Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
her broken promise.
Sixty
The wind had eased a little to the east, was becoming chill again,
as it had in the morning. Medraut shivered, decided it was time to return
home. He called farewell to the other boys and, scrabbling into his clothes,
trotted along the upward-winding track.
He thought it was his friends he could still hear, but when he looked back,
they too had gone. Then he heard the screaming clearer, and ran, head down,
arms pumping; the voice was unmistakably his mother’s.
Slowing, out of breath, legs aching, he rested a hand on the rear wall of
the small granary. The screaming had stopped but he could hear laughter and
unfamiliar, guttural voices of men. And another sound. He dropped to his belly
and squirmed beneath the raised building, wriggling between the stone pillars
that supported the wooden floor, an effective means of keeping vermin from
the grain. His eyes saw another form of vermin, more vicious than the rats
that came creeping stealthily by night, more frightening than the great eagles
he occasionally saw sailing on the winds high above the hills. Five men in the
yard, big men, loud and brash. One was holding his Da, the others, one with
a bloodied nose, were hitting him, beating him. Medraut could see his Da’s
blood dribbling from above his eye, could hear him gasping as fists and feet
thudded into his body. What could a boy do? A boy of six years against five
grown men? He could run for help, but they lived apart, their dwelling well
to the outside of the lake community. And beside, it was mostly women down
there. A few had husbands but they were old men, farmers, and they all lived
too far away.
If he had a sword he could…a sword! His Da’s sword! He knew where his
mother had hidden it, for he had peeped over the edge of his sleeping platform,
watched as she had put it there, beneath the mattress of her own bed. He knew
how to get inside the house-place, too, without being seen. The gnarled old
walnut tree behind reached past the window opening that gave more ventilation
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 5 1
than light. It was small, but then, so was he. It was a route he used often if he
needed to sneak something out without his mother knowing; food usually, a
chunk of bread or wedge of cheese.
It was dark inside, with the door partially shut and no lamps lit, but Medraut
knew his way around, and his eyes became quickly adjusted to the dim light.
Morgaine lay huddled, curled, on the floor, arms wrapped around herself,
sobbing. Her skirts dishevelled. Blood and some other stuff trickling down
her thighs.
“Get up, Mam, Da needs help!” Medraut shook her, pulling frantically at her
arm, her shoulder, but she shook him off, curling deeper into herself, her sobs
jerking louder. “Mam! Please!”
Desperate, Medraut ran to her bed, tugged aside the mattress, and dragged
out the scabbard. It was heavier than he had anticipated; he needed both hands
to pull the blade from its sheath, both hands to carry it back to the window and
irreverently shove it through.
They were still hitting his father, those horrid men. What could he do? He could
barely lift the weapon, could never use it—and then he thought of Onager.
The boy had ridden occasionally on the backs of ponies, once on a bigger
horse used to pull a wagon into Avallon. It was not the same as riding a war-
horse, but how different could it be? He managed to get the horse’s bridle
on by balancing on a stool and coaxing the animal’s head down. The saddle
he abandoned, for he was unsure how all the straps went; it would take too
much time to think it all out. He found some rope, wound it around the hilt
of the sword, and looped it around his shoulder; he climbed atop a barrel and
withheld breath, clambered onto Onager’s back. He had done well: the horse
had only nipped him twice!
The byre doors stood open; beyond, he could hear the men jeering, hear
their shouted words, though they spoke in a language he did not understand.
He knew how to make horses move. He took up the reins in one hand,
steadied the dangling sword with the other, and brought both his heels back
in a mighty kick.
Onager plunged, head down, back arched, squealing. Medraut let go both
reins and sword, clutched frantically at the horse’s mane, managed to stay
aboard through several of those enormous bucks. Onager careerned forward,
they were well beyond the door now, near the pile of muck and dung rotting
for use on the fields, another buck and…but at least it was soft. The Saxons had
scattered, convinced this was some fire-breathing creature of the gods. Dizzy,
3 5 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Arthur managed to dodge the animal’s crazed path, ran, breath gasping in his
throat for Medraut who sat in the muck, holding the naked sword as high as he
could manage. Arthur took it, swung around as, gathering their senses, two of
the men came at him.
It had been a long time since he had held this sword in the grip of his hand.
A long time since he had swung it, used its strength and beauty to destroy and
maim, but the time fell away as simply as dew beneath the scorching sun; it was
as if it had never been from his grasp, never been from his side.
And there was another man, with another sword, coming from the gateway,
yelling and hacking at the Saxons. A few moments only, and the five men lay
dead, and Gweir stood leaning upon his sword, grinning at Arthur.
It is good,” he said, “to fight again with the Pendragon.”
Sixty-One
The man in the byre talked easily, helped along by the subtle persuasion
of Gweir’s boot coming into contact, none too gently, with his shattered
thigh. He was, he then willingly told them, one of a group of men who had
followed the Lady Gwenhwyfar across Gaul, men who had been paid to ensure
the Pendragon was undeniably dead, paid to retrieve his head.
“Do we finish him?” Gweir asked when nothing more of interest was
forthcoming.
Arthur was seated on a pile of old mildewing sacking and straw. His brain
reeled and his vision seemed as if he were walking through a heavy, moorland
mist. What in ever the gods’ names was wrong with him? It was not the beating,
for this dizziness and disorientation had been bothering him before then, since
yesterday. Two vivid bruises were welling on his cheek and beneath his eye,
more would be on his body. He would tend them later, no hurry now. He
stood, feeling the room sway, held his hand out to the boy who sat wide-eyed,
open-mouthed, inside the doorway. Growled at Gweir, “Aye, do it.” To the
boy, in a kinder tone he teased. “Come with me, lad. Since you let him loose,
you can help me catch Onager. Unless he’s found a patch of sweet grass, he’s
likely to be half-way to Rome by now.”
The boy’s face dropped, and the thumb went back to his mouth. Arthur
ruffled his hair, swung him up into his arms. “You did well, lad, I’m proud
of you.” Amazing, the sudden difference of expression, from dismay of doing
wrong, to elation.
A brief, high-pitched gurgle came within the byre. Medraut attempted to
turn his head to look, but Arthur distracted him, carried him away with long
strides. Gweir emerged, bent to wipe the blade of his dagger on grass tufting
beside the sow’s pen.
Morgaine was standing in the yard, her face blotched and puffed by tears, the
skin beneath ash-white. She had one hand stuffed into her mouth, fear raged in
3 5 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
her eyes, hair straggled across her face. It needed re-dying, for the brilliant red
it had been these past weeks was fading, the paleness of her own natural colour
streaking through the artificial pretence. How many colours had Morgaine used?
Red, black. A rich, dark brown? Never fair, as she had been as a child, never
spun gold like her mother. The thick, black kohl she used to line and darken her
eyes had run in streaks down her cheeks making her appear haggard, and twice
her two and twenty years. As Arthur and the boy emerged into the evening light,
she pointed with trembling fingers, at the men sprawled in various postures of
death. “He is not here,” she quavered. “The one I spoke with, he is not here.”
Arthur dipped his head over his shoulder. “There is another, in there.” He
did not understand, but did not question. Added, not without a tint of cruelty,
“His throat is cut.”
Onager had not moved from beside the muck heap, as Arthur had known.
He would not move without a rider while the reins hung loose, every war-
horse of the Artoriani was trained so, such entrenched discipline could save
an unhorsed rider’s life in battle. Arthur tossed the boy onto the horse’s back,
picked up the reins. “Hold his mane—and keep your heels still!” Smiling at the
boy’s delight, Arthur returned the animal to the safe confine of his stall.
Inside, addressing Morgaine, he said dispassionately, “That your man?” She
stood beside the bloodied, twisted body, chewing her thumb-nail as her son
would have done, too numbed to answer.
Slipping the bridle from Onager’s head, and lifting the boy down, Arthur
glanced at her, caught from the corner of his eye a spark of red on the dead
man’s left hand. A ring. Curious, he handed the bridle to the boy, walked
forward, hunkered beside the body his narrowing eyes never leaving the ring.
Gweir had come up behind Arthur as he lifted his head to ask of Morgaine, in
a quiet, dark voice, “How did this Saex bastard come by my ring?”
Morgaine was too dizzy-witted to not answer. Nothing like her mother!
Morgause would have been laughing or sneering at the incompetent failure
of the dead. Rape would be a meaningless thing for the woman who had
entertained more men in her bed, for her own gain, than any tavern whore.
Morgause would have held her tongue. Even through the pain of torture she
would not have answered Arthur—answered any man. Morgaine, though, had
fear on her face, and guilt. Emotions unknown to her mother. “He was not
supposed to kill you, only her. I thought he understood that.”
Arthur squatted, very still, very quiet. His eyes had dropped again to the ring;
his ring, his dragon ring. The last time he had worn it was on the morning of
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 5 5
the last battle. And again, in his tortured mind, he saw that day. Saw his men,
his brothers, his friends, hacked down and dying. Saw and felt the deep, raw
pain of his failure.
Gweir stepped across the body, removed the ring, held it on the open palm
of his hand. The Pendragon’s ring. Reverently, he handed it to Arthur, who
took it, slid it onto his left hand where it nestled comfortable, familiar, as if it
had never been removed.
“Ambrosius,” Gweir began in desperation. He faltered. Would the Pendragon
heed him? He had turned away from his lady wife; why would he listen to a man
who was once a slave boy? In a rush of speech he ploughed on. “Ambrosius is
making the biggest balls-up Britain has been saddled with. War’s brewing—if it
hasn’t already boiled over.” He bit his lip, swallowed, lifted his eyes to Arthur
and pleaded, “We need you, my lord. Britain needs you.”
The Pendragon was staring at Morgaine, his expression hard, jaw clamped, eyes
narrowed. If he heard or listened to Gweir, he made no sign, save that he irritably
gestured for him to leave the byre. “Take the boy with you,” he snapped.
Head bowed, disappointed, Gweir obeyed.
“You gave my ring to this Saxon?” His gaze had not left Morgaine. His
brain was sluggish, reluctant to function, comprehend, but a few things were
beginning to make sense. At the beginning how many times had he almost
gone from here? Two or three? And on how many occasions had something
happened to stop him? The sow farrowed over-early and that house-place
fire, both during those months when he was first recovered, when he had
talked of going home. Coincidence? And those stomach cramps and the
dysentery that had seized him…His head was fuzzy. It all meant something.
He was trying to think. He shook his head, it was as if he had drunk too
much barley-brewed wine and was drugged from its numbing effect…and
he saw it all.
“You bitch!” The dark hatred that came into the shadow of his eyes was
intense. Not like her mother? What a simple fool he had been!
Na
, she was not
as confident or competent as Morgause, but Morgaine had her own talent, her
own art. Was she not a healer? Did she not know the properties of herbs and
roots and plants? Aye, she knew them well enough to be able to cure a sickness
as well as plan an illness. The bread, so thickly smeared with sweet honey. The
stew, so strong with flavourings? Drugged!
“God’s breath!” Arthur snarled, his disgust reeling. “Even your own son? He
was ill, so very ill. You poisoned your own son, so I might stay?”
3 5 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
His hand came over his mouth, fingers pinching the nostrils to stem the rise