A Hero's Throne (An Ancient Earth) (19 page)

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Authors: Ross Lawhead

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BOOK: A Hero's Throne (An Ancient Earth)
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There was a rattle at the door and it opened. The guard, without a word, let a hooded man into the narrow room.

“You,” Henry said. It was a declaration more than a statement. An accusation. “You . . .”

He didn’t have the energy to hate anymore. He was tired—all passion had left his body. He stared down at his old, impotent hands.

Ealdstan took down his hood and stared at the king, who turned weary, wet eyes up at him. For the briefest moment, Ealdstan experienced an unfamiliar sensation—that of looking into eyes older than his own. With a shift that he felt in his gut, the feeling passed and he was staring instead into the cloudy eyes of a sad, beaten madman. He took a few steps toward the window, and Henry, as though possessing no will of his own, also turned his face to the bars.

The sky was shades of russet and orange, fading into a light purple.

“I never betrayed you,” Ealdstan said. “You must think that I did, but I always did what was best for the kingdom, for the crown.”

Ealdstan turned from the window to see that Henry had also turned away. “You are in your silent mood again.”

“No. No, I am not. I am just tired. It is exhausting. First ruling, then deposed, then enthroned once again, only to be deposed once more. All the fighting, all the battles. English blood on English soil for the first time in over a hundred years. How did I fail my people? Where have I erred?”

“They wanted leadership. They wanted safety.”

“I would have led them to safety. I would have led them to piety.”

“They would sooner have the safety that victory over your enemies promised. A warm bed and a full belly. Even very pious men falter with a blade at their neck.”

“‘My enemies.’ I never understood that phrase. We are all brothers. We all bear the burdens of reality in this world. Who is my enemy? God knows, I have been an enemy to many, but has a man ever been mine?”

“You are too philosophical—that has always been your weakness.” Ealdstan sucked in his breath at this last word—the word he had told himself not to say. Weakness was the beginning and end with this man. It would not do to taunt him. “The opposer is
in every man you meet. You say every enemy is your brother—every brother is your enemy. We war not just outside the world, but within ourselves also, for the opposer is also there. The evil builds in season, like a flood tide, and will one day overrun us and wash away all that cannot stand.”

“And will you rouse your sleepers and save us at that time?”

“You could have been strong. You could have more readily drawn strength from others. Your wife, for instance.”
Or me,
he added silently.
If you had only listened to
me
.

“I would have been stronger if I let others fight for me, you mean?” Henry looked up, his eyes flashing. “Is that strength? Or is strength the power to stand for peace when all around you war? You who have known . . . how many kings now? In your wisdom, perhaps you can answer me this question: Why do hands clenching swords inspire men more than hands clenched in prayer? Why are there always far more willing to rip apart than to knit together?”

“Your father knew the reason. He brought peace, and he carried a sword.”

“Father’s victories were the worst part about him. If he were to have died at Agincourt, or somewhere along his French campaigns . . .” Henry was lost in wishes and thoughts he dared not speak.

“And he saddled me with a nation falling apart, piece by piece, like a castle of sand washed into the sea. I was never a warrior. I was not the man he was. I have walked the battlefields of England and seen Lancastrian fathers weeping for Yorkist sons. A man was brought to me for the crime of looting the battlefield. He was distraught, inconsolable. While rummaging through one of the stiffening bodies, he prised a golden bauble from cold hands that he himself had once owned and given to his son on his marriage. It wasn’t until he held it in his own hands that he recognised the form of the body beneath
him. What is a rational man’s response to this madness? And what is a king’s? It is the curse of the king that the curse of the nation be visited on his body. My own subjects war against me, just as my mind wars against my body. I loved my father, I truly did, but I have often wondered, if he had lived to see me grown, would he have even known me for his own? What do you think?”

“The old king was religious, in his own, direct way. He owned a warrior’s piety. He would have recognised that in you.”

“And you? What do you think?” He turned his gaze up, this time a young child looking for approval. Ealdstan felt sick.

Weak, he wanted to say. Weak in mind and body. He could almost spit bile at the limp, pathetic lump of flesh that had once owned the throne and yet now rotted in prison.

“I know what you think,” Henry said, bowing his head. “You think I was just unlucky. Some days I think God torments me for a purpose, in order to teach me and the kingdom; other times I think He just does it to prove how powerless we all are before His magnificence.”

“There’s still a chance for you. The people still love you—you can unite them. But you must follow my lead!”

“No,” Henry said, shaking his head. “No, I know where you would lead me. I know the cost you would extract from something the Lord knows is only too poor.”

“Please, I ask you for your sake.”

“Never. I will never give you what you ask of me—it goes against every nature of my spirit. It was never I who weakened these isles—it was you. Only ever you.”

Ealdstan frowned. And that frown became hard and set. How dare he?

“So be it,” Ealdstan said. “You brought this on yourself.” He raised his staff high, almost to the ceiling, and then brought it down on King Henry VI’s head.

The king groaned and rolled onto the floor. Ealdstan restrained himself from issuing more blows and knelt beside the figure, pressing a hand to the prone man’s chest and whispering an incantation of stopping.

Henry grimaced in pain. Or was he smiling? Was that a gasp or a laugh? His lips were moving. Ealdstan halted his incantation. “What is it?”

“I see . . . I see . . .” the king whispered.

“What do you see, old man?”

Henry swallowed, throat dry, almost choking. “I see . . .”

“What? What?”

His eyes swivelled sightlessly. “Golden skies.” And then he died.

Ealdstan rose and looked out the window. It was dark.

“God save me from pious kings,” he said.

Save me, in fact, from all kings,
he thought.

He knocked on the door and the guard let him out.

_____________________
III
_____________________

Freya’s head dropped and it almost knocked against the table before she jerked it back up again. “How long this time?” She unclenched her hand and let her pen drop. Her fingers ached. She began massaging her palm.

Vivienne, standing at a bookcase, wrangled with the books in her arms and checked her watch. “Five hours.”

“Five? This is taking forever, and it’s so exhausting. Please, no more.”

“But we’re getting valuable material.”

“Vivienne—I didn’t get to tell you about the mirrors. There’s a room in this tower, and it—”

“Contains mirrors that allow you to see past, future, and possible versions of yourself. Yes, I am aware.”

Freya was stunned. “How?”

“I told you, I’ve explored the Langtorr before,” Vivienne said, flipping open a book.

“How many times?”

“Just once. I didn’t come too far—just down to this room, in fact. I took only the briefest of looks around and heard a noise, which I now know must have been Frithfroth. I got spooked and ran back up the tower. Ecgbryt was there—he was the only one who could keep the doorway open past dusk—”

“What else is here that you haven’t told me about?”

“Let’s keep cracking on, shall we? Come on, these are from the seventeenth century.”

Freya rubbed her eyes. Using the pansensorum was mentally exhausting, but not physically. “Okay, in a second. But, Vivienne—if what you’re not telling me about is important . . . you’d have let me know, right?”

“Correct. I believe this is the best way we can help our cause right now. Far more than further exploration of the tower.”

“Okay,” Freya sighed. “Start it up again.”

_____________________
IV
_____________________

London, Whitehall Palace

1 December 1653 AD

Ealdstan paced the corridors of the massive palace. It truly was enormous. More than fifteen hundred rooms meant it could hold the population of a town. It was not as magnificent as his own realm, he reminded himself, but it represented an idea that had been growing in the surface world over the past few hundred years. An unconscious desire, more than an idea—a desire for separation, which was now becoming assumed and ingrained. The magnificence of the palace existed in sharp contrast to the
poverty of the citizenry around it. There was none of that in Niðergeard, he noted with pride. The smithies lived in rooms as fine as his own—much better, in fact.

He wondered what it meant. He couldn’t imagine all these rooms were actually needed or vital to the running of the nation. They were an excess, and an excess meant things were running inefficiently. It was good, then, that he had found Cromwell. Indeed, if he hadn’t come across Cromwell, then it would have been necessary to invent someone. As a rule, Ealdstan hated instability and revolution, but the nation had been wobbling on its axis for the last couple hundred years. Kings were hard to control, even in the best of circumstances. Republics had potential, though they’d need more attention.

It was then that Cromwell found him. He walked into the courtyard where Ealdstan sat, his ruddy face beaming, his oddly unmilitary build—narrow shoulders and protruding gut—gangling into view.

“Ealdstan, you old relic, how are you this morrow?” He clasped the wizard on his shoulder as he stood, giving it a vicelike squeeze.

“I am well, and seem to have found you in high spirits.”

“I tell you, man,” Cromwell said, “these are—” He was interrupted as a door into the courtyard burst open and a flock of harassed-looking men—armed soldiers as well as politicians and a couple clergy—entered.

“My lord—”

“Sir, if I may—”

“Your honour—”

“Permission to—”

“Out! Out you beasts, all of ye!” Cromwell shouted at them. “Quit the doorway! Shut that! Quit my presence and my sight. Give me peace for just a half of an hour or I’ll loose dogs upon ye!”

Faces blanched, a few arms saluted, and a penitent clerk closed the French door. Faces peered in at them from behind the rows of glass panes.

Cromwell shook his head. “A bevy of badgers.”

“Let us walk this way . . . eh?” Ealdstan faltered. “I seem to be at a loss for a title for you.”

“For me?” Cromwell turned back to Ealdstan with a grin. They began to walk a path in the courtyard. “Why, I am just a lowly MP in the service of his country. Call me Oliver.”

“Not just that, also a general and . . . more, if I am to believe what I hear of the feelings in the Parliament.”

“So?” Cromwell said, his face brightening once more. “News
does
reach you in that hole you occupy. Yes, this nation may finally come around to some sort of order, God willing. These are blessed days, my friend. The plans and schemes that we discussed in our—or at least
my
youth,” he said, looking Ealdstan up and down, “are bearing more fruit than even I had dared to imagine. I had thought, even at times of triumph, to be a sort of holy failure. A martyr, if God willed it. But now”—he took a deep breath and swung his arms around him—“can you smell it? There is something in the air. Men’s hearts have changed. We have moved closer to the Divine; we are climbing out from the ditch of sin that the kings and monarchists have steered us into. Through God’s grace, my ability granted through Him, and your good counsel, my friend. It is a new age of enlightenment—moral, spiritual, political. Holy times, my friend. Holy times.”

“I am glad you are pleased. With you ends the era of kings, and their confused, misguided folly.”

“In truth, Ealdstan,” Cromwell continued rapturously as they started a circuit around a rectangular reflecting pool, “when you and I talked and laid plans of revolution, I doubted. I was an unbeliever. Forgive me my foolish youth, friend.”

“Enough of that,” Ealdstan said. “Let us talk of next steps. What would you consider to be your fiercest regiment?”

“We will talk of payment later. First I must discuss my campaigns against the Irish and the Scots. You believe it is vital that we bow them to our rule?”

“Bow or break,” Ealdstan answered. “They must join. As must the Continent.” Ealdstan was drawn back hundreds of years by his thoughts. It once seemed possible—the Dane lands, the Frankish lands . . . ties had been made with them that were to last until the end of the world. But the map was fragmented now. He had thought that familial bonds would strengthen ties between nations, but that was an error. Where there used to be family ties, there was only enmity. All the houses of the royals—boiled down to one big, ugly string of family disputes. This new return to a meritocracy, the way it used to be when England was young, was the way forward.

“This is the start of a golden age. I envision a union of nations across the earth. A commonwealth of spiritual holiness.”

Ealdstan blinked and bowed his head. “And then we may be able to weather the storm I see coming.”

Cromwell pursed his lips and nodded solemnly. Then he smiled and gripped Ealdstan’s shoulder with his massive soldier’s hand. “Such an ambitious vision, and one I doubt will be realised in my time,” he said. “I will try not to let you down, but this new order of government—it is a delicate thing and needs much protection. I will need all resources at my command.”

“Be not intractable,” Ealdstan said to him. “You would pay a man for giving you a house; would you not pay me for giving you a kingdom?”

Cromwell laughed. “Cursing me with one, you mean. In truth, I pay for nothing these days. What I need, I am given or I take. But
worry not, old friend, due payment will come in due time, as my mother was well used to saying.”

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