Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
3 9 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
detailed planning. Arthur—and several of the men with him—knew Vicus
well, knew its street layout and gateways. The defendable places, the insecure.
A half-hour’s ride, less, if they pushed the horses on at a pace faster than the jog-
trot so far employed. They were warm, the animals, neck and flanks showing
more sweat than he would have liked, but then, this was winter. Even Onager,
and those like him with the Arabian breeding, had thicker, denser coats. Their
breathing was easy, however, energy unsapped.
Arthur’s stomach was churning at the anticipation of a fight, mixed emotions
of plunging fear and the rising excitement. He glanced at Gwenhwyfar who
lifted her head, gestured her thought by touching the sword at her hip.
“Cut off the rear, and it will be an easy gallop up to Badon.” She almost
purred at the prospect.
As her husband, Arthur ought to suggest she fall back, seek safety with the
boys and spare horses. He ought to have insisted she never left Durnovaria, but
then, Arthur never had been a man for doing as others thought he ought do.
He nodded at her. Aye, his thoughts exactly. “You will fight with us?” Only a
slight hesitancy, a slight doubting as he asked it.
“Would you prefer,” she answered, cat-eyed, blank expression, “that I had
stayed to keep Winifred company at Durnovaria. Joined with her in her fast?”
He replied with a matching, teasing solemnity. “If I could ensure an end to
the Saxon uprising by letting nothing but sips of water past my lips for the next
few days, I would have stayed with her myself!”
Gwenhwyfar laughed merrily. “What? You? Fast?” The gurgle increased.
“Has that shield you carry gone to your head?”
Grimacing, Arthur swivelled his eyes over his shoulder, tipped the oval shield
to an angle, wrinkling his nostrils in disgust at the design painted on its tough-
ened leather skin. The Chi Rho. All shields were painted so, Ambrosius’s first
task on learning the Pendragon was no more, to replace the Red Dragon with
the symbol of God. Arthur had no other shield, had accepted this one with no
time to have it altered.
“With the Dragon on my banner and this Christian symbol on my shield, I
assume I am covered from both directions.” He raised his hand, gave the signal
to move out.
Seventy-Five
That feeling of being alive but facing death, the sensation of the
heart pumping, sweat glistening. The pull of aching muscles, the bite of a
blade into thigh or arm. God’s love, but it was wonderful!
It was over all too soon and on reflection, when Arthur, breathing hard,
squatted his backside onto the winter-damp steps of Vicus’s shabby, timber-
built Basilica, nothing more than a slaughter of the unsuspecting and drunk by
the experienced. Most of them, the Saxons, had been old men, the unfit, the
wounded, those left behind to keep the road open for a safe retreat, should—
Woden prevent it—Aelle need to withdraw. The inactive waiting, poor
command and that element of over-confidence contributing to this, a minor,
easily accomplished victory. Aelle had obviously not expected the British to
come this far eastward. Most certainly did not expect the Pendragon.
Arthur marvelled that he had so easily forgotten the exhilaration of the
enjoined fight. That surge of elated power created by a war-horse in full gallop,
mane flying, ears back. The sheer pleasure of feeling so alive while death danced
so close.
Na
, he had not forgotten; perhaps had thrust it away to the furthest
depth of his mind because he had not wanted to remember? Some things were
best forgot, and even though his men were jubilant, excited, proud of this
success, he still asked whether he was suited to lead them. He had failed once,
he could fail again. The next battle he led those good, proud, unquestioning
men into could so well be their last.
Gwenhwyfar sauntered along the main Via Prima, wiping her sword with a
torn shred of a Saxon’s cloak. Her face was grimed with sweat and dirt, spotted
with blood specks. She positioned herself next to her husband, finished wiping
blood off the blade. Flushed, eyes bright-sparkling, her hair, never controlled at
the best of times, bursting in exuberant wisps from its restricting braid. “That
was good,” she said, as if she were speaking of nothing more simpler than an
afternoon stroll.
4 0 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
“Mm,” Arthur answered.
She sheathed the sword, propped her elbows on her knees, rested her chin
on the knuckles. “Only
‘mm’
?” she queried, slipping a sidelong glance.
The men were clearing up, helping their wounded, reverently lifting their
few dead—three only, incredibly only three! Occasionally, one would glance
up, see Arthur watching and raise an arm or hand in victorious salute. Ah! It
was so good to be riding under the banner of the Dragon again! Riding with
Arthur, the Pendragon! The Saxons, they were tossing into a pile beyond the
gateway, no time or want to bury them. Arthur had given orders for their
burning, come dark when the smoke would not be seen climbing into the sky.
The Saex wounded were finished quickly and dispassionately by a knife to the
throat. Men of the Artoriani disliked torture where it was not necessary, had
not the resource of enough men to leave guard over any suitable for slavery.
“The gods alone know how I managed to ride through that gate,” Arthur
confessed to his wife, staring ahead, embarrassed to say aloud the truth, though
he knew she understood it. “Once into the charge, there was no choice, but—”
he cast a swift, guilty squint at her expression, which remained impassive. “But by
the bull, before that I was trembling like a rain-sodden cur in a thunderstorm!”
The tactics had been to ride quietly as near as possible to Vicus, under the
sheltering cover of dense trees; then spring into a gallop, burst through those
still-unclosed, unguarded gates, and create havoc. The plan worked as if it had
been no more than a predictable child’s game using toy pieces. And only three
British dead!
Arthur held his fingers of his right hand out before him. Steady, controlled.
“I almost dropped my sword twice, and Mithras alone knows where the first
spear I cast ended up. Certainly not in its target!” He was beginning to relax,
the tightness in his body easing, leaving him. A hint of laughter gathering
behind the recounting, not yet ready to come out, but there, hovering, waiting
its moment.
Sensing it, Gwenhwyfar uttered a swift, silent thank-you. She, perhaps
alone above anyone, had realised and understood the great fear that had
clawed mercilessly at Arthur’s gut. To fight, to face battle, took courage and
endurance. Arthur had plenty and more of both, but he had also seen the
horror of defeat and failure—as on occasion they all had, but he had gone
away after it, taken by a woman who wanted nothing of death and fighting.
He had not even had his sword to touch or to cherish, to remind him of other,
better endings. It was best not to allow that tick of doubt to rise, to grow,
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 0 1
like yeast in bread. For a nerve broken was a nerve difficult—occasionally
impossible—to mend.
They all had fear—any man, be he British, Saxon, or Roman—and felt the
spectre of trepidation while waiting for battle to begin; all knew the dread that
sank into the stomach like a weighted stone. Knew how it would vanish like
mist under a rising sun when the bloodlust began to flow, when the battle-cry
was bayed and taken up; when the thing was entered. Arthur’s fear would be
harder to conquer, and this small skirmish was nothing to prove that it had been
exorcised. To rebuild self-pride and confidence took more than the slaying of
a few unwary drunkards, more than just remounting a horse and sitting there
while it stood, cropping grass. The hurdle need be faced and jumped again.
And again. The dawn of his coming through was there, though, the darkness
not quite as black, as cloying and smothering.
“So what now?” she asked. She had not talked with him about the fear. It
was something for him alone to face and to conquer. Instead, she was here,
beside him, with him. Her horse had galloped next to Onager, her sword
slashing beside his as, dismounted inside the gate, they had advanced through
the mud-slurried, dejected streets of Vicus. She covering his left, he, her right.
Aye, the rest of the Artoriani had been there also, but what mattered was that
she was there, her presence, with her loyalty and love. There.
“Now?” he repeated, pushing himself to his feet. Gods, but he ached! “Now
we feed the horses and ourselves; and, come dusk, we ride like souls fleeing
hell along the road to Badon.” He took Gwenhwyfar’s hand, hauled her to her
feet, caught a brief flare of her nostrils, a grimace. Instant concerned, alarmed,
he raked his eyes over her, searching for a wound, an injury.
“I’m well,” she reassured, patting her palm onto his chest. “You, however!”
She leaned back from him, appraising as he had, “You are filthy and you stink!”
The light came into Arthur’s face as brilliantly as the summer sun casts its
magnificence into the new-born day. His head tossed back, the barked guffaw
drawing attention from several of his men. He clamped his hands to Gwenhwyfar’s
shoulders, and smacked a resounding, firm, loving kiss to her lips.
“So, my dear Cymraes, do you!”
Seventy-Six
Three or so hours it took them to ride from Vicus along the Via
Ermin to Badon. A ride completed in near silence and beneath the
shrouding mantle of midnight darkness. No moon would rise, no soft glow
of star could penetrate the thick mass of rain-building cloud that pressed close
over the earth, like a lid above a box. They rode the fifteen miles at the walk,
any metal item that could clatter or jangle muffled: weapons, buckles, harness.
Hooves were bound with rags, leather slips secured around the muzzles of
war-dogs and horses to ensure no bark or whinny could betray their pres-
ence. The wind came from the west, blew in their faces, scudding their cloaks
behind them like wings spread from a soaring bird. The eagle king, come to
claim his land.
Of course, one of the Saex could have made it away, one among the English
might have not been so inebriated as the others. Or it was always possible a
messenger had been sent back from Aelle and the army ahead laying arro-
gant siege to the British fortress. Anything could have alerted the Saex of the
Artoriani. Even instinct, the gut feeling that a good leader has; the knack of
knowing. As Arthur knew Aelle was ignorant of his coming.
Leaving the easier route of the road, they dismounted, led the horses, and
cut across country, boots squelching in the many pocketed muddied hollows,
cursing silently as they thrust a way through tangled thorn and unyielding scrub,
slowing the pace more, and taking care. So much care. They could have taken
the smaller, narrower, and easier to travel road that would run, straight as an
arrow, up to the fortress. But that way was easily watched and they would be
vulnerable on foot; easily seen, mounted.
They began to climb, the flickering, smoke-shifting, pale glow of many
camp-fires leading them on; the Saxons, half of one mile ahead, strung out in
scattered copses of tents clustered around tended hearth-fires. Some would be
sleeping, others nursing weapons, talking quietly to ward away the tedium of
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 0 3
a long, quiet night-watch. Ha! Well, things would not be so quiet or monoto-
nous soon enough!
So Gweir and the two others sent ahead with him, had reported. They had
watched since dusk, secreted against the browns and greens of earth and grass,
observed the Saxons taunting the British entombed behind the high rampart
walls, held their breath as a foray to try again at the secured gates was beaten
down. But at even their safe distance, Gweir could see the British were suffering,
their defence edged with a lack of resilience that was rapidly crumbling towards
the inevitable. Would Ambrosius be tempted to surrender soon? It depended
on how many men he had already lost, how many could continue. And it
would depend on Arthur bringing up the Artoriani without sign or sound.
Gweir sent a boy back, riding on one of the swift Arabian breeds that ate
the ground beneath the hooves as hungrily as a starving beggar devoured
fresh-baked bread. The English were unaware they had been observed, were
unaware of the Pendragon’s closeness. One group, set to keep eye to where the
steep slope fell into the flat spread of land, were unknowing that Gweir and his
companions were close enough to hear their muttered conversation, smell their
wine-tainted breath, even. They, the three Englishmen, watched the sky now,
their blank eyes staring up at the blackness, waiting for a sunrise they would