Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
was the truth. He had not expected it to be so—indeed, had looked forward
with anticipation to Arthur’s death. The realities were always different to the
thoughts of ambition and imaginings, though. Reality was so final. Held so
much pain. You never remembered that in your thoughts and schemes for
what might one day be.
Now the silence had been broken, the men moved, came further inside.
Bedwyr crossed the room to pour wine, Illtud going to the inner door,
clutching up the little girl as he passed, lifting her with a high swing into his
arms. She laughed. She recognised this man, from where or when she did
not know, remembered only that he had played with her in the sun, swirling
her around and around like her father had used to do before he went away.
Recollected, on that same thought, they had gone away together. Happen they
were returned together also?
1 6 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“Will my Da be home soon?”
Illtud ruffled her hair, tucked her closer in his arms, made for the inner door
that passed into the Hall. “
Na
, lass.
Na
, He’ll not be home.”
What else could he say?
Closing the door behind him, he took her to find her nurse, to speak quietly
to those in the Hall who pressed close to hear with ashen faces and tear-brimmed
grief what he had to tell.
Gwenhwyfar acted with automation, taking the wine flagon from Bedwyr,
offering the two remaining men fruit and nuts from the side table. She sat in her
chair, her fingers fiddle-fiddling with her pewter tankard. Her eyes gazing at
the sword, lying where Bedwyr had placed it, across the bed-furs. On the side
where Arthur would have lain.
They sat a long while in silence. One of the dogs, Blaidd, who had been her
eldest son’s favourite hound, came from the warmth of the fire to nuzzle at her
with his wet nose. Absently she fondled his silken ears, running her hand over
his body. He had pined for the boy a long while after that killing, refusing to
eat or settle, until one night when Gwenhwyfar had taken him out with her
for a walk beneath the quiet of the stars. They had been up in the north then,
where the rivers ran deeper and wider, had sat together, woman and dog, her
arms clasped around the roughness of his neck, her head buried against his coat
while the dawn rose. And they had come away with their grief lain to rest. But
not buried, not forgotten.
“I would know what happened,” she said, breaking the stretching silence.
Bedwyr cleared his throat, spoke, telling all as it was, as if giving report. Telling
all, knowing she would not want half-truths or delicate covering of the facts.
When he finished, she asked a question.
“And so you know not where he is buried?”
Bedwyr shook his head. No. “It matters not. He is gone.”
Silence again. Bedwyr added wood to the fire. Poured more wine for
himself. Gwenhwyfar had not tasted hers. Then another question. “It puzzles
me. Happen I am tired or confused.” Gwenhwyfar searched Bedwyr’s strained,
dark-lined face for a clue to her worry. Found none. Had to ask. “Why did you
go direct to Ambrosius? Not come here, to me, at Caer Cadan?”
Bedwyr hung his head, wiped his trembling hand around the stubble of his
mouth and chin, trying to find the courage to answer her. Ambrosius spoke
for him. “Bedwyr thought you to be dead. He knew of no one else to take the
news to.”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 1 6 3
She thought on this a moment. “Dead?” she enquired, “How so?”
“I sent a messenger to the Pendragon when you were ill, to inform him we
expected you not to recover.” Ambrosius felt the need to justify himself. “You
were so very ill. We, none of us, expected you to survive.”
Again she mulled this answer in her mind. “But you sent again? Informing
him of your mistake? And I sent letters to my husband, several, after I recov-
ered.” She added with strained sadness, “Though I received none in return.”
“Gwenhwyfar, we had none of these. No messenger, no letter, came. We
knew nothing. Arthur was—” Bedwyr hung his head, feeling awkward, stunned,
heart-stricken with his own grief. His voice choked. “Arthur was desolate.”
Gwenhwyfar rose, placed her untouched wine on a table, walked across the
room, the dogs’ and men’s eyes following her, expecting something, some
outburst. Tears, anger? Something other than this stiff, rigid silence.
Her cloak was draped over a stool; she took it up, walked for the door,
clicked her fingers at the two dogs who rose and padded beside her.
“I would walk a while,” she said. “Sort my mind.”
She let herself out into the harsh weather. Neither of the men made attempt
to point out it was now raining, or to stop her.
Five
The unthinkable had happened. The Pendragon was gone, dead, with
none to follow him. Ahead stretched a void of uncertainty and anxious
fear for Britain.
Subdued, going about its business cloaked by a mantle of dark grief, Caer
Cadan survived through the passing of the night and day; its women keening
husbands or sons who would never return; the men, the Artoriani who had
remained behind, nursing the loss of comrades, friends, and brothers. They
were numbed, desolate.
The wind had dropped, and the rain had ceased, but the sky hung low and
petulant over the autumn landscape of the Summer Land. Trees with leaves
fluttering from their limp branches; dull, browned and faded grass; the winter
waters already returning, over all, the cold swirl of grey. More rain was in the
sky, threatening with the banks of cloud that rushed from the west, building
behind the Tor lunging upward from the Lake, that at this time of year had
swelled and spilled over much of the flatness.
Only the messengers were busy, sent on the fastest horses to all who
should know, by Ambrosius. The Council was summoned for the next new
moon at his own stronghold of Ambrosium. It had to be. Someone must
lead, someone must attempt to keep a steady course over the confusion and
disquiet. And someone had to put a hand on the rein that kept control over
the Saex.
Ambrosius stood beyond the Hall, looking at, although not seeing, the height
of the rampart walls. He had visited Caer Cadan on but a few occasions only.
Each time had been impressed—though reluctant to admit it—by the unity of
Arthur’s men. Caer Cadan was a thriving community, the heart, the soul the
very being of Arthur’s Britain, while he had been king. Yet now, suddenly
overnight, it too had died. Ambrosius could feel it, feel the limp emptiness
that was the nothingness of a shell, a dying body. A month or two, some day
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 1 6 5
after the winter solstice, there might well be nothing here save the abandoned
buildings of what once had been.
Gwenhwyfar stood on the ramparts with her back to the Caer, gazing over
the solitude of the Summer Land, her husband’s land, hers now. Ambrosius
would not take it from her, though he could allow her to keep only that which
had belonged to Arthur as personal possession. The Summer Land, Dumnonia.
The rest, Britain, was his.
If he could keep it.
A step behind, shuffling. He recognised the tap of a crutch, knew his son
approached. Did not turn around.
“She has stood up there since dawn,” Ambrosius observed aloud, pointing
with his finger to Gwenhwyfar. “I hear she passed but a few hours within her
chamber during the night. I doubt she slept.”
Cadwy made no answer.
“How fares the child? Does she understand much of what is happening?”
Shaking his head, Cadwy acknowledged that Archfedd did not. “A child
comprehends little at her age. I doubt she remembers much of her father.” He
steadied his own breathing, added, “It is for us, the adults, to come to terms
with our disappointments and griefs.”
His father nodded. Aye, it was so. Suddenly, unexpectedly, he confided; “I
know not how I am to contain the Saex. Word will soon spread among them.”
He opened his hands, palms uppermost, let them fall. “Bad word always does,
like mould in a barrel of badly stored fruit.”
Aesc of the Cantii. Vitolinus. Until now, uncle and son had argued and fought
as much between themselves as the younger had irritated and annoyed the British.
That would change. There was reason to unite now. Now that Arthur was gone.
Then there was Aelle of the South Saxons and his three sons. Three years
they had been settled along the coast near Noviomagus after the first fighting.
Three years while they settled themselves firmer. Entrenched with the British
while Arthur had been away moving further backward, further into the shadows
of the Great Wood.
There was little that Cadwy could answer, for there was only the truth.
“The Saex will rise when they hear Arthur is dead. We can but hope they
are not as ready as we may fear. It may be a year, happen two, before we need
fight them all at once.”
Astonished, Ambrosius regarded his son through narrowed eyes. “All at
once? You think the tribes of the Saex will unite together against us?”
1 6 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Sadly, Cadwy shook his head, began to limp away in the direction of the
small dwelling-place that was home for himself and Ragnall. “Against Arthur’s
British? No father, they would not. Against you? Aye, they will.” He trudged
away, glancing once, as he walked, up at the ramparts where his father had
been watching, up at Gwenhwyfar, standing bereft, alone. The Saex would
unite against Ambrosius. Arthur they would never have beaten, for he had been
a warlord, the Pendragon. Ambrosius Aurelianus was of the same family, but
he was no soldier, no fighter. Never would the honour and respect of the title
Pendragon be bestowed on him.
And that, the Saex knew all too well.
Six
Bedwyr’s boots scuffed on the wooden flooring as he ambled along
the walkway. He frowned. Gwenhwyfar was alone, staring out into the
emptiness of the landscape. He strolled to stand beside her, near enough to be
a companion, not so close as to intrude. He folded his arms along the top rail;
stood, much as she, gazing out into the world.
“We will have frosts early this year,” he said amiably.
“It will be a long winter.”
He rested his chin on his hands. “I recall the first time I looked across and
saw Yns Witrin under snow. A sparkling bright day it was. Great blue-black
shadows stretched across the whiteness. Everything shimmered. You could see
the shape of the Tor clearer, more bold against the snow.”
Gwenhwyfar made no answer this time, kept staring, staring out at nothing.
He stole a glance at her. Saw a single tear slither, unchecked, down her cheek.
“The pain,” he said, “never goes. But it does ease.”
“No,” she said after a while. “It just becomes buried under a mountain of
other pains.”
There was no comfort, no words, that he could offer. He needed them all
for himself, although he had grown used to this thing. No, you could never
become used to losing someone you loved. Bedwyr had loved Arthur more
than he had his own brother. When Cei had died he had mourned, aye, and
grieved, but for a while only. The forgetting had come easily there. But it
would not be so for Arthur.
“As a boy, I worshipped Arthur,” he admitted. “He was my god.” He bit his
lip. Gods were supposed to be immortal. Gods did not die. His own tears were
coming, trickling faster. “At least, though, I have the one comfort.” He turned
to her, instinctively opened his arms, “At least I no longer mourn your loss
also.” And she went to him, moving swiftly into his embrace, her face going
into his shoulder, his hold tight, protective around her.
1 6 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
They stood together, the guard on patrol altering his routine walk, turning
earlier, to step in measured pace back again along the walkway. His own few
tears streaking his firm, wind-weathered face.
Bedwyr held her as if she were a sister, lover, queen, and wife. She meant
much to him, for as a boy he had laughed with her and loved her. She had been
his first love, the first to stir a lad’s thoughts to the novelty of women. Whether
she ever knew it, he was unsure. Probably she suspected, for he had followed
her around like a faithful whelp all those months when she had lived with them
in Less Britain. He snorted a single note of self-contempt, said to the sky, his
chin resting on her head, “I was so jealous when I discovered it was my cousin,
Arthur, you loved, not me.”
She made no answer but her hands, clasped around his strong body, squeezed
harder.
“I was a lad, naive. I had no idea why you and he were always disappearing
together. When, much later, I found out, I was so angry with him—but of
course it was too late for me by then, you were already his wife.” He moved
slightly, held her away from him to see into her eyes. Smiled at her. “Mind,