Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
families farming below its brooding walls welcomed them as if already
a battle, a war, had been won. Sarum, the ancient defended place, with its
battered ramparts and broken gateways, was proving its use yet again. For
the Saex, it seemed, were no more than five and twenty miles north. Cattle,
goats, and swine were being herded into its protective enclosure, the air reeked
of fear and panic. The relief, the immense joy that swept through that small
community! “The Pendragon?” They asked, doubtful, disbelieving, when first
the cavalcade of horse and men made stop for the night, “But is he not gone
from us? Is he not dead?”
To Arthur, their elation when seeing the truth with their own sight, caused
personal embarrassment. So loud were the praises, the cheering, the offerings
of food, gifts, wine—best wine—nothing spared, nothing hidden. One land-
holder, of old Roman stock, offering two of his slave women should the men
of the Artoriani need them. Arthur declined the generous-meant offer with
thanks and gratitude.
“You are returned!” they all cried. “Returned to help us, save us, in this dark
hour of approaching death!” The cry taken up, repeated, shouted and gloried.
A thousand, thousand Saex, the chief man had declared in fast, agitated
breath, were gathered up towards the Way, laying siege to Ambrosius trapped
these past two days at Badon.
This was news! News that explained the intense panic! How, Arthur cursed,
did Ambrosius manage to get himself besieged? Mithras’s blood, the damn fool!
The numbers he dismissed as exaggeration. Hoped he was right to do so. If not,
it promised to be one hell of a fight. For all the love of all the gods, he hoped,
prayed, he was right!
They slept on the open ground, wrapped beneath their thick-woven, as good as
waterproof, cloaks. The tents they had not brought with them, nor pack-ponies.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 9 3
No accoutrements save what was necessary for battle. What could not be carried
in a saddle-pack or across the shoulders was left behind. Each man carried his own
weapons, own equipment, and enough corn to feed each horse for three days.
Arthur needed to move quickly, and at the far end of the journey, quietly. The only
exception was the young lads, not yet old to enough to join the ranks of fighting
men, boys who would in the years ahead be honoured with the title squire. They
had their uses, aside from duties of serving, for they rode the spare horses. Wagons,
baggage, and army whores could fol ow on at the slower pace with Geraint and
the infantry. They had no place with the three hundred Artoriani. An exact figure.
Ten turmae, twenty and six to each, with four officers. Being pedantic, three
hundred and two. Arthur and Gwenhwyfar.
She slept curled against him, both of them doubly warm beneath shared
cloaks. Slept without murmur, as they all did. The march had been an endur-
ance, almost forty miles to Sarum. With as much again to cover on the morrow,
now they had this further information. New plans, new route. They would
leave before dawn, swing out along the road heading north for the dyke Arthur
had built as a tormenting boundary between his land and that claimed by
Ambrosius. God’s breath! How long ago that seemed! Follow it, then strike up
the valley of the Cuneito, marching eastward, to swing around and behind the
Saex. Further to ride, longer for Ambrosius to hold out. A risk worth taking,
for surely Aelle would be expecting reinforcements from Geraint to come the
most direct route, from the south.
Dawn limped in, dark and dismal, replaced by a reluctant, dull, sulking
day. At least, everyone said to himself, as they rode up past Ambrosium, it
was not raining.
One question Arthur had to ask before they met with the Saex, before the
fighting began. His stomach churned each occasion he thought of it, looming
nearer with every mile set behind them. He had to know. They were walking
the horses down the Cuneito valley, leading alongside the south bank of the
river, resting them. The woodland was thick, quite dense, the surrounding area
quiet and unnerving. Arthur had dropped back, was beside Bedwyr; there was
no room here for more than two abreast. Gwenhwyfar walked ahead, leading
her bay. The men talked in low tones, suppressed by knowing the Saex might
just be wise enough to post scouts this low down, and inhibited by the grey,
low cloud; spirited chatter, jesting or singing seemed inappropriate. Gweir’s
voice was the closest, telling his companion of Gaul. Exaggerating, as all young
men do, with such a wondrous story to tell.
3 9 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“Do you love her?” Arthur managed to keep his voice neutral, as if he were
merely asking some minor, military matter.
Bedwyr had no need to ask of whom Arthur spoke. Only a matter of time
before the questions were asked. And the answers had to be made. Just as good
now as later. He spoke as casually, successfully masking the gallop of his heart-
beat. “I always have. My boyhood fancy never grew from me.” He checked his
horse from snatching at a mouthful of grass.
“How much?”
“Enough to know she does not love me in the same way as she loves her
husband.”
There was no answer Arthur could make to that.
They had not argued about her coming, Arthur and Gwenhwyfar, as once,
perhaps, they would have done. She had sorted her saddle-pack, had the
armourer put an edge to her sword, and had ridden out beside her husband. No
glance, no challenge. Arthur accepted the gesture as it was meant. Was grateful
for it. Nothing would have induced him to beg her to come; equally, nothing
would have prompted him to order her to stay. Leaving the children had been
hard—Archfedd had grown so! No longer a babe, but a girl, with fiery eyes
and tossing head—ah, so like her Mam must have been at that age! Medraut,
too, he missed, for he had grown used to the boy’s wide-eyed, awed company.
They were safe with Enid; given a while to settle, would establish a friendship.
Or was that another hope? Archfedd was quite the ferocious bully. Her idea
of acquiring a friend, according to one tale Enid had laughingly told, was to
hit another child over the head with some implement—a toy doll, a stick,
whatever—and make demand that he or she would be a friend! It seemed the
girl had a thing or two yet to learn about the subtle gaining of allies. Medraut,
timid as he was, stood little chance of beating her tyranny.
One of the scouts was returning, the column ahead shuffling aside to let him
canter past. He reached the Pendragon, dismounted, fell into step beside Arthur
as Bedwyr gave ground to him, gave his report, brief but concise. The column
halted. Arthur passed the order to mount up.
Ahead, several people gathered beside the old road, incredulous when they
recognised the Dragon. The villa, rambling behind overgrown trees, seemed
shabby, its once white-painted walls peeling and mouldering; the gardens were
once maintained to the highest standard. Arthur had stayed there for a few
days when he had served under Vortigern—when Winifred was his wife, he
remembered grimly. Old Phillipi, the owner, had been alive then, a gentle, wise
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 3 9 5
old man. The villa had seen better days, but with the old master’s passing, and
a son who preferred to spend what little gold there was on wine and women
rather than roses and maintenance, was its sad demise so surprising?
Arthur acknowledged the acclaimed greetings from the small crowd, prom-
ised, “We go fight the Saex! Keep yourselves safe until I ride this way again!”
They were jog-trotting now, to make up time, for already the day was sliding
rapidly nearer dusk and darkness. They would press on as long as they could.
Arthur rode beside Gwenhwyfar again. She wore male apparel, bracae, padded
under-tunic with a leather, bronze-studded over-tunic. Her hair, bound into
a single braid, thick as her wrist, bobbed and bounced against her back as they
trotted, hands light on the reins, riding easy, natural.
“I have been told of you and Bedwyr.”
Her eyes remained ahead, looking through the gap between her horse’s ears.
What to answer? Petty? Spiteful?
As I discovered Morgaine for myself. And Mathild,
and…how many others?
The way it was. The only way, the fact of it. “I was told you were dead. I
mourned, I grieved, but I could not remain alone and at the mercy of filth such
as Amlawdd.” She turned her head, regarded him, her green, tawny-flecked eyes
honest, hiding nothing from him. The meaning was there, plain, in her expression,
in those eyes.
Where was my choice? A woman cannot remain alone and unprotected.
They rode on a while in silence, Arthur mulling over her answer, wanting to
ask more intimate questions.
How often did you sleep with him? Did you enjoy being
with him? Is he better than I am?
At last he said. “Do you regret losing him?”
She softened, the smile touching her cheeks, eyes, her whole face. She
stretched out her hand for his. “If that was so, would I have ridden to Gaul?
Would I have spent that long while searching for you?”
Arthur withdrew his hand, curled the fingers around the reins. Feeling the
pressure, Onager laid back his ears, raised his head, his tail swished twice. Arthur
had to say it. Had to know if what Winifred implied had substance. “Your
intention may have been to ensure my end.”
A lucky guess, intuition, a knowing of how Winifred wove lies and deceptions,
made Gwenhwyfar say, “
Na
, if I had wanted you dead, I would have succeeded.”
She held his gaze. Added, after a significant pause, “I am not Winifred.”
He took her hand again, reprimanded Onager’s sullen temper. Arthur’s heel
clamped into his side, daring the animal to kick.
Behind, Bedwyr had observed the exchange, although the conversation he
could not hear. He sighed. It had been so difficult. Losing her, so close to
3 9 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
winning her, so close! His heart, pulled in two equal directions, one for the
love he had for Gwenhwyfar, the other for his cousin, Arthur the king. Ah,
but Bedwyr had always been philosophical. Gwenhwyfar would never choose
the lesser of the two, the boy if she could have the man. She had not wanted
him, not for who or what he was, anyway. He had been a means, a useful tool,
someone to buffer her against bastards such as Amlawdd, someone to be there
in her misery and darkness. He could accept that.
He would never admit Gwenhwyfar had been, always would be, his only
deep, especial love. But then, who needed that when there was sure to be a
succulent, fair-haired whore waiting for him, somewhere, sometime. Soon he
hoped, for he knew he lied to himself.
Seventy-Four
Over-confidence! Arthur was grinning like a moon-mad boy, jubilation
spreading through the men as word passed along the column. Gweir,
returned from scouting ahead, sat his horse with a matched expression. He could
not have brought better news to his weary and apprehensive companions.
“So,” Arthur declared, “Vicus is straddled with the drunk and the whoring, is
it? Hah!” His bark of delight rippled through the overhanging canopy of winter-
bare trees as he twisted in the saddle to speak direct to his men, their pleasure at
this unexpected turn of events as evident as his. “A fine rearguard that bastard
pair Aelle and Aesc have left us to deal with! Mithras, I was hoping for a real
fight!” They took up his laughter, heeled their horses forward as he signalled to
ride on, Gweir bringing his dun alongside Onager—at a respectful distance.
He was a good scout, Gweir. He claimed the ability to move fast and unde-
tected came from his deprived years of childhood. Too often, he would laugh,
he had to fend for himself out in those wild lands up beyond the Wall. Keeping
your head down from grey wolves or Saex wolves—the one was much like the
other. Clinging to the camouflaging trees that encroached beside the old road,
Gweir, to his surprise but relief, had found no Saxon outposts, no set watch
or guard. Could not believe his fortune when, crawling on knees and belly
through the untended, uncut tangle of low shrub and grasses, he reached the
small town of Vicus. He had heard the singing, the occasional woman’s scream,
much laughter and merrymaking. Needed only to see the huddle of guards
at the gate swilling wine from a passed-around wineskin to be sure. He had
waited, all the same, watching from his safe place of hiding, seen them slump,
drunk, fall sodden to the world, against the outer wall, leaving the gateway
open, unguarded. No one had come to reprimand them, to replace them, haul
them away. Easy to conclude there was no one sober enough.
Will such laxness be maintained,
Arthur wondered, mulling over the lad’s
report. A chance worth the taking; some things needed quick decisions, others,