Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
Eagerly enthusiastic about the horse in the byre, he had been chattering
happily about the animal, unaware of his mother’s tight-lipped silence. Tucking
a blanket around him, her patience finally snapped.
“No more of this! You are to stay away from the creature,” she commanded.
Wildly alarmed, the boy protested. “But I am to help Da make him better!
I promised I would!”
Morgaine snatched hold of the boy’s shoulder, her fingernails pinching
cruelly into the delicate skin. “If I catch you near that beast, I will whip you!”
And added, her face pressing vindictively close to the boy’s, “And I shall whip
the horse, too!”
Medraut dug his teeth into his lip, held his tears until she had gone with the
lamp, leaving him alone under the roof beams in the darkness. He could hear
her moving about down below, preparing supper for herself and his Da. One
solitary tear trickled from beneath his lashes, then another.
He turned his face into the bracken-filled pallet so not even the night spirits
would see him weep.
Fifty-Eight
Arthur was disappointed that the boy did not come to help with
Onager. He had seemed so eager at the outset, but that was children for
you. Full of boundless enthusiasm the one moment, off with their friends,
fishing or swimming the next. He supposed he had been inclined the same
as a boy, except, as a bastard child he had had few friends, and always, had
chosen the company of the Pendragon above other things. Although he had
not known Uthr to be his father, then.
Medraut was down by the lake, over to where a large cluster of dwellings
huddled beneath the shaded slope of trees. The morning had been overcast
and the wind chill, but by early afternoon the temperature was picking up.
Naturally the pack of boys had headed for the lure of the water. Arthur could
hear their shouted, excited voices floating on the wind, could imagine them
romping and splashing at the lake edge. He might walk Onager down there
later, lead him along the shore, let him graze the succulent grass that abounded
there. He forked a pile of dung from the horse’s bed, rested his shoulders and
back against the partition wall. Closed his eyes. He was so tired. Had no energy,
no enthusiasm for anything.
Morgaine had nursed a temper, although not one that could ever have
matched her mother’s. Morgaine was not as clever as her, nor as subtle or
vindictive. Why she should be so upset about the horse, Arthur could not
imagine, nor did he care enough to enquire.
Yesterday, she had changed tactics, had brought him a breakfast out to the
byre where he was sleeping; fresh-baked wheat bread smeared liberally with
honey, a tankard of barley ale. Had she guessed to where he had gone? On
several occasions yesterday he had almost told her. “
I went to see my wife and she
was more beautiful than ever I remembered.
”
She would have gone now, Gwenhwyfar, saddled the horses and be heading
home. Disappointed? Angry? He had no way of knowing.
3 4 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Arthur wiped his hand over his face. The palm was sweaty, the fingers
shaking, blurring before his vision. He sighed. So tired.
The goats would need milking soon, and the sow’s pen cleaning. He placed
an affectionate smack on Onager’s rump, the horse’s ears flicking backwards
with the sound. At least the animal was improving; he had eaten a feed mixed
with a generous handful of healing, dried nettles, was chewing at hay stacked in
the manger. The pus had stopped oozing. Onager had been lucky, a mild dose
of the illness it seemed. A few good feeds, a few days of grazing in the summer
sun, and he would soon recover. What in all the gods’ names was Arthur going
to do with a war-horse? Onager would never pull a plough or wagon; Mithras’s
love, what had made Arthur bring him here?
He could hear Morgaine singing as she worked at her loom, some song he
did not recognise. He put the wooden fork with the stable tools that leant
against the stack of the woodpile, cursed as it fell, his fingers fumbling to
stand it upright. Why were his hands so clumsy? Damn it, why was Morgaine
so happy? He could feel this black mood of despair engulfing him, cramping
its tentacles around him, feel the darkness seeping deeper and thicker. A
great pit opening before him, going down and down. All he had to do was
look up, reach out for the light, summon the courage, go after Gwenhwyfar
and say he was sorry, beg her forgiveness; but he was too tired. So much
easier to step into that hole and drift…He wanted to sleep, fought against
it, for the darkness would surely come, swallow him for ever if he drowsed
into sleep.
He had dreamt last night. Dreamt of home, of Caer Cadan and, strangely, of
Yns Witrin, the Tor that rose proud above the flat levels of the Summer Land.
His Summer Land, the land of the seven rivers, summer-sluggish, that swelled
and flooded in spring from the run-off from the surrounding rounded hills. Flat
pasture, willow-bordered, spongy beneath your feet even in the hottest, driest
summer. In winter, a constant movement of birds, for the levels swarmed with
lapwings, golden plover, redwing, snipe, rook, and gull. Hawk and kestrel.
In his dream, a light, golden evening was settling after what must have been
a brilliant day. Late summer, for the grass was sun-browned, the lake not as
high as it would be in the dazzling green of early spring. A boat, coming across
the lake from the Tor, one person paddling, a woman, brown-cloaked, hood
pulled forward. Two other women waited on the shore, both with their backs
to him, waiting for the boat. He knew who they were, the one dressed as a
Christian woman, with her dark gown and white veil, her gold crucifix glinting
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 4 7
in the evening sunlight, and the other woman, with her plaid, a rich red cloak.
Her tumble of copper hair.
He had tried to call, attract their attention, but they were intent on watching
the boat. And then Gwenhwyfar had turned, but she had not seen him, was
unaware he was there. His sword was in her hand—and then she and Winifred
and the boat that carried Morgaine were gone. Only the sword remained, the
blade quivering in the grass as the wind, dancing down from the height of the
Tor, whispered past.
Arthur gasped, found he was on his knees, his head bent forward, his vision
reeling and spinning, an ache hammering against the side of his skull. Sweat
slithered down his spine, from beneath his armpits. He saw the shadow move
at the doorway, heard the rush of movement, the dagger scything downward,
and he rolled, head ducked, back curved, rolled over and up onto his feet,
crouching low, hands spread, his movements slow, clumsy.
There were two of them, two men. Saxons, blonde-haired, drooping mous-
taches, blue, cold eyes. One man with blurred senses against two intent killers.
Arthur’s fingers fumbled at his waist for his dagger, dropped it. He leapt
backward as one man came again with his short sword, the Saex, the blade
whistling as it sliced the air, missing Arthur’s midriff by the width of a hair.
Arthur stumbled, sending the stable tools, a bucket and several other items
tumbling and rolling, part of the woodpile crashing as his hand grappled for a
hold to steady himself.
He needed a weapon! His hand closed around the stable fork; he jabbed the
prongs at the nearest man, swung forward to drive the second backward, but
that first man’s sword had an edge like a midwinter’s night. The blade sliced
through the wooden shaft, leaving Arthur holding a next to useless stump of
stick. He used it haphazardly as a defence, waving it before him to keep the
attackers away while he manoeuvred around, closer to the woodpile. He slid
the stick into his left hand, felt frantically with his right among the stacked logs.
The two men stood, side by side, their grins widening, one shifting his blade,
menacing, from hand to hand as they closed in, their breaths strong and foul
from an excess of stale wine and strong cheese. Desperate, Arthur side-stepped a
pace, his fingers still scrabbling between the crevices of the stacked logs—blood
of Mithras, where in all hell was it? Where was his sword?
He heard a woman screaming, a man laughing; ducked and twisted as both
men lunged forward. Head-butting one, his fist pounded into the chin of the
other. The first doubled over, winded, his arms going around his stomach,
3 4 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
sword falling to the earthen floor. The second reeled, but lurched forward,
mouth drawn into a snarl that showed a row of blackened, decayed teeth.
Arthur again rolled, coming up with the dropped short sword in his hand,
driving it upward, within the same moment as the man raised his own weapon,
and pushed it in through the abdomen.
No time to take a breath, to gloat at the one’s death, for the first man was
again on his feet, a log of wood firm in his hand, coming hard at Arthur,
enraged at the death of his companion. Arthur had his back to Onager, the
horse shifting nervously in his stall, ears back, eyes rolling. Simple to manoeuvre
around, reverse the positions. As easy to lunge forward, drive the Saxon back
a step. Onager’s hind foot lashed out, trumping against the Saxon’s thigh. The
sound of the bone shattering and the scream, ricocheted around the byre.
Shaking his head to clear the muzziness and blurred vision, Arthur ran outside.
Three men were coming through the gateway, swords drawn. Another had
been searching inside the grain-barn. Saxons, everywhere. Why? What were
Saex doing this far into Gaul? No time to think, to reason, the man from the
granary was entering the house-place, the eyes of the others swivelling in that
direction also as Morgaine’s screams were rising against the excited roar of male
laughter. Saex-sword raised, Arthur hurtled across the small, square yard. He
would rather have had the secure feel of his own cavalry sword in his grasp, with
its greater length and stronger bite, but all Arthur had was this bloodied one. He
ran, foot-kicked the door wide, sending one man sprawling face forward as it
back-slammed, killing another almost within the same instant with a side-thrust
of the blade, ripping it double-handed, through his ribs and lungs.
Morgaine was on the floor, her skirt pushed up over her head, a heavy-
built Saxon grunting on top of her, another hauling at his shoulder, urging
him to hurry, make way. Arthur’s sword slammed between the waiting man’s
shoulders, slamming in to the hilt. Blood spewed from the dying man’s mouth,
choking off the startled death-cry. Two-handed, Arthur attempted to pull the
short-bladed sword out, had to leave it, turn, bending low, as a man flew at
him from behind. Arms grabbed him, a fist thudded into his abdomen, under
his jaw.
Morgaine was still screaming, the man on top of her urgently finishing what
he was doing. Arthur toppled forward, dizzying into semi consciousness.
Fifty-Nine
Gwenhwyfar did not look back, not once, not even when they
passed by the track that trailed southward, following down into the
Avallon Valley and to the lake where the community of pagan women squatted
between the shoulder of the hills and the shore. There was a dwelling-place
there which housed a woman, her son, and a man who had once been so
splendid a king. She shut them from her mind. Angry, so disappointed.
She rode ahead, her horse picking its way, sure-footed, across roots and
tangled overgrowth. They would meet the main Via Agrippa some time soon,
ride onward through the night, for a full moon and clear skies were expected
to light the way.
They ought to have left the same day as he had. No, she refused to think
of that, think of him. They ought to have left, but had not, the excuse being
that Gweir had not yet returned, but by this mid-morning she had decided not
to wait longer, ordered the men to saddle the horses. They rode slowly, in no
great hurry, following the valley up the steep winding track that Gweir had
ridden to find…
Gwenhwyfar closed her eyes, let the horse pick his own way along this
narrow, faint-marked trail.
“
The two Saxons have moved
,” Gweir had reported, that afternoon after Arthur
had come, and gone. “
They have split: one waits among the lower trees, the other has
ridden hard in the direction of Antessiodurum. There is mischief in mind, I am sure.
”
Mischief indeed if Gweir were not to return! He would catch up, knew the
direction they headed, the quicker way home, straight up the Roman Road to
the coast and a ship to take them back to…to what? She had promised herself
she would not cry. No more weeping, no more tears.
Gwenhwyfar rode alone, ahead of her men so that they would not witness