Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
beating. Both. He knew little of the Saxon stranger, for Eadric had kept his
own council, save that he had no family and had made the journey across the
sea for a reason. But then, had not they all at some time done so?
“You speak,” Cuthwin observed, “as if you had known the Pendragon?”
Eadric did not answer. Instead, he tossed the little brooch, caught it again, and
slid it into his own waist-pouch.
2 7 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“I am thinking,” Eadric said, “it would be good to have a home and a wife.
To raise childer and crops.” Gundrada smiled secretly at him, quietly accepting
his offer. “I will wear Aelle’s badge when the call comes; I will fight against
Ambrosius, although never will I take arms against any loyal to the Pendragon.”
Cuthwin’s brows rose. Ah, he
had
known Arthur then!
“But before I put an edge to my war-blades, and before I take your daughter
to the marriage bed, I have a task to complete. I need to talk in privacy with
the Lady Gwenhwyfar.”
The older Saxon whistled, was eager to ask on what matter, and through what
circumstances, but held his council. It was not for him to pry into another’s
business. “Be that why you were up at the British fortress?”
Eadric nodded. Cuthwin shook his head, bewildered. “Yet they treated you
as they did?”
“What they did to me was dishonourable, but it was not of the Lady’s doing.
What I need to do is also a matter of honour.” He held his hand out for
Gundrada to shyly take. “When I have discharged my promise, I will return,
and we will be wed and raise our children. And hope that perhaps this badge of
Aelle’s will stay untouched in my pouch.”
Thirty-Six
May 472
Bedwyr hated tax collecting. Arthur had, too, he remembered, when
it came to taking tribute from the poor. A necessary evil, he had called it.
Mind, obtaining due tithe from the wealthy had often compensated! All that
blustering and protestation could be a joy to handle. The majority of settlers
and farmers in his jurisdiction of command, up and around Cwm Dolydd,
though, were not wealthy. The harvest last year here, as elsewhere, had been
frugal and the winter exceedingly wet. Not as many as in some years had died
from the cold, but enough had neared starvation. Aye, Bedwyr always hated
the spring collection of taxes. How did you take a farmer’s last surviving sow?
His only sack of grain?
He rode at the head of his turma of men. They all rode with swords loosened
and spears ready. The ox-cart was filling rapidly with payment already collected:
grain, barrels of ale, furs, leathers. Christ God, what was he going to do with the
girl-child? Selling a child into slavery was commonplace, but Bedwyr had no
stomach for it, even if in all probability the child had more chance of surviving
under a master than with her malnourished parents. She could not be more
than five years of age.
For the fourth time the men had to dismount, manhandle the cart through the
mud. The two oxen were militant beasts who saw no reason to work any harder
than they needed. Bedwyr cracked a slight smile; one of the men, he noticed,
was playing with the lass, tickling her under the chin, making her grubby little
face shine with laughter, instead of putting his shoulder to the cart. Bedwyr
turned away. If the others did not mind this shirking, why should he notice?
Another muddy lane led up through thick, hazel hedging to another
steading-place, slightly larger this one. The freeholder had been a favoured
mercenary soldier, given high reward. He had a British wife, one daughter of
marriageable age, three under-age sons; he held four hides of land, which in
the Roman was about sixty acres, one fish-pool, ten sow pigs, one boar, four
2 7 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
oxen, twenty geese, four beehives, and ten goats. Bedwyr knew all this from
his official scroll. He was surprised, therefore, when rounding the last bend in
the lane, to see a young man leaning on his spade, watching the soldiers from
the fortress ride in, taking a rest from digging what was obviously a vegetable
garden. The man nodded; he was a Saxon, unmistakable from the colour of
his hair, manner of dress. The daughter was wed then, the scroll would need
be amended.
Cuthwin, the landholder, came from around the back of the dwelling-place.
Bedwyr caught a glimpse of three impish lads peering curiously after their father,
heads hastily ducking back as the British commander winked at them.
“It’s waiting for you, the tax be by the gate. Grain and furs. The pig’s in
the pen over yonder.” Cuthwin spoke gruffly, barely moving his lips, his Latin
clipped and uneasy.
“I thank you,” Bedwyr said, gesturing an accompaniment with his hand
and talking in the Saxon language. Cuthwin was an honest farmer, for all
his curt manners and abrupt ways. Given the situation, who could expect
anything less?
“No need to give thanks for starvin’ us,” the Saxon bowled back, crabbily.
“You’ll not get a thank you in return.”
Bedwyr surveyed the farm, neat kept, well stocked even this side of winter.
“You do all right for yourself, old sir.” He indicated the younger man, still
leaning on his spade, still intently watching him. “With another hand to guide
the oxen, you will plough well later this year.”
Cuthwin sniffed loudly, rubbed his bushed beard, and regarded Eadric, who
without haste set his tool against the low, stone wall and sauntered over to stand
beside Bedwyr’s horse. He ran his hand down its neck, appreciating the smooth
coat, fine muscle of the crest. “A good horse. One from the Pendragon’s desert
bred stock, I’d wager.” He spoke British well, with an accent deeper than most
the Saxons in this area.
Shrewdly, Bedwyr surveyed him, taking note of his stance, his confidence,
hearing the marked difference in speech. “Do I not know you from somewhere?”
Eadric gave the horse a final pat, pulled one of his bay ears through his
fingers, and let the animal lick at the salt taste on the palm of his hand. “Mayhap
you do. I know you.” He returned Bedwyr’s stare, said lightly, almost offhand.
“I helped you drag the Pendragon from that bloodied field of battle.”
Bedwyr gasped, swung down from the saddle, stood looking eye to eye at
the man. Slowly he nodded, accepting the statement for fact. “One of Mathild’s
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 7 3
men.” Bedwyr loosed his held breath, added, “You are a long way from the
Elbe; could you not find a wife nearer home?”
Lifting a slight smile to one corner of his mouth, Eadric shook his head.
“I am here at Cuthwin’s farm because of your men, though Gundrada, his
daughter, is good reason to stay.”
Frowning, Bedwyr queried the answer. “My men?”
“Aye, my lord. Your men beat me so bad I have not been long from the
bed-place.” Eadric indicated his leg, that was bent, slightly misshapen, touched
a vivid scar to his temple.
Still, Bedwyr did not understand. “You enjoy riddles, my friend. I cannot
fathom this one.”
“No riddle, my lord. I came up to the fortress just as the winter snows cleared.
I needed to speak with the Lady Gwenhwyfar. I was beaten for my trouble.”
At that Bedwyr formed a wry smile, not quite enough to laugh. “Why would
a Saxon from Mathild’s Elbe River wish to speak with my lady?”
The answer came back swiftly, Eadric”s head high, eyes piercing, sincere. Proud.
“That be for me to tel her.” Then he relaxed his expression, a weariness entering
his spirit, gazed at Bedwyr’s men sitting on their horses a few yards away, came to a
decision. “I wil tel you though, my lord, for I believe it wil be the only sure way
my lady will hear what I have to repeat.” He glanced, pointedly, at the other men,
included Cuthwin in his flickering eye. “’Tis for your ears alone, though, Sir.”
Now Bedwyr was growing curious. He passed the reins to one of the men,
put his hand on Eadric’s arm, guided him to the house-place. Inside, Gundrada
squeaked with alarm, although her mother barely glanced up from her cooking-
pot at the two men. Her nose did wrinkle at the thick mud cloying on their
boots as they stamped in over the doorsill, but she made no comment as she
would shrilly have done had either Cuthwin or Eadric entered so, alone.
“Get you gone,” Bedwyr ordered, tipping his head to the outside. “I need
speak with this man.”
Gundrada hurried away, risking only one quick, frightened glance at Eadric,
who smiled encouragement at her. Her mother grumbled. “My stew be nigh
on cooked.”
“We’ll see to your stew,” Bedwyr assured her, holding the door wide,
ushering her through with an encouraging gesture of his hand.
“You mind you do! If it burns, it’ll be the waste of a fine hare.” She stalked
outside, nose tipped high, muttering protest. Bedwyr slammed the door shut,
stood with his back leaning against it, arms folded.
Tell me
, his expression said.
2 7 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
The dwelling-place was larger than most farmsteadings, Cuthwin being of
higher status financially. An aisled timber-built structure, with at one end the
family place, lower down, the cattle stalls, all empty this time of day and year.
Pegs for hanging harness. Three fattened chickens scratched, content, at the
straw-scattered, beaten-earth floor.
The living space seemed comfortable, although sparsely furnished with a
wooden box-bed to one end and loft space above where the boys slept. Another
bed, smaller, lay to one side. An old oaken chest, a sturdy table. Several stools,
baskets, pots, flagons, and barrels. In one corner, the inevitable loom. Hunkering
down on his heels before the hearth-place, Eadric poked more kindling onto
the fire, blazing the flames higher.
Bedwyr waited. This was obviously something of importance, and there
could be no hurrying for great matters.
Finally, Eadric lifted his head. He was nervous, for his tongue licked at his
lips, hand rubbed hand. “Since June’s month have I been hiding my tracks,
looking over my shoulder.”
Bedwyr made no interruption, let the Saxon speak. June? All but the year
around. A long time.
“Those first months I was running from Lady Winifred, ensuring she could
not know where I had gone.” Eadric spat into the fire, sending a hiss of steam
flaring out.
Bedwyr’s eyebrows rose. Winifred had long claws if her malice was stretching
as far as the Elbe! But then it was her son’s place now Leofric the Saxon was
gone. Was she making it her own also? “Why?” he asked simply.
Taking a deep breath, Eadric poured the next out: “Because I am certain she
was responsible for my Lady Mathild’s death. Because she could not let those of
us who served that good lady live to tell others what she knew.”
Pushing himself away from the door, Bedwyr approached the opposite side
of the hearth-place, hunkered on his heels as Eadric did. “And that is?”
“Mathild told us, I and several of my comrades—they are cruelly dead
now, that bitch’s doing. How my lady knew this thing, I know not, but
there was no reason to doubt her.” Squarely, the Saxon regarded the British
commander. Bedwyr, an Artoriani officer. Cousin to Arthur, the Pendragon
and, so word on the wind chattered, a man who would soon be husband
of that same lord’s widowed wife. “Mathild gave us secret command. If
death came to her we were to bring word to Lady Gwenhwyfar. Word of
the Pendragon.”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 2 7 5
Bedwyr raised one eyebrow higher, his breath, though he realised it not, was
tight held. Everything seemed paused, stilled and waiting, waiting for this thing
that, with a prickling itch to his scalp, he had feeling was going to be difficult
to hear.
“The Pendragon was not buried. She believed he did not die. He lives.”
Eadric shrugged. “At least, he did last year, when Mathild was murdered for
the knowing of it.”
For a long, long while, Bedwyr sat very still, very quiet. The flames of
the hearth-fire crackled, the stew bubbled, began to burn. A hen at the far
end of the dwelling-place announced her proud intention to lay. He drew
his fingers down his nose, across his clean-shaven chin. Bit at the rough skin
around one nail.
“If this be some evil jest…”
“’Tis no jest. I carry out a promise to my Lady Mathild. She wished your
lady, Gwenhwyfar, to know the truth.”
“Jesu.” Bedwyr breathed. “Jesu Christ.”
Thirty-Seven
Utter stillness. Gwenhwyfar sat unmoving, her ankles crossed,
hands folded on her lap. Still, except for the steady rise and fall of her
breathing, the occasional blink of her eyelids.
A cuckoo was calling outside from somewhere in the small copse behind the
chapel. A bell began to ring, calling the women to prayer. Someone walking
quickly, her feet scrunching on the gravel path, her shadow flickering briefly
beneath the closed door as she strode past.