Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
raised from childhood. “Your father would see you hanged when he returns.”
“Then why not have an end to me now?” Medraut had asked, not under-
standing this seeming benevolence.
And there was so much grief in her voice as she had answered, that Medraut had
almost wept for shame. “Because,” she had said, “already your father has lost three
sons to the darkness of death, another to the maliciousness of hatred and treachery.
I would not have him be responsible for the loss of the fifth, and last, of his sons.”
He knew then, as he walked down the cobbled lane from the Caer, with no
knowing of where he was to go, he ought to take his own life. Open his veins
5 7 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
with his dagger, drown himself in the river, obtain poison; but he could not, he
had not the courage even for that.
But was this exile the better choice? This living death? As he ambled through
the busy streets of Cerdicesora, he again wondered, as he had so many times
these past months.
Cerdicesora. A wealthy settlement, if first impressions were ought to go by.
The market stalls well laden, the children clothed, fed; the women bonny. The
two taverns he passed were full, ale flowing plentiful from amphorae and jugs,
the smell of hot pies and stews enticing. He would stop soon, fill his belly,
quench his thirst, but first he need find Stefan, in the street of the silversmiths.
Stefan had been recommended him as a buyer and as a useful contact, for
Stefan was silversmith to the ealdorman, Cerdic. Medraut asked directions,
found him in the street of the silversmiths, over to the east of the town.
“These pieces look familiar crafted,” Stefan remarked, his myopic eyes
squinting suspiciously at the wealas man, the foreigner, sitting opposite him on
the far side of his smith’s bench. “They are, I think, not from your hands?”
“Oh I could not work as fine as that!” Medraut admitted with an amiable
smile. “I bought them off a man who cannot make the journey to Cerdicesora
this season.”
The old silversmith nodded, again held the piece in his hand close for inspec-
tion. He allowed no expression onto his face, set the buckle down, picked up
the next item, an exquisite silver ring, emblazoned with the device of a griffin.
He scratched at the nape of his neck, rubbed his nose, sniffed a few times.
Coughed. “If you bought these pieces,” the old man said, “you’d be wanting
to make a profit.”
Medraut was leaning on his elbow, chin cupped between his fingers and
thumb, waiting patient and quiet throughout. He removed his hand in a brief
gesture of agreement.
The smith set the ring down, pushed the collection of pieces across the
bench, shaking his head. “I’ll not pay more than they are worth. Sorry, lad.”
Slowly, Medraut straightened his back, laced his fingers, as if considering.
He moved the pile back towards the smith. “I ask for no higher payment. All I
want for profit is something in kind.”
Stefan pursed his lips. There was some good silver amongst the things before
him. The three plate dishes in particular would fetch a nice amount, mayhap
from Lord Cerdic himself. “And what kind of a something would that be
then?” He asked.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 7 5
For the third time Medraut almost abandoned his plan. This was madness,
coming here—what in the name of God was he doing? Get up, go home!
Hah, he had no home! He had nothing, save the clothes he stood in and the
stained name of a traitor. His wife, that first dawn after the treachery of Caer
Cadan, had taken her belongings—aye, and his—and fled north, back to the
hills around Caer Rhuthun, had entombed herself in a women’s holy house
rather than be linked to the stench of the name Medraut. His father refused to
think of him as son, and Archfedd, his half-sister, had refused to see him. He
had gone to her to explain, to set his case, to try to tell someone he had been so
grievously mistaken, that he was a fool and ashamed. But Archfedd had ordered
him tossed beyond the gates of Caer Morfa as if he were a begging peasant. He
had nothing and no one. The apology he so wanted to give to his father and
Gwenhwyfar must hang unuttered, unpenanced. There was only this one thing
left him.
“I wish to be admitted into the Ealdorman’s Hall. To speak personally with
Lord Cerdic.”
The smith laughed, a wheezing, old man’s chuckle which crackled in his
lungs. “And you want me to see it so?” He shook his head, his eyes wrinkling
with mirth. “You wealas people are all fools! I have long known it!”
Close to losing his nerve, Medraut fought the instinct to bundle his wares
and bolt for the door at the front of this dark little smith’s bothy.
Stefan was sucking at a loose tooth. “How do I know you are not harbouring
plans to murder him?” He snapped, his amiability vanishing. “I would not have
blood on my hands because of you!”
Medraut stretched his right hand across the bench. Save for one ring, he
wore no adornment, no ornate rings, no arm-bands, though there were the
lighter marks against his skin where such things had rested. The one ring was
a battered gold thing. “This,” he said, “was given to my mother by my father,
from before the time of my birthing. It is all I now have of him.” He withdrew
his hand, rubbed his left thumb affectionately over it. “I have no honour of my
own left to me, but on my father’s honour.” He lifted his head, gazed earnestly
at the smith, “I do not come to murder Cerdic.”
He had thought of it. Oh, many nights he had lain, planning ways of putting
an end to the whore-son. But what purpose would it serve? He would need kill
the son also, Cynric, who was ten and eight, a man grown, and with a young
wife already swelling with child. She, too, would need ending, to ensure the
line was finished. Killing outside of battle was against God’s law. If Cerdic was
5 7 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
to die, then it must be done openly, where Arthur alone could take the victory
from it. A knife wielded secret in the dark would not solve this thing.
“I have nothing,” Medraut admitted openly, “only these few pieces of silver
to sell. My father has cast me from him, my sister shuns me. My own people,
the British, spit in my face. What have I left, but to find for myself a new home,
a new people?” He shrugged, resigned to his fate. “Cerdic seeks men to fight
in his name. He gives them reward of gold and silver, spears and shields, food
in their bellies, his Mead Hall to lay under, and a woman to lay with. I have
none of this from the British. I wish to speak with Cerdic, for I wish to join
with him.”
Forty-Five
April 489
Walking down the cobbled lane running steeply up through the
heights of the ramparts, Gwenhwyfar could see Arthur on the far
side of the nearest paddock. There were a few foals already, the early born,
long-legged, and gangling, dancing beside their fat-bellied dams. The sun
was warm this day, the new-hatched midges bothersome, with the mares’
tales constantly swishing. Arthur had stopped to talk to one of the foals, a
handsome dark-coated colt—he would turn grey as he grew older, would
make a fine height if the length of leg was anything to go by. Gwenhwyfar
smiled as she watched Arthur offer the colt a crust of stale bread. He kept his
waist pouch full of morsels this time of year for the foals, though he was all
too often saying it spoilt them to offer titbits. He was good with horses, more
patient than with men. You could expect loyalty from a horse, and trust. Not
so with men, sons.
Gwenhwyfar stood, shielding her eyes from the glare of the afternoon sun,
watching as Arthur parted from the foal, walked to the small mound of earth
in the far corner that was only just beginning to grass over. Had she done right
to allow Medraut to run, to disappear into exile? At the time, she thought she
had, was not so certain now.
Britain was at peace. A golden age of content, they were calling it. Aye, even
the fusty, pedantic men of the Council. The English lands, too, were settled
and thriving. Intermarriages were common place, with the two cultures in
certain areas, especially the East Anglian and North Humbrian lands, mutually
blending together. English husband, British wife.
“They will grow stronger than the British one day,” Arthur had once confided
to Gwenhwyfar. “The English are a determined and rugged people.”
He had stopped beside the mound, stood with head bowed. If he mourned
Medraut’s loss, he had not outwardly shown it, though Gwenhwyfar knew the
wounding had speared deep. For Onager, however, Arthur openly grieved.
5 7 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
She resumed walking, but had changed her mind about visiting Rhonwen at
the tavern. Rhonwen’s fifth child was due within this week, with the pregnancy
a difficult one, but Gwenhwyfar could always call on Rhonwen later. Instead,
Gwenhwyfar continued on down the hill, across the rutted lane, and let herself
through the hazel-laced fencing of the foaling paddock. She, too, put out her
hand to the grey foal, his soft, delicate nose whispering, curious, at her hand.
No bread from her. It was Arthur who spoilt the foals.
Without speaking, she threaded her arm around her husband’s waist, a
squeeze of understanding comfort. He, too, said nothing, enfolded her hand
within his. Onager, a bastard of a horse at times, but how often had his courage
and strength saved Arthur? No man among the Artoriani had thought it a
weakness when Arthur had ordered the great horse to be buried here, in this
spot where the sun settled for most the day. They all had special thought for
their horses—for some of the men, more so than their wives. A horse, they
would laugh, does not answer you back!
“Do you think it has truth behind it, this latest rumour?” Arthur asked.
What could she answer? Lie, and know he knew she lied. Reply with the
truth, and drive the spear further? “It is never wise to trust rumour that cannot
be substantiated, but aye, this one I believe.”
Where else would Medraut have gone? There were no other reports of him,
and few loyal to Arthur would have cared to take him in. The ring of truth
behind words whispered on the wind, was too sound to be ignored. Medraut
had been caught into Amlawdd’s net of intrigue, and Amlawdd had trudged
dangerously close to Cerdic’s heel.
Arthur sighed, linked Gwenhwyfar’s arm through his own. Truth or mali-
cious taunting, either way there was little he could do. They would know
about Medraut one way or another, eventually, soon, when Cerdic made his
mind to move the men he had been massing away from the thin line of his held
land, and into Arthur’s territory.
I ought have slit his throat when I had chance
,
Gwenhwyfar thought. “Come,”
Arthur said to her, “I have more productive things to be doing above standing
mewling over a horse’s grave.”
Forty-Six
The Feast, an occasion that symbolised more than the consumption
of food and drink.
Gegadorwiste,
the Assembly for Plenty, a gathering
intended for celebration and social pleasure; for entertainment, the exchange
of news and to pledge homage. To eat and drink at the provider’s table was to
declare openly, for all to see, the agreement of support and a pledge to fight to
the death. For the lord, the leader, to provide more than mere food and wine
or mead, to give an image of plenty, an atmosphere of wealth and harmony,
stability and coherence, in a world where conflict and uncertainty was the
experience of the many. The English Feast.
Medraut hated them, and Cerdic held them often. A great lord had the
need to show his wealth and status; for Cerdic, the extra need to instil into his
followers that he had every intention to become their king one day and that the
day of reckoning was fast approaching.
The summoning horn had blown three hours past—and what a gathering of
fine-dressed, strong men had made way to their benches! The usual shuffling
for position of course, the best place: to be seated at the end of a bench, to be
served first; the most prestigious of all, to be asked to the higher tables where
cushions made the seating more comfortable, and the choicest portions were
served. Some of the usual scuffling by those who considered they ought be
placed higher up the Hall, nearer the lord’s dais; one or two exchanges of
payment for the privilege to be seated at his table.
The Hall had looked splendid, draped with wall hangings threaded with gold
and silver, and all the shields, spears and weapons hung there. The higher tables
laden with gleaming silverware, brimming jugs of ale and wine, baskets of bread
and fruit; servants waiting with silver bowls for the ritual washing of hands, the
ordered effect disintegrating as the hours wore on, as the Hall became hotter,