Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
to blood their blades, answered him. They sought adventure, manhood, and
a chance to swagger their achievement before the maids. Glory would not be
found behind the ox and plough.
Initially, it was planned well. Vitolinus had realised, perhaps belated, and
on Cille’s advice, that he had to work with others of his kind to gain what he
wanted. His uncle, Aesc, would not take part in the foolery of young men—yet
neither would he condemn nor put firm end to it. A youth’s blood ran with the
urge to prove his brave hearted strength by the spilling of blood on the field of
battle. So it was with the male of whatever species. Who were the older and
the wiser to interfere?
Fortunate for Vitolinus, another Saxon had the cry of the battle-blood in
his heart. The South Saxon, Aelle, was waiting for his chance to extend his
borders, waiting patiently to claw for himself more than those few, small,
scattered settlements that he held along the southeastern coast. And Vitolinus
wanted to strike at Ambrosius. Despite their earlier differences, it became an
easy matter for the two to secretly put aside judgmental words, call truce, and
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 1 9 3
negotiate their plan through the long winter. The one with his battle-scars and
experience and with bold, firm-muscled sons; the other eager, sharp.
The Shore Fort of Anderida, slightly eastward of the island of Vectis, was a
bastion of dogged Romanised perseverance. An irritating itch that lay beyond
the stretch of Aelle’s finger reach. It would fall to him one day, but that day
seemed too distant along the horizon. He wanted it destroyed, needed it gone.
With no Anderida to heckle his warriors, to burn his steadings, slaughter
his cattle, he could concentrate on dominating this stretch of the southern
coast, could build on his strength and achieve his aim, his hope. Gain power,
credence, and wealth. None could be his while British Anderida stood, defiant
at the corner of the land Aelle intended to make solely his.
When more ships came, he could do it; when many more men carried arms
beneath his banner, he could rid himself of the pestilence that fortress entailed.
Vitolinus was a boy, a piddling whelp, but he was easy to manipulate. A setting
aside of previous misunderstandings, a few crooned suggestions, some flattering
praise—the occasional, idly slipped-in propositions—and he was trapped like an
eel! However uneasy, such a temporary alliance could form a mutual benefit for
two ambitious men. Aelle had no concern whether Vitolinus succeeded against
Ambrosius. If not, the Governor of Britain would last well enough for Aelle
to fight on another day. Once the coast was secured as the Saxon’s own, then
Aelle—or his sons—could see to him. If Vitolinus was, by some unexpected
hand of help from the gods, successful—
ja
, it could now prove useful to Aelle
to be united, for a while, with the half-bred whelp, Vitolinus.
The plan was simple enough. Using two of his uncle’s long ships, Vitolinus
sailed into the harbour at Anderida two days before the spring month
ended, fire-arrowing the craft moored there, and attacking the sea ward wall.
Simultaneously, Aelle and his men marched on the western side of the fortress,
battered at the gateway beneath the spanning arch of the main entrance, and
scaled the massive stone walls that soared high beyond the twenty feet. The
Pendragon had seen well to his coastal and border forts, but neglect and rot
had set in rapidly once his demand of discipline and authority had wavered.
Undermanned, underequipped, attacked on both sides together, the place
fell—the fight valiant but brief. Within the passing of two hours, the might of
what once had been a proud Roman fortress was ended, its defenders dragged,
some wounded, still alive, to burn in the victory fires piled high with gathered
timber and dead bracken. An inglorious end to such a noble place.
Aelle was well satisfied. He had won his eastern boundary. And Vitolinus,
1 9 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
cheering and laughing with the South Saxons, had a foothold in the south, from
where he could march, undetected, unexpected, into firm-held British territory.
He would move north, taking Ambrosius’s defence from the south. A few
settlements burnt along the way, but the march must move swiftly, no time to
delay, to tarry. Later, they could return and leisurely settle accrued accounts.
For another reason, then, had Vitolinus so wanted to approach the British
territories from the south. After settling with Ambrosius, he would march on
Venta Bulgarium. Would visit his murder-minded sister, Winifred.
Thirteen
Unlike Arthur, Ambrosius had few cavalry. He fought in his own
style, with ranked, disciplined infantry. He had ensured Vitolinus had
been watched through most the winter—the shabby steading of the warrior
Cille was no difficult place to observe, with its tumbled dwelling-place, poorly
tended fences, and encroaching woodland. But Ambrosius’s spies were paid
men, not loyal comrades of the Artoriani. Paid men worked only as well as
the gold clinked in their waist pouch. And when rain fell heavy or a cold wind
blew, they were inclined to prefer huddling around the warmth of a camp-fire
rather than stand in the shadows watching the closed door of a small, rough-
made, Saxon dwelling-place.
Cille was an ageing man. There would be no more fighting for him this side
of the Otherworld, but though his joints were stiff and cramped, his mind was
active, his senses alert. He knew well enough that Ambrosius’s poor excuse for
spies were watching him and the lad. Knew when to send Vitolinus out, secret,
under cover of darkness and rain-scudding clouds.
When word came that Vitolinus was gathering the young warriors to Cille’s
hearth, Ambrosius made ready. There would be a fight, that was certain—and
he greeted the prospect with enthusiasm, now that it was upon him. One
victory, one good, well-fought victory, and he would gain the respect, the
kudos, that he needed to put the memory of Arthur aside.
Inadequately informed, he had not calculated the unexpected. Unable to move
as swiftly and precise as the Artoriani had, the British found little time to move
into a suitable position, so unexpected and unpredicted was Vitolinus’s coming
at them from the southward. A few, a very few, of Arthur’s men had survived
the massacre in Gaul and had struggled homeward. Four complete turmae of
cavalry, one hundred and twenty men of the old Artoriani, were encompassed
now into an effective cavalry wing of the Ambrosiani. Experienced, battle-
hardened men who knew what it was to face a rampaging enemy, who knew
1 9 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
how to deal with a mewling cub which had not yet learnt what it was to face
the spilling of blood in battle.
There were a few who whispered, of course, that Ambrosius had never taken
the responsibility to lead men into battle. He had fought himself, once, with
Arthur in the north, but he was a man of book-learning, not raw experience.
He knew the theory of how a battle ought be deployed, knew the tactics and
logistics of war, and below his authority he had those experienced officers,
men like Bedwyr and old Mabon who had fought beneath Arthur’s command.
Experience counted for much, but so too did a cool head and a determination
to prove capability. Ambrosius would show that he was as good as ever his
elder brother or younger nephew had been! Vitolinus, the son of Vortigern and
that Saxon whore-witch Rowena, was a stabbing thorn that needed plucking.
Chance to achieve both aims may not come again for Ambrosius.
It was a shabby, shambling affair, the fight, when it began. A young man no
more than a boy with an arrogance the width of the Tamesis estuary, leading
an ill-prepared rabble—the young Saxon Cantii warriors, for all their numbers
of several hundred and their surprise appearance from the south, could never
boast the title of army. And these, arrayed against a man who followed the rules
of war as written by the book. A man who had taken no account of the bloody
mess that was the reality of battle.
It was not a battle, this ill-thought, ill-timed yearning for a fight, that
happened at the place called Guoloph, along the Roman road northwest of
Venta Bulgarium. It was not how the scribes had written the glories of battle
to be. This was a bloodied scramble, a muddle of snarled oaths and wounding
blades, of hand-to-hand mauling and killing. Feet kicking, teeth biting, fists
punching. When the rain, threatening for most the morning, finally dropped
from grey, hard-packed clouds, and the ground beneath their feet turned treach-
erous from churned mud and spilt blood, the two sides fell apart, breathing
hard, growling, and cursing, teeth bared, hackles high. Dogs squabbling over
the same mouldering bone.
Only later did men give it the grand title of battle. Later, when, in retro-
spect, British harpers told of Ambrosius’s first-led fight, and English story-tellers
recounted the inglorious ending of Vitolinus.
Fourteen
Winifred had not dared admit, even to herself, the extent of her
fear when first she heard that her brother was marching up through the
forests of the south, up from the coast, swinging out along the Roman road
heading for a battle with Ambrosius. He had come too close to her wealthy
steading outside Venta Bulgarium—and the fear ran high through all those who
dwelt on her land. Many knew there was no love between brother and sister,
as many could too readily make guess at the prospect should Vitolinus take the
victory over the British.
Winifred’s fear had rapidly turned to anger when word came, back along that
same Roman road, that the fighting was over. The British—Ambrosius—had
won. The anger swelled, now that she was safe; her brother, that toad-faced,
poxed, weed-stunted, shrub should dare,
dare
, to threaten her…indirectly maybe,
but she knew well her danger had the outcome at Guoloph proved different.
The anger became scathing derision when, through the storm of rain and
thunder that had persisted across the night and into the next day, a few tattered,
blood-smeared Saxons came stumbling into her steading. Breath-panting,
sweat-pocked, they huddled behind a young man, face bruised, arm torn and
bleeding. The man they had, but yesterdawn, hailed as a son of Woden.
The torn and battered young man fell to his knees before the steps of Winifred’s
grand Mead Hall, and with tear-impassioned voice, begged for her aid. Vitolinus
knelt before his elder sister, hands clenched, begging her protection.
“My army is scattered or slaughtered,” he sobbed. “They were untried and
untested boys, yet the British hacked them to pieces. Where was the mercy
your Christian kind so often extol?” Pleading, he looked into his sister’s blank,
hardened face. “Ambrosius will be hard at my heel,” he stammered. “He will
string me up by my balls for this.” He choked, the full rein of cowardliness
after failure unleashed. “Talk with him, Winifred! He will listen to you. Offer
anything. Save me, for the love of our lady mother, I beg you!”
1 9 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Winifred stood on the top step of her Hall, her cloak held tight around her
throat against the damp chill of the evening. A pathetic creature, her brother.
Her father, too, beneath his mask of greed for power, had been naught but a
bullying coward. At least, for all his faults, Arthur had never been one to plead
or beg.
“For our mother?” she sneered, answering him. “My mother once pushed
me back into the flood-waters of Caer Gloui, would have let me drown—unless
the Pendragon had caught me, and then I would have hanged. Why did she do
this, to her only daughter?” She narrowed her eyes, looked with loathing at the
thing that ought to be a man, grovelling before her in the mud. “Why? So that
she could save you, a snivelling, cheating heap of cow-dung.”
She descended the steps regally, her cloak swishing behind her. She was not
alone, for those of the Hall were gathered in the door-place, watching; others
from the steading were grouped at a discreet distance behind the shabby bunch
of defeated young men.
Winifred reached the last step. Whimpering, Vitolinus crawled to her,
fastened his hands to her ankles.
“Come, brother,” she said, her voice less harsh, less judging. “Things be not
so bad. As you rightly say, I have influence with my lord Ambrosius.”
A hesitant smile flickered over Vitolinus’s face. He began to rise, tentative,
embraced his sister for her generous forgiveness. The dagger went into his
stomach easily, but she twisted the blade, pushing it in deeper, her arm holding
him around the neck, choking off his breath and voice.
Killed in such a manner, it took Vitolinus a while to die.
One death Winifred would openly own to. No regrets for the way it was