Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
was one honed out of jealousy and envy. Arthur was strong and powerful, he
feared nothing and no one—or so he cleverly gave the impression. Between
the two, father or son, who would she support if it ever came to a fight? Arthur
or Cerdic? If she would be Arthur’s queen, then it would be the Pendragon
without doubt. With her son? As his adviser, mentor, guide…Ah, it was power
she wanted, that which she loved.
A rap at the door, Oslac entered without waiting for permission, two heads
held by the hair in his hand, blood dripping from the severed necks. Two of
Winifred’s guard, meant to intimidate her, no doubt.
“Do you think I will give way to such paltry threats?” she retorted curtly,
barely glancing at the bloodied trophies. “What are a few dead to me?” Did
Cerdic think her so feeble-minded? So soft-bellied? She, Winifred, who had
murdered for her own gain; Winifred, who had from childhood, schemed and
bartered and fought to achieve her wealth, her position. Wealth and position
that she fully intended to keep. Threaten her? Had she, then, bred a fool?
Cerdic stood, the axe in his hand. “Your land is to be legally, undisputedly
mine. On that land, my people can settle and thrive without threat or intimida-
tion. More will then come to join us, with the swing of the seasons, they will
come. And then I will found my own kingdom. Mine, Mother, not yours, not
my father’s: mine. I will become Bretwalda of the English, the founder of a
dynasty, the…”
The absurdity! Winifred laughed, head back, hands on hips, mouth open,
laughed. “You? Do all that for yourself? You could not even sire your own
son—your father had to do it for you!”
Cerdic’s lip lifted into a snarl. The axe was in his hand, he lifted it, swung,
brought it down, his breath bellowing from between his enraged, clenched
teeth with the exhalation of effort. Blood, bone, sinew spewed among the
shards of green glass and splintered wood.
She had not screamed or moved, so quickly had he killed her.
Oslac scratched, unconcerned, under his armpit, the drip of blood from the
two heads adding to the mess on the floor as he raised his arm. He had under-
stood not a word of what had been said, for they had spoken in Latin, and he
knew only the English tongue.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 2 3
He sniffed. “Bury her, do we?” he asked. “With the others, to stop their
spirits walking?”
Cerdic wiped his hand beneath his nose, licked his lips. He was shaking.
Gods, he thought, what have I done? “Aye, put them with their severed heads
between their legs to bind them to the darkness of the earth.” He left the
room, went to where it was dark and private, and brought up the contents of
his stomach, his belly heaving and twisting. Then sat, his back against a wall,
letting the cold of the night dry the sweat that was on his skin, the quiet calm
his shaking. After a while the thought came that he had wanted his mother’s
land, and now, by right of inheritance, it would be his.
In control of his guts and his thinking, Cerdic rejoined his men who, if they
had noticed anything, said not a word. There was one last thing to do, now he
had obtained what he had come for. Cerdic had recognised him when they had
battered down the wooden gates of this place. The priest had been one of the
first to run forward, protesting, demanding that the Saxons leave. Cerdic had
recognised him.
He rapped orders, watched as they slowly butchered the man, that unfor-
tunate priest. They would toss the bloodied bits into a shallow pit, not like
the others, no burial grave for this one. This one, who would never again
be entering a whorehouse, or running to tell tales to a mother about a boy
eager to sample his first taste of offered delights. Ah, vengeance had its own
reward, and Cerdic found it to be a good way to settle a heaving stomach and
a shrieking conscience.
Their business done, Cerdic and his small band of Saxons left, weighted with
treasures and trinkets, carousing their success. Three words, remembered from
those tedious days of childhood tutoring thrumming in Cerdic’s mind as they
marched home, southward.
Veni, vidi, vici.
I came, saw, conquered.
The guilt had already passed, replaced with the smell of undominated freedom.
Three
April 476
With men working together as a unit, a team, Cerdic’s Hall took
shape. It was the first permanent building to be erected, for the Mead
Hall was more than a prestigious place of residence for the head man. It was
a meeting hall for the Council, where judgements of law would be made or
collective decisions discussed and argued over, be it for planning the next
harvest or the next war; a workplace, where women would cook, weave, and
sew, where men mended harness, sharpened weapons, fashioned new spears.
A feasting hall, a sleeping place…the Mead Hall, the heart, the centre, of a
community. Although as yet this embryonic settlement of the West Saxons was
not a community. They were fledglings, grubbing an existence under tents,
foraging for food, living hand-to-mouth, day-to-day, but not for much longer.
Cerdic’s people were here to stay, and the raising of the Hall was a statement of
their intransigent intention.
The oval palisade fence had been the first essential construction. Defence
and confinement, to keep domestic animals in, the undesirable—human or
animal—out. Built of oak, a wood that smouldered rather than blazed, rising
higher than two men standing one atop the other, and with the width of two,
spread handspans, it encompassed an enclosure of several acres that would,
eventually, be a permanent home to the founders of Cerdic’s kingdom.
With that completed, the men felled yet more timber for the Hall. Oak
again, for the upright supports, door-frames, roof rafters, wall-plating, and the
crafting of the great, curved pairs of timber crucks needed to support the weight
of the roof. The plank floor was to be suspended, the height of a man above
ground level; the space underneath to take the foundations for the weight-
bearing uprights, and to keep the living quarters warm and dry. The dark cellar
would eventually be used for storage, reached by a low entrance set modestly
beside the steps leading upward to an imposing, intricately carved doorway.
Cerdic’s Mead Hall was to be a magnificent building. Roofed with timber
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 2 5
shingles, not thatch, half as wide and long again as the one he had inherited
from Leofric—oh, his was to be a chieftain’s Hall, worthy of mention in song!
And others would come with the passing of the seasons, see it, admire its
crafting, its significance of power. Men would come, bring their wives and chil-
dren, offer their shields and spears into Cerdic’s service in exchange for the right
to build their own dwelling within the protective hand of Cerdic’s authority.
The foundations were well laid, the massive uprights in position. The door-
frames fitted, skeletal openings. Today, the first of the roof-beams were to be
hoisted, slotted into the half-lap joints. The weather had been kind, dry, but
not hot. If it lasted until the shingles had been laid…Ah, would the gods be
that generous?
Cerdic stood, fists resting on his broad waist, legs spread, head back, eyes
squinting into the light, as the first of the heavy beams was pulled upward, the
ropes creaking from the suspended weight, men’s muscles straining. The beam
was swung around, manhandled, eased forward, slotted with deceptive ease
neatly into the waiting joint; at the far end, another beam, with another team
of men. They were working high off the ground, the height of five tall men.
The crossed ends of the exposed upright supports to the fore and aft of the
apexed roof would be carved and decorated, painted with the grotesque faces
of house-place spirits to ward away the forces of mischief and evil. Glad Cerdic
was, that he need not clamber about up there! Once, he had groped his way up
the mast of one of his ships. He had been younger then, no more than ten and
six years, but still the dizzying height had spun his brains, churned his stomach.
He had left the sorting of the square sails to the experienced sailors after that.
And the building of his Hall roof to the carpenters.
Someone approached from behind, his shadow passing across Cerdic’s feet,
stood beside his lord. Belched, wiped his mouth with his tunic sleeve, pork
grease dribbling down his chin, the hunk of meat, well-chewed, between his
black-nailed fingers.
“Going well,” Oslac observed, indicating the busy industry. “Be settled in
soon, eh?”
Cerdic made no answer. Oslac was a good soldier, reliable, strong armed,
sure-aimed, though his manners left much to be desired. He also stank of rancid
wine, stale sweat, and piddled urine—but then, most of them did.
“How long do you reckon then? Before we move on?” Oslac spoke through
a mouthful of pork, mouth open, teeth masticating, oblivious of Cerdic’s
responding frown.
4 2 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“Move on?” Cerdic asked, his tone severe. “I do not intend to move on.”
Swallowing the chewed meat, Oslac picked at a shred stuck behind his gum.
“We’re not going to stay here forever, are we? Stuck on the edge of these
marshes with all that land out there ripe for the taking.” He threw the bone
away, northward, to where, beyond the palisade fence, the sea-marshes gave way
to the outskirts of woodland—laying further back now that so many trees had
been felled, the new-cut stumps stark against the foot-trampled undergrowth.
“Until I am ready to expand, we stay here, on my own-held, undisputed ground.”
“But I thought we were here to fight!” Oslac’s voice could whine, petulant,
like an irritating child. “That’s what I came for. To kill British.”
“And that is what we shal do,” Cerdic’s acerbic tone was lost on Oslac, who
failed to notice the lift to his nostrils, the narrowing of eyes, warning signs. “When
we are secure here, when we have ploughed, sown, and harvested our fields, stored
our barns to the roof-beams with grain, have fattened cattle, milk-yielding goats.
When the traders’ ships come first to our harbour, not others along the coast. When
the women have borne us the next generation of warriors. Then, when we have
the power of permanence behind us, then we will fight.” Stability meant survival.
Attack now, and the Pendragon would have al the excuse he needed to sweep in
from the west and wipe them out, while they were vulnerable and exposed.
Winifred’s death had been a mistake, Cerdic had realised that on the swag-
gering march back from Venta. He had done it in a rage of temper; it had not
been intentional, not been planned—but she had pushed him once too often,
the bitch. And it had been so easy to lift that axe and…
For now, he must keep his head down, remain quiet, then he would be
forgotten, ignored as of no consequence. Only a few of the British were blus-
tering their protest at Winifred’s death, but Cerdic had taken steps to repair
the damage done in that fit of temper—and he had more or less succeeded.
His bile had risen at having to write so placatingly to his father, to petition his
innocence, pleading Winifred had forced his hand. And the bribing of so many
of the British Council had cost him dear, but then, the ploy had worked, for
his father seemed content to let things ride.
Although you never knew with Arthur quite what he was thinking.
“There’s enough of us,” Oslac said, piqued. “We could make a fight of things
whenever we wanted. And why has the Pendragon not come to us? Challenged
us?” He spat pork-stained saliva to the grass. “They say, so I’ve heard, he hasn’t
the stomach for battle anymore.”
“They are fart-arsed fools, then,” Cerdic retorted as he walked away, only
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 2 7
the white of his clenched knuckles betraying the rage burning inside him. The
idleness of gossip! Arthur was afraid of nothing, so Winifred had maintained.
Hah! Boasted, bragged! How often had she flagrantly compared him with
Arthur?
Your father is not afraid of the dark, of thunder, of the pain of a tooth that
needed pulling.
But he would learn to be afraid! When he was ready, Cerdic
would show him there was something to be feared—the destruction his son
would unleash. The death he would bring.
“He’s lost his balls,” Oslac muttered, persistent. “He’d have come otherwise,
after you murdered your own mother.” Possibly it was not meant to be heard,
but it came out louder than intended.
Cerdic’s fists clenched, his teeth clamped together. He would have slain
Oslac then, at that moment, except it would have tainted the building of his
Hall, the cold spilling of blood as the beams were raised.
No one crossed Cerdic. No one doubted his word, contradicted his plan-