Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
back? Was not going to return?
Two months since, a rider had galloped up to Geraint’s Hall of Durnovaria, his
horse lathered, ridden hard the distance from the port of Llongborth, the man come
from across the sea, one of those who had accompanied Lady Gwenhwyfar.
“The Pendragon is found! He is alive!”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 7 5
How that joyful, and so expectant, news had then travelled! Despite the
hushed warning it was to be kept tongue-locked within their own knowing.
Two months past. And still the Pendragon had not come.
“It is my belief it was false news, Bedwyr.” Geraint pushed himself wearily to his
feet. “We must face the fact of our own eyes, our own sense. Something—some
tragedy, illness, treachery, I do not know what—something has befallen them.
Him. Whatever it was that had prevented the Pendragon’s return three years
past is still as prevalent now. If Arthur could have returned, he would have done
so. If not…” He eased a second sigh. “We must accept, Bedwyr. We are—for
all our hopes, our ambitions and dreams, God help us—on our own.”
Bedwyr remained at the table, leaning on his arms, his lips as tight folded.
“The men are here, Geraint, waiting to fight. To fight against the Saex. To fight
for Arthur and Britain.” He lifted his eyes and face, his chin, lightly stubbled
with beard-growth, jutting determined. “They strain at the leash, anxious to
fight this Saxon army, but they will not do so, not under Ambrosius’s banner.
They will not follow a man who ordered the murder of old men, of women
and children. Of those who farm, are settled, and live at peace with Britain.”
He unfolded his arms, lay his palms flat on the rough surface of the wooden
trestle table, pushed himself up, as wearily as Geraint had done. Taking his cloak
from where it lay over a bench, he swung it around his shoulders, fastened the
ornate pin. “This garment,” he said, settling the folds of the cloak comfortably
around him, “is the red of the Artoriani. Beneath, I wear the white tunic.
We,” he idled his hand in a general direction of the outside, “those of us who
knew Arthur, who rode with and loved the Pendragon, have faith that if he can
return to lead us into victory—and restore the peace that victory brings—if he
can return, he will.” He ambled to the door, lifted its latch. “If we must ride
against the Saex, then we ride under someone who will preserve all that Arthur
stood for. We’ll ride as Artoriani, Geraint.” He half-turned, his eyes pleading to
be understood, pleading for some unknown god to be listening and take pity.
“We’ll ride under Arthur, when he returns to lead us.”
He left the room, the door closing with a quiet thud.
Geraint stood before the brazier, warming himself. His bottom lip was tucked
between his teeth, and his head shook, slowly, from side to side. Dreams and
hopes were one thing. The realities, another entirely.
Sixty-Nine
Deep into the mead, Aesc, self-styled king of the Cantii Saxons, was
morose. This whole venture went against the grain of al sense. Why face
degradation, blood, and pain for the sake of obtaining land when he already had
sufficient lordship over land enough? Talked into this fool thing by a honey-
tongued ambition chaser! Ach, Aelle of the South Saxons had much to gain,
little to loose, but he, Aesc? Curse the idle god who had allowed him to slip,
unsuspecting, into this damn situation! He drained his tankard, slopped more
mead into it, drank again. What, in all the power of Woden’s thunder, had
possessed him? He had lost men, good fighting men. Could lose so much more!
His wife, his sons, his land, his wealth. As mead dribbled from his mouth, he
rested his forehead against the rim of the drinking vessel, groaned. He ought have
stayed at Canta Byrig, stayed in his own land, remained lord of his own future!
A hand, thick-wristed, muscle-armed, slapped onto his shoulder, a chortling
laugh sounding behind. “My friend! More mead? This is excellent stuff, is it not?
Something else we do better than the poxed British, ferment a fine brew!” As he
spoke, Aelle’s other hand gripped firm around the mead-jar, poured a generous
measure for the seated Cantii king, and set the jug down again. Aelle placed
himself next to his fellow Saxon, his tactfully appointed joint commander. “Have
you thought on what I asked of you? Do you join us when we march on the
morrow?” The joviality was, perhaps, a little false, a little too extreme, too hearty.
Aesc, if he realised it, made no move or comment against that grand, extravagant
show of friendship. The South Saxons needed the Cantii in this thing as much as
the other way around. Without either side backing the other, the whole uprising
would crumble into scattered pockets of weak-minded, weak-armed rebellion.
Soon crushed, soon ended. Together, they almost stood a chance of succeeding.
“You could have more than that insubstantial corner of Britain.” Aelle’s arm
was gripping firmer around Aesc’s shoulders, his lips close to his ear. “Much
more. All yours, and mine, for the sake of one more effort, one last fight!”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 7 7
The mead tankard thudded to the table, slopping the rich, dark drink over
the side. Aesc half-turned, his surly, drink-sodden features growling behind the
cragged, grimed skin, puckering beneath the unkempt, mead-stained beard and
moustache. Why in Woden’s name was he still here at Radingas? Why in all
the gods’ names had he not gathered together his men and arms and returned
home? There was nothing here, save defeat and shame. And a sore head to face
come morning.
“Fight?” He sneered. “Fight? As we fought ten days past, do you mean? Do
we, then, chase a second opportunity to piss our breeches and run?”
The control to retain the good humour came with well-schooled patience.
That was why Aelle had attained the position of Bretwalda—overlord, Supreme
King—among the Saxon peoples. Aelle, not any other king or princeling. He
was a large-built, sturdy man, strong-muscled in arm and thigh and brain. A
man who could think as efficiently as he could fight.
“Ah,” he said, batting the air derisively, “that was a mere skirmish, a battle of
no significance, save to test our strength against theirs. Let us be magnanimous
about it, allow the British to make merry and crow loud about their poxed little
victory. His fingers returned to grip, claw-like into Aesc’s flesh, the bite hard,
even through the padding of cloak and tunic. “Let them win a small battle. We,
my comrade, shall win the war!”
Almost insolent, Aesc picked at the clasping fingers, setting them loose,
pushed the hand aside. “War? Why did I get myself embroiled in your farting
war? This is your need, not mine!”
Assessing the hostility, Aelle moved himself a fraction along the bench. He
must take care, for as mule-minded as Aesc could be, he was an essential ally.
They must fight together! Together, they had strength and determination;
together, the British could be defeated. “Agreed, it is I who require the more
land, to enlarge that which I have already laid claim to, but it is we, my friend,
we who can drive the British into the hills, we who can send them scurrying
across the sea to their God-mumbling sanctuaries in Less Britain. It may take
us a while, may take the spilling of much of our blood. The losing of many
battles.” He leant slightly more forward, more intimidating, more sincere. “But
I say again, you and I with our unity can win!”
Aesc growled something inaudible and Aelle knew he had him, had his alli-
ance again. Quickly, he moved on. “I have learnt that the British remain at
the place they call Badon. ’Tis a fortress guarding the Ridge Way—
ja
, as you
rightly say, you know this.”
3 7 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Aesc had grunted his indignation at being told what even a babe in arms
ought know. Protested, “I know more of the British defences than do you
South Saxons! My father, Hengest, rode with a British king, remember? My
sister married him. My niece, Winifred, married another!”
Calming, talking easily, low-voiced, unhurried, Aelle skirted the rebuke,
continued. He must make certain Aesc would march with them come the
morrow! He must! “Forgive me, I do not tell you what you know, merely sort
my own thoughts aloud so we may compare our strategies.” Tactfully, neatly
done! “Badon is a fortress formidable on the north side, easier to take from the
more gentle sloping south. We need to swing around, secure the British, then
attack.” Added, almost as an after-thought, “Ambrosius is again ill, I hear.” His
excitement and enthusiasm increased as if urging an already running horse into
a flat gallop. “We could take them so easily, Aesc! From the south, we could
take them as if they were poisoned rats sealed in a nest-hole!”
The Canti conceded. What Aelle said was the truth. “Do we have the time
to lay siege?”
“La! We do!”
“What of Geraint? What if he comes riding hard from the south?”
“Is that now likely? All this while and he has not made a move. ’Tis obvious he
has sided with Bedwyr. They are waiting for us to finish Ambrosius, then…”
Impatient, curt, Aesc interrupted. “Then we will need start a new fight! I knew
singing the praises of a short, sharp war was a mead-soaked exaggeration!”
The other man chuckled a gust of amusement. “Since when, friend, did a
warrior not exaggerate the course of battle!”
The sour retort. “Since he discovered his hair was becoming thinned and
grizzled, his back and bum ached from lying on damp, hard ground, and the
delights of a wife’s teats, the warmth of her bed, and the knowing he could
savour the same enjoyment the next night uninterrupted began appealing to
him more than the possibility of having his balls hacked off by some raw
British recruit!”
Aelle roared amusement. “You are right! Of course, you are so right!” Shoving
the empty mead-jug from him, Aesc swivelled to full face his Bretwalda. Asked
one, earnest, sober question.
“So, Ambrosius is ill. Geraint will not aid him. What, then, my overlord, do
we do if the other rumour proves to be truth?” He belched, wiped the back of
his hand across his mouth. “What if Arthur truly is returned?
Seventy
Arthur gripped the top lip of the palisade fencing, the knuckles of
both hands whitening under the tension of that anxious grasp. Below,
slaves were lighting the torches and braziers. The cobbled courtyard of Geraint’s
inner, private sanctuary of royal dwellings leapt with the dance of illuminated
shadow, the uneasy proximity of a winter’s evening recoiling, while beyond the
wooden palisade, the darkening sky pressed closer, leaning its cold breath up
against the outer walls of Durnovaria. There were no stars. No moon. January
had been a dull-weathered month, encased in louring grey cloud that refused
to scud or billow into anything more than an omnipresent weight. If snow or
frost touched a more northerly part of Britain, it had not dared to ride here to
this milder, more southerly, climate.
Durnovaria, the town beyond the royal enclosure, rustled into the casual
stroll of a typical evening routine. Shops and bothies were closing, taverns
filling with those seeking warmth, food, and drink after a day’s laborious toil;
streets emptying of daytime traffic, mothers calling their young children in from
play, husbands returning home. Doors and window shutters bolted, the chill
of night closed firmly out. The day ended so soon after it had begun this time
of year.
A wind was stirring, becoming attentive to the banner flying from the roof of
the northern guard tower and scuffing at Arthur’s cloak. It smelt different. Here
in Britain, the wind carried a heady scent of damp soil and mouldering autumn
leaves, mixing with the saline tang of the sea and sheep-grazed upland grasses.
Always, the tantalising promise of distant summer and optimistic hope.
Three days had he been back. Three long, never-ending days of heart-racing,
unnerved panic. He had come up here onto the rampart walkway to escape the
loud press of people in Geraint’s Hall, their swell of excited talk and heated debate:
They had been feasting, the men, Geraint’s loyal, warrior-class followers, and his
own Artoriani. A handful more than three hundred men, where once he could
3 8 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
have boasted three times that number. They were men who had remained loyal to
his memory, his name, men who had ridden with Bedwyr rather than go against
all they had previously fought for. Men who, whatever way you cared to look at it,
had deserted Ambrosius and their country, leaving both to God’s mercy and their
fate. By Arthur’s law, and the law of soldiering laid down by Rome—and even
before that, by the law of tribal honour—one in every ten of those men ought be
stoned or clubbed to death. Desertion was the greatest sin for any fighting man,
from the humblest shield-bearer to king himself. Arthur’s fingers gripped tighter.