Dreaming the Hound

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Authors: Manda Scott

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Boudica, Dreaming the Hound. By Amanda Scott. Book Jacket. Manda Scott Boudica - Dreaming the Hound

The most magnificent novel of the world’s most famous warrior queen.

AD 57: Caradoc is lost forever, betrayed to Rome and exiled in Gaul, leaving Boudica bereft, to lead the tribes of the west in an increasingly bloody resistance against Roman occupation. Only if she can drive Rome from the land will she find the peace she needs, and to do that she must once again raise the tribes of the east. Her people, the Eceni, languish in the shadow of the Legions, led by a man who proclaims himself king and yet allows slavers to trade freely in his lands. Too notorious to reclaim her own birthright, Boudica strives instead to return her daughters to their heritage.

Across the sea, Boudica’s half-brother has been named traitor by both sides. He, too, seeks peace, on a journey that takes him from the dreaming tombs of the ancestors to the cave of a god he no longer serves.

Only if these two meet can their people - and all of Britannia - be saved. But the new Governer has been ordered to subdue the tribes or die in the attempt, and he has twenty thousand legionaries ready to stop anyone, however determined, from bringing Britain to the edge of revolt…..

Written with uncompromising mastery, this is fiction that captivates the heart, challenges the mind and offers us an utterly enthralling experience of history in the flesh and blood of its making.

Dreaming the Hound is the third novel in the bestselling BOUDICA series.

Manda Scott is a veterinary surgeon, writer and climber. Born and educated in Scotland, she now lives in Suffolk with two horses, two lurchers and too many cats.

Manda Scott first made her name as a crime writer. Her debut novel, Hen’s Teeth, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize. Her subsequent novels are Night Mares, Stronger than Death and No Good Deed, for which she was hailed as “one of Britain’s most important crime writers”.

Dreaming the Eagle and Dreaming the Bull, the first and second books in the Boudica series, are also available in Bantam paperback.

Acclaim for the Sunday Times bestselling BOUDICA series:

“One of the boldest recent adventures in historical fiction…Scott celebrates the mystic matriarchy of the British tribe with lush lyricism and story-weaving panache.” INDEPENDENT

“Alive with the love, deceit, wisdom and heroics of humanity”. JEAN AUEL

“A stunning feat of the imagination and an absolute must-read for lovers of historical fiction” STEVEN PRESSFIELD

“Manda Scott has created a fictional universe all her own….Breathtakingly good, it reveals the best and worst in all of us.” VAL MCDERMID

“It looks as if we have a new trilogy to rival The Lord of the Rings in its appeal. Actually, I think it will be better”. SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY

“Of the recent historical novels set in Roman times, this is the best one I’ve ever read.” MAIL ON SUNDAY

“A cry for freedom cloaked in lyrical and sensitive prose”. OXFORD TIMES

 

TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS 61-63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA a division of The Random House Group Ltd

RANDOM HOUSE AUSTRALIA (PTY) LTD 20 Alfred Street, Milsons Point, Sydney, New South Wales 2061, Australia

RANDOM HOUSE NEW ZEALAND LTD 18 Poland Road, Glenfield, Auckland 10, New Zealand

RANDOM HOUSE SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD Endulini, 5a Jubilee Road, Parktown 2193, South Africa

Published 2005 by Bantam Press a division of Transworld Publishers

Copyright (c) Manda Scott 2005 Maps (c) David Atkinson 2005

The right of Manda Scott to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBNs 0593 052625 (cased) 0593 052633 (tpb)

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers.

Typeset in 11/13’/ipt Sabon by Falcon Oast Graphic Art Ltd.

Printed in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives pic

 

13579 10 8642

 

Papers used by Transworld Publishers are natural, recyclable products made from wood grown in sustainable forests. The manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.

For Debs, with love and thanks

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to my editor Selina for her continued resilience, patience and acuity of thought - and for understanding the nature of dreaming. Continuing thanks also to Nancy and to Deborah for outstanding copy-editing throughout the series, to Kate Miciak for holding faith on the far side of the Atlantic, to my agent Jane Judd

for rock-solid support, and to H. J. P. ‘Douglas’ Arnold for keeping my Roman thinking in line.

Particular thanks to Jonathan Horowitz and Chris Luttichau, both excellent and inspiring teachers, for sharing their understanding of the dream in its many forms, and to all those who attended the dreaming workshops of 2004 for their courage and willingness to trust the process.

Thanks to all of those who made horse-ownership a possibility, particularly Tessa, without whom it would never have happened at all, and certainly would have failed at the first hurdle.

Finally, heartfelt thanks to Gigha, mother to the kittens, who came home to die during the editing process and altered again my understanding of the boundaries, or lack of them, between life and death; you were a bright star in the days and I miss you.

 

CONTENTS

Prologue
I: Autumn AD 57

II: Spring AD 58

III: Midwinter AD 58-Autumn AD 59

IV: Winter AD 59-Early Spring AD 60

Epilogue
Author’s Note

Characters and Pronunciation of Names

 

LISTEN TO ME. I AM LUAIN MAC CALMA, HERON-DREAMER, ONCE of Hibernia, now Elder of Mona, adviser and friend of Breaca, who is the Boudica, Bringer of Victory. We are in a time of great peril; if you do not understand the past, you cannot come to understand the present, and without it, the tribes of Britannia have no future. Here, tonight, by the fire, you will learn what has come before. This is who we were; if we win now, this is who we could be again.

It is fourteen years since the Emperor Claudius sent his legions

to invade our land. Then, we were a diverse people, of many tribes and many gods, united only in our care of our dreamers: the men and women who came here, to the gods’ island of Mona, to study for a dozen years in the great-house under the elders. Warriors, too, came to learn the arts of honour and courage that might lead later to acts of heroism in battle. We fought against each other for show and thought each skirmish a mighty battle.

Then Rome came, with its legions and cavalry. The men of Rome do not fight for honour or to hear their names sung in the hero-tales at winter. They fight for victory, and when they have made a land their own, they do not leave it.

The tales of how we fought have been told in other places; the battle of the invasion lasted two days and will be told for ever round the fires. A thousand heroes lost their lives and those few who emerged alive did so through the sacrifices of others. It was then that Breaca, once of the Eceni, then Warrior of Mona, led the charge to rescue Caradoc and earned the name by which we know her: Boudica, Bringer of Victory.

Breaca and Caradoc were amongst those who, on the orders of their elders, left the battlefield. They did so with reluctance, fleeing only to continue the war against Rome, and to protect the children, who are precious above all else. They brought them here, to the gods’ isle of Mona where warriors and water hold safe all that is most sacred; where dreamers, singers and warriors of many tribes come to know themselves in the full gaze of the gods, that they may take that knowledge, and the wisdom it brings, back to their people.

From here they fought for ten years, preventing the Roman legions from gaining any foothold in the west. Thus the Romans built their first fortress in the east at Camulodunum, which had been the stronghold of Caradoc’s people.

In the early years of the occupation, thousands of warriors and dreamers died in the east; whole villages were slaughtered in reprisals for rebellions, real or imagined, and it was declared illegal for any man, woman or child to bear a weapon.

The legionaries who broke the swords of our warriors were led by an officer, Julius Valerius, who rode a pied horse. More than anyone else he was hated, for he had been Eceni once, and had sold his soul to Rome and its gods. He fought for Mithras and for the emperor and both thrived on Eceni blood.

Breaca and Caradoc had a son, Cunomar, and then a daughter, Graine. Shortly after her birth, Caradoc was taken captive by treachery and made prisoner in Rome. Captured with him were his

son Cunomar and his elder daughter, Cygfa, a warrior of high renown.

The family were taken to Rome, to die at the whim of the Emperor Claudius, only that Airmid, the dreamer who is the other half of Breaca’s soul, found a way to bargain with the oldest and most dangerous of the ancestors and was able to prevent their death and, much later, to bring about their freedom.

Caradoc was tortured and maimed beyond repair. He was well enough to bring his family to the coast of Gaul, but not to go beyond it. He could not have returned as a warrior to Mona - his injuries were too great for him to wield a weapon as he had done with such success before his capture and he would not inflict on his warriors the pain of seeing him brought low by Rome. Thus he stayed in Gaul and word was sent that he gave his life to save his children as they boarded the ship that would bring them back to Mona. That was three years ago. Breaca mourns Caradoc, but inwardly. Outwardly, she has given herself heart and soul to the battle against Rome. In summer, she leads the warriors of Mona to keep the legions from reaching our island, and to push them back as far as she can from the mountains of the west. Through winter, she hunts alone, taking men singly or in pairs, and they have come to fear her, as if she were a spirit of the mountains who feeds on their souls.

One other returned on the ship from Gaul, who was not expected: Julius Valerius, the once-Eceni cavalry officer who had led the oppression of his people. By the will of the gods, he was called back to Rome by the ailing Claudius to undertake a final duty: to escort Caradoc’s family to the Gaulish coast and thence to a ship that might take them to freedom.

Claudius died before the family could reach freedom and Nero, his successor, required that they be returned. Valerius could not go against an oath sworn in the name of his god, and thus was named traitor, and forced to flee.

I would have brought him to Mona, for reasons that are not only my own, but Breaca forbade it and she is not only the Boudica, whose word holds sway with the warriors, she is also Breaca of the Eceni, sister to the man who was once Ban and became Valerius, an officer of the legions.

These, then, are the ones who have fashioned our pasts: Breaca, who hunts legionaries in the mountains of western Britannia, and her brother Valerius who is in exile in Hibernia, where he drags out a living as a smith. Neither can continue at this for ever. The world changes and they must change with it, or die.

Meanwhile, the children, and the dreamers, wait on Mona, watching a world that grows more brutal by the year. Rome seeks revenue from its provinces, and Britannia is not the rich vein of silver and gold that Claudius believed it to be. Nero was made emperor in his place and Nero is ruled in turn by his advisers. These are men without pity, for whom a land and its people mean nothing, unless they have gold or can be made to yield it.

This is the future we fear and against which we fight. Mona is safe now, under the care of the gods, but if it is the gods’ will that it be no longer safe, then all that is sacred will continue in the hearts and minds of those who hold the lineage of the ancestors. We are those people, you and I. Dream now, and know that in the dreaming is your future and all that we believe to be true.

 

PROLOGUE.

MARCUS PUBLIUS VINDEX, STANDARD-BEARER OF THE SECOND century, third cohort of the XXth legion, stationed on the far western frontier of Britannia, drank wine sparingly when on winter foraging duties and never took unnecessary risks. When the late-night need to urinate became overpowering, he stepped away from the watch fire only for a moment and told his armourer where he was going and why. Passing between the tents, he whistled the tune of the ninth invocation to Jupiter as evidence that he was still alive.

At the margins of the firelight, where the rain became silver and the sound of it hammering on the tent hides was too loud for his tune to be heard, Vindex called out to the armourer and was answered. The stream of his urine cascading on rocks made a good counterpoint to the rain. There was a cold satisfaction in pissing on the base of the mountain; for as long as the sound of it lasted, he was solid in his victory over the weather, the sucking mud, the lack of game and of corn and, best, over the native warriors who grew out of the dark and left the unwary dead to be found in daylight.

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