Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
“Why think you I buy her? To converse with over dinner?”
Arthur grimaced. He was no moralist, had no prudish censorship, but this
thing brought a sour taste to his mouth. The girl could be no more than nine
or eight and ten; Fat Man was in his sixth decade at least.
Arthur jiggled his fingers at the money pouch secured at his waist. He had
not much coin—bronze and silver was becoming rare, nothing had been minted
in Britain since Vortigern had died. Idly, casual, he took a ring from his finger,
tossed it in the air, caught it, saw the slave-master’s greedy eyes follow its move-
ment. Fat Man had stopped tugging at the rope, the girl ceased her shrieking.
Bedwyr tapped at his cousin’s arm. “Leave it, what want you with her?”
Arthur waved him silent. His eye had never left the slave-master. “As she says,
a noble-born, even a king, might be interested in her.”
4 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
The man laughed, derisive. “As much as such a profit would be pleasing, no
man of that rank would be seeking a bed-mate in this midden heap of a place!”
Raising one eyebrow higher, Arthur considered the situation. He had obvi-
ously not been recognised. On the two occasions he had visited this Forum
he had not lingered, the tavern he frequented was on the far side of town,
and the citizens of Juliomagus most certainly did not venture into his own
army encampment downriver. There was no reason, save for the quality of his
appearance, that he would be recognised. His cloak was fastened close, hiding
his sword and the royal torque around his neck. Save for the dragon ring on his
left hand there was nothing to show who he was.
“I may be interested in her, assuming she does not carry the cock-pox.”
Sensing a better deal Tadius answered quickly. “She’s clean, a maiden pure.”
The latter Arthur very much doubted. The girl was looking at him, kneeling
in the mire, her expression pleading—anything, anyone, rather than the fat
man. A maiden? Arthur studied her.
Na
, she had the look of the world-wise
about her, no naive innocence lingered behind those blue eyes.
Fat Man snorted his contempt, tightened his grip around the rope. He had
no intention of losing his bargain. “You are a bloody soldier, one of those
cursed British, as bad as any Saex or Goth! We did not invite you here. We
want you gone, want rid of you. You plunder us for food and whores and wine;
you brawl, make a nuisance of yourselves. Your poxed, bastard king promises
to pay, to settle all debts with us, the honest traders and merchant men—huh!
Aye, that he will, on the day pigs fly in the sky!”
Arthur stood very quiet, very still. Bedwyr, a step behind knowing his cousin
so very well, had his hand resting lightly on his sword pommel.
Tossing the ring once more, Arthur flipped it in the slave-master’s direction.
“That is good gold, the gem is small but a quality garnet, for all its lack of size.”
He indicated the purse of coins. “I doubt that will match my offer.”
The slave-master examined the ring. He doubted the garnet was real, glass
probably, and the gold would be poor quality, but it was of a higher value than
the other offer. He nodded acceptance, put the ring in his pouch, and reached
for the girl’s rope, tossing the coin pouch back to its owner, who ignored it,
let it fall.
With surprising speed, a dagger came into Fat Man’s hand. “You agreed the
deal Tadius. She is mine!”
Arthur’s hand had, even faster, clenched around the man’s pudgy neck—and
he was sailing forward, not far or high, but far enough for Arthur to laugh, “I’ll
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 9
be damned, a pig flying!” Then he had his sword out, the blade slicing through
the slave rope. He picked up the severed end, his blade hovering above Fat
Man’s groin. “I get the girl or your balls? Your choice.” A heartbeat pause, no
answer. Arthur grinned. “It seems I get the girl.” He grasped her hand, brought
her to her feet. “You’d better be woman-clean, girl. Riothamus, despite popular
opinion, may be a bastard but he’s not, yet, a poxed bastard.” Casually he
shrugged back the folds of his cloak, let the glimmer of his torque show, a coil of
twisted gold shaped like a dragon. Only one man wore such a thing.
“Come, Bedwyr, we are late for that meeting.” Holding the slave rope
as casually as if it were a dog’s lead, Arthur walked away, heading for the
northern exit from the Forum, the girl trotting obedient, wide-eyed, and silent
at his heel.
Tadius re-examined the garnet ring, ignoring the fat man, who, breathless,
was struggling to his feet. “God’s Fortune!” Tadius whistled aloud, “That was
the Pendragon; this is the real thing!”
Fat Man, at his shoulder, peered at the ring, unimpressed. “If he can
squander such things on a whore, happen it’s about time he paid some of us
honest townsfolk.”
Tadius laughed, put the ring safe away. “Honest folk? God’s balls! Honest?
Here? There be no such person!”
Fourteen
Sidonius Apollinaris welcomed the Pendragon, or Riothamus, as he
was titled in Less Britain and Gaul, with wide arms and a wider smile. If he
was annoyed at the late arrival of his guest, he made no mention of it. Instead,
he ushered Arthur and Bedwyr into the luxury of a private room at the rear
of the tavern, raising his eyebrow only slightly at the British king’s request
to have the bedraggled girl accompanying him sent to the kitchens for food
and a chance to dry her clothes and hair. Sidonius was a man who took the
unexpected in his stride—storing such glimmers of tantalising information away
in his brain for later, private reflection.
There was another man in the room, seated, sipping wine. He rose as Arthur
entered, bowed formally. A young man, bright-eyed, clear-skinned, tall, and
clean-shaven. He bounded forward, offered his hand to Arthur, not caring to
wait for formal introduction. “My lord, I am Ecdicius; my elder sister being
Sidonius’s good lady wife. I have heard much of you, am honoured to meet
you.” His hand was pumping Arthur’s arm, his grin broad and genuine. Sidonius,
Arthur noted, seemed slightly embarrassed at this reckless enthusiasm.
“My brother-by-law,” with a light laugh Sidonius explained, indicating his
guests be seated and offering them wine, “is an incurable romantic. He has a
notion of riding with you to sweep the Goths from Gaul forever, in one deft
charge.” He shook his head at the naivety of such an impossible idea, seated
himself on a cushioned chair arranging his body straight, small feet neatly placed
together. “He has an unfortunate disability not to be able to recognise the
realities of life.” His accompanying smile was sated with indulgent affection.
Sipping his wine—it was good stuff, the best he had tasted here in this
town—Arthur answered, “Given the men, horses, and financial backing I was
promised, more than a year since, I could do just that.” His false smile did little
to hide his annoyance. Sidonius, ordering the slaves to bring in food and more
wine, either did not hear or chose to ignore the comment.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 1
Bedwyr, sitting beside Arthur asked eagerly, “Are you the Ecdicius who after
that disastrous harvest a few years past, fed all your estate tenants from your own
granaries through the entire winter?”
Ecdicius nodded assent. “Not just my tenants, the folk of the settlements
and their families also. About four thousand in all.” His beam of pride was
extravagant. Incredulous, Bedwyr encouraged him to tell more.
“I sent horses and carts to bring all those poor people onto my estate. I saved
them from starving.” Ecdicius flapped one hand dismissively. It was no large
thing, a simple matter of helping one’s neighbour.
Sidonius snorted. “Damn fool nigh on beggared himself! Used all his grain
surplus and a good deal of gold to buy in more to feed classless peasant farmers
and their whores and brats! Let them find their own way or go without, I say.
There’s always someone else to take over an empty farm.”
Ecdicius kept his smile but his retort was barbed, for all his outward pleas-
antness. “Aye, there is many a Goth who would like to get his hands on
good farm land.” He had been baited with this same line of contempt for his
generosity many times. “Is it not a lord’s duty to care for those less well off
in the time of need? By following my duty, I am assured of loyalty from my
tenants and servants.” There was mischief in his eyes as he added, looking
direct at Sidonius, “I do not constantly need to watch the shadows growing
larger behind my back.”
Sensing something more than family disagreement over the treatment of
servants and tenant farmers, Arthur searched for plausible reasons. Why would
a man need such a large, loyal following? He tried a blind stab at one. “Have
you, then, an ambition to become Emperor like your father, Avitus?”
Ecdicius laughed, head back, large hands slapping his thighs. He had a bold,
full-of-humour bellow. “What? And have a dagger plunged into my back a few
months later? No thank you my lord Riothamus! My father was foolish enough
to want to wear the purple; he held that dubious pleasure for less than a year.”
He sat at ease, spread his arms along the back of the couch. “I am content with
what I have. A wealthy estate, a loving wife, and an articulate brother-by-law
who is soon to become Bishop of Augustonemtum”
This was news to Arthur.
Sidonius shrugged modestly, though the flicker of annoyance and bitterness
was not lost to the Pendragon’s keen, watching eye. “It is an honour that has
been offered to me.” The modesty was false. “I have humbly decided to accept
the position.”
5 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Polite, hiding his amusement—and satisfaction—Arthur offered congratula-
tions, while rapidly digesting the information. So, Sidonius was thought to
have been involved with that treasonous letter sent by Arvandus to Euric of the
Goths! Because of it, he had fallen from his high place of favour in Rome. That
Arthur knew already, though the reason had not been made clear. Nothing had
been openly said or declared, there was probably no evidence to support the
suspicions. But this sealed the lid to the coffin, did it not? To be forced into
accepting the oblivion of a bishopric! Hah! Happen there was justice in this
world after all.
“I hear,” Arthur decided to stir a few muddied puddles, “that Arvandus was
saved from execution by a sentence of exile instead. The man was your friend,
Sidonius, was he not?”
Quickly, too quickly, too hotly, Sidonius denied it. “He was a colleague,
nothing more. The man was foolish in not understanding the intricacies of
Roman law, that was all, was unfortunate enough to fall foul of others with
more evil intent than ever he could dream of.”
“So, plotting with Euric to destroy us British and then to overthrow all traces
of Roman rule in Gaul is not evil intent?” Bedwyr responded, not bothering to
hide the disgust in his voice.
“The episode was all a misunderstanding, I assure you.” Sidonius had to say
that, had to believe it, for he too had very nearly been lured into the plotting,
had only escaped by reason of his own eloquence and wit. Arvandus had been
his friend, they shared the same views, the same beliefs, knew the only hope
to rekindle prosperity and peace in Gaul was to let Euric become the legal and
only lord. Sidonius had attempted, discreetly, to give defence for the arrested
traitor—not expecting the idiot to trumpet his guilt all over Rome. Nothing
had been proven to involve Sidonius beyond a wrong-made friendship, but in
consequence he had lost his exalted position as Prefect of Rome and his lands
had been confiscated. Offered instead the binding chains of a bishopric! An
offer only a fool would refuse.
A slave was refilling Arthur’s goblet. He smiled at her, a pretty young thing.
That reminded him of the girl he had bought. What in the Bull’s name was he
do with her? He grinned to himself. Happen he could think of some use. He
sat back, relaxed, all the anger and frustrations of these long, slow passing weeks
suddenly evaporating.
What do you do with a dignitary against whom you cannot prove corruption
and treason? You bind his hands and silence his tongue, you bury him alive.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 3
You make him a bishop. Raising his goblet, Arthur saluted his host. “A good
choice of career, my friend, I am sure you will make an admirable bishop.”
Ecdicius echoed Arthur’s toast. “Oh he will, my lord, my brother- by-law
has a taste for telling others what to do, as long as it causes no discomfort
for himself.”
Sidonius scowled, deeply regretting allowing his brother-by-law to accom-
pany him here to Juliomagus, and bitterly regretting the suggestion of this
meeting. It would be an idea to get to the business side and be gone. He cleared