Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
his hands into the loose sleeves of his robe. “I am not intending to wait for them
to attack us. We attack them. Through the winter, we burn and destroy. Come
spring, there will be no Saex left to fight. Not even the women or children.”
For many long seconds Bedwyr stood there, staring at the man dressed in the
style of a monk. “My God,” he said, appalled, “you are to commit us to a war
that will be bloodier than any slaughter ever made.”
“No,” Ambrosius stated, blandly. “I am to do what I set out to do. I intend
to destroy the Saex.”
Forty-Four
So they had taken a barge up the River Liger, had stayed a few days at
Juliomagus, then continued on to Caesarodunum. From where the letter
Winifred held in her hand had come. She tapped the scrolled parchment against
her lips, thinking.
That Gwenhwyfar had gone in search of Arthur was obvious. How she had
discovered him to be alive was inconclusive, but not difficult to realise. Winifred
had known she could not ensure the silence of all Mathild’s men—mind, it came as
some personal satisfaction to know she had almost achieved it. Precautions against
failure had, naturally, been taken, had reaped reward, although Gwenhwyfar
had led the spies a merry, winding dance these last months! Agreeing to wed
Bedwyr, changing her mind, living a while at the Holy House of Durnovaria.
Oh, what a time Winifred’s paid spies had had, trailing and observing. The cost
was mounting, ah, but worth every spent piece!
For although Winifred knew Arthur might live, she had no clue, no hint
of gossip or whispered speculation of where to look for him. Torturing
Mathild’s men had gained her nothing. Her smile was smug, cat-like in her
gloating self-satisfaction, for Gwenhwyfar, it seemed, was inadvertently to
solve the riddle.
She folded her arms, watched her grandson toddle across the courtyard
outside, miss his footing and fall onto his knees. His nurse ran to him, all hugs
and consolation, but the boy stubbornly pushed her aside, scrabbled to his
feet and tried again. Winifred quietly applauded, her expression as proud as
any doting grandmother’s should be. Cynric was a determined whelp, for the
three months he had been here at Winifred’s steading, a few miles from Venta
Bulgarium, she had not heard him cry or wail once. A boy a handful of months
into his second year, Cynric had the resilience of a warrior. Stubborn, with a
mind made to succeed at all cost. Like his father.
Huh! Was there any doubting Cynric was Arthur’s child?
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 0 1
Winifred shed her breath with a loud, partially impatient sigh. It was a pity
Cerdic was the mismatch of the family. Pig-headed, aye, but to all the wrong
leanings. Determined, but only in the area of a determination to do all in his
power to oppose his mother.
It was a marvel she had been allowed this short while to have the boy with
her, happen even Cerdic had a small grain of sense in his granite-bound brain!
Winifred placed her palms together, the fingers pressing under her chin. There
had been fighting again along the Elbe, the peoples moving up from the south
and from the east, causing confrontation with those already settled along that
busy, important waterway. Cerdic was safe—for at least a while, a few years or
so; happen, if he were fortunate, more than that, but three times now his water-
side buildings had been burned to the ground, his fortified settlement attacked.
Added to that, so many of those who were supposed to be loyal to him had
left, taken a craft or walking away, preferring to offer allegiance to some other
man of status. Too many remembered the killing of Mathild to remain loyal to
Cerdic. Those first few months after her death had been difficult, disquieting,
for he had found need to prove himself worthy over again. There were not so
many supporting Cerdic now. Those few who stayed remained for the boy, the
child of Mathild’s body, but there were not enough of them to secure the boy’s
safety, that was now certain, or else Cerdic would never have sent him here,
away from the sporadic raiding, safe with his grandmother.
Winifred chuckled; mayhap the turning of events would force her son to
consider the taking of Britain as his own. There would soon be precious little
for him along the Elbe.
As she watched the boy that wandering thought came again to mind. Whose
child was he? Cerdic’s? Arthur’s? She would never know for certain, but this she
did know: Cerdic enjoyed his women. He had lost his boyhood at the age of
three and ten. Yet no woman, outside of Mathild’s bed, had borne him a child.
Cynric noticed his grandmother watching him, laughed happily up at her.
He adored the woman, for she allowed him anything he wanted, unashamedly
indulged his every whim. Winifred blew him a kiss from her fingers. She, in
return, idolised the boy. He, she hoped, would not turn out to be the bitter
disappointment that his father—whichever one of them was the father—had
proved to be.
Forty-Five
August 472
Antessiodurum was a town teetering on the brink of Christian fame.
Narrow, steep-rising streets, buildings huddled shoulder to shoulder—a
town that was doing well for itself. The abbey, with its complex of buildings, was
already impressive, nestling as it did beside the river and below the domineering
height of the town. A congenial place to be, Antessiodurum, if you had the time
to wander and admire. Along both banks of the wide, slow-moving river idled
clusters of trees, cool with green shade, while in the water fish lazed beneath the
span of the only bridge. Fields of fertile soil supported recently harvested crops
of corn, and strong, healthy vines. Drowsing heat and murmured pleasantries;
trade agreed over a goblet of local wine, a crowded town where no one cared to
hurry, where there was time to sit all day in the sun.
Gwenhwyfar hated the place.
Accommodation had been the first difficulty. The world with all his chil-
dren, it seemed, had decided to visit Antessiodurum this same week, drawn
by a festival, a celebration to the glory of some local, minor, Christian deity.
Eventually they found a tavern that was little more than a flea-ridden hovel,
where the food was mildly edible if not wholly appetising. Ider had long
since taken it upon himself to sleep across his lady’s door-place, not trusting
even his own men to see to her safety. The horses had, through the same
necessity, been stabled in shoddy stalls where the hay was musty and feed
smelt of mildew.
No one knew, or admitted to know, of the pagan Ladies. Ask a question,
receive a shrug, uplifted arms, slow-shaken head, blank or askance expression.
“Ladies? No, not here, this is a Christian place.”
Gwenhwyfar began to despair, even to doubt the wisdom of this fool idea.
Would she not do better to turn around, find some obsolete place in Less
Britain, and settle there in quiet oblivion for the rest of her days? As many in
Britain would prefer.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 0 3
She sat at a table outside a street taverna, Ider standing behind, leaning one
shoulder against the wall; his expression was gruff, as always when on duty,
his eyes narrowed, watching all who passed with a glower of suspicion. Once
or twice his hand tightened around his sword pommel. Ider, too, had little
liking for this place. Antessiodurum reminded him of an old villa he had once
visited as a child with his father. Grand on the outside, giving the appearance
of ordered wealth. Inside, comfortable, with servants and wine and good food,
but Ider had noticed the threads of spreading cracks on the plaster walls, the
patched tunics of the serving girls, and the small portions offered only the once,
no chance of a second mouthful.
Gwenhwyfar sipped her wine, had not touched the greasy stew in the bowl
before her. The barge journey up the Liger River had been frustrating for its
slowness, for the river was low, the exceptional summer heat rapidly drying its
many tributaries. Many times the craft had laboriously to follow the shrinking
navigable channels, and with the river more than a mile wide in places, each
manoeuvre to change direction became an unbearable delay. The horses
drooped beneath the heat, listless and bored, the monotony of the scenery
lulling the passengers into a hypnotic daze. The relief was enormous when they
disembarked a few miles after the river had swung to the south. To ride again,
to be in command of their own pace!
Leaning her elbow on the table, Gwenhwyfar rested her cheek on her fist.
With passing interest, she watched two young women walk by, catching a
glimmer of their conversation. She smiled to herself. Either that erotic descrip-
tion had been exaggerated boasting or the dark-haired girl had a stallion for a
bed-mate. She chewed at some dead skin by her fingernail.
Na
, that would be
impossible to do…Christ and all the gods, she was sitting here, speculating on
some wretched whore’s sexual exploits!
She signalled to Ider, made to move away, heard her name called. The street
to their left was steep, narrow, and busy, but Gweir called again, waving his
hand frantically to draw attention. He thrust his way through a group of women
waiting to buy bread, danced around a man carrying two bolts of cloth, pounded
on up the incline, and stood, panting for breath before his lady, his grin broad.
“I have found them!” he declared, “At least, I think I have.” His face was
alight, animated, the pleasure of success running not far behind the promise of
leaving this seething town.
Excited, Gwenhwyfar grabbe his arms, bent slightly towards him. “Where?”
she demanded. “Tell me!”
3 0 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“To the south. The Place of the Lady!” His grin broadened at Ider, his arms
folded, countenance scowling. “A great hill, rising high, high.” Gweir raised his
hand over his head, “Above the valley. We follow the river south, there will
be a track before the water swings west.” He laughed, danced a few delighted
steps. “The woman who told me—” He flushed, suddenly embarrassed at the
pleasurable memory of these past few hours: he had learnt more than a destina-
tion from that delightful creature. He floundered, forgetting what he was about
to say, blushed at Ider’s snort of amusement. “The place is known, but few go
there, especially men.”
Gwenhwyfar kissed his cheek. “I am not a man.”
Oh, the relief! They could be gone from this wretched town within the
hour. That passing idea of returning to Less Britain was quite, quite forgotten.
Forty-Six
The track, zigzagging up the side of the hill, seemed to take forever
to climb, the riders sweating as profusely as the horses before they were
even half of the way up. Gwenhwyfar brushed hair from her eyes, wiping
perspiration with the same action. She blew out her cheeks, kicked Onager
forward again. He was a bold, strong animal, but even he was labouring.
The day was hotter than yesterday and the day before, a more insistent,
oppressive heat that drained energy, made for bad tempers and irritability.
The blue, unblemished sky had hazed over after the sun had passed through
the midday zenith, with dark cloud building ominously from the south. Rain
would be welcome, but not if it came with a crushing storm. Several women
working at the vines unbent to stand, one hand to an aching back, the other
shielding eyes at Gwenhwyfar and her men, their bodies turning, curious, as the
party rode by. No one spoke; it was too hot for words. At first sight of them,
Gwenhwyfar knew they were in the wrong place. Morgaine would not be
known here, not among these Christian women.
“Different than Antessiodurum,” Gweir remarked with false amusement.
“There, everyone would rather talk than work. Here…” And he swept his
hand behind, across the spread of the vines clinging like limpets to the steep,
sunward slope. “Do we turn back?” he asked, disappointment catching at the
tiredness in his throat.
“At Antessiodurum,” Gwenhwyfar answered, “it was only the men who
lazed and talked. I saw enough women with their backs bent double and their
hands gnarled from hard labour.
Na
, we have come this far, we may as well go
on. There may be someone who can be of help to us.”
One of the men, turning to look behind, remarked, “There are more travel-
lers on the road. Two, three riders?”
The view from up here was tremendous, overlooking the spread of the
parched valley, dark trees dotted against sun-burned, brown grasses and withered
3 0 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
crops. One single track wound through the centre of the valley, bald, bleached
white against the baked earth, the horses too far away to see clearly or make out
detail, a dark smudge against the stark emptiness.
Ahead, higher up the slope, another woman had ceased her work, had