Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
and therefore justified to make loud and continuing protest against Bedwyr. He
was all hot air in pumped bellows, all words and mouth. Amlawdd would never
find the courage—or stupidity—to openly make a challenge for Gwenhwyfar’s
hand. Did the imbecile not realise the lady would never have him? Bedwyr let
the fool spit his venom and slander, allowed him to save face before others of
Ambrosius’s court. Time enough to deal with anything more serious, should it
arise, after the winter snows had fallen and melted again. Come spring, Bedwyr
would be a month or two blessed as Gwenhwyfar’s lawful husband; she could
even be carrying his child. What could Amlawdd do about losing her to the
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 4 7
better man then? It was said that empty amphorae made hollow noise. Hah!
Amlawdd was as empty as a dry, fire-baked, new pot!
Sliding his arm around Gwenhwyfar’s waist, Bedwyr brought her nearer,
enjoying the supple feel of her slender body against his, relishing the joy of
knowing what lay beneath her garments. Silk-smooth skin, long legs, and even
though she had borne children, firm breasts and a flat stomach. The anticipa-
tion of sharing her passion, her immodest need, was already rousing him, the
excess of drink doing little to dampen his eagerness. The Hall would be rising
soon, drink-filled men and women seeking their dwelling-places within the
settlement or, for the unmarried and the servants, beds within the protection
of this Hall.
Gwenhwyfar, for all Amlawdd’s protest and blustering, had emphasised she
was committed as Bedwyr’s lady, though they had not yet been blessed by
the priest and were not joined in legal marriage. They shared a need, and a
companionship, the warmth of a bed; the formal details could come later, after
Saturnalia. Gwenhwyfar had promised him that after the feasting they would
exchange vows, make the thing legal. They were already bound together in
companionship, she said, was that not enough for a while? In turn, Bedwyr
had a concern she was not going to consent to the formalities, for they were
supposed to have been wed two months past, on All Hallows Day, the day after
Samhain. She had balked, suggested Saturnalia instead. He was impatient to slip
the security of a marriage band on her finger, but, ah, surely he could wait until
she was ready? She was his woman, no one else’s—only that memory of Arthur
formed a rival. And he had no fear of the dead.
The professional acrobats were performing a fabulous, breath taking contor-
tion, earning themselves splendid applause. Slaves were distributing wine as if the
amphorae could never be emptied. Merrymaking, happiness. It was Saturnalia,
a season for enjoyment and pleasure. Gwenhwyfar twined her fingers tighter
into Bedwyr’s clasp, joined the enthusiasm. Pushed back the voice whispering
a name, a memory.
She would forget Arthur. She would! She had to. But that damned, persistent
voice would not let her.
Thirty
The night lay quiet, except for the normal sounds—the bark of a dog
fox, the call of an owl. No wind. With the temperature dropping, there
would come a frost. Bedwyr slept on his back, hair tousled, arm outstretched,
facial muscles twitching as his sleeping mind chased some dream. Beside him,
Gwenhwyfar lay awake, listening to the darkness outside their small, private
dwelling-place, her eyes watching the pale hearth-fire shadows creep across the
far wall. Archfedd was asleep in the other bed, curled safe and warm against her
nurse, a young lass of not more than ten and four, given to care for the child
by Enid. Beside the last warmth of the hearth, the dogs were piled, Bedwyr’s
three brindle hounds and Gwenhwyfar’s two, Blaidd and Cadarn. Both presents
from Arthur: Cadarn for herself, Blaidd for her son, Llacheu. She remembered
Arthur’s face as he had held the two squirming pups, both from the same litter,
his smile wide as he had dumped one in the boy’s lap, the other in hers. The
touch of his lips against her forehead as he had followed the giving with a light,
almost casual-given kiss. Llacheu, playing with them when they reached that
gangling, legs-longer-than-the-body stage…his wild shout of laughter as Blaidd
had stolen a boot, the resulting game around their room as he had attempted
to claim it back…Arthur’s extensive cursing one wet night when the dogs had
come in from outside and shaken their coats vigorously. Memories.
Bedwyr was more good-natured than Arthur, would shrug insults and
nuisances aside with an indifference that could so easily be taken as uncaring.
He believed more in the law, in the judicial intervention of right. Arthur
would never have trusted to such unreliable uncertainty. If something angered
or offended him, he would see to its sorting himself. Never would Arthur
have allowed Amlawdd’s tongue to have shouted the insults that had reached
their ears these last few weeks. If Arthur had heard those vile things Amlawdd
had called her, the man would have been dangling by his balls from his own
stronghold walls by now. Bedwyr had taken the man as a jest, had laughed, slid
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 4 9
his arm around her, and loudly proclaimed they had nothing to fear from the
jealous defeat of a toad-spawned, mannerless boor.
Nothing to fear? Happen not, but the words had stung. No woman liked to
be called harlot, whore, and slut. No woman cared to have her children cursed,
her honour tainted.
Bedwyr would be returning to his garrison soon, within the week before the
snows came he had said, as they were preparing for bed. His leave had finished,
three weeks taken; he could not reasonably extend the time away from duty.
“Oh,” was all she had answered.
“Are you to come with me this time?” he had asked, as he had blown out
the last lamp, scuttled beneath the fur-coverings. His place of command was
a wooden-palisaded fortress set above the marsh-spread valley of the Dolydd
River and command of two further outposts set at stages up the valley. Nothing
grand, he had said, a plain fortress. “We keep a weather eye on the coming and
going of the Saex as they bring their boats up the river to their little hovels.” He
had told her that when first he was posted there, oh, back into the new-end of
summer. An out-of-the-way place, where Ambrosius had hoped to keep him
apart from the likes of Geraint and Gwenhwyfar.
“I will come.”
She sighed, closed her eyes to try again for sleep that would not visit.
I will
go with you
, she thought, said soft, aloud, into the darkness, “but I will not wed
with you. Not yet.”
Amlawdd had called her a whore, and worse, for deceiving him. Amlawdd
had said she had promised herself to him, aye, promised, even before the
Pendragon was fool enough to get himself bloodily slaughtered. He was right,
she had, but as a trick, as a means to gain time for Arthur.
Bedwyr mumbled something in his sleep, shifted, lumbering his body
over onto his belly, taking most of the fur coverings with him as he turned.
Gwenhwyfar lay a moment, her feet and body growing cold. No use trying to
retrieve them, Bedwyr seemed to weigh as much as two oxen when he slept,
was as possessive of his bed-coverings as a cat was of a captured mouse. It was
being a soldier, she supposed. Arthur had been the same. He would roll himself
into the bed-furs, leaving little for her. The difference, Arthur had been easy to
wake. One prod, one mild kick. One kiss.
She sighed again, deeper, more drawn, left the bed to fumble in the dark for
her cloak, hunkered down beside the fire with the dogs, who flapped their tails
with a welcome, happily allowed her to wriggle into their heaped warmth.
2 5 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
To gain time. Why was she stalling the deadline of marriage? Why would
she not consent to make this new-begun thing binding between them? She ate
with Bedwyr, laughed with him, slept with him. Had agreed this very night to
go with him as a commander’s lady. Why would she not go as his wife?
It was warm among the bundle of dogs, and comforting. She had her arms
around Blaidd, Cadarn was resting his old, grey-grizzled muzzle across her feet.
Warm and soothing. She slept.
P
A stranger trudged wearily along the lane that trundled steeply up the incline
between the ditches and ramparts. It was an hour after sun-up, but still the gates
at the top were closed; beyond, only a few thin wisps of hearth-place smoke
spiralled into the frost-blue air.
He hammered on the iron-studded oak-built timbers, shouted for entrance.
He had come a long way on foot. A long, weary trek, his heart as heavy as his
tired, blistered feet.
A face, grizzle-bearded, and sleep-riddled, peered over the top rampart of Caer
Cadan, demanded who made so much noise so early in the day? “I have come to
speak with Queen Gwenhwyfar. I have word for her, important word.”
“She ain’t here. She’s gone. No one’s here save us few.”
The man, a Saxon, though he had taken care to dress himself British-fashion
so as not to draw over-much attention, ran his fingers through his dank hair.
“To where has she gone?”
“Durnovaria. South of here.”
The Saxon almost wept. He had just come north from the South Saxon
Coast. He sat, desolate, tired, head in hands. For weeks now he had been living
like a beggar, walking the roads, sleeping in ditches and sheep folds, constantly
looking over his shoulder in case she had found his trail.
He had masked it as well he could, travelling through the great dark forests
of Gaul, first, working his way to the River Rhenus to put her off the scent,
before finding a ship to bring him across the sea to Britain. A waking night-
mare! He was the last alive, for she had dealt with the others, torturing them,
his companions, his friends, before ending their lives. Dealt with them as she
had dealt with their mistress.
Oh
ja
, it was known it had been her, Winifred, that half-British witch who
had been behind the murder of Lady Mathild. He did not believe the lies they
had said about that good woman. Not as most of them had! That she had tried
to kill her own son.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 5 1
At least the boy was safe. Cerdic had proclaimed that, as the funeral pyre had
burnt high, taking Mathild’s spirit on her last journey to the gods. “Cynric is
my son,” he had said, “my son and hers. In him, her spirit shall live on!”
Ja
, it
had better or Cerdic would answer for it! There were those along the Elbe who
had never trusted Cerdic. He was not one of them by blood, for all his adoption
by the lord Leofric. Adoption was not blood-tied, not blood-bound kindred.
Cynric was of her blood. And his. Arthur’s, not Cerdic’s. Though that was their
private view, those men who had come with Mathild from Arthur’s camp, after
he had set them all lawfully free from the misery of slavery.
They had served Arthur with loyalty, repaying his asking of no questions
of whence and from whom they had come. Had served Mathild, as one of
their own, with loyalty even deeper. And now he was the only one left alive,
the only one who knew two things of importance. That Cynric might not
be Cerdic’s son. Oh, the dates, the calculations might be wrong, that was all
women’s matters and women’s words, but he knew this for certain: Mathild
had been as sick as a poisoned dog each morning on that journey from Gaul to
the settlement along the Elbe. It could have been the fear, the grief; the poor
food, the fast-set pace. Or it could have been for a woman’s reason.
And that the Pendragon might be alive, not dead as they were all meant to
believe. A secret Mathild had kept to herself, sharing it only with them, her
few trusted, loyal, personal guard. “Tell Gwenhwyfar,” she had commanded
of them. “If ever something should happen to me, tell Gwenhwyfar I believe
Arthur to be with the ladies of the Goddess in Gaul.”
He looked up at the bright sunlight, heaved himself to his feet. Durnovaria.
More than twenty miles. Ah, at least it was not raining.
Thirty-One
January 472
It had snowed overnight, although it only amounted to a light fall
of a few inches. The air was dry but the wind came direct from the east, bitter,
with a bite as raw and mean as a boar’s temper. The skin on Gwenhwyfar’s
cheeks felt as though it were being ripped apart by dozens of small knives. She
had ceased to feel her fingers curled around the leather reins, after five minutes
of riding. It did not help, trekking along this part of the valley that was open to
the full exposure of the wind, but the other track threading through the density
of trees, Bedwyr assured her, was an inadvisable route. “Impassable at times!”
he had explained heartily, his usual boyish grin decorating his face. “The earth
around here is mostly heavy clay—the Green Track is well named, bright green
grass in every hollow—God knows how many poor souls are at the bottom of