Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
lips nervously. She welcomed visitors, indeed counted on them, but it was usually
men who came to her hut by the causeway, not women. And this woman, with
hair dyed as black as a raven’s wing and penetrating deep-blue eyes that seemed
darker than they ought be, alarmed her for some unexplained reason.
“I will be preparing supper soon,” she offered tentatively. “You are welcome
to share with me, although,” she slid in a small, flustered giggle, “I may have
custom to attend.”
Morgaine raised her hand, dismissive. “You need not concern yourself over-
much. I ask only a bowl of broth and a bed for the night.”
The girl, her milking bucket wedged under one arm against her hip,
chewed a finger-nail. She had only the one bed, a blanket-covered pile
of dried bracken, and that, if any-men paid call, she would be needing.
Disconcerted, she wondered what to do. The law of hospitality bid her make
any traveller welcome, yet no woman had ever wanted to stay at her wayside
whore-place before.
Could this woman read her mind? It seemed she could, for Morgaine smiled,
reassuring, said as she rose, walked to the open doorway, “Mayhap this night
you will not have custom.”
Inside, the hut was dark, musty, as most small dwellings were. A hearth-place
situated centrally with the smoke-hole above it in the roof. A stool, the bracken
bed to one side, a stone-weighted loom. Cooking pots, pottery amphorae;
from one timber support hung two glass-bead necklaces, intertwined with a
bunch of drying herbs. It was humble but tidy. It would suit Morgaine. This
hut had once belonged to another whore, Brigid, who had been the messenger-
woman of Morgause, Morgaine’s mother. Brigid, who had also worked for the
Pendragon, feeding him suitable information. Oh, he had found out, eventu-
ally, that Brigid had two paymasters, that she was a traitor to his kingdom.
Morgaine had been misguided then, had thought Arthur to have the right of
it, had thought love was the most important thing. Not the commands of her
mother, given through Brigid’s tongue.
Aye, this whore-hut would suit Morgaine well. Easy, in the early light of the
next dawn, when a cattle-driver called by to ease the itch in his groin, to inform
him this was her place now. He never questioned further: one whore was much
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 5 7
the same as another. He had no reason to notice the patch of garden—even if
he had, would have assumed the fresh-dug earth was for the planting of new
herbs. Why would he suspect it made an ideal grave for the girl who had been
whore here the evening before?
Eleven
February 478
They located a small herd of five deer after about an hour’s easy
riding. The woods that spanned the undulating ground to the south of
Caer Cadan were winter-quiet, the trees dormant, lifeless in their naked state of
bare branches. The day had been dull, although the snow clouds trudging across
the skies these last few weeks had at last retreated. Pockets of snow remained,
huddling between tree roots in the lee of bramble and hawthorn bushes, lining
the shadowed places of ice-fringed streams. It was cold, the breath vapour from
rider and horse steaming, the light beneath the thickly crowded trees, for all
their lack of a leafed canopy, poor.
Arthur pointed with his bow, indicating the does feeding, some few hundred
yards distant, as yet unaware of the newcomers in the woods. He grinned at
Gwenhwyfar riding a few yards to his left. She smiled back, the prospect of an
easy kill cheering them both. The quicker they could bring down this night’s
supper, the sooner they could return home to the warmth of a hearth-fire and
a tankard of wine. One of the dogs whined, chastised immediately by Gweir
who had already dismounted, secured his horse. They were well downwind;
the deer grazed, unconcerned. Arthur, too, dismounted, signalled for the boy,
Medraut, to climb down from his pony, tether him alongside the others. The
dogs were similarly secured, the handler left to crouch with them, ready to slip
the leashes when needed. Hunting was a synchronised effort, each rider and
bowman working as a team, needing, necessarily, to work in silence without
command or communication; to act implicitly.
He was nervous, the boy, as the last hunt a month past had been disastrous;
not his fault, they all said, it was a thing easily happened, yet had he not stepped
on that dead branch, had the snap of its breaking not ricocheted around that
clearing…it had taken three hours to find their quarry again. Archfedd had not
let him forget it. She was not with them this day though, laid up as she was with
a swollen and bruised knee after a fall yesterday. He ought not smile, ought
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 5 9
not feel this gloat of pleasure; the girl was in pain, could have been severely
injured. At least the pony was unharmed, though the fall had been a crashing
one. Gwenhwyfar had told Archfedd not to jump Briallen over the ditches, not
in icy conditions. But she had ignored the advice, as ever, jumped the mare
anyway. There had been a terrible row after, Gwenhwyfar determined to thrash
Archfedd for putting a good mount in unnecessary danger, Arthur countering
the anger by saying the injured knee and the forgoing of a hunting trip was
better punishment. Medraut agreed with his father. Archfedd took a whipping
as stoically as a warrior faced a battle wound. Not coming today though. Hah!
That had hurt her indeed!
He attempted a smile at his father, put one finger against his lips to indi-
cate his awareness for the need of stealth and quiet. Arthur nodded, tested his
bowstring, indicating Medraut was to do likewise. Arthur, Gweir, and a third
bowman took position beside Gwenhwyfar and the two other mounted men,
Medraut staying close to his father as he had been instructed. Ready, arrows
knocked to the bowstrings, the horses moved off slowly, almost ambling. Deer
were not so mistrustful of four-legged creatures and, downwind, the scent of
human was masked. The bowmen, on foot, walked to the far side of the horses,
Arthur beside Gwenhwyfar, his hand upon her thigh. She playfully tapped his
fingers as they stealthily worked erotically higher, mouthing at him to wait
until later. He grinned up at her, boyishly winked. He was still handsome in
his rough, rugged way. Grizzled hairs were starting to show more pronounced
against the dark above his temple, but it was as thick as if he were still young, no
sign of receding from the forehead or balding on the crown. The skin around
his eyes, chin, and jowls was wrinkling, perhaps developing a slight sag where
once it lay firm, but the eyes themselves shone bright, mischievous. Later, that
wink implied, I’ll hold you to it.
Gweir stopped at the first position, stepping from beside the horse, shrinking
against the solid width of an old oak. The horses moved on. Arthur tapped
Medraut on the shoulder, their turn to drop aside. He had skillfully chosen
two trees close together, Medraut to stand a little to one side of and behind
his father. The third man positioned himself, the three experienced men and
the boy forming a V-shape ahead of the grazing deer. There they must wait,
immobile, poised, and ready, while the horses unhurriedly continued to circle
upwind, to manoeuvre behind the quarry. Walking in fits and starts, the
horses grazed a few mouthfuls of grass here and there. Unhurried, unsuspi-
cious, unalerting.
4 6 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Upwind, Gwenhwyfar and, spaced a few yards apart, the other two horsemen
began to tighten the noose, edging closer to the group of does, starting the
drive forward. The occasional click of the tongue, a light slap of a rein against
the leather saddle. Innocent noises, almost natural, but a doe lifted her head,
some half-doubt alerting her. The horses gave no threat, but there was a slight,
uneasy scent to the air. Chewing the mouthful of grass, she walked a few yards
downwind, head high, eyes alert, ears listening, nostrils scenting for that vague,
half-caught smell of human. The other four followed gradually, browsing
unconcerned as they went with her, nudged forward by the three innocuous
horses those few, distant yards behind.
Medraut held his breath. His arm was quivering, for the bows needed to be
held in the firing position. They, he and the three men, blended well with the
trees and bustle of hawthorn and hazel bushes, dressed as they were in natural
colours, browns and dark greens, their hoods pulled over their heads. He kept
his half-slit eye on one deer, as his father had told him. “Pick your prey, a deer
nearest you, one that looks likely to come to your side of the ambush.” He
had laughed, Arthur, when telling this, ruffled the lad’s hair. “Works as well
when ambushing men, only they have a better power of reasoning than beasts.”
Medraut had grinned at the advice. Ah, he so wanted to do well on this hunt!
It was a delicate task, herding the prey forward. Too slow and they could
simply trot away, melting into the shadows of the trees, too fast and they could
panic, running to one side or flee too soon. If they simply disappeared, it was
not too much of a matter, for the dogs would scent them out again, but it
would all be time, and daylight, wasted.
Gwenhwyfar, riding to the right, clicked her fingers. Another deer pricked
her ears, listened, attentive, watchful. A flurry of wind taking scent to wary
nostrils…and they were running!
The best shot was to aim for the centre of the chest as the deer came head-on,
from as close range as possible. If the animal ran to the right, a good aim would
be difficult, the bowman had to turn. To the left was desirable, for an arrow
could be loosed into the side. “
For Mithras’s sake though, boy
,” Arthur’s words
flickered through Medraut’s mind as the deer came nearer, his fingers tightening
around the drawn bowstring, “
do not shoot straight to your left or right—you could
easily hit another man and anyway, the quarry would be moving too fast in relation to
the arrow flight.”
Medraut gathered his breath, forced himself to wait, one eye shut, the other
squinting, intent on the doe with a pale muzzle. He had been practising with the
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 6 1
bow. It was easier to handle than a spear, for he could take better aim, aligning
his eye with target and arrow head…Just one more yard, one more…Medraut
released the strain on the taut bowstring, let the arrow loose, heard the whine
of its brief flight, fancied he heard the thud of its finding the mark. The doe
faltered, staggered, scrabbled a few more paces, her legs working, chest heaving,
fell forward. Dead. Medraut cheered. His exultation sweeping away caution, he
leapt in the air, hoisting his bow, yelling his delight, “I did it! I did it!”
Simultaneously, the second deer staggered, picked herself up, ran on.
The third was also hit, but the lodged arrow barely broke her stride. The
other two leapt away, unharmed. Arthur had reached for a second arrow,
knocked it quickly into place, but they were gone, too far to shoot accurately
between the trees and undergrowth. He was pleased, stepped forward, slapped
his son on the shoulder, took him to the fallen deer. “Well done, lad!”
Medraut grinned up at him, satisfied. Two arrows protruded from the carcass,
one, Arthur’s, clean through the chest, the other, Medraut’s attempt, penetrating
the neck. It was so much cleaner when the quarry fell easily. Gwenhwyfar rode
up, slid from her horse. “Well done,” she said to the boy.
“What about me?” Arthur chided, feigning petulance.
“What about you?” she teased.
Gweir trotted up, his face glowing. The third man was sounding his hunting
horn, the notes spiriting through the woodland, the baying of the dogs answering
almost immediately, aware of the oncoming excitement, the tracking of injured
deer. The two trails were found with ease. One was of clear, bright blood, a
long chase probably, for it would be a minor wound; the other dark, thick,
and sticky. They followed for one quarter of a mile, found the deer collapsed,
already dead, the arrow buried deep in its belly. For the other, they took to the
horses again, letting the hounds run free to follow the scent unhampered by
leash or handler.
The dogs brought the animal to bay after half an hour’s searching. Arthur
was tempted to let Medraut finish the doe, but it was senseless to prolong death
unnecessarily. He motioned for Gweir to do it. One arrow at close range. The
three carcasses would provide well for supper that night in the King’s Hall.
Riding homeward, while the adults exchanged teasing jests and bellowed
raucous hunting songs, Medraut dared ask his father a thing that had been on
his mind for several months.
“Da?”
“Aye, lad?”
4 6 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“Can I go to Ambrosius’s school?”