Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
swords drawn, anxious, alarmed. Mathild’s men, Saxons. A maid-servant in the
open doorway, hand to her mouth at the blood and the mess, began to scream.
Cerdic swung towards them. “Get out!” he bellowed. “Get out of here!” He
pushed at them, lunged with his fist, booted with his foot, driving them from
his private chamber, slammed the door shut, stood, breathing hard. Shaking.
She was dead, Mathild, he knew that. No woman could survive such
brutal treatment.
“You fool!” Winifred snarled. “Will they follow you now without question?
Without glancing at you with thoughts of murder in their minds? She was their
kindred by blood.” With difficulty, she was attempting to control her own
shaking body, swallow down the rise of vomit that had come into her throat.
She fetched a cloak, threw it over the body, hiding it from sight, then wine
from the far side of the chamber; with trembling hands, poured, drank a few,
quick gulps, poured for Cerdic, handed him the tankard.
“You have one chance to survive beyond this night, Cerdic, to live into the
next dawn and the dawn after that.” Her hand went to his arm, gripped it tight,
urgent. “You must say some madness took possession of her, that she tried to
murder your son—I will be witness to it—to protect him you acted as only you
could.” Her other hand took hold of his chin, her fingers biting into his jowled
cheeks, forcing his head to turn, to look at her. “They will follow the boy!
Without question, they will follow him.” She slowed her breathing, becoming
calmer now she knew how to deal with this madness. “You must be his father.
And I must discover, and ensure, somehow, that yours is truly dead.”
Cerdic pushed her grasping hand from his face. Bitter, he laughed. “And
what of Britain? Do you still command me to take Britain?”
She moved away from him, turning her eye from the heap on the floor that
had once been his wife. “If I do not manage to win over or destroy those men
who have loyalty for Mathild above you—or her son—then Britain may be the
only safe place for you.”
Her smile allowed a sliver of triumph to settle into it. She knew who
most of those men were; she had made it her business to know. They were
the ones who had come north with Mathild from Gaul. The ones who had
fought with Arthur. Easy enough to pay the right people with the right gold.
Winifred laughed, low, to herself. Ah no, Mathild would not be going into the
Otherworld alone. She would have her men with her for company. And by
chance, one of them might talk of Arthur before he died.
Eighteen
Another spring come and gone, with the days rapidly sprinting
towards the full heat of summer.
The man stood beside the palisade wall looking down into the valley that ran,
almost as a second defensive barrier, around this side of the decaying Roman
town. Avallon had once been a busy, important place, bustling with the trade
that had come from the road that trundled northwest through Gaul, passing
below its high citadel walls. No more. Few used the Roman road now Rome’s
influence was waning. There was no safety in travel, no profit in trading along
an obsolete route. Avallon, too, was dying. Once a proud town, its buildings
were beginning to crumble, becoming shabby; where the many taverns had
swelled with laughter, only one sold wine now. Where the young had set their
market stalls, opened shops, sold pottery, skins, and cloth, now only broken
shutters swung aimlessly in the wind and few cared to visit Avallon.
He, this man, was one of the few. Of dishevelled appearance, hair in need
of cleaning and combing, simply dressed in rough-spun, woollen tunic and
plaid bracae. He was watching a woman and child make their way along
the track. They seemed small from up here, overshadowed by the tumble
of trees cluttering the far hill, dwarfed by the steepness of Avallon’s own
imposing height.
He could hear their voices floating up to him on the clear, still air; hear her
chiding the boy for idling. He ought to call out, show them he was watching,
but he did not.
Unchecked, a single, despairing tear wavered down his beard stubbled cheek.
He closed his eyes, seeing in his mind not the woman walking down that
narrow, steep-sided valley with her son, but another lady, one who had green
eyes and unruly copper-coloured hair, not Morgaine’s dyed, red hair.
He could see her, the other woman, her shape, her size, her hair tossing and
cascading around her shoulders. But he could not image her face, or recall her
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 1 3
voice. It was there, on the edge of memory, hanging like a half-awake dream,
always just beyond his reach, never near enough to see clearly, to touch.
He ought to be grateful to Morgaine, for she had so patiently healed him of
his terrible wounds, brought him back from the edge of the Otherworld. Her
nursing, skill and love through those long, long months when he had lain so ill,
so weak, and so helpless, ought to be appreciated, rewarded. She loved him, he
knew that, but for her he felt nothing. Nothing at all.
After the passing of these long, long seasons, the hardship of winter, the glory
of spring, surely he ought to feel some stirring, some lift of caring feeling? But
Arthur felt nothing. Nothing save the gaping emptiness that surrounded and
swallowed him. His Gwenhwyfar was gone, gone ahead to the Otherworld
without him, and he had lost everything that had once been his, in this. His
men, his kingdom, his courage and hope.
Morgaine happened to glance up, saw him standing there behind the timber
palisade wal , waved, encouraged her son to wave also, but Arthur did not return
the acknowledgement. She could heal deep inflicted wounds from spear, sword,
or axe, could ease away the ravings of a fever, nourish the weakness, and return
strength to a body so sorely punished. Nothing could she do for the inner hurts,
the bruising and lacerations to the heart and soul. Arthur was her life, her being, her
meaning, yet she was daily, almost by the hour, aware he had no feeling for her.
Arthur stood, his mind not registering the blueness of the sky, the gold of the
sun, or the fresh green of the trees. When the others had gone, believing him
dead, Morgaine had stayed with him. Cared for him in the hovel of a deserted
goatherd’s hut she had found tumbled beside the river. Fought for many weeks
against the spirit of death that had so determinedly courted him. She had cooled
his fever, warmed him when he lay shivering and cold. When those immediate
dangers were passed, struggled with his weak and feeble body to bring him
here into the safe territory of the Burgundians; to the place where she lived, a
few miles outside Avallon, within the dedicated, discreet community of pagan
women who served the Mother Goddess.
All this she had done for him out of love. He ought to feel something of
gratitude to her, not this damning darkness of resentment. He could not fight it
though. Had not the strength or inclination.
Better it would have been, for Morgaine, for himself, to have died there
in that stinking goatherd’s hut. For, without reason to live, it was all, all of
it, so pointless.
Nineteen
Although Ambrosius Aurelianus wore the impressive title Supreme
Governor of All Britain, it was a hollow decoration, or at least, the
element “All Britain” was exaggeration. By the factor of his strength and
popularity among the north and western tribes, Arthur had been the only man,
since the extinction of Roman influence, to rule as unquestionably supreme.
Save, perhaps, in the extreme north, above the line of the old Antonine Wall,
where not even Rome had survived for more than a handful of years. To the
Pendragon, the British tribes had acknowledged their homage, claiming lesser
titles of king or prince beneath his seniority. To Arthur, the English had also
knelt, either willingly or forced through defeat. By right of inheritance, he had
been lord over his own Dumnonia and the Summer Land. Aye, Arthur had
been a warlord who commanded much power and respect.
Only the territory of Ambrosius had not bowed to him. Centred around the
wealthy and well-to-do towns of Aquae Sulis, Venta Bulgarium, Caer Gloui,
and Corinium—Londinium having been shamefully lost to the Saxons through
the tyrant Vortigern’s incompetence—the populace preferred one of their own
kind to lead them. Someone who valued Rome and the Empire, someone who
would restore that same stability of law and order. Who would reintroduce the
hierarchy’s necessary status and wealth, and lower unreasonable taxation.
Arthur had veered towards the old, pre-Roman way, to the independence
and tradition of the British tribesman. Ambrosius Aurelianus advocated the
opposite, the rights and privileges of the citizen. Naturally, with its deep-rooted
sense of pomp and grandiosity, southern Britain came down heavily weighted in
the latter’s favour. As naturally, the wilder lands of Britain would have nothing
to do with him.
With Arthur’s going, that gradually splitting rift had fragmented even further,
Britain was no longer a single island state. With no steady hand firm on the
steer-board, the tribespeople were returning to how it had been before the
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 1 5
Roman Eagles had marched up from Rutupiae way back in Claudius’s time, in
Anno Domini forty-three. Gwynedd, Powys, Rheged, and their sister lands; the
wild hills above the Wall—all were now independent, forming themselves into
rough-hewn embryonic kingdoms, answerable to none save their own lord. The
ending of Arthur had escalated the ending of Britain as a united province. Only
the one enclave, Ambrosius’s held lands, remained steadfastly Roman.
And then, of course, there were the English.
There was little Ambrosius could do about the British tribes, as unruly,
snarling a bunch as ever had been. Nor was there much inclination among
the Council to consider them. The tribes, never truly Roman, would, it was
widely accepted, revert to type. Let them! But the English?
Ambrosius had pledged to finish them, send them scuttling for their boats and
the sea. For the Saex, he promised his loyal followers, Britain would become as
uncomfortable as squatting on an ants’ nest.
The problem with rash-made pledges. Easy to make, difficult to accomplish.
Inexperience of soldiering did not deter Ambrosius, for he was a man of
faith and he had good men beneath him, battle-hardened, war-scarred men
who for all their previous questionable loyalty, would serve him well. At least
until someone else lured their interest. As there was no one now Vitolinus was
despatched—and even were he not, it was doubtful British men would follow
a half-Saex cur—Ambrosius was safe at least for long enough to achieve his aim
to firmly entrench the level of respect that Arthur had once acclaimed.
His first move was to occupy English-held territory, to dominate and suppress.
He ordered a formidable line of fortresses and strongholds to be built at strategic
points. He placed patrols and militia guards along the key trade routes. Arthur
had never advocated such methods, preferring to be able to move his men fast
and effectively when needed, where needed. To tie men to one area went
against the use of his efficient cavalry, but Ambrosius was ever an infantryman.
He would do things the Roman way. What was left of the proud Artoriani,
Arthur’s elite cavalry, Ambrosius sent to man the new fortresses that set watch
over the English settlements. They were no longer Arthur’s men, for they were
his to command now.
Twenty
August 471
Amlawdd, for all his impatient character, was astute enough to
realise he must wait, pick a right moment to approach Gwenhwyfar.
Apprehension was behind his reasoning. Gwenhwyfar was no ordinary, demure
woman. One false step and he could lose more than pride! The lady was too
well practised with sword and dagger for any man’s safe comfort—as he well
knew from past experience. Even the hope of amassing all the Pendragon’s
wealth and land kept his hand steady on the reins. Whatever was Gwenhwyfar’s
would, as her husband, become his. The prospect of making attempt for the
supreme kingship, though, for all his dreams of ambition, was low on his list.
Even Amlawdd, with his imprudent and ill-thought ideas, recognised his limi-
tations. No, to be lord over such prestigious land was enough. With both the
Summer Land and Dumnonia marching alongside his present, modest, coastal
holding, he would be master of the entire southeast…a fine ambition.
It was not, then, until August was into full gallop that Amlawdd rode, intent
upon his quest and with an escort of but four men, to Caer Cadan. He had
chosen a fine, warm, day; a pleasant ride beneath a sapphire blue sky that was
skittered with mare’s tail and distant mackerel clouds.