Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
strap of his war-cap. “I have no wish for killing,” he replied. Eadric the
Saxon spat on the ground. “Nor,” Bedwyr added, “have I much of a wish
to disobey orders.”
Eadric spat a second time. “And whose orders would they be? Those of the
Roman fool Ambrosius?” He let the axe-head down, let its weight swing to the
ground between his feet, his hands holding the shaft, ready to move, use it, if
he must. “It is the shame that your king was not found. The Pendragon would
never have permitted the spilling of so much innocent blood.”
“No blood has been shed,” Bedwyr countered.
Blood, no, but to the south and along the Tamesis Valley those past months,
farmsteadings had been burnt to the ground, livestock herded away, harvests
taken. The Saxon families were not killed but with no shelter, no food left
them for the winter, how long would they survive? “There are other ways to
die,” Eadric said sadly. He took one step forward. “Without this farm, I cannot
support my wife nor the bairn growing large in her belly. Without this farm
there will be nothing for her brothers when they are grown into manhood.
Without this farm.” He lifted the axe so that the gleaming head lay in the open
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 6 3
palm of his broad, strong hand. “I, as with the others of my kind, will have no
choice but to fight you and your kind.”
Bedwyr looked about him. This was a pleasant valley; it had seen little killing,
save for the hunt and the stalking of nature’s own endings. He had no heart
to start shedding blood now. He sighed, long and slow. Had his mind already
been made before he came here, before they had saddled up and rode from the
fortress? Made two weeks since when the first written orders had arrived? He
took up the reins, turned his horse.
“When the Pendragon left,” he said, “Britain had a prospect of peace and
trade. Ambrosius’s southern lands are still prospering, but only because he is
taking from the Anglian, the Jute, and the Saxon. He has taxed and taxed
again, is bleeding these peaceful, settled lands systematically dry. He is trying
to rid us of the Saex, he says, but he will not. If bees nest in the hollow tree at
the far end of the orchard, you leave them there, harvest their honey for your
own use. You do not poke them with a stick, make them swarm in anger. I
will not serve a man who deliberately sets women and children on the track to
starvation, even if they are Saex. I am a soldier, I am no cold murderer.” He
heeled his horse into a walk. “Peace be with you, Eadric the Saxon. I’ll not be
the one to destroy you.”
One by one, the men followed, aware of what Bedwyr, their commander,
was doing. One asked. “To where shall we go, Sir?” They could not stay at the
fortress, for now they were no longer Ambrosius’s men.
“I will ride to Geraint, take service with him.” Bedwyr shrugged. Truly he
had no plan, he was doing things as he went along. “Mayhap we will consider
resurrecting the Artoriani, place a challenge to the one who is destroying all
that the Pendragon once fought for.”
Nods and murmurs of agreement, a good suggestion. They were once, most
of them, Arthur’s men. Would willingly be so again, even if they need follow
his kindred, not the man himself.
Feet, running from behind, the youngest of Cuthwin’s sons. Bedwyr halted
his horse, the lad proffered something in his hand. A brooch, another of those
round saucer-shaped brooches with a mask pattern.
“Eadric says, to honour you and the king you once both served, he will have
no use for this.” Bedwyr took it, thanked the boy, put it safe in his waist pouch.
If only all the threats of war were so easily settled!
Sixty-Five
December 472
If they march,” Amlawdd warned in his irritating nasal whine, “we
will be knocked aside like year-old saplings before a charging boar!”
Ambrosius Aurelianus barely bothered to flick a long-suffering glance at the
man. He had been belly-aching about more or less the same thing for the
past half of an hour—had been ignored at the start of this Council, was being
ignored now. There was no point in repeating the obvious, for it served no
purpose and solved nothing. If the Saxon force, assembled at the place they
called Radingas, decided to move within the next eight and forty hours, Britain
would be lost. Would become the land of the Saxons, of the English. General
opinion, though, was agreed that this was to be their wintering place. There
would be no fighting this side of the winter snows.
The east was already fallen, out of any direct British control, all treaties,
agreements, and enforcements systematically and irrevocably destroyed, as was
the line of fortresses Ambrosius had so ambitiously planned. At least no British
men were slaughtered, but, as most had ridden south under Bedwyr’s banner
of the double-headed dragon, effectively abandoning the entire East Saxon
region north of the Tamesis, it was a fact of little consequence. They were
classified as deserters; faced, under the stricture of law, the sentence of death
by stoning.
A few had refused to ride with the traitor Bedwyr, had returned to Ambrosius.
Joined by the loyal fortresses of the Cantii border and those in the valley of the
Tamesis, the Governor of All Britain had an army to his name. But they were
not enough. Even with calling out the entire levy due to serve, the Saxons held
the advantage of three to one.
“Is there no word from Geraint?” someone asked from the rear of the crowded
Council chamber at Ambrosium. “Surely he will bring men to reinforce us?”
Someone else took up the cry. “Aye, he will not let Britain fall to the
barbarian heathen!”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 6 5
Amlawdd was standing, legs straddled, beside Ambrosius’s chair of state. He
answered with endemic scathing. “Geraint? Fah! He shelters the traitor Bedwyr
and his scum followers! Geraint keeps his own land for his own kin, cares
nought for anyone or anything north of his borders. We are on our own and I
say we ought take up our arms and hit the Saex first! Hit them while they sleep,
burn their camp, halt them afore they make a decision to march onto the ridge
and become unstoppable!”
A few ears were beginning to cock in his direction, a few murmurs of reluc-
tant agreement, silenced as Ambrosius raised a hand so he might speak.
“Geraint has not yet answered my urgent-sent plea. For all my friend
Amlawdd may think of him, he is a man of honour. Admitted, Bedwyr resides
with him, but Geraint gives shelter to kindred, as he is by duty bound. He has
not publicly declared for rebellion. Geraint may yet come to our aid.” Did he
speak with too much of a hesitancy in his voice? With too much fervent hope?
“Aside those here at this meeting, and a handful of lords to north and west have
pledged to send men.” He shrugged dismally. “It may be enough.” He knew it
would not. The voices of the Council rose louder, one clearly heard.
“We ought never have let ourselves become so isolated! Arthur retained
petty kingdoms under his sovereignty for this one especial reason. When he
needed men, he had them.”
Someone else shouted, “Arthur deliberately kept the Saex contained and
contented. Under his rule, this bloody mess would never have raised its head
higher than his balls would have let it!”
“If only he were to come again! We would have chance of victory under a
leader such as Arthur.”
The number of voices increased, a few, Ambrosius noted, decrying that last
statement. Amlawdd one of them, of course. He had not hidden his open
pleasure at Bedwyr’s fall from grace, was personally seeing to it that these
latest, gossip-mongering rumours of Arthur were firmly quashed and ridiculed.
Arthur would come again in time of need? Fool nonsense! Childish prattle to
bolster unsteady nerves. No one spoke of Arthur when the gold chinked in
their pouches, when the grain was stored high in their barns. No one spoke of
Arthur when they had sent the Saxons running at Guoloph!
Ambrosius would not speak of him. The Pendragon was dead, gone, buried,
and mouldering. The maggots and worms had already heaved and twisted
through the bloated, decaying corpse, the stinking, rotting flesh moving as if in
life beneath the darkness of the earth. Arthur was gone!
3 6 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
That last speaker had been his own son, Cadwy.
Slowly, drained from tiredness and an ominous hint of returning illness,
Ambrosius stood. The faces blurred, the walls moved, and he closed his eyes,
all but briefly. He must not be ill. Must not! Spoke, mustering calm and confi-
dence. “We have, then, the one option. We initiate the fight.”
Delighted, Amlawdd punched the air with his fist; men were on their feet,
beginning to herd forward, excitement overruling any former reluctance, the
roll of blood-heat pumping. Others, generals, petty chieftains, were gathering
the drape of their togas over their arms and hurrying for the outside. The
one cry loud on their lips, passing from ear to mouth, a babble of expectant
anticipation, spreading through the fortress and beyond its secure walls to the
scatter of encampments. Within the hour, men were putting a sharper edge
to their spears, swords, and daggers, were checking straps to harness, helmet,
and armour. Women were seeking their loved ones, or those who needed a
woman. One word hovering and dancing, leaping and cavorting.
War!
Sixty-Six
January 473
The Ridge Way. The Tamesis River flowed from the west a while,
before turning abruptly south, its flood-plain fed by hungry, running
tributaries dashing down from the high ground that was topped by this ancient
and majestic track. The Tamesis, a geographical and cultural boundary. Below,
to the south, British land, lifting to the heights of the soft -coloured, bright-
aired Downs; above its flow, the outriders of the forests that ran up dark and
foreboding to the fledgling Saex Kingdoms of the East and Middle Saxons.
An undisputed frontier, a great protective curved boundary that effectively
separated English from British.
Except the English had gathered to the British side and were massed near
a place of early, peaceful settlement, called in their English tongue Radingas.
The settlers, the farmers, and landholders, there and along this part of the
gentle Tamesis Valley, were of a third and fourth generation, their land given
as reward by Rome itself. More British now than Saxon, some even converted
to Christianity, they found themselves inextricably caught between the cultures
of the two. Ostracised by one, treated with contempt by the other. Old men,
young boys, unsure on which side to carry their spears. No farmer cared to
fight, not when the land needed ploughing, sowing or harvesting. No farmer
cared to leave his cattle ready to calve, his sheep ready to lamb. But then, no
farmer cared to pay taxes to a greedy and scornful overlord—and it was not yet
spring, not yet the time of nature’s urgent need for those who farmed the land.
There was little choice. The long-established settlers of the Tamesis Valley tied
the war ribbons to their spears, and made their way across their winter-sleeping
fields to the fortified encampment beside the great ridge, swelling the numbers
of discontented English. If Arthur had been king, they would have stayed at
home, mending their ploughs, watching the skies for the first signs of winter
snow, sifting the bad sowing-grain from the good. But he was not. Ambrosius
was Supreme. Ambrosius Aurelianus, a man who answered only to his Christian
3 6 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
God, and acclaimed the ways that were Roman. The English cared nothing for
Rome and what little was left of it. Cared even less for the Christ God.
On the eve of midwinter, the British had come crying their Christian
war-shouts and hefting their war-spears along the Ridge, driving the English
outposts before them, sending the Saex scuttling for shelter behind the high,
solid-built timber palisade walls of the English encampment. The fighting had
been bloody and short. One gateway had given way, several British had pushed
through, raising an expected victory cry, but the English were many within,
and the broken defences were soon rebuilt by a barricade of the dead and dying.
The night attack failed. The dawn of the new day saw the bodies of the British
dead piled before barely charred, sentinel-like oak timbers.
A loud-sung victory for the English. The British had come and were beaten
back. Those few of the Saxons who had wavered at the prospect of battle took
up their weapons and made with all speed for Radingas. There was now hope,
and Aelle, the acclaimed Bretwalda, High King of All Saxons, was to lead them
to a victory even greater. One that would resound in song from mead-hall to