Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
here, where the trees grew higher and thicker. The rain had fallen almost inces-
santly these past three days, with no promise of it easing, judging by the dark
hang of the sky and the distant rumble of thunder. Spring this year had ventured
late, tottering pathetically after a dismal winter, bringing with it cold winds
and squalls of rain. June had fared somewhat better, with pale, half-hearted
sunshine, but those winds had persisted. Much of the Summer Land remained
underwater, isolated lakes and swollen, overflowing rivers and streams. Arthur
was not alone in being sick of damp clothes and wet boots.
The grumblings at the lead mines—involving the legality and authentication
of the various official stamps used in marking the pigs of lead—had rumbled
on through the months, with one useless procurator replaced by another, and a
series of officials sent to attempt to sort the muddle of bureaucracy, resulting in
the ultimate need for Arthur himself finally to intervene. Too much lead—and
5 2 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
more important, extracted silver—was going amiss; only the king’s authority, it
seemed, would get to the bottom of the problem.
The road that ran beside the rise of hills had fallen quieter as late afternoon
dwindled into an early-arrived evening. Wagons and travellers with any sense
would have already been seeking shelter for the night. Those last few on
the road were hurrying to a final destination, not eager to make another,
unnecessary stop.
Ahead, by five miles or more, lay the Great Gorge, limestone cliffs that towered
several hundred feet above a winding pass that cut like a vicious sword wound
into the side of the Hills. Arthur hated the place. The precarious track ran, slip-
pery and muddied, beside the gurgling run of the river. The small slit of sky so
high and distant above, cliffs to either side rising sheer, dominating, brooding.
Trapping. He would rather not ride up that gorge, but his business lay with this
latest appointed procurator who resided at the largest mine, at the head of it. He
could go the other route, up and over the top, the longer, exposed road. In this
rain? Adding almost a whole day to the journey?
Na
, he would brave the gorge.
Ahead, an ox-wagon had turned to make the ascent of a narrow side-track,
the Saxon driver whipping the beasts to pull against the cloy of mud, shouting
abuse as a wheel lodged in a rut. The stone roads were bad enough for wagon
haulage. Idiots to travel the lesser roads, Arthur thought absently, giving only a
passing glance at the cart as he rode past the junction. A man, mounted, flanked
by two body-guards respectfully, if somewhat slowly, moved aside from the
road, their heads dipped in acknowledgement of rank. Well-dressed, a man of
some wealth. A merchant-man. Saxon.
Arthur ignored him.
Behind, the Pendragon guard sniggered muted laughter. “What is the jest?”
he asked Gweir, riding beside him.
“That fat Saxon has taken the track after the ox-cart.”
They would stop soon, make camp. Arthur edged Onager into a jog-trot,
pushing the pace slightly faster. They would camp this side of the gorge, ride
through at first light. “And what is comical about that?” he had to ask, having
decided on no rational explanation for himself. The Saxons were certainly fools to
travel a rough track so close to nightfal , but no merchant cared about the welfare
of man or beast. Trade and payment their sole concern. Where was the jest then?
“The whore lives up there.”
The whore. What whore? Whores spread their wares along any track a man
might travel. These roads around the mines would provide ample trade.
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 2 5
The hills were deep misted with the rain, trees dripping, the dampness
seeping upward. It was cold, the light fading, so depressing, hills, in the rain. At
Caer Cadan they would be huddled around the hearth-fires, filling their bellies
with hot food and warming wine.
Gweir rode his beloved dun. Arthur regarded him, one eye half-closed,
other eyebrow raised, his expression questioning. “The whore. The Lady of the
White Hills,” Gweir explained. “You must, surely, have heard of her?” Arthur
had, but had not realised it was to this side of the hills she dwelt, thinking her
further to the north.
Gweir then added, “She was the one Medraut visited.”
Ah, he could see reason for the laughter now. “When was that?”
Gweir shrugged, wiped at rain trickling uncomfortable down his neck. When?
How did he know when? He pulled his dun to a walk, set in beside one of the
men, questioned him, kicked into a trot to catch up with the Pendragon.
“Last year, while you were in Gwynedd. Antonius was one of the escort.”
Again,
ah.
“The tale is well known among the men,” Gweir continued. “Medraut came
running down the hill as if the hounds of Hades were after him. The men
reckon either her price was too high for the lad or her legs too long for him
to reach into the important parts!” Gweir chuckled. Poor Medraut, with the
misery of such a sullen wife, the ideal butt of many a jest.
It was wrong to make mockery of the king’s bastard son, of course, but
with him away these last two months, visiting at Llan Illtud, the old stories had
naturally resurfaced, safe in the knowing he would not hear.
“You seen her, this whore?” Arthur asked, casually.
“Me? When I need a woman, I go for one a little nearer home!”
“That,” Arthur answered with a broad grin, “is because you have no need to
hide your habits from a wife!”
Ahead, a suitable sheltered place to make camp. Arthur ordered a halt. He
had a prickly, uncomfortable feeling rising along the nape of his neck. It had
been there since that ox-wagon had lumbered into view. More precise, the
merchant travelling with it. What was the familiarity about him? There was
many a Saxon trader Arthur had met in passing or spoken with along this route,
why this unease?
It hit him with the force of an axe blade, while the world, save for the
night creatures and the watch guard, slept beneath the canopy of darkness.
Had it come to him in a dream, or was it merely that thoughts came clearer
5 2 6 H e l e n H o l l i c k
when there was not the distraction of daylight? Whatever, he had been sound
sleeping, curled beneath the thickness of his cloak oblivious to the patter of
rain. He sat up, arrow straight, eyes wide, lips slightly parted.
That man, that Saxon, turning off onto the whore’s track. There were easier
paths to the nearest mine. Why would he take the wagon with him to pay visit
to a whore?
And more important, why had he been so intent to hide his face?
Thirty
With the horses secured, Arthur and Gweir walked the last mile.
Away from the track, the going was easier. They walked carefully,
aware of the need to make as little noise as possible, but the rain drizzling from
the canopy of the trees, and the soft ground, absorbed small, unavoidably made
sounds. At the edge of the trees, they hunkered to their heels, observing the
bothy that squatted before the dark opening of a cave. With the rain falling,
dawn would come late, the sky lightening with reluctance from darkness to
slate-grey. No glory of a welcome, golden sunburst this morning!
Arthur was wet and in sour mood. The ride yesterday had been dispiriting,
his sleep non-existent. And that black, predatory hole of a cave entrance exag-
gerated his bad temper. Gweir had assured him the whore lived in the bothy,
but what if they had to go in there, into the caves? The sweat on Arthur’s
forehead and upper lip was not from the exertion of walking. Gweir would
have to go in. He most certainly would not.
Three horses, unsaddled, were tethered to the lee side of the bothy, each
standing with a hind leg resting, head drooping. Two men dozed beneath the
makeshift protection of the ox-cart, the ox himself grazing unconcerned at the
weather, over to the left. The driver, presumably, was the bundle beneath a
sodden cloak huddled beside what had been a pathetic attempt at lighting a fire.
The Saxon merchant-man? Assuming the two beneath the wagon were his
bodyguard, he could only be inside with the woman.
The decision. Whether to disarm these three outside or kill them. There was
no cause, outside Arthur’s suspicions, that they were about any wrongdoing.
Even Saxons were permitted to rut with a whore! He glanced at Gweir, who
mimed binding hands together, nodded his agreement. To kill them would be
murder. Aside, their tongues may be useful.
They went for the two under the wagon first, assuming they would be the better
armed, the more dangerous. Drivers were often slaves and simple-minded: you had
5 2 8 H e l e n H o l l i c k
to be to keep sane, as oxen were such stupid creatures. Within a few short moments,
the two were secured and gagged several yards down the track: one unconscious, the
other too dazed to make a sound, with more than a few bruises and aching bones
between them. Gweir dragged the third man from his sleeping place, his frightened
whimpering silenced by a crack to the temple from Arthur’s boot.
When the daylight finally came, miserable and slovenly, Arthur indicated
he was going into the bothy. Gweir nodded, grinned, whispered, “If she’s any
good, let me have a turn at her before we leave?”
“You are welcome to all of her. No damn whore is worth all this effort!”
Arthur drew his sword from its sheath, instinctively running the pad of his
thumb along its sharpness. He stepped out from the cover of the trees, shoulders
hunched, head bent low—was about to run the twenty or so yards to the closed
doorway—froze, tumbled back into the shelter of the trees, heart pumping,
cursing colourfully beneath his breath.
Gweir, with his own sword drawn, had heard it also. A horse, coming up
the track. As stealthily as if he were approaching a nervous buck, he made his
way to Arthur, exchanged a curious glance. They watched. The horse was
a bay, four white feet, white face. He was muddied, tired, had been ridden
through most the night by the look of him. His rider, cloak hood pulled well
forward against the rain, dismounted, circled the ox-wagon, walked to the
tethered horses, inspected them, examining their quality, looking for any
brand or distinguishing mark. Stood a moment, considering the implication
of their presence. Decision made, he marched for the closed door, his left
hand stretching forward to thrust it open. His hood falling back, exposing
his face.
Gweir reacted as swiftly as Arthur grasped his arm, gripped hard, for the
Pendragon had risen with a startled, angry gasp, was about to step from the
trees. Gweir pulled his lord downward. “No!” he hissed. “If you had a wife like
his, would you not be secretly visiting places like this?”
Annoyed, Arthur shook the restraining hand off, but he hunkered down
again, his sword lying exposed across his thighs. With a wife like Gwenhwyfar,
he had already visited such places—but never while a wealthy Saxon was taking
his pleasure.
They watched Medraut enter, waited for the shout and the flurry of activity
bound to follow. It was normal, if a whore was busy, either to wait your turn
or find yourself alternative arrangements. One minute passed. Two, three. No
sound from that bothy. Nothing, no disturbance, no clatter or indication of
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 2 9
fighting. No woman’s scream, no reopening of the door with an embarrassed
or grieved customer scuttling through. No man who valued his balls would
deliberately walk in and disrupt another’s purchased entertainment. Not unless
the thing was arranged.
Arthur’s eyes narrowed, his knuckles whitening against the grip on the sword
pommel. Arranged. Organised. Deliberate. He spoke low, the control over
his fury menacing. “That bloody whore-son is not here for the woman, he is
meeting with the Saex.”
“We do not know that.” But Gweir’s protest fell on closed ears. Arthur was
already running for the bothy. Gweir had no option. He followed.
Slamming into the door, kicking it open with his boot, Arthur was through,
rolling with the impact, instantly up on his feet, nostrils flaring, sword ready
to strike if necessary. Gweir silhouetted against the daylight in the doorway.
Froze, both stood quite still, stunned. This, neither had expected. The implica-
tions began to slither into Arthur’s brain. The answers to so many uneasy,
puzzling, questions.
Medraut’s expression was a mixture of horror and embarrassment. He stood
pressing his back against the far wall. Morgaine, Arthur recognised immediately.
She was hunched at the end of the tumbled bed, a fur loosely covering her
nakedness, her hair unbound, uncombed. Her head had jolted up as Arthur had
roughly entered, her eyes widening in fear, a gasp escaping her lips. She made