Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
through its entire history, had broken more promises than it had kept.
Seven
It took much courage, and a certain amount of bravado for Winifred
to enter her maternal uncle’s settlement—were it not necessary for her son’s
future, no enticement or threat would have brought her to within a day’s
ride of the place. Aesc was much like his father, the big and brash Hengest,
famed for his strength of muscle and mind, a bull of a man, set in his ways
and proud of his inheritance. Hengest had been a soldiering seeker of fortune.
The youngest brother of a vast brood, with little prospect of laying claim
to anything of value before the seizing of the great opportunity of Britain.
Vortigern, Winifred’s father, had been the key: a man as greedy and ambitious
as Hengest, and a man with an eye for a woman. Little encouragement had
been needed on Hengest’s part; he was a mercenary ready for the fight, and
had a daughter ready for marriage. Vortigern, the Supreme King, had willingly
accepted both offers, and Hengest waited quiet in the wings for the land and
gold he had been promised in exchange. Except, beyond a small, wind-swept,
surf-washed island, and an occasional bag of coin, neither had materialised. It
came as no surprise to Vortigern’s opponents that Hengest, tired of waiting
for the pledged reward, had decided to take what he wanted by force. Only
he had reckoned on Vortigern’s successors being as weak as that king. Had
reckoned without the Pendragon.
Aesc, perhaps, was reaping better reward than his father. The Pendragon was
no limp-minded king, to him went the strength of victories and the generosity
of grants that went with peace. Aesc was allowed the title
Rex
, though as a
subject-king beneath Arthur, with all the dignities accompanying such a title.
Aesc ruled as Arthur willed, conditioned upon annual homage and sufficient
tithe paid—and the continuation of peace.
Fight me and you lose
; Arthur’s words.
Words meant. Aesc held prime land in a prime position for the flourishing of
trade. To him, the longships called first on their voyages from across the sea;
to him fell the first pickings of wealth. Aesc was content with the treaty of
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 5
peace that he held with Arthur, for it allowed him the ability to collect what
he wanted most: wealth.
Winifred had never much liked her mother’s brother. She saw him as the
barbarian son of a Jute war lord, with the manners and stench to match a
rutting boar. The feelings were mutually exchanged. Aesc saw his niece as a
spoilt, arrogant woman who had turned her back on the tribal laws and beliefs
of her kindred. Both were content to use each other for personal benefit when
it suited a need.
As now. Winifred needed Aesc to persuade her son home. Rebellious, he
was steadfastly ignoring his mother. She had no one else to ask for help, Arthur
would prefer the boy dead, and Ambrosius Aurelianus had no place for him
among his plans to restore Britain into Rome’s fold.
She rode through the open gate into the settlement, expecting to see the
common graubenhauser buildings, dwellings of little more status than midden
huts in her opinion. Winifred was surprised to find a grandly built, timbered
Mead Hall, surrounded by a cluster of solid wattle-walled houses and barns.
The place thrived, bustling and busy; the people bright-clad with healthy skin.
Wealth and prosperity oozed from beneath every reed-thatched roof, abounded
in the surrounding hidage of fields, orchards, and grazing land. Her uncle was
doing all right for himself it seemed!
Aesc came open-armed to greet her, his smile and boom of accompanying
laughter full of welcome. He lifted his niece from her mare, embraced her as
valued kindred, Winifred responding with a smile that successfully masked her
inner feelings of contempt.
From the Hall also, accompanied by her attendants and brood of sons, stepped
Aesc’s woman. Anhild, fifth-born daughter to Childeric of the Franks. Her
dress and jewels were lavish, her manner superior—she was a king’s daughter
and a king’s wife. Her dowry had brought the basis of her husband’s present
wealth and the accompanying extensive exchange of trade with northern Gaul.
She greeted Winifred coolly, aware her guest was a divorced wife and daughter
to a deposed, disgraced king, conveniently forgetting that her own father had
been in the same position for a while. But then, Childeric held more friends
than had Vortigern, and his exiled dethronement had been a temporary setback
only. He was allied now with Syagrius of Soissons. While it suited him.
Childeric could change his allegiances as often as the wind swung around.
The two women embraced, their cheeks touching in token of friendship;
both felt the cold of the other, both broke apart with barely disguised dislike.
2 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“The Pendragon is making much of a nuisance of himself in Gaul, so I hear,”
remarked Anhild. “My father reports that the Gaulish landowners complain
more of his Artoriani’s looting and whoring than they do against the Franks,
Goths, and Saxons combined.”
Winifred retained her pleasant smile—loathsome woman, as fat as a toad
and as ugly. “The Pendragon is of no concern to me, Anhild, only his title and
kingdom. The sooner he loses both, the better. It is his son who occupies my
thoughts. It is for Cerdic I have come to seek my uncle’s aid.”
“Ah yes,” Anhild replied, her Frankish accent distorting some of the Jute
words, “your independent son.” Her condescending smile broadened as she
motioned three of her boys forward, smaller images of herself, though they
bore the red hair of their father. “My childer would never run away from their
mother. We are too devoted to each other.”
Your childer
, Winifred thought,
would never have enough brain to find their way out
of this settlement without someone holding their fat fleshed hands.
Aesc invited Winifred inside his Mead Hall, called for wine and food, served
his kinswoman himself. Congenial, outwardly friendly and welcoming. All
smiles and laughter, an eagerness to please. It was a waste of time, this coming
here, Winifred knew it the moment Aesc had lifted her from her mare. Her
Jute kin would not give aid in attempting to persuade—or force—Cerdic
back to Winifred’s Castra. It had only been a vague hope that they would, a
last resort.
She sipped her wine, ate the food, though the drink tasted bitter and the meal
stuck in her throat. Aesc would not help. Her uncle was over-fat and over-full
of his own laziness. He had his kingdom, his wealth, and his pleasures. Why
should he stir himself for a mere boy?
A young man entered the Hall, swaggering with self-importance, another
reason for Aesc’s unwillingness to help her. Ten and five years of age and
with all the arrogance of his untried, incautious age group, the newcomer
paused within the shadow of the Hall, his hand resting on the pommel of
his Saxon short-bladed sword, the Saex. Winifred caught her breath as the
youth came through that open doorway. She saw the very image of her
father. Her brother Vitolinus was another Vortigern, the same chiselled chin,
long, thin face and nose, small darting eyes. There was even a scar to the side
of his face. Involuntarily, Winifred’s hand went to her heart, its beating fast
and startled. Only the hair was different, his being thick and fair. Rowena’s,
their mother’s, hair.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 7
He strode up to Winifred, acknowledging his uncle with a curt nod to his
head; he stood, legs apart, fists on hips, before her, eyeing her, weighing her.
“Well, I never thought I would see the day! My sister, deigning to visit the
poor relations of the family. Come to spy on us, have you?” Vitolinus thrust
his pointed face forward, reminding Winifred of a weasel. “Whatever it is you
want, sister dear, forget it. You’ll have nothing from us.”
Her composure returned, Winifred spread her nostrils as if some foul stench
was before her. “I want nothing from you, little brother. I come for adult
council with my uncle.” They were talking Latin, a language neither Aesc nor
Anhild understood. She added tartly, “Go away, boy. My business does not
concern a whinging brat.”
Vitolinus’s smile was more of a sneer. “No? I would have sworn you
were here to talk of Cerdic!” He turned away, whistling, nodded again to
Aesc, tossing, in English, “My men and I have brought home a fine buck
from our day’s hunting. I’ll go help the butchering.” He sneered again
in Winifred’s direction. “The stench of offal is more appealing than the
company of your guest.”
One interesting facet. Winifred noticed Anhild’s expression of contempt,
and Aesc’s own narrowed eyes. Ah! Did they dislike her brother as much as
she did?
Aesc offered more wine, said, as he gestured for a slave to pour, “I sympathise
with the worry of a mother for her son my niece, but Cerdic is better off where
he is.” He sat back in his comfortable wicker-woven chair, folded his hands
across his ample lap. “I am content with the ruling of my Kent lands, but that
one there,” he pointed briefly to the door through which Vitolinus had just
departed, “that one wants a kingdom of his own. He intends to gain back his
father’s.” Aesc shrugged, accepting an inevitable outcome. “While your son
remains on his acquired stepfather’s land, Vitolinus will forget him. If, when,
your son becomes a man, he should have the notion of trying for what the
Pendragon now holds…” He spread his hands, shook his head. “Vitolinus has
higher entitlement to that land than Cerdic. I gave a home to my nephew when
he sought my protection from your,” his insincere smile showed blackening,
broken teeth, “shall we say, intended incarceration?”
Winifred too sat back, folding her hands. Murder would be a more appropriate
term. Unfortunately her plans for Vitolinus’s demise several years past had failed
when the wretched boy had escaped her custody. Her frown deepened. He had
disappeared the day Arthur had beaten her injured son, the day after that fire
2 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
at her farmsteading. Aesc had been there to pay homage to the Pendragon and
agree renewed treaties, and the boy Vitolinus had run to his uncle and his Jute
kin, spreading tales and lies about his sister and his future. Well, perhaps not so
far-fetched tales. Winifred had held every intention of being rid of the boy, her
brother. But Vitolinus threaten Cerdic?
Could a worm threaten a wolf?
Eight
September 468
Bull’s blood!”
Arthur savagely threw the parchment scroll he had been reading across
the tent. It hit the leather wall, bounced a few inches, then lay curled up on itself
on the rush-woven matting. He was pacing the tent, arms waving, animating his
deep, frustrated anger, his expression dark as thunder. Bedwyr, his cousin and
second in command, and Meriaun, Gwenhwyfar’s eldest nephew, were seated
on the only two stools. Wisely, they considered it prudent to remain silent.
The officer of the Roman Imperial Guard who had brought the letter stood at
rigid attention near the door flap, his indignation growing redder on his face;
his helmet, with the splendid red-dyed horsehair plume and gold and silver
plating, was clamped tighter between the curl of his arm. Proud, rich dressed,
his armour—and ego—was old but immaculate, both a reminder that Gaul was
still very much a subservient province of Rome governed by and answerable to
the Emperor. He disliked this pretentious British king, was affronted at being
treated as if he were an imbecile.
“Have I this aright?” Arthur asked, scathingly. “The sender of this letter,
the present Prefect of Rome who is, in this instance, acting in his capacity as
Ambassador of Gaul, bids me welcome. He greets me with flowered words
as a guest here, entreats that I make my men as comfortable as may be, as if
I am here on some informal courtesy visit?” Arthur stooped to retrieve the
offensive letter, rolled it tight, then changing his mind, shook the scroll loose,
batting irritably at the perfectly neat script with the back of his other hand. He
continued his pacing, the eyes of Bedwyr and Meriaun anxiously following his
movements. “This Roman aristocrat,” Arthur glanced at the signature, “this
Sidonius Apollinaris, then proceeds to inform me that a friend of his has been
arrested for writing a treasonous letter against the Emperor, and he begs that I
am to make no matter of it.” Arthur’s nostrils flared. The couched implications
were plain enough. A sour taste spilled into his mouth. “By the gods,” he
3 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
roared, “were I to lay my hands on such a treasonous turd, I would have his
balls first, then his blood!” Gods, he thought, all this way, all these weeks and