Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
Gwenhwyfar had been laughing with Gweir and the other men, she had
not heard. Arthur checked his mare from snatching at an appetising clump
of grass, rode in silence a while. Medraut bit his lip, hung back slightly from
the merry group. He had been stupid to ask. His father was not a Christian.
Arthur referred to Mithras, the soldier’s god—though in all reality, he was
not a dedicated follower. And he was needed at Caer Cadan, to be trained as
a warrior, to fight, to lead, but oh by all that was dear to him, he wanted to
go to Ambrosius’s school! To read the scriptures, to learn how to perfect the
technique of using styli and ink. To hear the histories, the great works of poetry
and oratory! He wanted to learn, to become a scholar, not a soldier.
“Is that what you truly want? To leave Caer Cadan, go to Ambrosium?”
Medraut rode, looking intently at his hands gripping around the reins.
He did, oh he did! But to say so, to tell his father he would rather be with
the monks of Ambrosius Aurelianus’s religious school. It would sound so
ungrateful, so hurtful. He said nothing. It was only a hoped-for dream after
all, a boyish wanting.
“I wanted to be the greatest leader when I was a boy,” Arthur said. “Even
before I knew who my father was. Not king, I did not know I had the birthing
to be king, I just wanted to be a good leader, good enough to have men eager
to fight with me.” He had eased his mare slower than the others, had pulled
back so that he rode beside Medraut. “Wanting something so badly can hurt,
more than a wound sometimes.”
Still Medraut made no reply.
“Are you so unhappy living with me at Caer Cadan?”
Medraut’s head shot up, protest quick on his lips. “
Na
, father, I am not
unhappy, it is just that…” he broke off. He did not want to leave, he was
happy, but equally he wanted to be at Ambrosius’s school.
“You helped me kill that deer well today. Happen you have a better talent
with a bow than you appear to possess with spear or shield?”
Medraut’s smile was tentative. “I will keep practising until I am as good
as you.”
“Aye, lad.” Arthur released a slow, resigned, sigh. “I’ll ask Ambrosius to
ensure you do.”
Twelve
June 478
Had he been a more cynical man, Ambrosius could have been forgiven
for believing Amlawdd arrived at the time he did to be deliberately
annoying. Always a man for routine, Ambrosius insisted on following a rigid
day: prayer at dawn, a light breakfast of goat’s milk and cheese, the morning
devoted to correspondence and judicial matters, midday hours delegated to
his school of learning, attention directed during the afternoon to overseeing
the stronghold’s farming estate and expanding settlement. With the third
hour firmly set aside for a strict continuation of Roman order and civilisation.
Ambrosius spent an hour relaxing in the steam and hot-waters of his bath-
house. Such a typically Roman thing—and with so many estates forgoing the
costly upkeep and maintenance of a private bathhouse, Ambrosius’s modest
little building had become something of a personal symbol for his immovable
sense of loyalty to Rome. This single, self-indulgent luxury, a daily ritual of
private solitude with only the presence of a necessary body-slave had become
an opportunity to relax, to quietly peruse mental ideas of worldly plans and
Godly thoughts.
The law of hospitality decreed a guest be welcomed, offered shelter, suste-
nance, and the sharing of comfort. In Roman terms, this included use of the
bathhouse. Ambrosius was preparing to wander down the hill to his small
complex of buildings as Amlawdd and his eight-strong bodyguard entered the
outer courtyard at Ambrosium. Initial formalities concluded, he was obliged
to extend the courtesy of asking Amlawdd to accompany him. Naturally,
Amlawdd accepted. Masking his annoyance, Ambrosius disrobed in the modest
changing-room, his nostrils wrinkling against the putrid-stench that wafted
from Amlawdd’s travel-grimed body.
“Damned uncomfortable journey,” Amlawdd complained. “Saddle needs
seeing to, my backside’s been chafed raw. See?” He thrust his buttocks outward
for inspection, rubbing at the fatted folds of skin with his hand. Ambrosius
4 6 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
murmured some appropriate comment of sympathy, declining to look at the
overlarge rump.
“Nothing a whore’s touch can’t cure though, eh?” Amlawdd belched and
passed wind simultaneously, loosing a worse stench into the confined space.
Surreptitiously dabbing at his nose, Ambrosius gestured for Amlawdd to proceed
before him, to enter the hot pool.
Waves heaved as Amlawdd leapt into the gently steaming water splashing
against the tiled edge, slopping over the top to puddle the hypocaust-heated
mosaic flooring. Sedately, Ambrosius descended the three shallow steps, waded
to the edge of the pool and, gripping with his hands, allowed his legs to float
before him. He laid his head back into the relaxing warmth, closed his eyes;
tried to close his ears against Amlawdd’s prattle.
For most of it he succeeded, not hearing the repetitive detail of that tedious
journey; “Lazy brute of a horse wouldn’t go faster than a trot, only slightly
lame, damned thing’s fit only for sausagemeat.”
Complaints against the poor state of the roads; “Mud wallows, Arthur ought
make repairs an urgent priority.”
The coldness of the wind; “Gets right round your balls when it blows from the
east.” The inhospitality of a passed inn. “The whore there smelt of pig’s muck!”
Ambrosius said nothing. From Amlawdd’s similar stench, he assumed he had
rutted with her anyway.
“This school of yours has expanded since last I was here, Ambrosius, must
be making a gold piece or two from fees, eh?” He idled a few more lumbering
swimming strokes, trod water. “Think I might start something similar, get a
few of those eunuch monks of yours to teach the lads.” He scratched at his
private parts. “Better still, have a few young girls, eh? I see you’ve got some
around the place.”
Ambrosius averted his eyes from the obvious pleasure this erotic statement
evoked in Amlawdd, did not condescend to clarify the inaccuracies. Men who
offered their celibacy to God were not geldings; the girls attending his school
were noviciates of the women’s holy house and were the educated daughters
of noblemen, not whores. Useless explaining to a dolt like Amlawdd who had
interest only for the perverse and the crude.
“You ought spend more of your profit on personal comfort, Ambrosius.
Look at these tiles man, they are a disgrace!” Amlawdd had swum to the pool-
side. It would be the one part most in need of repair. He picked at the loose
edging, pulling a cracked tile away, tossed it out to the floor where it shattered,
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 6 5
unrepairable. Ambrosius’s body-slave immediately trotted forward to gather up
the pieces. “This water’s not as hot as it ought to be either. I would supervise
your slaves more carefully if I were you. Here, you!” Amlawdd beckoned to
the slave, a thin-faced man in his late second decade. “Feel this, it’s damned
cold!” Guffawing, Amlawdd splashed water over the slave, drenching him.
“He’ll make sure it’s warmer next time, eh?”
So he went on, passing comment, making criticism, rankling Ambrosius with
references to the quality bathhouse he intended to build. Ambrosius took several
calming, deep breaths, blotting out the rambling monotony. Amlawdd, a bath-
house? How many times had Ambrosius endured this same boasted conversation?
The water was becoming chill. The stoke-hole had not functioned as effi-
ciently since it had partially collapsed a year past. The rebuilding had been
unsuccessful, the quality of bricks poor, the mortar too soft. Shivering slightly,
Ambrosius left the pool, settled himself on the couch for the slave to begin
work with the wooden strigils, scraping away the sweat and grime, followed
by massaging oil into his skin. The experienced kneading of taut, tired muscles
brought a pleasurable, clean glow, marred by the raucous, indecent song
Amlawdd bellowed while floating on his back in the pool, his rotund belly
bobbing, visible, like a white, bloated corpse.
“You have not enough flesh on you to keep a bed-flea occupied,” Amlawdd
observed between choruses. “You’re thinner than my black-haired bitch from
Gaul—and that’s saying something! A hay-fork has more meat on it than she
has
. O…oh, for a feast! I stuffed the hare and stuffed the pig, and stuffed the girl who
served it!
” Fortunately for Ambrosius’s bruised ears, the lewd song had only a
further three verses and, his massage finished, he had the excuse to retire to the
sanctuary of the changing-room.
“Arthur has taken most of my best horses, you know,” Amlawdd called after
him, climbing from the pool, adding a comment that a massage would be the
more satisfactory from a female body-slave.
Ambrosius ignored him, was tempted to ignore the previous comment also,
but felt obliged to answer. “It is the Pendragon’s policy to purchase good stock.
You have the misfortune to have stallions that relate to the old breeding lines
of Gwynedd.”
“Purchase!” Amlawdd sat up, jerkily thrusting the slave aside, bellowed again.
“Purchase? I think not! He took them, stole them, two weeks back! Eight of
my best-bred colts and five mares. Said it was for tax tribute, pah! The bastard’s
no more than a common thief.”
4 6 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Draping the final fold of his toga, Ambrosius called up a vague semblance of
polite sympathy. “Taxation has always been a cause for contention.” His glint
of amusement went unnoticed by Amlawdd, who was wriggling himself into
a more comfortable position on the couch. “Harsh measures can even lead
to uprisings, I believe,” he added, but again the sarcasm was lost. It had been
Amlawdd’s suggestion to tax the Saxon settlers heavily, which had led to the
beginning of Ambrosius’s downfall. That Arthur would make the same mistake
was highly doubtful.
The Pendragon was lenient in those areas where trouble could arise, took
only from those who could afford to pay—and, damn the man, took within
the bounds of reason, never too much, never more than necessary. Ah, but
why should he worry over the failings of the past? Ambrosius had no wish to
rekindle thoughts of leadership. There were a few, a mere handful of like-
minded men, who would willingly donate a fortune to re-alight the flame
of Rome, to return Britain to sanity and discipline. But to what point? Even
Ambrosius had to admit, now, what was gone had gone. A clay pot once
broken could not be mended.
At least here in the calm confines of his stronghold, within the walls of
his religious school, he was his own master. A little piece of what was once
the Roman way flourished here. Ambrosius realised that his mind had been
wandering, that Amlawdd was still making complaint against Arthur. Huh, was
he ever not?
“We ought be looking ahead, I say, to securing our future. What do we do
when he has gone, that’s what we ought be asking!”
It was a question they all mulled over, aye, even Arthur quietly, to himself. Who
would follow the Pendragon, when death eventually came to claim his corpse?
“There is Medraut, the bastard-born,” Ambrosius suggested.
Amlawdd heaved himself from the couch, gesturing a crude sign of dismissal,
stalked into the changing-room, began to dress. “We have two choices. We
look to the daughter or to Cerdic.”
Were the second option not so absurd, Ambrosius would have laughed outright.
“She will not be far from reaching the age for breeding. Find her a suitable
husband, get her with child,” Amlawdd said.
“And you, I have no doubt, would be willing to offer yourself for such a
role?” It was pointless adding that edge of mockery.
At least Amlawdd had the decency to laugh. “Of course! I could not secure
the mother, why not have a go at the daughter?”
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 6 7
“The daughter,” Ambrosius replied, “has the promise of an even sharper
temper, so I hear.”
“My blade could cut her down to size!” Robed, clean, Amlawdd headed
for the doorway, his stomach audibly growling for food and drink. He pointed
nether-wards, indicating the blade he meant. “How was your last brewing
of ale?” he asked. “Mine was poor, but I know you stock other stuff of a
superior quality!”
Ambrosius suppressed a groan. Amlawdd knew, full well, there was always
sufficient wine.
“Breed with the daughter, aye, but it would also be wise to nurture Cerdic.”
Later, Amlawdd continued the conversation as if there had been no substantial
interlude. They sat in Ambrosius’s private chamber, already one flask of wine