Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
had been emptied, refilled.
“Cerdic has reneged to the Saxons.” Ambrosius’s pinched tone indicated that
the subject ought be ended, Amlawdd ignored the reprimand.
“Cerdic is half-British. He wants a kingdom, would as easily return to
being British if he knew he could have what he wanted. Have it handed him
on a platter.”
“Nonsense!”
“Nonsense, is it?” Amlawdd crammed the last of his meat pasty into his
mouth, spoke while he chewed. “I have it from Cerdic himself.”
Thirteen
Ambrosius was uncertain whether his sense of outrage was that
more intense because the man, obese from a cumulation of years of
over indulgence, crude-mannered and sprawling slovenly on the best couch,
was either an outright fool or a serious threat. Had he heard right? Had
he truly understood what Amlawdd implied—that Cerdic could be, was
willing to be, bought?
“Cerdic has only one want. To rule as his grandsire ruled.” Amlawdd
sublimely picked meat from between his teeth.
Spluttering protest Ambrosius rose indignant and angry to his feet.
“Vortigern?” he bellowed. “Christ and all the holy saints! You would return
us to that era of heretical darkness? For all Arthur’s faults, for all his petty
annoyances and irritations, he has taken better care of this land than ever that
poxed tyrant Vortigern did!” He took a breath, blustered on, “We have peace.
Prosperity and trade are again rising, there is law and order in our towns…”
“I merely meant,” Amlawdd brusquely interrupted the tirade, “that Cerdic
wishes to be king by right of inheritance. Bear in mind he could secure us a
much stronger peace, for he can dominate the English as no other British-born
could.” Added with a sneer, “Not even Arthur.”
“And you know all this?” Ambrosius barked. “How? Have you spoken with
Cerdic? By Christ, if Arthur hears of this!”
Lifting his buttocks to ease the discomfort of flatulence, Amlawdd passed wind,
making the action sufficient answer to the threat. “Things wil travel along one road
or the other,” he said. “One day, Cerdic will have sufficient men to fight Arthur.
The Pendragon is three and forty, Cerdic a much younger man, he will undoubt-
edly win. I see it as prudent to show favour to the fortunate now, rather than later.
When it may be,” Amlawdd’s black-toothed smile was obscene, “too late.”
The horror of what he was suggesting made the blood run cold through
Ambrosius’s body. As he reseated himself, he felt chill, his stomach, his guts,
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 6 9
turning uncomfortably. Amlawdd was suggesting a treaty of alliance with the
Saxons! By God’s grace and truth, was proposing that good, honest, sensible
men declare for Cerdic! He swallowed vomit, felt the pain of the flux twisting
in his bowels.
Amlawdd belched, stood, stretched arrogantly, drawing attention to the
muscles in his arms, his strength. “Well, it was a tiring day, I’ll be away to my
bed, my men ought have found a whore of some sort to be warming it for me
by now. Think about it Ambrosius. We put Cerdic as supreme over Britain,
and end all possibility of hostility. Or we look to having a bastard whelp, born
of the father’s own sister.” He had strolled to the door, was buckling his sword
and baldric into place. Ambrosius’s complexion had paled.
“The boy Medraut is here in your school, is he not?” Amlawdd said. “Arthur
bedded his own half-sister to get him. Did you not know? Ah, I see you did not.”
Sitting, arms flopped, head tipped forward, mouth slight open, unbelieving,
incredulous, Ambrosius attempted to digest what he was hearing. What evilness
was being spoken in the tranquillity of his private quarters? What foul, devil-
spawn had been set loose in Ambrosium? In Britain?
“It is true. The mother told me herself.” Amlawdd opened the door, admit-
ting the subdued night noises that drifted from the settlement beyond the
outer walls of Ambrosius’s private compound. Men, the worse for drink, dogs
barking, a young woman’s suggestive laugh, reminding him of Morgaine, a
delicious woman! Regrettably, she had moved on, away from her hut by the
causeway so closely convenient to Amlawdd’s stronghold. But then, she was
not so far away, was more suitably placed for contact with traders—Saxon
traders. Her whoring set so usefully near the busy, winding road to the lead
mines. He might well take that route home.
The bell hung beside the monastery chapel on the far side of the compound
tolled its calling to Compline.
“There’s your God wanting you, Ambrosius. I’ll be away to the more
enticing settlement. Of course, incest would not worry Arthur; he is a heathen,
so is she for that matter. Neither of them care who, or what, they rut with.
The brat could cause a problem though, do you not think? Do we really want
such a creature as our king?” Amlawdd tapped his finger against the side of
his nose. “Think on it. I am going with Cerdic; at least he was born from a
good Christian woman’s slit, not spawned on the lust of a devil’s ride. I would
rather not risk having my place in God’s kingdom tainted.” Amlawdd lifted his
eyebrows, emphasising his point, left the room.
4 7 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Ambrosius could hear the mocking, the scornful ridicule that crept and slith-
ered, black and soiled beneath the surface of the laugh that was not quite audible
on Amlawdd’s tongue. Amlawdd. Confessed as a traitor! How many, like him,
were tempted to turn to Cerdic? Cerdic, who ran like a rogue wolf with the
Saex. Cerdic who had hacked his mother, a good Christian woman, to pieces
with an axe. Cerdic, son of Arthur—and Medraut, the other son. Oh God in
His wisdom, how many knew of this, this sickening thing about the boy?
Ambrosius fell forward to his knees, his lips mumbling in fervent, desperate
prayer. What to do! What to do? He vomited, the muck spewing onto the
mosaic flooring, the mess staining the benign face of God, peering upward from
the pattern of the tiled picture.
Fourteen
There was another boy who could be a valid contender for the
royal torque when Arthur was gone. From the same family as Arthur,
claiming right of succession from a past Emperor of Rome. Aurelius Caninus.
Ambrosius’s grandson. How useful that he, too, was a pupil of Ambrosium.
Useful for Amlawdd’s purpose of setting his eggs in different baskets.
For the immediate, it was Medraut who had to be dealt with. Medraut, for
all his incestuous begetting, could become a problem in future years. Only the
devout, the fanatical followers of this Christian God, would trouble themselves
about the pedantics of kindred between a man and a woman’s intimate relation-
ship. Of course it was not encouraged, inbreeding was not a way to produce
healthy sons, but then, it did ensure a purity of blood line. There was many a petty
king or chieftain who had secured a line of inheritance through coupling with his
own sister or daughter—men who would not oppose Medraut inheriting from
his father for this reason alone. Ambrosius was such a dour perfectionist. You
would always find flaws in man, especially where women were concerned. Did
Ambrosius think old Caw to have been such a pure Christian? Hah! Not all those
sons and daughters were born to legitimate wives or taken whores. Amlawdd
knew of at least four children born to Caw on his own daughters. Cywyllog, that
pinched-faced girl he had seen on arriving yester-afternoon, being one of them.
Caninus? If Medraut were out the way Caninus could become king once
Arthur was dead. But who would back him? He might be properly born out
of a coupling between legally vowed husband and wife—but who would trust
the issue of a misshapen hag and a lame-legged father? There would be too
many whispering speculation as to where the unseen twisting and warping
would fall in the son. In the sanity? Or the spreading of his seed? Few would
readily follow Caninus without someone to urge his acceptability, someone to
guide him, advise him. Amlawdd would never be accepted as king, but the title
Regent sat well in his mind.
4 7 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
It was not by chance that he found the boy the next morning. Ambrosius was
ill, confined to his bed. It was natural Amlawdd would seek out his grandson,
express his concern for the other grandsire’s health.
In his eighth year, Caninus was a tall, lithe boy. Brown-haired, hawk-eyed,
carrying the trait of the Pendragon kin, the long, slightly overlarge nose. Easy
to draw the boy aside, engage in conversation. And the main thrust behind
its purpose falling like meat served onto a platter. Medraut came from the
scriptorium, head down, a scroll clutched between his hands as he trotted in
the direction of the latrines.
But this was too simple! Amlawdd easily recognised the wrinkle of Caninus’s
nose, the glint of sneered malice. “The Pendragon’s son,” Amlawdd vaguely
indicated the lad as he turned a corner, disappeared. “I hear he is a most prom-
ising pupil.”
“He is a bastard whelp, with the impotent balls of a mule.”
“You do not much care for him then?”
Caninus guffawed. “About as much as a pig cares for the slaughterer’s knife.”
For a while Amlawdd altered the line of conversation, directing talk to
hunting, fighting, things that would be of interest to a boy. Said, so casually,
“You seem the better lad, the more capable; it is a shame Medraut has prece-
dence over you. Were he not to survive into manhood, of course, it would be
you to become the next king.”
So easy done! Light came into the widening of the boy’s eyes, Amlawdd
could almost see the thoughts whirling in his brain. King! Power. Respect.
Amlawdd lightly patted the boy on the shoulder. “When you grow a little
older, I would think about clearing the dead wood from your path, lad, were
I you.”
Fifteen
The new dwelling place Amlawdd had suggested she move to suited
Morgaine well. This bothy was larger and more comfortable than the
damp hovel that had stood beside the marshland causeway. For a bed, she had
piled dried bracken and mosses scattered with sweet smelling herbs and covered
by a thick, soft-woven blanket. There was a stool, a wooden chest for her
few clothes, cooking pots and utensils, a selection of wooden bowls, and two
fine-made plates of Roman Samian ware. Both had chipped rims, but were
serviceable enough. The wattle-built bothy was her public place, where she
would sit and watch or dream when alone, and where her visitors came. They
were frequent, the men who came to her, men who travelled the road to and
from the lead mines. And the complex of caves that tunnelled deep into the
White Hills behind were ideal for her private needs. At first, she had avoided
the leer of the cave opening, going only to draw water from the river that
rushed from the dark, gaping mouth, but eventually she had plucked courage
to take up a lamp and duck into the darkness, using the rush of the river as her
pathway guide. Several times she had gone into the darkness since then, using
her tallow candles, thrilled yet scared by the crowding of the weight of rock
above her, the mystery and magic of this deep, dark world. It was surprisingly
warm and dry further in, once past the first cave with its mosses and lichens.
She found things on the dry floor: pots, tools, animal bones. People had lived
in here. For how long, and when, she did not know. And then she had found
the underground lake, dark and mysterious, lapping against a small beach. She
swam there regularly, delighting in its deepness and the cold bite that set her
skin crackling and glowing as she rubbed herself dry after. It amused her that
once again, even if only in secret, she was the Lady by the Lake.
These inner sanctuaries provided her privacy, and the pockets of eerie shadow
gave her mystery and concealment to those who came visiting. There were the
formations of rock that stabbed down from the ceiling or roared up from the
4 7 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
limestone floor—places to silently hide behind and between should she not
wish to entertain a guest; places of darkness from where she could listen or
watch, unnoticed, unknown.
The men would come to the opening, peer into the darkness, call out, wait
a while then shrug and go. It was good to have their attention or not, as she
chose. Those she did lay with were generous with their gifts of payment of
grain or meat or fowl. Eggs, cheeses, bread, fish. A woollen cloak, an ivory
comb. Morgaine and her reputation, once she had settled herself as Lady of the
White Hills, rapidly spread along the road from the lead mines to the coast. She
became the enchantress, the woman who could pleasure a man and cure all ills,
the faery woman who came up from the Underworld into the land of mortals.
Once, soon after she had come to the caves, a man had not turned directly