Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
the participants rowdier.
Medraut—although he was half-brother—did not warrant a seat at Cerdic’s
5 8 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
table among the honoured lords and thegns. He was seated lower down: not,
for him, an honourable position, but Medraut did not complain—indeed, the
further from his brother, the better.
The two hated each other with a distaste as strong as rancid cheese, yet
Cerdic saw the wisdom of keeping eye on the one who could oppose him,
and Medraut had no choice but to stay, although there were times when the
temptation to walk out the stronghold gate and not return were often great.
He had settled well among the fighting men, learning to disregard their lewd
humour and rough ways. He was not treated unkindly or made to look the fool.
No man would openly insult the brother of their lord, even if that lord made
such things regular habit. Cerdic made Medraut’s life into misery whenever
the two came into close contact—which was rarely, as Medraut saw to it that
where his brother was, he was not. Until a Feast was called.
Feasting highlighted Medraut’s harboured resentments. Cerdic had for himself
a fine Hall, retainers, loyal men, and a pleasant woman to serve the wine, to share
his bed. Cerdic had the courage to decide his own law, his own fate. What had
Medraut to his name? A mother who had been a notorious whore, who had
produced him through the sin of incest, and a father who now despised him.
They were bellowing laughter at the high table, the boom of merriment
hitting the smoke-swirled rafters with the thunder of a thrown boulder. Cerdic,
with Cynric his son sitting aside his right hand; Cerdic’s woman, his wife, to
his left. A small, demure lady who rarely spoke, rarely lifted her eyes. There
was no reason to believe Cerdic treated her cruelly, yet there was no show of
love between them either. She had borne him no children. Cynric himself had
three daughters by different women—and one in the belly of his taken wife.
They were sweet little girls, with dimpled smiles and flaxen hair, welcomed at
Cerdicesora as all Saxon men welcomed their offspring, whether legitimate or
no. Another bellow, more laughter. Cerdic’s wife rose to bring the wine again
to the men of the three highest tables. Medraut, sitting at the far end of a bench,
was one of the last for her to serve.
“See,” Cerdic roared, wine dribbling from his lips, “my wife pours wine for
the whore-son bastard! The boy who poked his thumb at the great Pendragon,
our father!” Cerdic was well into his drink, the gluttony of over indulgence
almost a prerequisite for the rules of enjoyment. He belched, pointed with
unsteady hand at Medraut.
“On your feet, boy, let us all look at you so we might recognise a traitor
when we see one!”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 8 1
No use Medraut protesting, for that would only enrage his half-brother, and
Cerdic in a temper was an ugly experience. Already Medraut bore scars on his
shoulders from where Cerdic had ordered him a beating for defiance. On his
feet, Medraut judiciously kept his head lowered, schooled the anger from his
reddened face. The taunts would continue a while until Cerdic found another
unfortunate to condemn, or a loyal friend to praise.
“Before you,” Cerdic’s voice boomed, “stands a dog turd who slithered from
the womb of a mare who could be ridden by any who fancied scratching at the
itch on his piece. She had breasts like a cow’s udder and a sex as open as the sky
in summer. I know, for I rode her often—and I rode her at the gallop, no fancy
trotting and prancing for me!”
Enduring the insults, Medraut could feel his heart beating faster, the pump of
his veins thudding. He would insult Arthur next. As always. It came.
Cerdic had stumbled to his feet, was waving his tankard of wine around as
if it were a banner. “My father,” he sneered, “has not the stamina I possess.
He hides behind the woman who is his whore-wife—the bitch who takes his
cousin to her bed. Why? Because, so I have heard, he prefers the company of his
men!” They all jeered, the entire Hall mocking and contemptuous, ridiculing
the Pendragon. “I have reason to believe,” Cerdic shouted, regaining attention,
“I am the only true son born from him. My mother was a virtuous woman, a
noble, wise lady.”
Aye
, Medraut thought to himself,
was that why you so brutally killed her?
“The others, they were not of his seed—and neither are you!”
Appalled at the sudden thrust of venom, Medraut dodged, as Cerdic threw
the tankard at him. It caught his shoulder, tumbled to the floor. “Are you
then,” Cerdic screamed, “an impostor? Eating at my table, begging warmth
from my fire under the pretence of being a brother?”
“No, Lord!” Medraut countered hurriedly, “I come to fight with you against
the man who treated me with as much wrong as he did you!”
“Fight? You, a snivelling boy, fight?” Cerdic put his fists to his waist, threw
back his head and howled derision, the Hall echoing his mockery.
“I am three and twenty!” Medraut protested hotly, this insult one too many.
“Older than the boy who calls himself your son!”
The skin on Cerdic’s face became blotched, patched red and white, the
loose jowls beneath his chin quivering. “How dare you!” He swung around
from behind the table, striding the distance between himself and Medraut, took
him up by the collar as if he were a recalcitrant pup, and shook him. Almost,
5 8 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Medraut’s teeth and bones rattled. As if he were something unpleasant, Cerdic
abruptly dropped him; Medraut crumpled to the floor, winded, more than a
little frightened. What had he said, for God’s sake? He had only meant he was
of an age more fitting to fight than Cynric. To his relief, there came no blows
or kicks. Instead, Cerdic hauled him upright, held him painfully by the throat,
his fingers squeezing and bruising his windpipe. Medraut, choking, gasping for
air, tried to pluck at Cerdic’s grip.
“Do I want your poxed presence tainting the glory of my proud men?” Cerdic
was shouting, his eyes pig small, cheeks puffed. “How do I know the stench of
a traitor does not cling to your foul breath? You? A snivelling whore-son against
that bastard, my father? Ah no, you will not fight with us come the next waning
moon, you are not worthy to be among those who call themselves Cerdicingas!”
Cerdic let go, pushing Medraut into the arms of a man standing close by. “Get
him from my sight!” Cerdic roared, his wrath suffused with contempt. “Throw
him to the sea, let the Mer people feed on his miserable guts!”
Medraut could not protest, make an attempted plea for forgiveness, for
his throat was aching, tight, as he tried to swallow. The pain became almost
unbearable—but anyway, did he want clemency?
Rough hands took him by the collar, the shoulder, the elbow, dragged him
from the Hall, accompanied by ribald, drunken laughter, the finger of disdain
and derision at his fall from grace, pointing firmly and unforgiving. Across the
night-dark courtyard lit with the flare of smoking braziers and torches, they
took him. Loud voices hailing for the small water-gate to be opened. They
marched him through, manhandled him along the echoing wooden walkway
of the wharves, and tossed him over the edge into the black coldness of the sea.
Cynric was the only one to remain seated at the high table. He watched his
father’s torrent of rage, knowing it to be unjustified, felt regret at Medraut’s
humiliation. Such was not the way to treat a man who had come to offer
his sword. Even if the offering was riddled with suspicious patterning. Cynric
would have won Medraut over, would have showered him with gifts and good
feeling, made him one with the family. How much more that would have hurt
the Pendragon—the knowing another son had full and whole-hearted turned
against you?
But too many men pledged loyalty to Cerdic through the colours of fear.
Fear of his anger, fear of being left with nothing after the day of fighting finally
came. His father was too demanding, too harsh. Regrettable, but many a man
would not miss his going when the Reaper of Death came for him. For all that,
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 8 3
all those in this Hall would be with him when the battle came, with him to the
death. That was the way of the Saxon.
He would miss Medraut. They had held some good conversations together,
discussing the differences of religion and culture between Briton and Englishman.
Had talked of Arthur, the Pendragon. Cynric would have liked to have met
him, his grandsire, under better circumstances: under conditions other than
those of hostility, for although he would never dare breath word to his father,
Cynric admired Arthur. A good leader, an excellent military strategist, and—
even Medraut had admitted this—with exception of the one son, Cerdic, a
good father.
With the exception of Cerdic? If he, Cynric, was to examine his heart for
the truth, he would find the admission that he intensely disliked his own father.
And if so, then why could a father not dislike a son?
Forty-Seven
May 489
The coldness brought Medraut to his senses, although the pain in
his throat caught alight with the rush of salt-water entering his mouth
and nose. He could swim, but the weight of his boots dragged his legs and
the leather of his tunic hampered movement. The tide was on the ebb, with
the current already strengthening. He would need grab hold some solid object
soon, or be swept out into the eddies of the channel. He forced his arms into
a few pathetic strokes, groping blindly. Everything was dark, the blackness of a
moonless, heavily clouded night. Rain was falling, a soft drizzle.
As each wave lifted and tossed him, he could hear the voice of the wind and
a soporific, swishing, rhythmic sound; dull, repeated, distant. It seemed a while
that he had been in the water, was probably only a few minutes. Once, to his
left, he saw the darker shapes of the wharves and moored ships; beyond those
would be the Hall, people. The current pulled him further away, outward
along the open desertion of the coast.
Something bumped against his shoulders, something hard and unforgiving.
He cried out. What now? Had they come to hit him? To finish him off? He
thrust out with his arm, knocked against a cask, bobbing on the tide. His breath
sobbing, Medraut pulled it to him, leant his arms and chest over it, the effort of
heaving himself partially out of the water draining the last particle of strength.
His vision swayed, the roar of the sea increased in his ears and a blackness
darker than the night leered into his numbing mind and body. If it were not
for that empty, floating cask, he would have drowned, would have sunk into
the oblivion of the sea.
For what seemed a long while he drifted there, aimless, carried by the disin-
terested tidal pull. Dark, so dark, with no light, no sound, save for the constant
movement of the sea and the rhythmic pulse somewhere, way ahead. Had there
been the bathing light of the moon he might have been able to see how far he
had drifted, whether it was worth trying to swim, to save himself. But there was
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 8 5
nothing, only darkness. And why would he care to live? What was there to live
for? Better to close his eyes, let the sea have him.
No moon. When would the moon return? Soon. Full moon. His mind was
slurring, tiring with the cold, numb ache of his limbs. There was something he
had heard about the moon. Something Cerdic had said, and Medraut snapped
his eyes open, alert, awake. To march at the waning moon. Cerdic intended to
march into Arthur’s lands, to fight within the month.
The next thought tumbled after the first. Did Arthur know? Was the
Pendragon aware of the number of men Cerdic had beneath his banner now?
Of the strength, the determination of those who called themselves Cerdicingas,
the People of Cerdic?
And then the sound registered. The familiarity of it jerked his senses, shouted
at his shattered will to survive. He lifted his head, saw, not too far away, the
shore resting darker than the pale gleam of the sea, the wide expanse of night
sky. Recognised the sound of the sea caressing the reeds. For a moment, as he
attempted to propel himself forward, he found himself in a new danger, for the
energy of the tide swept him back, then hurled him forward, the waves strong,
reluctant to release him from their snare. He had to make land, had to get
himself from this current, else he would be swept out into nothingness. With
one hand he paddled forward, determined, persistent. His feet touched on the
muddied ooze of sand, scraped shingle. He had made it.
Arthur must already know of Cerdic’s movements. But what if he did not?
Forty-Eight
Good intentions remain good while in the sublime regions of the