Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
dais, Geraint’s table, took the white banner decorated with the leaping red
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 8 5
dragon from Bedwyr. His banner, the Dragon that Gwenhwyfar had made for
him and his Artoriani.
Must I preserve my kingdom from Saxons, so my own whelped
Saex-breed may one day take it from me?
Geraint knelt before him, unsheathed sword in his hand, given in offering
of homage. “To you, lord, I give my sword and shield, my heart and soul. To
you, lord, I give my life, to command as you will.”
None could possibly hear those words, through the exultant roar of voices.
The combined voice of the Artoriani.
Seventy-One
Winifred, Lady Pendragon, as she obstinately referred to herself,
had not finished with her one-time husband. Once decision was taken that
he and his Artoriani would be riding from Durnovaria at first light, she found it
next to impossible to seek him out for private audience, but she had always been
persistent; she final y caught up with him as the hour approached midnight. It had
been his custom, in the past, to walk through his men’s encampment on the eve
of marching or battle; they appreciated his presence. This night, his tour was even
more important. He needed to re establish his authority and his friendship, needed to
greet each and every one of the two hundred and seventy-four men who would ride
with him on the morrow. Arthur had the gift of making every man special, every
man important. Duach, who carried a stiffness to his shoulder from one of their first
battles together; Drwst, who had a fist and a punch as hard as iron. Glewlwyd, who
had the strength in his grasp to hold a sword all day in battle and not once let go that
grip—he too had been with Arthur from the first, aye, and with his father, before
him, with Uthr Pendragon. Anwas, who they called The Winged because of his
fleetness of foot; Hael, The Generous; Halwyn The Unsmiling; Gwrhyr, who could
speak any language within a day of hearing it…many men, many old and so very
dear friends. Peredur, as ever, had a jest to share that was as bawdy as a whorehouse.
He was called Long Spear for his well-endowed manhood, a good man, Peredur.
Chuckling at the jest, reminding himself to repeat it to Gwenhwyfar, Arthur barely
noticed the shadow emerging from behind the next tent, felt his heart lurch and race
as it materialised into a cloak-flapping shape. “Mithras, woman!” he raged. “What in
the name of all the bloody gods are you doing here?”
Winifred stepped into the feeble light cast by the few campfires, tossed back
her hood, and laid her hand on Arthur’s arm. “You never used to startle so
easily. What, are you growing old and tired?”
Irritated, he walked on, thumbs thrusting through his sword belt. Why did
he let this damn woman annoy him so? If the gods were ever good enough to
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 8 7
allow him to live his life over, he would certainly ensure this item of baggage
was not loaded onto his wagon!
To annoy him further, she threaded her arm through his, ignored his attempt
to shake her off. “Has it occurred to you, Arthur, it is not I who lie? Why
would I have wanted you dead? There is another who may have desired that
convenient ending.”
Arthur managed to brush her intimate hold aside. “Ambrosius?” He snapped,
tetchily, “I do not see him behind murder.”
“Ambrosius?” Winifred scoffed, “God praise him, he is too pious for such
a sin.” Determined, she again threaded her arm, walked to match his striding
pace, “I do not talk of him.”
He knew she was stirring mischief, knew he ought give her a few choice
words and send her away, under armed escort if need be. Damn her, the ques-
tion came out! “Who then?”
Winifred had two voices, one strident and harsh, used more often than
anything to get her own way; the other wheedling, drowning in caring inno-
cence, bordering on the sickly sweet. Also used to obtain her way. It was the
second she used. “Are you aware Gwenhwyfar was to marry?”
Arthur had slowed, decided it best to ignore the informal way that she was
walking with him. His lips compressed, his left, free hand, going to the pommel
of his sword for self reassurance. Walked on. There was much to do before
daylight: weapons to have an edge put to them, horses examined for lameness,
harness and armour checked for loose stitching, cracked leather, loose joints
and buckles. “Aye, I understand Amlawdd sniffed around. I would not expect
ought else of that web-footed toad.”
She had to lengthen her stride to keep up with him. “Not Amlawdd, dear-
heart, he is but a predictable fool kept deliberately sweet-fed by Ambrosius.
’Tis better to keep a rogue under close eye.” She cocked a knowing eye at her
ex-husband. “As I believe you often did?”
Absently, he nodded agreement. Which is why he tolerated her nearness. Better
to keep her in clear sight than hidden away. What did she want? Trouble, he was
certain. Trouble by stirring clear water into black mud. Winifred excelled at that.
“It is not my place to tattle idle gossip,” she oozed. Arthur snorted, almost
laughed outright at her hypocrisy. “But it is well rumoured that Bedwyr and
your wife are not innocent of each other.”
“Gods, you’re a bitch!” Arthur halted abruptly, fiercely shook her arm away,
faced her, angry.
3 8 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
They were at the end of the row of pitched tents, Winifred had not halted
with him, but walked on. She swung left, heading away from the muted dark-
ness of the encampment, returning to the bustle and light of the royal place.
Over her shoulder, she tossed, “That I am. How else would I have survived
being the wife of such a bastard?”
Seventy-Two
They could, perhaps, withstand a siege for a few days, food was
not a problem—they could always eat the horses, although even among
the most cynical, this would be considered unlucky, a legacy surviving from
pre-Roman paganism. Horses had been valued by those early British tribes,
valued and prized, worth as much as gold or any splendid jewel. The concept of
not eating horseflesh had never faltered, standing during four hundred years of
Roman belief, and unwavering through the doctrine of Christian values. There
was nothing to show the Christian faith honoured the horse, but British men
would not eat one. Unless a great need meant they had to.
Water was the problem. The Ridge Way fortresses were built as intimidating
watch-places, designed to mark the ancient track striding from southwest to
northeast, not intended to withstand siege. The old tribes, those who had
built them, would have had each of the four main strategic forts along this
stretch of the Way occupied against inter-tribal raids, not against the massed,
amalgamated force of the Saxons. Until Rome came, sieges would have been
superfluous, the British warrior would have come out to fight, not remained
trapped and cowering behind walls put there for the safe-keeping of women,
children, cattle, and ponies. Warfare had changed so much since Rome had
decided on the taking of might and power by force.
Like the other three, Badon was above the water line. Taking the horses
down for daily watering was no difficult task; collection and carrying by leather
bucket similarly no more than a part of a day’s expected toil. The constructed
dew ponds provided enough water for need, but not for an army seeking shelter
from Saxons that had swept, so unexpectedly, up the Cuneito Valley, shrouded
so cleverly by the heavy woodland, short hours of daylight, and murky, low
cloud. The forts were there to glower down upon the Way as it marched past
the soaring, impressive ramparts. The southern side was vulnerable, and Aelle
chose to exploit it.
3 9 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
A second, inconvenient problem. Ambrosius was again unwell. He had fought
the returning sickness and diarrhoea off before that first fight, that victory, had
swallowed powders and mixtures one end, inserted other such things at the
other, to no avail. Even prayer had failed him. When he needed his strength,
when he needed to be seen, to enforce courage and endurance, to instil the
protection of the Good Lord, all he could do was lie on a bed and wretch into a
bowl. When he was not squatting over a chamber pot. Ragnall, may God bless
her, was his strength, constant at his bedside, spooning unpleasant-tasting medi-
cines, emptying the results. Ambrosius marvelled that any had ever doubted her
sweet nature, her uncomplaining goodness. Like his son, he no longer noticed
the puckered scarring, the clumsy limp, or the twisted fingers. Mind, he was
too ill and too preoccupied to notice anything beyond the clamour of derisive
shouts and abuse that hurtled from beyond the rampart walls, and the pain in
his belly.
The second day. Two, three days more, they could survive, not beyond.
What hope of the messenger getting through to Geraint? Huh! Even if he did,
help would not arrive in time. Their only hope was that word had reached
Durnovaria of the Saxon advance. That Geraint had realised the implications.
And acted.
Cadwy had helped his father—all but carried him from the Hall and up the
steps to the walkway. Ambrosius leaned heavily on the boy, sweating profusely,
his breathing coming in pained gasps. His belly and bowels were empty, had
nothing else to eject, but the feel, the belief that he must soon visit that stinking
latrine persisted. The day was duller than yesterday, the cloud billowing lower. It
might rain later. Beyond the palisade and high, grass-topped, chalk-cut ramparts
and ditches, the ground sloped down into the crowded swell of woodland that
strode too close to the lower slopes of Badon.
“Why were they not cut back, those trees?” he asked, his accent critical.
His son’s answer was brusque. “Because I have not the manpower to fell so
many, nor has there been a need.” Cadwy resented the question. He had tried
to keep the creeping scrub tamed, had cleared to one half mile all around the
ramparts. Always intending to do more, go further, when he had time.
The Saxons appeared in no hurry to flush them out, were unconcerned at
the grey coldness of the day. The current work parties were piling branches,
leaves, turf, into the outer ditch, steadily filling it in, a few British spears and
arrows found their targets, but the men were mostly under orders to preserve
their weaponry. Those arrows that went wide would be gathered, sent back
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 9 1
with the next Saxon uprush. The last had endured for most the morning. Not
enough of the enemy had fallen, too many of the British lay awaiting burial,
when someone found time or thought to order it.
The woods, deeper, denser between the undulating hollows of the hills,
were full of Saxon men, some scurrying, busy about given orders, others taking
their ease, tending wounds, adding an edge to their weapons, relaxing, playing
dice, drinking or eating a meagre meal. Aelle was down there. His spread-
winged raven had been sighted on several occasions during that last assault. No
doubt he was discussing the next move, the next tactic. As Ambrosius ought
be doing.
But what in the Lord’s name was he to do? Several of his officers were shuf-
fling a few yards away, their helmet-straps hanging loose, blood staining here
and there, awaiting him. He wished—he snorted at the irony—that Amlawdd
was here. For all the man’s irritations, he had a sense of bravado and gut feeling
for these situations. It had been Amlawdd who had pressed home the victory
at Radingas, but it was no good dwelling on what was not. Amlawdd was
commanding at Castellum Prima, had precise orders to remain there, whatever
happened here at Badon. The small force he held there could do nothing
against the hundreds of Saex crowding these slopes, would be needed to hold
that fortress when they had finished here. Ambrosius groaned aloud.
Cadwy, too, had been dwelling on the fancies of wishing. “If only those
rumours of Arthur had proven true.” Stoically, he watched the Saxons finish
the filling-in of a few more yards of ditch. They would be across soon. Were it
summer-dry, not winter-sodden, the British could have sent fire arrows down,
burned the wood and grass.
His father made no answer, he dared not, for those officers were within
hearing, along with too many of the men. But aye, as reluctant as he was to
admit it, even to his own thoughts, he would have embraced that rumour were
it true.
Ambrosius Aurelianus closed his tired eyes in prayer. He had so wanted to
succeed, to lead with pious and clear-sighted wisdom. So wanted things to be like
they were in the days of his father and grandfather. Now, would give anything
to see the Dragon Banner, and Arthur, come riding out of that valley.
Seventy-Three
They camped overnight beyond Sarum, the Artoriani. The few