold Cynric’s arm as he stepped away.
“How dare you, boy?” Cerdic roughly swung him around, took a hurried
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 1 9
backward pace, let go his spiteful grasp as he met with an expression that
shouted contempt and hatred.
“How dare I, Father? How dare I?” Cynric jabbed his father in the chest
with his finger, pushing him back another pace, and another.
“I dare because I know I will become king of the West Saxons when you
are gone.” He jabbed again. Cerdic came up against his chair, tripped, sat down
heavily, his son leaning over him, breath spewing the fury on his face. “I dare,
because it would not take much for me to decide to take my kingdom for
myself now. This day, this moment.”
Cerdic was quivering, struggling to contain his bladder. He never had much
bravery, had not inherited his mother’s quick thinking, nor her ability to
disguise thought or fear. He could lie, but his untruths were plain seen.
“You promised your friends great reward for victory over the British, did
you not? And for so thoroughly destroying the marsh stronghold, what do they
get? The Roman isle of Vectis? Wihtgar is even now taking the first ship to
claim his land, sailing to establish for himself a burgh. What do I get from all
this, then, eh? What is there for me?” Cynric’s hands tightened on the neckline
of Cerdic’s tunic, his father gurgled some half-heard response.
“Arthur, my grandsire, fought with you, fought an honourable battle. He
set your troops running. How many did you lose, Father, six, seven, eight
hundred men?”
His courage returning, Cerdic tried to prize the tight fingers away from his
throat. Cynric would have drawn his dagger by now had he truly intended murder.
“We slaughtered more than three hundred British this day at Caer Morfa!”
“Caer Morfa is become ours. It is peopled with the rotting carcasses and
charred bodies of the British dead. Where is the victory? Where is the honour
in the killing of so many women and children?”
“For every Briton dead, I gain another acre of land…”
“We have gained nothing today. You ordered your men to retreat. You saw
the Pendragon coming for you, saw your death in his sword, shit yourself and
ran. As you did the last time, at Llongborth. The Great Wood may be ours,
because Arthur will not be able to rebuild the stronghold that protects it, but
we have penetrated no more than twenty miles, Father. And we have the blood
of innocents and heroes to carry with us to our graves.”
Cynric released his hold, almost tossed his father aside. “If you had fought
as you had boasted, we would this first evening after battle, have for ourselves
a kingdom.” He turned on his heel, walked the length of his father’s Mead
6 2 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Hall, the eyes of those within, following him. No one else would say all he had
voiced, none of the hearth-guard, the thegns. Not elders or chieftains, not the
ordinary man who fought in the shield-wall when Cerdic called him to battle,
or felled trees, grazed sheep and planted corn when he did not. Only the eyes
portrayed their thoughts. And every man in the Hall thought to himself,
Cynric
will be the better king when he is called to lead us
.
Hunched on his chair behind the high table, Cerdic saw those thoughts, and
the jealous doubts whiffled through the hollows of his own dark mind.
Cynric
has more of his father in him than do I.
“
Boy!
” He scrabbled to his feet, bellowed down the length of the Hall. “Boy,
do not turn your back on your king!”
Cynric halted. He was a tall young man, agile, long fingers, strong arms. A
man with the nobility of the stag about him. Handsome with his dark eyes and
mother’s flaxen hair, his firm jaw, long nose, and quick, humorous wit. He was
much liked for his fair judgement. He stood with his shoulders back, head high.
Did not turn.
“Did you hear me boy?”
“I heard you.” Cynric slowly turned around, faced his father, regarded him
a long, silent moment.
“You are not yet a king.”
The gateway at Caer Morfa. It had come so unexpected, startling, the opening
of those gates. None of the Saxons swarming before it had remotely considered
they would be thrust open and the British would—so insanely—come out to
fight. The scrabble of those first few moments had been little short of panic, the
Saxons ready to flee for the safety of their ships, believing, in that mad whirl of
yelling and shouting and sword-brought death, that the Wild Hunt was escaped
and coming for them. Indeed, had that not been the Huntsman himself out in
the front? An oak of a man, as tall as a tree, as broad, as strong. Dressed in red
cloak, white tunic, the uniform of the Artoriani—his roaring voice, his sword
whirling pounding death on all who had the misfortune to be in his crazed path.
When they gathered their wits and tried to cut him down, he fought on. Though
they hacked and sawed at his blood-spewing body, still he stood there, defying
death, fought on, refusing to let go of life and sword until the riders—the two
women—had gone through, had reached the first line of trees and were away to
the road, to safety. Ider, someone said his name to be. Cynric would have had him
buried with honour, but the Saxons, his father’s friends, Stuf and Wihtgar, had
ordered him dismembered and used in the burning of the Hall at Caer Morfa.