Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 2 1
Cynric gazed down the length of the Mead Hall at the overweight figure
of his father and knew him for what he was: a man who had never known
love, who had not experienced pity, and who would never understand the
word compassion.
All the British had fought well, sacrificing their lives for those two women
and the children who had been with them. Cynric had caught a glimpse of
one of the boys himself. He had pushed forward, grappling with one of the
riders whose horse had fallen, a spear through its chest. The woman had
been there, urging her grey horse on, her mouth open, the war -cry of the
Artoriani shrieking from her lips. Cynric had finished the man, leapt up,
trying to make a grab for the horse’s reins—and he had seen the boy clinging
to her beneath the fold of her cloak. He had hesitated. Gwenhwyfar. She
could have been no one else, and that must have been one of Arthur’s own
grandchilder. Her sword was raised; Cynric had stood, transfixed, unable to
move for that one, so very brief moment when all else, the rage of fighting,
the noise, the blood, the stink, had faded into the mists that swirled outside
of time and life. She could have struck him, used the sword to end him, but
she had not.
Their eyes had met, fleetingly gazed into each other’s thoughts, into each
other’s soul. Why had she deflected that sword stroke? Mayhap Cynric would
never know, not until he entered the next world and the gods saw fit to tell
him. And he? He had stepped aside, brought the flat of his blade down on the
grey’s rump, urging it away faster. With what followed, he had been glad he
had. He would not have wanted that sorry ending for the Lady Gwenhwyfar
and her kindred. His kindred.
“You bring dishonour to me, boy!” Cerdic rasped. “I ought have you
whipped for your insolence.”
Cynric was looking at his boots. They had blood on them, a spattering of the
life of men. He was a Saxon lord, and he had honour and courage. He would
fight for a land of his own, fight the British, whoever. But he would not fight
with dishonour, with the blood of murder on his sword and shield.
It was they, his father’s friends, who had butchered the lord of Caer Morfa.
Not Cynric. Natanlius had not been as fortunate as the tall man. He had not
been killed, but captured. Wihtgar had ordered him gelded and while the man
still lived, his intestines drawn from him. They used them as rope to fasten him
to the broken door-timbers of his own Hall. Then they took the dismembered
bodies of his officers and men, and piled them before the doorway around him,
6 2 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
adding bracken and hay and anything that would burn, poured oil over it all,
and fired it with the women, children, and wounded huddled inside.
Natanlius had not cried out once during his slow death, but the tears had
poured from his eyes. At his feet they had placed one body for him to see, to
watch, as it burnt.
Cynric lifted his head. If his father ever had doubt as to how much his son
despised him, he was made clear of it now.
“I have no need to bring you dishonour,” Cynric said. “For you bring
it to yourself. I asked for some reward from you, as is my due for fighting
beneath your banner. I ask for the destroyed stronghold of Caer Morfa as
my own.”
The hostility was thick; it could be severed with a dagger. Cerdic knew
his son was leaving him, taking a hearth-place for his own. The fear stabbed
through him. If his son left, then others might follow, for Cynric was much
liked, had much favour, most especially from the younger men. He could not
let him go—least, not while this anger rested in his heart. Cerdic was not fool
enough to miss that necessity, had learnt something from his mother.
“It is yours, as a sign our disagreement is passed and we are again friends, as
kindred such as we ought be.” It stuck in Cerdic’s throat to be so pleasant, the
smile he forced onto his cheeks hard, without warmth. The atmosphere in the
Hall, however, eased, the men visibly relaxed. A few hands dropped away from
their daggers and sword hilts.
Cerdic’s one fear, had passion overspilt between father and son, on what side
would they have fought?
“I intend to bury the remains of the dead. To give the area a new name.”
Settling back into his chair, showing outward sign that he was content,
relaxed, Cerdic gestured with his hand. So be it, he signalled.
“From this day, the day when so many brave men died, when so much
honour was lost by the spilling of bloody murder, the British place of Caer
Morfa will bear the title Natan Leag. The Forest of Natanlius.”
Cynric ignored the infusion of red colouring his father’s enraged face. He
saluted, a mocking gesture of uncivil obedience, swivelled on his heel, and left
the hall. His last words echoed the dark length of that huge place.
“And if you were not my father, I would challenge you for the futile butchery
you brought about this day. My grandsire may be British-born not Saxon, but
it seems to me that to be British is to fight and die with honour. Do not ask me
to fight with you against Arthur again, Cerdic, for I will not.” Honour meant
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 2 3
much to Cynric, and oath taken was oath kept. The shame of Caer Morfa
ensured he kept his word.
It was a child they had lain there. Natanlius’s own son. A babe, no more than
a few weeks into life. It would not have been so shameful, that wicked burning,
had the boy at least been dead.
Part Four
The Final Thread
One
May 500
A group of men stood, close together, talking low-voiced beside
the blaze of the hearth-fire. Occasionally, one would cast a furtive glance
at the woman who sat in the king’s place.
Gwenhwyfar was aware of their hostile appraisal, guessed their thoughts as if
they were being spoken aloud. What did they see when they watched her from
beneath those half-closed, wary eyes? Confidence, an appearance of ease, that
there was nothing wrong? Or did they see the copper hair, now silvered grey,
her wrinkled skin, her stiffened fingers that found it difficult to hold, let alone
use, a sword? Did they realise, if she seemed so old, what age was her husband,
their king?
It was they who had called this Council, the lords, the elders, men of the
Church. Justly, she supposed, for Arthur was ill and for a man nearing his five
and sixtieth summer, their concern could be expected. Did they not think she
shared their worries? They did not listen to the breath rattling in his throat, they
did not watch the strength daily sapping from him in the sweat of his fever.
There were not as many lords as there ought be. How many had not come?
Dyfed was not here, nor Powys, Rheged, Builth, or Brycheniog. None from
the North. Gwynedd? Hah, Gwynedd! Gwenhwyfar clenched her jaw against
the vomit that rose. Thank all the gods she was the last of Cunedda’s children
to have life! How her brothers, she closed her eyes, her dear father, would have
wept to see Gwynedd as she now was! Would the Council, Arthur, expect
Gwynedd’s loyalty? What, allow a murderer, a cheat, and a liar to sit at the
Council hearth? Maelgwyn, her—God preserve her—her kindred. Maelgwyn,
who had taken a sword to his own uncle, Owain, had murdered him for the
prize of Gwynedd. Prince Maelgwyn? Scum, dog’s dirt.
A side door into the Hall opened. Bedwyr stepped in, his expression and step
jaunty, his hair tossed, wind-tousled. “My,” he joked, “the wind’s stronger
than an evening after onions for supper!”
6 2 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
A few men politely chuckled.
Bedwyr strode to Gwenhwyfar, saluted, made his obedience. She made a
light gesture of implied question with her eyebrow. Imperceptibly, Bedwyr
shook his head. She had hoped Archfedd would come, but she was new wed
to Llawfrodedd, Lord of Comovii, a good man, but not wholly to Archfedd’s
liking. Between them, with Archfedd’s land of Dumnonia, given her by her
father for her eldest-born, Constantine, they had much to rule, much to see
to. Though for all that she had gained in land and wealth, Archfedd still had to
forgive them for advising her into this marriage. She did not want Llawfrodedd,
for all he seemed kind and generous, nor for all the alliance this marriage brought
her father. He was ten and five years her senior, and with a serious view of his
responsibilities. His first wife, Archfedd declared unkindly to her parents, most
probably died of boredom.
Natanlius is my husband
, she had added, on that
wedding night, two months past.
The memory of his love will not fade merely because
I must go to another’s bed. He knows it is against my will.
Archfedd had always been stubborn. Too much like her mother, Arthur
often complained.
Indicating Bedwyr was to lead her to the hearth, Gwenhwyfar took his
hand, rose from her chair. Would she have gone through with marriage to
another, to Bedwyr? Who knew? Certainly not she. Happen, it was only the
Three, the goddesses who wove the fate of men and women, who had seen
the future rippling in the pattern of life. There was a difference, though,
between herself and Archfedd. She had not had two living sons to follow
after Arthur. Archfedd did. And one of them might become Pendragon one
day. For that, Archfedd needed the alliance of a husband who would fight
for those sons. Archfedd knew that. It was the reason she had agreed to wed
with Llawfrodedd. But, even for that reason, she could not forgive her father
for making her do it.
Gwenhwyfar hid her disappointment.
Give nothing away in your expression,
hold your planning close to your chest
. Arthur had instructed her what to do, say, at
this Council, but she wished it was he who was now making way to the hearth,
calling the men to order. As she sat, making herself comfortable on the cushions
spread, for them she allowed a slight smile to slip onto her lips.
And such an
interesting, enjoyable chest ought have things held close. My body, preferably.
He might
be ill, but he could still tease her!
Bedwyr sat beside her, at her right hand. To her disgust, Caninus seated
himself, uninvited, to her left. Almost in his thirtieth year, a man with young
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 6 2 9
sons of his own, but another like Maelgwyn, out for his own gain with blood
on his hands and deceit in his mind. Oh, he had come to the Council, for even
after the treachery of the past he considered himself next after Arthur. Well,
he would need to pursue another thought on that! Constantine of Dumnonia
might yet be only ten and three years of age, but Arthur had been barely a
year older when his father had been killed in battle. The grandson would be
proclaimed the next Pendragon, not Caninus.
They sat in a circle as Arthur had introduced the tradition so many years
past. Circular, so that each might see the others’ expressions, read the others’
thoughts. They began with the trivial things, the levies for the rate of taxation,
the granting of rights for three settlements, a change to a minor law. The
matter-of-fact everyday items that the Council was responsible for. All the
while their minds on the door to the rear of the Hall, the closed door, where,
behind, lay the king. Never before had Arthur missed a calling of the Council
through illness. Anger, belligerence, aye, then he had stayed away; but never
would he have admitted the frailty of the body, the creeping hindrances of age
to so important a group of men. They were here, these lords, to gain what they
could for themselves, to discover how ill Arthur was. How soon it would be
before he died. She would need say something, show them that soon he would
be well, on his feet, as strong as ever he had been.
The Bishop of Aquae Sulis cleared his throat. “It grieves us that the Lord
Pendragon cannot be with us. How is the king’s health?” He asked it politely,
with a grave smile. “We trust he will be not be incapacitated long?”
“It is a fever, nothing more. A few days to regain his strength,” Gwenhwyfar
spread her hands. “It is difficult for me to persuade him to rest, you know how
the Pendragon loathes to lay abed when there are things to be done.”
They nodded, agreeing, sympathetic, offering their hopes for a fleeting return
to health. Most of them lying, most, secretly delighted he might soon be gone.
Too many in this Council wanted the royal torque for their own decoration.
A man came quietly into the Hall, whispered to Gwenhwyfar. She gasped,
half-rose to her feet.
Bedwyr put his hand to her arm. “What is it?” he hissed. Concern raced
through the circle of the Council, all sharing the same, unspoken thought…
the king? Only Bedwyr realising the gatekeeper would not be bringing word
of Arthur.