Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
raised his arm, and they had moved forward. From walk into jog-trot, pushing
immediate into a canter—and the release into gallop.
Aesc, they did not kill. They did not treat him kindly, but he was spared
death. At least for now, until the Pendragon could decide what punishment to
mete him.
Aelle, the Bretwalda, was running, although he would not go far. The road
to Vicus was closed to him; he could only head into the woods, where the
dogs would sniff him out, or along the Way, where the horses would ride
over him.
It was to last throughout the day before it was ended, a day of harrying and
following, of moving in, encircling, attempting to thrust into the wedge that
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 0 9
Aelle’s men formed whenever the horses came too close, a day from before
dawn to after sunset of determination, sweat, and exhausting energy. A day
that had followed two of fast riding and another fight a few miles down, along
the road.
There was another skirmish beneath the place where the white horse galloped
in her endless race against the wind. Fatigued, despairing, unable to go much
further, Aelle ordered his men to make a stand. They would fight, kill as many
of these British as they could before meeting Woden themselves. It would be a
brave death, an honourable death for his fine men.
Many died at that place, more of the English than the mounted, elated British,
but it was a fight of honour, and the men were buried with their weapons in
one grave to mark the respect that each side felt for the other.
When Arthur and his queen returned to Badon with Aelle led like a dog by a
chain around his neck, stripped naked, with leather thongs twisting tight into his
wrists, Ambrosius greeted them beyond the gates cleared of the dead, the dying
and the wounded. Nothing could be done to clear or hide the ground that was
churned and scraped. The blood still puddled in the ruts, spattered against the
stonework of the arch, the solid wood of the gate. The smell lingered, too: the
smell of blood and death and grieving.
Ambrosius stood, head erect, proud. Arthur rode Onager forward,
dismounted, went to greet his uncle, unsure what to expect, uncertain what to
say. Ambrosius talked for him.
“It is with regret I cannot return your kingdom to you as it was when you
left it, but I can at least let my heart rest that it is indeed returned to you, and
not delivered up to a Saxon.”
“I thank you, Uncle, for taking care of my people and my land while
I have been gone.” Arthur reached forward his hand in offering of peace.
Grateful, with relief, Ambrosius took it. He had expected a sword to bring
his justified end, a torrent of curses and reprimands; had not expected this,
Arthur’s forgiveness.
As they shook hands in greeting, Arthur noticed something glint at his feet.
He frowned, bent, picked up a brooch, saucer-shaped with a mask of eyes and
mouth indented on it. The Saxon brooch of rebellion.
He looked at it a moment then leant forward and pinned it to Ambrosius’s
shoulder. “Wear it,” he said, “to remind you always of this day, and,” Arthur
quietly indicated the graves being dug on the slope below the ramparts “and of
who was lost.” He sighed. He was tired, every muscle in his body ached, every
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nerve-ending was screeching to be eased or scratched or bathed. He itched, he
stank, his belly needed filling, his bladder emptying.
Gwenhwyfar came up beside him. Ambrosius caught his breath at sight of
her, as begrimed, as bloodied as her husband. He stammered a greeting, added,
speaking of Arthur, “You found him then?”
Gwenhwyfar nodded.
Ambrosius allowed a small, weary smile. “I am glad. Perhaps now I can see
to the running of my monastery and my school. My work is with the kingdom
of God, I think, not the kingdom of man.” With his eye he sought dismissal.
Arthur gave it.
“Go in peace, nephew,” Ambrosius said, making the sign of the cross. “Go
in the peace of God.”
“Peace?” Arthur echoed. “How long will peace last? There is another Saxon
we may yet need to face.”
Ambrosius’s eyebrows lifted.
“Cerdic,” Arthur answered. “My son Cerdic.”
“Ah,” Ambrosius mused. “Cerdic.”
The burying was begun. The Saxons they took to the byre that would burn
and send souls to Woden; the British they lay in Christian graves, clustered
beneath the ramparts of Badon.
In one of them lay Cadwy, who had tried to fight so valiantly to keep the
Saxons from entering his fortress, the fortress he had held in bravery and honour
in the name of Gwenhwyfar, wife to the Pendragon.
Part Three
The Remnant
One
March 476
The ship’s prow nosed into the reeds, carried forward by the heavy
roll of the incoming tide, the flurry of movement rippling through the
stems, whispering, as if unseen fingers were stroking a harp’s finely tuned
strings. A moorhen paddled away from the wooden keel that loomed dark and
high, her scolding at this sudden intrusion vociferous in the empty stillness of
the early morning.
Cerdic was the first to leap ashore. He plunged into the knee-high water,
thrust his way to the firmness of land, head back, arms wide, exultant, trium-
phant. He had brought his ships across the sea to this isolated British inlet that
was his mother’s held land, would soon be his own. Four other keels jostled their
formidable way into the reeds, disgorging men who hauled at the mooring ropes,
their voices loud against the quiet of the murmuring breeze and the flurry of
anxious bird-calls. The women and their children came after them, hesitant and
uncertain in this unknown place that was, from now forward, to be their home.
Drawing his Saex, the short sword of the Saxons, from its sheath, Cerdic held
the weapon before him, its blade glinting in the bright sun of this, the first day
of the Roman month of Mars. The month dedicated to their god of war. More
significant to Cerdic and those first few men wading up out of the reed-lapping,
incoming tide, this was their own special day of the calendar week. Woden’s
day. Cerdic held the weapon by the polished wood of the rounded pommel,
held it high above his head, and called upon his god, his creator, his ancestor,
to grant his blessing and favour.
“Woden!” he cried. “Hear me, hear your son, Cerdic!” The men and women,
jostling their children before them or holding the younger ones in their arms,
straddling their hips, gathered behind their lord, almost two hundred people in
all. Some of the men also drew their swords, others held high their spears or
shields. The boy was brought forward to stand beside his father. He would see
his sixth birthing-day this year, too young to be at the forefront, assisting with
4 1 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
the business of the gods, but this was to be their land now, and one day Cynric
would be their leader.
He must be here for this, their coming, the names of father and son linked
together in the tales that would be woven around this day.
“Be with us,” Cerdic called to the sky, aware they all watched, attentive and
expectant. “Woden! Give us courage and endurance to make what we will of this
land. Grant us aid to build our homes and plant our crops, let our women bear us
sons, give us daughters who will bring us the union of husbands and allies!”
A cheer soared behind him as the men and women proclaimed their approval
and echoed his prayer. They had elected to come with Cerdic, these few,
abandoning what remained of their old home along the Elbe to start again. A
new life, a new beginning.
Cynric was proud of his father, excited at this great adventure. The sea-
crossing he had not liked, for his stomach had heaved as much as the roll of the
waves, but now they were ashore and the motion of the craft was leaving his
legs, he was again starting to enjoy himself. Although he understood little of
what was happening. Someone had fetched the white kid from one of the ships,
set it down before Cerdic. Cynric watched, interested. His father had taught
him the importance of sacrifice.
“Woden!” Cerdic cried again, “And Thunor! As this blood spills on this
ground before me, then so shall the blood of any who dare oppose me spill!”
He lowered the sword and drew its sharpness quickly through the bleating
kid’s throat. The red blood streamed, puddling in the dew-sparkling grass, the
animal’s legs kicked, its eyes rolled into the blankness of death. He slit the belly
open, lifted out the guts and entrails, the steam and stench rising together into
the sea-tanged air, the gulls, whirling overhead, crying and swooping, already
sensing an unexpected meal. No twisted growths or black evilness there! Cerdic
turned to the men, those behind the first row craning and peering to inspect
the offal. “The portents are good!” he cried, letting the mess slide through his
fingers to lay beside the blood-soaked carcass. Cynric wrinkled his nose, took a
half-step backwards from the foul-smelling, slimy stuff.
“Woden!” His father raised his voice, tipped his face up to the spring-blue
morning sky, “Woden, be with us!” They cheered, and raised their voices to
the skies, setting the waders and shorebirds wheeling and calling in alarm.
Then they set about bringing one of the ships up from riding the shallows,
left it beached, forlorn, and desolate, lying on the tall reed-grass, a ship so
graceful and beautiful when on the sea, clumsy and inelegant on land. They
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 1 5
stripped it of all that would be of use; the oars and sail fashioned into makeshift
tents to provide shelter, the wooden benches, the water barrels, ropes; all they
left was the hull and the single mast.
Cerdicesora, they agreed to call the place, this lonely stretch of coastal marsh-
land along the southern coast of Britain. Some, a few, went off to hunt duck
and to catch fish, the children sent to gather fuel for the fires. Most of the men
set to felling the trees for the strong barrier of a palisade fence would need
be erected before nightfall. If the British came to drive them away then they
would fight, but the women and children, the goats, sheep, cattle and pigs they
had brought across the sea would need protection. If the British let them alone,
then so be it. They had come in peace to their new home. At least a peace that
would last a while and a while. A handful of men, some young, some old, could
not yet take on the might of the Pendragon.
As evening fell, the mead jars were passed around, and Cynric sat beside
his father, sharing the pleasure and euphoria.
Ja
, it had been a good day! Dusk
descended with the delicate, twilight shading of a clear-skied spring evening.
The stars beginning to murmur their presence, subduing the day into what
would be a frosted night.
It was then that they burnt the ship, the one they had heaved up onto the
land. An offering to the gods. Tomorrow, they would clear more trees, begin
the permanent building of their settlement, but this day, their first, was the most
important, this day of their coming, and it needed something special, something
ultimate to mark its ending. They stood in silence as they watched it burn,
watched the flames wander at first, then run and twist into leaping, engulfing
spasms that roared and cracked and shouted. The screaming and pleading of the
four women slaves, brought from their old home for this purpose, had ceased
with the uprush of fire and dark smoke. With pleasure and pride, Cerdic’s
people gave the craft to their gods.
Never again would they see what was left of the trading settlement on the
Elbe River. Many had wandered away soon after Mathild’s passing, those who
had resented Cerdic’s coming, disliked his taking of authority; then, for three
years in succession the floods had destroyed their homes, washed away the
new-sown seeds or sprouting corn. Men had drowned with their families;
cattle, goats, and sheep were lost to the rapid spew of water that had engulfed
the banks and swamped the low-lying land. The water-bloated bodies and the
stink of mud! And then last year, after the floods had receded, the Franks had
come raiding for what little was left.
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They could fight, but for what? For sodden timbers? Drowned pastures,
shattered keels, and abandoned hopes? Nay, better to try for something worth
the taking. And Cerdic could offer that. There was land that ought to be his,
land that boasted fertile fields and hoarded riches of gold and precious jewels.
Let the Franks overrun the mudflats of the Elbe! Cerdic could offer a better
place to the Saxons. Britain.
They stood in silence and watched as their craft was taken by the gods. With
the guidance of Woden’s hand, they would build for themselves new homes,