Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
course of the river here to Juliomagus, their base camp for now. Manoeuvres
that had taken weeks, not days to complete. If Euric had decided on taking an
immediate defensive position, all this land would be blackened ruins by now.
The town of Juliomagus, one mile or so distant, had been engulfed by the
night, only a few scattered watch-tower lights glimmered in the darkness. The
stars were different here, too. Bolder, sharper, a few down on the horizon he
remembered seeing as a boy at his father’s estate downriver near Condivicnum.
Only he had not known the great Uthr Pendragon to be his father then, for his
identity had been hidden until it was safe to announce him for the son he was.
Juliomagus had survived one bloody attack already, a few years past. The
Saxons had been raiding along the river, building their homesteadings on the
numerous islands, and, growing bolder, had tried for something more than
holding a few scattered villages. The fighting had been bitter, but in the end
Odovacer, their leader, had been driven out, running.
The whole of Gaul was a simmering cauldron. If watched it would bubble
away without harm, but if left to its own there was every possibility the heat
would grow too high and the thing would boil and spurt over like a volcano
blowing its top.
Arthur wandered back to his tent. It was that which niggled him. He did not
much like being a pot-watcher
Ten
October 468
The remnants of an autumn dawn lay over the levels of the Summer
Land. The Tor, eleven miles distant as the raven would fly, sat like a faery
island rising solid amid the white, shape-shifting mist, and as the sun rose, deep,
black shadows lengthened away from the ramparts and ditches of the king’s
stronghold of Caer Cadan. The heart-place of Arthur, the Pendragon. Finger
shadows stretched out across the moving mist, shadows cast from tree and bush
and scattered copses of alder, ash, and willow, the tumble of uneven ground.
Another morning, another day.
Gwenhwyfar shivered, drew her cloak nearer around her shoulders. It was
chill this morning. Summer had faded into the sharp tang of autumn; already
the colours had altered from pleasant green to the fire-bright bursts of red and
yellow and orange. With the lifting sun the mist, too, was turning gold. How
this great welt of loneliness and despair gripped her, clutched at her, like the
unrelenting numbness of a frozen winter! Arthur was gone, ridden away with
the laughter and hopeful excitement of his men. Gone to chase the lure of a
promised fight. Gone, not knowing when—if—he would be back. As he had
been gone so many, many times before.
Why then, this portent of dread within her stomach? Because he had
taken ship across the sea? Because, already, he had been gone longer than
he had intended? Because the crows circled the Caer each night before
going to their roost, the wind blew from the east, the old apple tree had not
borne fruit…so many nonsense reasons to explain the questions that held
no answers.
The mist lifted, evaporating with the new-risen burst of sun-warmed day,
leaving the Tor once again stranded in the mortal world of the Christian God.
Gwenhwyfar, seeing the magic of the whiteness disappear, had the thought it
was not so easy to chase away the fears that lunged through her night dreams,
that muttered so persistently at the back of her waking mind.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 7
Nail-studded boots scraped on the wooden stairway, emerged out onto the
rampart walkway. She recognised the step, the heavy tread, turned with a smile
to greet Ider, the Captain of her personal guard.
“My Lady?” His voice showed concern, a question, aware of her sadness
and fears. No sign though in his words or eyes of the unutterable devotion
that he felt for her. He had a wife of his own, and a family, but still he loved
his queen. As did nigh on every man of Arthur’s elite cavalry of nine hundred
men, the Artoriani.
“I have come for this day’s orders,” he said. The daily routine of a stronghold
went on, king present, king absent.
She managed a wide smile, brighter, appearing content, knowing she did not
fool Ider.
He stood as strong and tall as an ancient oak tree, his heart and kindness as
gentle as the willow. He crossed to the palisade fencing, stood next to his lady,
rested his arms along the top of the wooden fencing, and gazed outward as
Gwenhwyfar had. He breathed in the dew-wet smells of this new day. A rich
aroma of earth and marsh, of water and autumn withered grass, a distant tang of
the sea. Arthur’s summer land.
“It is in my heart,” he said at length, the northern burr of his accent
pronounced even after all these years in service to the Artoriani, “to be with
my comrades, my brothers, across the sea in Gaul following the Dragon
Banner. A soldier needs the pull of a battle to keep an edge to his sword. But
then,” he turned with a barrel-wide grin and an exaggerated inhalation of
wafting smells, “then I catch the aroma of the remains of last night’s supper of
ham cooking for breakfast down there, and change my mind!” He nodded to
the scatter of wattle-built dwelling places and huts that made the Caer into its
life-place, chuckled.
Gwenhwyfar laughed with him, laid her hand for a moment on his chest,
against the leather of his tunic. “Glad I am that you did not go with my husband;
you have always had the wicked ability to make my heart smile.”
Ider stepped back a pace, his expression displaying hurt. “And I thought you
valued me for my good looks, strength, and skill with a sword!”
Amused, the heaviness of heart, for a while at least, lifted, Gwenhwyfar teased
back, “Those come without question, my lad!” She made her way to the steps,
began to descend, the sun striking the brilliant copper-gold of her braided hair.
For all the affection he held for his wife, Ider felt a knot tighten in his stomach.
She was an attractive woman, Gwenhwyfar, her figure slim, despite the bearing
3 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
of children, her skin fresh, unmarked, teeth white, all her own. Her thirty years
leant nothing but maturity and poised wisdom to her being.
If Ider were her husband he would not have been so eager to leave, to go to
fight for a foreign cause. But then, Ider was not a king. The role of husband, he
supposed, had to come second behind that of being the Pendragon. Even with
a wife as lovely as Gwenhwyfar.
Eleven
December 468
Sorrowfully, Ambrosius surveyed the ragged, incomplete building
before him; the half-height walls, the tumble of stone, a scatter of timber,
the rutted wheel and foot-churned ground. Half-built, abandoned for the other
work, the other construction up on the hill where, it was said, the great Vespasian
once made a stronghold, back in those times when Britain was being harnessed
to Rome’s superiority. There was to be a fortress again there. Ambrosius’s
fortress, his place of command, his stronghold from where he would refasten
those loosened straps and chains. The men were up there, labouring to dig
the defensive ditches, toss up the huge ramparts, build the stone and timber
palisade. Inside would come the dwelling places for the men and their families;
the principia, the administration offices. He was determined to have a Roman-
built praetorium for his own house, not the British-built timbered Hall.
He sighed, long and loud. He would have preferred this half-complete
building finished rather than have a fortress saddled on him. Council wanted
a stronghold, wanted preparations ready, in hand. He did not, but Council
would have their way. He turned away, resigned, and saw his son hobbling
with his cumbersome crutch and dragging, lame leg. Another thing that must
be accepted, but stuck like a fish-bone in the throat. His only son was limp-
legged and useless.
Cadwy tried a cheery expression, aware he was a constant disappointment to
his father. He pointed with his crutch to the building works up on the hill. “It
goes well, father! Soon it will be finished.”
Ambrosius returned a forced smile that did not reach the eyes. Aye, soon it
would be finished and then Council would be pressing for him to use it, to
take over the permanent leading of this God-forgotten damn country. He did
not want that either, but who else was there to do it? Who else could herd this
lost and weary province back into Rome’s protective pastures? He gestured
at the abandoned building behind him, said, the sadness all too obvious in his
4 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
voice, “I would rather it had been my school for teaching God’s word that was
nearing completion, not this place of war.”
“War?” Cadwy stayed determinedly cheerful. “Surely Father, the fortress is
a precaution only, a standby in case Arthur…”
“Does not come back?” Ambrosius finished for him. Added, in a loud, slow
voice, as if he were talking to a child not a man of ten and eight, “Arthur will
not be back. Council will not allow him back.”
Abandoning the pretence of a smile, Cadwy shook his head, pleading with
his eyes for his father to accept that although the leg was twisted and wasted
there was nothing wrong with his head and mind. “Can Council stop him?”
he asked cautiously. “Arthur has many men, he is a warlord unparalleled in
battle.” Difficult for Cadwy, for he liked the Pendragon, admired and respected
him, but the loyalty had to go to his own father. A father who gave all to his
Christian God and spared no love for his son.
Ambrosius twitched his hand, dismissive. He was a man who believed firmly
in the ways of Rome, the old ways of law and order and justice. It was Council,
the British equivalent of the Senate, who should have the voice of power, not
kings or princes. Command should be by an appointed governor. If Council
decreed he ought to be that governor, then who was he to go against the will of
the Council? His nephew frequently did exactly that, but then his nephew—aye
and his nephew’s dead father, Uthr Pendragon—were in Rome’s eyes almost
barbarian. Ambrosius took a patient breath. What had become of Rome, to
allow such men the respect of recognition?
“Arthur’s men are across the sea and he fights with horses. His cavalry is what
makes him good. Take away the horses and you are left with nothing.” He began
walking up the sloping ground in the direction of the rising fortress, pacing with
deliberate long strides, making it hard for Cadwy to keep up. He knew what he
had just said was not true, but he could not admit that, not even to himself. He
had to believe what Council said and decreed was the right of it, the only way of
it. Had to. “Arthur’s men,” he stated, “may find a way to return, but he will not
be able to transport the horses.” He added no more, for this part of it—huh, if he
were truthful, all of it, but this part in particular—left a sour taste in his mouth,
left behind a putrid smell of poison and treachery. Council was already seeing to it
that the ships would not be available to bring Arthur’s valuable war-horses back.
Horses that cost much in time and gold and experience to breed and train.
Resentful, for Cadwy could smell that stench of naked treason, the young
man almost snapped a sharp retort, but dutifully swallowed the thought that
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 1
his father sounded pleased. It was no secret these two, the Pendragon and
Ambrosius, nephew and uncle, had little liking for each other. Opposites in
nature and mind. Instead, Cadwy steered a safer course, asked, “You would
not use horse then?”
“Not like Arthur does, no.”
More disappointment, although he had already known the answer. Cadwy
could ride a horse; could, if he were shown how, fight from a horse. It had been
the one thing that had pulled him through the burning, paining illness that had
crippled him at the age of seven years; the hope, when he was grown, he could
ride a horse and join with the Pendragon’s cavalry. Arthur had become king
that month, as Cadwy began to surface from the horrors of those long months
of agony and near-death. A great battle there had been, over on the east coast,
against the mighty Saxon warlord, Hengest. Arthur had won his sword in that
battle, taken it from an ox-built Saex and slaughtered the sea wolves with its
shining strength. Cadwy’s nurse had told him the tale of the battle—as many,
many others had been retelling the same thing throughout the land of Britain.
He had so wanted to be a part of that glory, the hope and excitement. He
could be still, if his father would only let him ride a horse suited to war. No use
regretting. It would not happen; he was a lame-leg, a nothing. And his father
intended to take the Pendragon’s place.
He hurried his awkward steps to stay apace of Ambrosius, the thought
flashing like a stabbed spear into his mind, that he did not want to fight Arthur.