Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
down the track after he had enjoyed her services but had hidden, deciding
to watch her a while. She had come out the bothy and gone into the caves.
Curiosity had overcome his fear. Scuttling into her dwelling, he had found for
himself a lamp and some candles, had run after her, heart beating that she had
already vanished, but he could see the distant pool of light from the flaring
torch she carried and followed her, not knowing Morgaine was full aware
of his noisy-footed, clumsy presence. He had then seen her, this courageous,
or foolish, man, had seen the goddess herself walk naked into the water of
the Underworld, had seen her black, raven hair streaming like rippling weeds
against the darkness of the lake, her skin white and smooth. He had watched as
she sank below the surface and did not appear again.
Yet she was there, out in the sunlight the next day. That same woman, with
the black hair, pale skin. There for him when he came to pay for her again.
He could not have known she had found, quite by accident, that by taking
a lungfull of air and swimming fast beneath the surface, she would come up
into another cave, another black, empty space, that she could only feel, not
see. Only a sense of vast emptiness told her she stood at the edge of another
cavern. She dared not move from out of the water here, for fear she would be
swallowed up into the hollow of nothingness. Only occasionally did she go
there, to prove she was more powerful than the god of the dark. For when she
went, she would always come back; he could never hold her, take her for his
own into his Underworld realm.
She never allowed anyone else to follow her into her private world—but that
one man had proven useful, for he had spread word among the many who used
the Lead Road. Word of a Goddess from the Lake of the Underworld.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 7 5
Most days, more than one man would come. Occasionally, they came in
small groups, twos or threes. Usually, she would oblige them with what they
wanted; always, if they were not of British blood.
For the Saex came along the Lead Road. Saxon traders, to buy the lead, cart
it on lumbering ox-wagons back to the coast and their waiting ships. British
lead to use or to trade for high profit. The difficulty of the journey made much
more rewarding by a visit to the Lady. Who had more than her body to sell.
In secret, Amlawdd sent weapons to Morgaine’s caves. Swords, shields,
daggers, and spears. Quietly they were pushed in among the pigs of lead, hidden,
transported, safe. And the Saxons paid well for this extra, illegal trade.
Especially Cerdic.
It was Morgaine’s greatest thrill when he came himself, dressed moderately
as an overseer, or a rich buyer. To entertain Cerdic in the way she knew best!
To tell him all Amlawdd deliberately, and others unintentionally, passed to her
listening ears. To tell him of Arthur. To know she was undoing the mistake of
the past, that she was stirring the potion that would one day put an end, as her
mother had wished, to the Pendragon.
And doing it by using his own son. Her nephew.
Sixteen
July 478
Gildas was five years old, a quiet, serious little boy. He loved
listening to the stories of Jesu and adored the man Ambrosius Aurelianus,
who had brought him to this wonderful place of Ambrosium. His other home,
the stronghold of Caer Rhuthun, he had hated for its dark gloom and stench of
drenching blood covering everything that could be seen or touched. His sister,
Cywyllog, was happier here also; she would often sing to him, take him for
walks along by the river or through the cool shading of the woods. Never had
she done so in Gwynedd. There had always been a clutching of fear and danger
there, never much happiness or laughter. Gildas was too young to understand
why. Caw, his father, had been a man with strong discipline for obedience
to his will. No one had said no to Caw, save for his eldest son Hueil, and the
Pendragon. A man who had put his own purpose before the need of others,
who sought his own pleasure, protected by the belief that he followed the will
of God.
It had been easy for Hueil to take Alclud from him, to make himself lord in
his father’s place. As easy to rally the North to his voice, not so easy to defeat
Arthur. Gildas did not understand any of his family history either. All he knew was
Arthur had killed his brother. Through the law of family rights of blood-tie, the
Pendragon and all his kindred were to be mistrusted and regarded as an enemy.
That was the difficulty. Ambrosius Aurelianus was kin to the Pendragon, but
he was a good and holy man, to be loved and respected. Medraut was Arthur’s
son. Gildas liked him, too. Medraut was in his twelfth year, almost man-grown,
yet he had time for the younger boys, enjoyed playing with them, reading the
scriptures to them, telling stories, patching up scraped knees and cut elbows
with soothing salves and honey words.
Cywyllog said Arthur had murdered Hueil. It was true, Gildas knew, for the
blood, to his mind, was still there on that stone in the courtyard at Rhuthun.
Medraut, though, had told him another version of that same story.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 7 7
“After the battle, which was terrible and bloody and where many men from
both armies died terrible deaths,” Medraut had said, using the sing-song voice
of the story-teller, “Hueil fled, riding his horse without mercy, for Arthur’s son,
his last remaining son, had been killed.”
“But you are his son,” Gildas had queried.
“This was another son. I was not born then and my mother is not Queen
Gwenhwyfar. Hueil rode to Rhuthun where lived his father, a Christian man
who would surely forgive him and take him, as the eldest son, into the sanctuary
of protection.”
“My father loved all his sons.”
“Stop interrupting! He took Hueil into his stronghold, but only until a court
of law could be arranged to try him, legally, against the accusation of treason.
That was the Roman way, the established way of law and justice.”
“Ambrosius’s way?”
“But not the Pendragon’s. Arthur, my father, followed hard on Hueil’s heels
and demanded he be given over for execution as a traitor and murderer. Caw
and Ambrosius and others argued for things to be done in the correct way,
and in the end Arthur agreed. What men were there—and there were many,
for Arthur had chieftains and nobles in his army—formed a court. Hueil was
summoned to state his case before them. He came out from where he had taken
shelter in your father’s chapel. As king and the highest of judges, save for Christ
Jesu and God the Father, Arthur stood by the sacred stone, one hand, his left,
placed upon it. Hueil came up to him, giving the impression of humble repen-
tance. He made to kneel before Arthur, but instead leapt forward, a dagger in
his hand! He plunged it at the Pendragon, striking for the throat! Arthur was a
soldier, a man swift with weapons and fighting. He struggled, his fingers found
the hilt of his sword, he broke free, knocked Hueil aside. Hueil stumbled, fell
across the stone. Arthur raised his sword—and struck Hueil’s head from his
neck. The blood ran thick across the sacred stone and all agreed, save for Caw
and the kindred of Hueil who mourned his passing, justice had been done.”
Gildas had asked Ambrosius whether this telling was more true than the
one his sister told. It was, Ambrosius had said. Medraut’s version was the
more accurate.
It was a puzzling thing for a boy of five years to fathom. Why had his sister
lied to him?
He was wandering through the complex of alleyways that snaked between
various essential buildings of the monastery, the rear of Ambrosius’s bathhouse,
4 7 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
the stables, cow-byre, pig-pens, and kennels where the hunting hounds were
kept. Ambrosius would not allow them in his living quarters for his house, he
said, was for God’s servants not flea-ridden creatures.
The door to the kennels was shut. Unusual for midday but one of the bitches
had whelped yesterday, happen that was why. A yelp, anguished, pitiful, and
laughter, malicious, wicked. Then a scream. Gildas recognised it, the tone, the
pitch. His sister!
He pulled at the heavy door, panting hard as it refused to give. Ran along
the narrow walkway around the back where he knew there to be a window.
Climbed to a barrel, peered through, sobbing as the sounds inside increased. A
group of boys, six of them, the eldest two almost four and ten years of age, with
the youngest, Maelgwyn, his own age, and Caninus, eight. Now there was a
boy to hate! They were all throwing stones, had a basket full of them, aiming
at the bitch and her new pups—and at Cywyllog who was cowering over the
litter trying desperately to protect them with her own body.
Gildas gasped, shrieked. There was a pause inside, then a stone whistled
through the window opening, caught Gildas on the forehead. He tumbled back-
ward, fell, scrambled up, his arm hurting, his head aching. He must get help!
It was the hottest hour of the day, the heat had been unbearable this past
week. Everyone was inside resting until the midday sun eased. He ran, calling
for help, rounded a corner, was in the main courtyard—and there was Medraut,
squatting in the shadows of Ambrosius’s carefully tended line of ornamental
trees, reading.
Medraut looked up at the boy’s frightened shout, leapt to his feet, the scroll
falling, abandoned; ran, concerned, for blood trickled from a cut to the lad’s
head. “You are hurt! What has happened?”
Gildas explained, his words tumbling almost nonsensically but Medraut
understood. It needed only three words. Caninus. Stones. Pups. “Fetch others,
an adult,” he ordered. “Brother Illtud is in the scriptorium.”
Medraut ran. He never knew what made him take up the broken hunting
spear that had been carelessly left laying against the kennel wall. He saw it,
took it up. Taller, stronger than Gildas, he had the kennel door open, was
inside his eyes for a moment blinded by the darkness contrasting with the
bright sun outside.
The bitch was bleeding. Two of her pups lay dead, their small, delicate heads
smashed. Cywyllog was sobbing, blood soaking her tunic, her arm hanging
limp. And Medraut was so angry. So very, very angry.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 4 7 9
Everything he had been taught came to him. He heard Gwenhwyfar’s voice
in his head. “Calm and controlled when you face an enemy. Keep your feet
light, your body balanced. Go for disabling if you cannot kill.”
The spear’s blade was loose, but he had no need of it, used the shaft instead
as a staff, lunging forward to strike at the nearest boy’s legs, catching three of
them, one after the other, not expecting his intention. He continued with the
momentum, brought his weapon up, laid it hard to the left, across the shoulders
of another, swung it immediately right catching Caninus across the jaw. The
boy screamed, fell back, blood pouring from his mouth. The others fled.
A few moments only, a mere handful of heartbeats. Medraut was breathing
hard, was shaking. His first battle, his first fight.
Men were crowding in, Brother Illtud, Brother Paulus. Their anger as great
as Medraut’s at the senseless, wicked cruelty.
Gildas’s head throbbed through most that night, his puzzlement over family
loyalty even more compounded. “Medraut,” his sister said from her bed in the
infirmary, when Gildas went to see her before supper, “may be the son of the
Pendragon, but he has courage in his blood.”
Did that mean it was all right for Gildas to like him now? Or were his sister’s
injuries affecting her reasoning? One thing for certain, Gildas would never
speak a good word for Caninus and those other boys as long as he lived!
And with his jaw broken, it was doubtful Caninus would, through future
years, think with any fondness of Medraut.
Seventeen
Arthur was appalled at Ambrosius’s condition. Regretted not
coming earlier. He had not always agreed with his uncle—more often
than not outright opposed him. Most of the time they did not even like each
other, although there had been the odd occasion when mutual need had
brought them together to ride the one path. And he had been ill on and off
for so long they had all become accustomed to his need occasionally to take to
his bed and to the thin, sallow face, the tired eyes, the discreet, painful cough.
But not this! Ambrosius was nothing more than a living skeleton. Sitting rigid,
self-conscious on a stool beside the bed, Arthur could count every bone in his
uncle’s limp, gnarled hand. He was not old, Ambrosius—Mithras, not much
older than he himself! A handful of years older—eight, nine? Death in battle
was one thing, but this, this wasting away, this slow, painful death-in-life!
Arthur put his hand over his eyes, brought the fingers down over his nose,