Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
2 9 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
those circles back home, touching each standing stone with a warm caress of
greeting, brought the overwhelming inner feeling of calm.
But these Stones Gwenhwyfar could not touch. She felt no fear or dread;
there was no leering shadow of evil or malicious intent, she just could not reach
out, touch the surface of the nearest Stone. She walked forward a pace, imag-
ined that the Stones were parting before her, making a path, stepping aside, not
wanting to be a part of this, her time, her existence. It all seemed very polite,
so tolerant and indifferent, as if those spirits that lay here, remembered only by
the marking of these Stones had dutifully accepted her presence, offered her
polite courtesy, yet would be relieved were she to go. She was not wanted, but
would not be turned away. They were waiting, she was certain, for someone,
or something, to come, were prepared to wait until the other end of existence.
Until the very ending of time.
As Arthur was waiting. She knew that, she could feel it, so strong was it here
amongst the Stones. Waiting…for what? For her? To be freed? To decide? Ah,
that she could not yet know.
Impulsive, she curtseyed low and deep to one Stone that seemed larger than
some of those others nearby. A trick of light, the fading glow of sunset, the
coming of dark…Did it seem the Stone answered her with a slight, shifting
movement? She turned. The hermit was waiting at the edge of the trees, not
stepping out from their night-darkening protection. He, a Christian man,
would not come into the domain of the pagan.
“The Ladies,” he said, in a voice as clear and fresh as spring water, “are
beyond these lines of Stones. Follow their march, on the morrow.” He lifted
his head a little higher, his blue eyes glittering a Christian challenge. “If you are
not afeared.”
Gwenhwyfar walked back to him, her smile indulgent. “The Stones do not
mind those who come to do them no harm.”
He snorted light contempt, indicating they were to return along the same
path. “May I ask why you seek the heathen, when it is the words of Christ
that ought be in your heart?” he said, after they had walked in silence for some
many yards.
Again, Gwenhwyfar was behind him, having to trot occasionally to keep
pace with his long stride. “It is only the heathen who can answer the questions
I must ask,” she replied.
He walked on, head high, his staff stabbing into the ground with every pace,
saying no other word until they neared the camp. She could smell the smoke
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 9 5
of her men’s hearth-fire, hear the faint murmur of their voices. Ider would be
waiting, anxious, at the edge of the trees, not settling until she returned.
“You have the look of a woman who has lost something that must be found,”
the hermit announced. “I will pray that Jesu may help you find it.”
They stepped out into the clearing, a shallow river ran down to where the
hard earth slipped into sand, and the sand into the sea. Ider, as she expected,
grunted, nodded at her, turned to join his men. The hermit went direct to his
bothy, slipped inside.
At dawn, Gwenhwyfar made her way, with only Ider for company, along
that same twisting path and out among the mist-wreathed columns of Stones.
She walked the few miles with her heart light, her steps making no sound
on the dew-wet grass. Where the Stones ended, she found the place where
the Ladies dwelled. They were of the Goddess, but were not the Ladies she
sought. There had once, and not so long ago, been many such scattered groups
throughout all of Less Britain and Gaul, but their following was dwindling
now, here as in Britain, with the young girls going to serve Mary the Mother of
God, rather than the Goddess, Mother of Earth. None of the five knew of one
called Morgaine who had a boy-child named Medraut, but then Gwenhwyfar
had not expected them to. For a journey to end it must have a beginning, and
no journey could end too soon after its starting.
By mid-morning she and her men were again on their way. At least now,
from the telling of the Ladies by the Place of Stones, they had some vague idea
of where they need ride, where they need look.
Forty-Three
July 472
Bedwyr, riding through the gateway into the outer settlement
of Ambrosius’s stronghold, was surprised, and not pleasantly. The place
was busy, full with people occupied with the various needs of daily routine,
but they were civilians, a good portion of the men clad in the garments of
Christianity. Where were the soldiers, armed men, trained professionals? He
halted his horse by a trough, let it extend his head to drink. July had been hot
and humid, a long, uncomfortable month of sticky, itching skin and irritable,
flaring tempers. In a few months time, when the bite of winter was nipping
sharp at fingers and feet, they would look back and long for this heat, as a fall
of snow would be most welcome now! Christ God, this was supposed to be a
fortress! A bell began to toll, striking one, solemn note. Bedwyr’s eyes followed
a group of monks as they made their way through a stone archway into a shaded
courtyard from where the summons came. A gaggle of five young boys ran
from a narrow side-street, dodged around his horse, and scampered after the
monks, one pausing to grin a quick apology.
Bedwyr dismounted, led his horse after them, but stopped this side of what
was an obvious boundary. Through the arch, in contrast to the business of
the streets, order, neatness and an air of calm solitude. The monks, and the
boys—more of them now, at least four and twenty—were entering a low,
single-storey chapel, stone-built in the traditional equal cruciform shape. So
Ambrosius had his abbey built, and his school for boys. His fists clenched,
Bedwyr turned away, clicked his tongue for the horse to walk on, and headed
for the lane that ascended steeply upward to where another gate stood open.
The fortress proper. Well, he hoped Ambrosius knew what he was doing, that
those simple-clad, sandalled monks knew how to wield a staff and club as easily
as they did gospel and crucifix. He shook his head as he began the climb up
the cobbled track. If not, that fine, recent-built place would soon enough be
blackened and lying as a smoking ruin.
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He had to wait for the most part of an hour. He was offered wine, fresh baked
bread, sheep and goat’s cheese. He drank the wine, nibbled the cheese, paced
the floor, barely noticing its splendid mosaic pattern depicting the ascension
of Christ. There were soldiers up here within the fort, guards at the perimeter
wall. A half-century, about forty men, drilling on the parade-ground before the
principia building. Others loitered around the barrack blocks, some grumbling
between themselves, as soldiers always did, at the unfairness of the fatigues rota.
A few men looked up as Bedwyr passed by, saluted a superior officer, but with
reluctance, no snap of enthusiasm or interest. Someone had come to take his
horse and he was escorted here, into the ante-chamber of this Roman-style
house-place. And asked to wait.
“My business is important,” Bedwyr had said, twice now, received in response
the same answer: please wait, lord Ambrosius will not be long.
More wine, more cheese. A door opened and closed somewhere among the
rooms behind this one. Footsteps, but no one came. Another quarter of one
hour. Another door, more steps, and Ambrosius entered, his hand extended in
greeting. “You ought have joined me at Mass, Bedwyr,” he chided. “We have
a new-appointed abbot, his words are most uplifting.”
The thought that there were more important matters needing attention beyond
the listening to a new abbot’s monotonous liturgy crossed Bedwyr’s mind, but
he held his tongue, answered with a polite mumble. “Another time?”
“Indeed! Please, sit. May I offer wine, something to eat?”
“Thank you. No.” Bedwyr remained standing, ignoring the offer of a couch.
Pointedly, he looked at the two servants who had entered with their master. Ambrosius
dismissed them. From his waist pouch Bedwyr brought out a smal , bronze Saxon
brooch, handed it to Ambrosius who took it, frowned, passed it back.
“They have reached your part of the woods, then?” Ambrosius seated
himself on a couch, patted a cushion into place behind his back, his good
humour evaporating.
Bedwyr put away the saucer-shaped brooch that carried the mask of a human
face, fastened the leather thongs of the pouch. “It is in my mind they have been
worn for some months, hidden beneath folds of a cloak or kept safe within a
pouch.” He patted his own. “That they are now beginning to be worn openly
is, I think, significant.”
“Yet there is no whisper on the wind of a hosting. No mumbling of a
meeting point.”
Pursing his lips, Bedwyr agreed, but added, “There are war spears, I have
2 9 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
seen them, though I was told they were for hunting.” He lifted one hand,
fingers curled as if cradling a sword pommel. “There is a sharp edge being put
to the sword and axe. Nothing tangible, nothing obvious, more a pricking at
the nape of the neck.” He let his hand fall; he wanted to shout, to get angry, to
say all the things that were in his head and heart to the man before him. To tell
him of this inadequacy and inefficiency. To say that Britain desperately needed
Arthur back…but he was sworn to secrecy, could not betray his king, nor
Gwenhwyfar. Could not betray the confidence of men such as Geraint, Cadwy,
the trust of Lady Ragnall. “The Saxons are about to rise,” he said, pushing
thoughts of Arthur from his mind. It might all be wrong, Arthur might be
dead. “And you are not making ready.” It came out, not as an admonishment
or judgement but with a hurt cry of saddened pain.
“Aelle will not call for a hosting this year.” Ambrosius placed his palms,
fingers spread, on his knees, spoke with a conviction of certainty. “But if he
does, I shall be ready.”
Scornful, Bedwyr challenged the assurance. “Ready? How? Do you plan
to pray for a victory?” He swung away from Ambrosius, faced the wall, leant
one hand upon its smooth, dark-red, painted plaster. “When Aelle comes,” he
turned around, managed to keep the anger from his voice, “he will be coming
with an army at his back!”
“And if he does not come?”
It was not an answer Bedwyr had expected. He stood, mouth open, the
words he had intended to say trapped as irrelevant. He frowned. “Of course he
will come.” He heard the question in his voice. Did Ambrosius know, then,
something he did not? He had to, for he was sitting too calm, too self-assured.
“His eldest son will not be able to fight. Aelle will not act without Cymen.”
Bedwyr gasped, his face coming alight with a glimmer of hope; happen God
had not deserted them after all! “Is he ill? Mortally so?”
Ambrosius shook his head. “Not ill. Few die from a break to the leg, but he
will not be from his bed until the leaves change, too late for battle by then. The
Saex will not fight during winter.”
The answering comment was a curse, one of Arthur’s favourite colourfully
embellished oaths. The anger was rising again. “Are you so certain they will
not? Or next spring, what of then? Do we still sit here, on our backsides,
running our thumbs along our blades, waiting?”
Refusing to rise to the bait, Ambrosius leant deeper into the comfort of his
couch. His back was aching, his shoulders stiff. He had lain awkward during
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the night, would take a hot bath, have his slave massage the tense muscles. “I
have placed my resources where I think them to be effective, Bedwyr. If Aelle
cannot form a hosting, there will be no battle. When the time comes, you will
have your orders. I expect you, and others who hold like command, to contain
the Saex in their own territories. Your East Saxons will not meet with Aelle of
the South.” Ambrosius pushed his cushion a little higher up his spine, confident
in his judgement.
The anger was seething, bubbling below the surface. “Are you mad?
Contain the Saex? Is that what you want us to do?” Incredulous, Bedwyr
stood before Ambrosius, too stunned by the utter stupidity to release that
checked anger. “My few men against God alone knows how many? We’ll be
slaughtered—if we ever even manage to fight our way out of our fortress.”
He strode across the few paces between them, thrust his face close into
Ambrosius’s. “Aelle understands the rule. You obviously do not. United we
win. Detached, we die.”
“No, Bedwyr, I say again, the Saex will not fight. You and your men will
ensure they have no heart to fight with. No men, no weapons to fight with.
You misunderstand me, Bedwyr.” Ambrosius stood, folded his arms, threading