Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
mead-hall, from father to son, to son, to son.
The rain came in cold, vicious squalls lashing from the northeast, and the
English saw no reason to leave the safety of their camp, the warmth of their
tents, and the comfort of their women. It was a time of feasting. They drank
their mead and ate their fill of ox and deer, boar and fowl, toasted their gods,
and told their tales of heroes past and adventures achieved. When the winds
eased and swung to a more benign south, they would be ready, with cleared
heads and high hearts. Aelle of the South Saxons would call to his brothers, and
they would march. When the feasting was done, when the mead had run dry,
and when the tales were all told.
Despite the failure to dislodge any of the Saex whore-sons from their encamp-
ment, the British were of good morale, eager to fight—and to fight well. They
had not expected to achieve much in that previous attack, had attempted the
idea more as a challenge, a warming-up, a flexing of muscles. Did not look
upon the incident as defeat or loss, seeing it merely as an exercise, a chance to
explore the Saex strength and seek out weaknesses. After all, few fortified places
could be taken with ease.
Sunrise, the third day of the Roman month of Janus. An appropriate month,
Ambrosius thought, if you disregarded the pagan element. Two-faced Janus, the
pre-Christian god who looked ahead and behind. Behind, the failure. Ahead,
the victory. It was time for battle.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 6 9
After the Nativity and midwinter feasting, more men had arrived, not
many, but every extra man was welcomed and valued. Powys had sent fifty,
Rheged another thirty or so, the mid-land tribes over two hundred between
them. The mild weather helped, and the eagerness for a fight. After that
short bout of cold wind, the sun had shown through spindle thrift clouds for
most days, persuading the birds to sing for their mating territories over-early.
Even the buds of the elderberry and hazel were bursting into too early,
spring-worn green.
Briton and Saxon spent that night straddling the Ridge Way, camped no
more than two miles apart. Dawn saw the Saxons dividing into two forces,
Aelle of the South Saxons commanding one, Aesc of the Cantii Jutes the other,
holding the advantage of deploying on slightly higher ground. The British saw
no reason to make private complaint, drew a similar stand. Ambrosius and his
own men, the infantry of Britannia Secunda taking the northward division,
Amlawdd with the militias and tithe-bound men the southern. Battle-lines
drawn, division facing division astride the ancient track that led south to north.
A pause, waiting for the last few stragglers to make their way into the rear, a
chance for individuals to make a last peace with their own god.
Ambrosius bent his knee to pray, head bowed, lips silently moving the intoned
words. Coinciding with his Amen, the sun rose, filtering a pale, subdued glow
onto the winter-bare ground—and the Saxon lines rippled and shifted, their
spear tips and swords gleaming faintly in the weak burst of new light. Ambrosius
called his horse forward, mounted, settled himself into the saddle, and raised his
arm, commanded his column to advance at the run. There came a great shout,
and the British rushed forward to meet the slow-advancing Saex. The crash and
clash of weaponry, the yelling and shouting and cursing reverberating across the
lower lands that fell away to each side of the high ridge, sending winter birds
into wild, raucous flight. As wild, the furious melee of men.
Although they held the higher advantageous ground, the uprush of the British,
so determined, so intent, allowed the Saxons not one pace forward from their
first-drawn lines. With Amlawdd and the tribes’ warriors beating and hacking
at Aesc’s Jutes, and Ambrosius himself leading against the Bretwalda, Aelle, it
became an even match as more and more of the Saex, peasant men many of
them, poorly clothed, ill-armed, fell dead or dying. Twice more. The sun rose
to the zenith, slid westward, the gather of winter-dark clouds bringing dusk
early. The Saxons broke, began to fall back, steadily, pace by pace, fighting still,
but drawing back. Night enveloped the Ridge, with a sudden-come bluster of
3 7 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
wind-driven rain, and the Saxons turned and ran for the sheltered safety of their
fortified place at Radingas.
Dismounting his horse, weary, blood-grimed, battered and aching, Ambrosius,
again that day, bowed his head in prayer. They had seen off the Saex; it was a
victory, but such a small one. Such a very small, temporary one.
Sixty-Seven
Gwenhwyfar tugged her fingers, sensuous, through Arthur’s thick,
dark, hair; on down over the naked, rapidly cooling skin of his back,
running across the haphazard pattern of scars. More than she remembered, her
touch lingering over the newer, unfamiliar disfigurements. Many of them, too
vicious. “If ever, at any time, I grow tired of you, remind me of this. Remind
me of what we have just shared,” she murmured.
He quirked a light smile, one that tilted the side of his lips; nuzzled his
face deeper into the softness of her body. They had made love several times
on the long, slow, journey home, kindling each other’s needs, rediscovering
each other’s body, but those few uncertain explorations had been bound by an
unspoken hesitation that harboured flickering doubts and wary apprehensions.
Wounds heal, but the pain can take a while to cease its blistering throbbing,
and the scars remain, red and evil before paling, puckering white against a dark,
healthy, skin.
Now they were home, or near enough. They had rested a while at the first
town—Antessiodurum, Gwenhwyfar’s least favourite place—giving Onager
time to gain strength and recover, giving themselves time to be certain of their
decisions. But Arthur had never looked back over his shoulder, and the boy,
Medraut, made no murmur of returning to his mother. Hard, those first few
days, for Gwenhwyfar to accept the child, another woman’s born son; harder
still to sit quiet and calm as Arthur had told her everything of Morgaine, of her
birthing, of her father. His. Unexpected, she had shown no anger or recoiling
horror; Gwenhwyfar had accepted the fact. Arthur had sired a son on his own
half-sister. What was done was done, threads in the multi-coloured tapestry
of life were too close-woven to be unravelled. The dark knotted too tight to
unravel within the gold.
“I remember her,” Gwenhwyfar had said. “A ragged, poorly child with scalds
and hand-marks bruised on her skin.” Morgause had not cared for the girl, had
3 7 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
abandoned her, left her for the other elderly priesthood women to see to her
upbringing. “While I was waiting for you, that time at Yns Witrin, to come to
me, Morgause was there with the child.” Gwenhwyfar remembered the sadness
of the girl, the pity she had felt for her.
Watching the boy, sleeping curled as a babe, thumb stuffed between his teeth,
she had remembered her own sons. They had seen troubles and sadnesses, even
witnessed fear and the dark shadow of death. But never had they known the
loneliness of the uncherished, the unloved.
“I could not leave him,” Arthur had said, that first night together. “I could
not abandon him to an echo of my own childhood.”
And Gwenhwyfar, the mother in her, had understood. Understood more.
She could perhaps birth Arthur more sons, but they would be too late, too
young. Cerdic was grown, a man with a son of his own. Cerdic would most
certainly come if he knew he could claim his father’s land with the ease of
taking a choice bone from a new-whelped pup. Medraut was not hers, but then
nor was he Winifred’s. That was the importance, the difference.
After leaving Antessiodurum, they had ridden north along the road that
became more travelled the further they journeyed. Stayed a while at Lutetia,
on the island town of the Parisii, Arthur in no great haste to follow the last few
miles to the coast and find a ship home. Gwenhwyfar in no great urgency to
hasten him.
He had been sleeping badly. Restless dreams tossing with perspiration and
sharp, fearful cries. The enveloping blackness of memories, galloping with the
hard-forced pace of those unbidden night-riders, hostile on their red-eyed,
black-coated mares. The sound of battle, the clash of sword on sword, the
scream of men killed and dying. The red of blood, the black of death! Horror
and fear revisiting, returning. Gwenhwyfar, warm and safe and strong. Her
arms around him, comforting, reassuring, hand soothing the stark sweat of
fear, closeness easing the ragged breath of drowning, suffocating, beneath that
returned stench of the past.
It had to be faced, had to be done: they had to return to Britain. But it was
so hard, so dreadfully hard!
On to the coast; the craft they had found had battled her way steadily through
the strong winds. It was the wrong time of year for the sea, but she was a game
little ship. Again, she raised her prow with the uplift of the heavy sea-swell the
surging wind from behind, shadowing like a swooping king eagle, flecks of salt-
spray keening into the breathless air. Arthur stood on the foredeck, legs spread,
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 7 3
hands gripping the rail as if there was no tomorrow. Ahead, a grey-misted hint
of something that was not sea nor sky. Rising higher, clearing, coming nearer
as the ship kicked her way forward.
Britain. Home. Almost home.
Gwenhwyfar had come behind him, her tread muffled by the shout of
waves and wind, her cloak and hair billowing as excitedly agitated as the single,
square, bleached-blue sail. He had jerked as her arm slid around his waist, his
hand flying, instinctive, to the pommel of his sword. Covered his disquiet with
a laugh.
Gwenhwyfar rested her head on his shoulder, warming into his returned
embrace; stood, silent a while, watching the shape-changing grey mist congeal
into the more solid shape of land. He was afraid, she knew that. Every muscle
was tense, every nerve-end screaming, jagged. Afraid of going home, returning.
Afraid of the fighting that surely would be waiting.
She linked her fingers through his. “You will be at ease,” she comforted,
“once you are back.”
He answered, betraying himself with a shaking huskiness to his voice. “What
if they no longer want me?”
Her answer was succinct. “For those who once followed you, it will be as if
you had never been away. For those who did not,” she chuckled, kissed him,
light, reassuring, on the cheek, “well, they did not want you in the first place.
It did not bother you then. Ought it bother you now?”
He supposed not, but for all her flippancy, this was not going to be easy. For
too long had he been gone. Ambrosius was the Supreme now. Hard enough to
have fought for, and won, a kingdom once. To retrieve it after so blindly letting
it go? He closed his eyes, let his weight sink against Gwenhwyfar’s solidity. To
fight again, knowing he had once failed; knowing he had irresponsibly killed
so many men?
Sixty-Eight
I’ll not fight for that incompetent imbecile!” Bedwyr slammed his
clenched fist onto the table, his expression as conscientiously fierce as the
action. “Ambrosius has brought this mess upon himself, must get himself out
of it, or die.”
Patient, Geraint choked down the temptation to match Bedwyr’s blazed
anger. “Ambrosius is a good man, has done only as he thought best. You
cannot censure a man for pursuing his beliefs.”
“Pah!” Bedwyr thumped onto a stool, sat opposite Geraint, leaning his arms
onto the table, his eyes glowering, mouth pouting. “You censure me? I believe
in the Artoriani. Want to ride with them, take back what is ours!”
Disciplining his hands to relax along the carved arms of his oak-wood chair,
Geraint inhaled three deep and slow breaths. “No, you want to become king.
That I cannot condone, not yet. Not while the Saex have risen under one leader.
There are times when, for all our hatreds and disappointments, we cannot afford
to fight among ourselves. That,” he leant significantly forward, one finger raised,
“that was always the Pendragon’s belief. It ought be yours also.”
Bedwyr eased forward, the weight of his upper body taken by his tight folded
arms. “I fight in the Pendragon’s name, for Arthur, for when he returns.”
The man opposite did not intend it to be audible, but the sigh was stronger
than he realised. Geraint rested his head against the high back of his chair,
closed his eyes. For how many days now had they been sparring with this
self-same argument? These same words, round and around and around? In the
name of the good God, was it not blindingly obvious Arthur was not coming