Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
looked up at her, their eyes enquiring, several of the men and women half-rose
to their feet. The woman motioned them to be seated with a slight shake of her
head. No change, nothing of any difference. She came, with quick, firm steps
across the timbered flooring, her smile wide and welcoming. Cadwy recognised
her as Enid, Geraint’s wife, one-time nurse to Gwenhwyfar’s sons.
Pushing himself to his feet, Cadwy mastered the urge to wince as his leg
violently protested. Wearily, Enid waved him down, sat herself, taking a place
next to her husband on the bench.
“Her breathing comes a little easier,” she said as she took the bowl of uneaten
broth from her husband, ate a few spoonfuls. With a slight shrug to her shoulder
added, “But it may only be my fancy it seems so.”
Cadwy thought she was going to weep, but the tears did not come, for Enid
was a strong woman, and the time for tears was not yet here.
“My father knows of a doctor who resides in Venta Bulgarium,” Cadwy
offered. “Happen he…”
Enid touched his hand, her smile soft and grateful, her eyes so very tired and
saddened. “There is nothing more that can be done.” She left her spoon in
the bowl, sat with her chin in her cupped hands, weary. “No one can do the
fighting for her now.” And then she added, so very softly Cadwy barely heard,
“Save Arthur.”
The young man came to his feet, the pain ignored. “I could fetch him! A fast
horse, the wind behind a good ship…” It was something he could do, some
useful, welcome thing!
Geraint patted the air with his hands, gently bid the lad to be re-seated.
“
Na
,
na
, ’tis well meant and we thank you. Do you think we have not already
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 7 3
considered it? The journey would take weeks, and we have no sure idea of
where Arthur is. We have only a few more hours, at most a day or two.”
Reluctant, Cadwy sat.
In an attempt at consolation, Enid said, “It is good of you to come. Your
father would…”
Cadwy looked up sharply, his eyes flashing. “Would not come,” he finished
bluntly for her. “My father has, for all his life, nursed a grudge of jealousy
against his elder brother.” He shook his head, offered unexpectedly, “It must
come hard upon him to also live beneath Arthur’s shadow.” He shrugged,
was amazed to see, as he stretched his hand to pick up his goblet of wine that
his fingers shook. “Even harder to accept the Pendragon left him with the
responsibility of Britain on his shoulders and that he has not the strength to
keep it as Arthur left it.”
How often had Cadwy talked of one day learning to fight from a horse,
one day joining the Artoriani, being with Arthur? Arthur, always Arthur.
Never had he expressed a wish to fight alongside Ambrosius. He had
assumed his father did not want him, was disappointed because he would
not be able to fulfil those dreams of being a normal man. The truth hit him
as hard as a hammer blow. Did Ambrosius resent his son, not because of
the lameness, this twisted disability, but because he was jealous of Cadwy’s
regard for Arthur?
He groaned, swallowed the wine down. And this day he had compounded
that jealousy by riding away. All he had wanted was for his father to be proud
of him. It was too late now, he was here, he could not re weave the threads he
had so wantonly unravelled.
“Can I see her?” he asked tentatively, expecting to be denied. For all the
realisation of his father’s feelings, Gwenhwyfar meant much to Cadwy, for he
had few friends, few people he could trust enough not to mock him behind his
back, remark on his disability or sneer at him for being weak and unable. He
wanted a wife, a child, but was enough of a realist to fear he would never have
either. Most women seeking a husband respected only the strength of a man,
not the awkwardness of a crutch and a stumbling gait.
Enid rose, her head nodding in agreement, led Cadwy along the length of
the Hall past the few dejected, sorrowing occupants whose eyes followed as
they passed. While hands worked, minds were turned to that private chamber
where Gwenhwyfar lay, covered by the shadow of the next life. All hearts tore
and ached for her safe keeping in this.
7 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Through that private door Cadwy stopped, gasped, his hand covering his
nose and mouth against the stench of sickness and clutching death that assaulted
him, all thoughts of his father clean forgotten. Gwenhwyfar lay, small, with-
ered, against the expanse of the bed, beads of sweat proud on paper-thin skin
stretched over gaunt cheeks; her eyes closed in deep, dark-ringed sockets, while
her fingers plucked, restless, at the bed covers. The room was hot, airless; a fire
burned in the hearth, the hiss of steam rising from a cauldron of boiling water.
Distressed, Cadwy shuffled across the room, plucked a stool from beside a
table, sat by the bed. Was it any wonder Caer Cadan shouldered such heaviness
of heart? He took up her hand, held it firm in his own, willing her to know he
was here, willing her to live.
Twenty
Cadwy sat with Gwenhwyfar through the night, listening to the
spatter of rain dribbling outside, hearing the hiss and crack of wood on the
hearth-fire and her harsh, laboured breathing. He wiped the sweat from her face
and hands with a damp linen cloth, dripped the potion Enid had left between
her dry, cracked lips. Held her hand, holding her, keeping her in this world.
The night seemed long, endless. His thoughts came crowding, insistent,
whispering and fluttering in his mind. Fleeting thoughts that flickered from
one subject to another like a leaping hearth-fire, dancing around and around in
a never-tiring, engulfing circle. His lameness, unvoiced hopes and dreams; his
disappointed father; the future. Arthur. Gwenhwyfar…His lameness…Around
and around.
Even in his drifting sleep they came, those thoughts, entering disguised as
dreams; dreams where he was trying to run to save Gwenhwyfar, to run and
run but he was caught by cloying mud or the grip of an incoming tide, bound
by tightening ropes, held by clutching hands. He could not run, could not save
her. Dreams where his father stood, condemning, disappointed. Dreams where
Gwenhwyfar’s life was fading, ebbing into final darkness.
He awoke with a jerk, startled, not having intended to have slept. It was that
sleep-filled hour when it was not quite night, nor yet morning. Something had
roused him, some noise. He looked at the fire. It had burnt low, but the dried
dung and wood were still glowing red, friendly, there were no logs that could
have fallen or cracked. The rain had stopped, only the occasional drip, drip,
from outside. An owl called, mournful, somewhere not too near.
Something was different, something important. Something, some sound, was
missing. That harsh, clutching-at-life sound. Almost as if he could not bear to
look he leant nearer Gwenhwyfar. Her hand felt cold in his, limp and lifeless.
Breath held, fearful, anxious, he bent closer. Was this it? The end? And her eyes
fluttered open! Vague, distant eyes, but eyes of tawny green flecked with sparks
7 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
of gold; eyes that were blurred and tired, but eyes that attempted a smile. Alive,
breathing. Here. Alive!
“Arthur?” she murmured, her lips dry, barely moving.
Cadwy’s insides twisted, lurched. No! Not Arthur! Me, Cadwy! Cadwy! “I
am here.”
Her fingers moved in his clutching hand. “I have dreamed such fright-
ening things.”
“They have all gone now.” Cadwy stroked the damp hair from her hot—hot
but not feverish—forehead. “Rest now. Sleep.”
“Have I been ill?” Her voice was a whisper, hoarse. Hard to hear clearly.
“Aye.” His was choking, full of relief and despair and rage. Relief that she
was alive, despair that he might never experience the deep love shared by a man
and a woman, and rage against Arthur. Arthur, her husband, who ought be here
with his sick wife, not off fighting some barbarian foreign king in a barbarian
foreign land.
A slight, very slight smile touched her lips, a barely perceptible squeeze to his
hand. “Stay with me,” she asked.
“I will stay.”
Her eyes closed, the lashes fluttering down. A light sigh floated from her lips
and her body relaxed. She slept. A peaceful, unfevered sleep.
Bowing his head, Cadwy prayed—to which god he knew not—to the one
Christian god? To the pagan deities? He cared not which one among them
listened to his murmured, relieved, words of thanks.
Twenty-One
May 469
One of Winifred’s greatest delights was the stirring of a still pond
into muddied waters. The feasting had been a congenial affair, extrava-
gant but satisfying. The selection of shellfish in particular, an extravaganza of
mussels, oysters, whelks, cockles, and scallops. The tender roasted, stuffed hare
also of exceptional, succulent taste. Winifred sat, relaxed, at ease with her guest;
sipped her wine—best Greek, her last amphora. When—if—she would be
able to import more of the same fine quality was anybody’s guess. The Saxon
Leofric had been a mistake as a husband, but he had been able to secure the best
goods for her. Most of these were used to furnish this private apartment within
the holy abbey of Venta Bulgarium; fine carved tables and chairs, intricate
tapestries. Bronze candelabra, expensive Roman glass and the rare red Samian
pottery. The best wine and food, served to the few honoured guests Winifred
received here.
“More wine, my lord Ambrosius?” The polite, smiling hostess. Concealing
her relief when he declined. “I hear,” she said, with that well-practised lightness
of innocence, “your son is residing at Caer Cadan with Lady Gwenhwyfar.”
Ambrosius’s answer was a mere clearing of his throat, a lowering of his
eyebrows. Winifred felt a warming glow of delight. They were true then, these
rumours! All of them? Oh, she must know! She affected a little laugh. “People
are talking.” Again, a light-hearted chuckle. “They say he sleeps within her
private chamber.”
They say
, she thought, smugly,
he sleeps with her!
“And who, Madam,” Ambrosius retorted, setting his half-empty goblet of
wine down sharply on the table beside his couch, “are ‘they’? Tongue-waggers?
Inane peasants? Illicit traders? What do they know of circumstances?” His anger
gave away his embarrassment, his hurt.
Displaying feigned righteousness, Winifred laid her hand flat across her
breast. “Tale-tellers indeed. Wicked people who would impart any lie to gain
a bellyful of food and a night’s comfort.” The sort of people she entertained at
7 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
her steading a few miles from here. People who kept her well informed of news
and tattle. Forcing aside the regret at using the last of the wine, she motioned
for the slave to top up her guest’s drink, for she must loosen his tight-held
tongue somehow. “Nevertheless,” she said with a loud sigh, “there is talk.”
And what talk! Whirling down the wind like a winter storm! Cadwy,
the lame-leg, only child of Ambrosius Aurelianus, wooing and bedding the
Pendragon’s queen!
Did Arthur know of the rumours,
she wondered? But was it
true? Could a lame-hobble lay with a woman who, so rumour also said, had
been held in death’s arms not a month or so back? A second thought. Would
Gwenhwyfar be unfaithful to her husband? Would she be so openly foolish?
Winifred thought not, but then, Arthur had a whore in his bed over there in
Gaul—a flaxen-haired slave-girl. Through her planted spies Winifred knew of
her. As, surely, must Gwenhwyfar.
She motioned for the slave to serve Ambrosius with honey and apple cakes.
A Saxon recipe, but she doubted Ambrosius would bother himself with such
minor culinary thought. Common knowledge, of course, that Ambrosius was
disappointed in his son—how much more so, now this scandal had occurred?
As well known that the Governor of all Britain had never liked or approved
of Gwenhwyfar. Feelings fostered and honed over the years by Winifred’s
subtle interference.
Biting into one of the cakes—a little sweet for his taste—Ambrosius nursed
his varied annoyances. Annoyance that this meddling woman, whose nose
always seemed to be poking into the business of other people, was prying into
areas that were not her concern. Annoyance that his son was behaving in this
way—combined with the older, deeper awkwardness over Cadwy’s lameness.
He had intended his son to be destined for high office within the church, a
bishopric certainly, but now? What could there be for Cadwy with this outra-
geous scandal dangling over them? Could Cadwy ever raise his head in public
again? Huh, if Arthur came home, would Cadwy be left with a head? It must
be stopped, this whole, intolerable wickedness must be put to an end. But how?
Already Ambrosius had written to his son demanding his return home. Short