Read Shadow of the King Online
Authors: Helen Hollick
Tags: #Contemporary, #British, #9781402218903, #Historical, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
no other sound, but the trembling was visible.
Arthur shifted the grip of his weapon, stepped forward across the four paces
of the room, brought the sword-point, with deliberate leisure, into the hollow
of the Saxon’s throat. Except for the flicker of fear in the eyes and the slow,
uncomfortable swallow, the man did not move. He was sitting on the edge of
the bed, birth-naked. Wickedly, Arthur brought the sword lower to point at
the private parts, a sneered smile coming to his mouth at the Saxon’s hastily
stifled, indrawn breath.
“Father, I…” Medraut had to say something, had to explain.
“Do not beg, boy. Not of me.”
Medraut hesitated; the viciousness in that retort was acid sharp. He knew
his father’s potential for anger—had witnessed it often enough—but could not
place why he was so enraged over this. Was it so unreasonable for him to be
here? Aye, he had a wife—but then, so did his father. Could that be it? Arthur
did not want others to know he was visiting a…Medraut could not bring
himself to think of that word about his mother. No, no that could not be it.
5 3 0 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Why bring Gweir if that was so? Unless…was the anger for the same reason
as his own?
That last time Medraut had come here, unsuspecting, tricked by the men…
What if his father had stumbled on the knowing about Morgaine just this
moment, as unsuspecting? What if his father had not known the woman here
to be Morgaine? Expected to find a healing woman, as he, Medraut, had? To
come in innocence to find her here. Could his father be shocked and enraged
for that reason?
“I—Father—” he blurted, trying to ease the pain he was certain was also
coursing through his father. “It, this, is not what you think!”
Arthur did not take his slit eyes from the Saxon, said to his son, “I would like
to believe the pair of you had lured this turd here for my benefit, but knowing
this bitch as I do, I doubt it.”
“Medraut,” the Saxon said, hiding his fear by pretending arrogance, “could
not lure a starving hawk to the bait. He is too incompetent even to clean his
own arse.”
“Well, you would know all about arse-wiping, wouldn’t you, Cerdic?”
Medraut gasped, lurched forward, skin draining pale. Bile was rising in his
throat. Cerdic? Had his father said the name Cerdic?
Arthur flicked his gaze, briefly, to Morgaine. Her head had dropped forward,
tears were splashing, matting the fur. “And you? You thought this would never
be discovered?”
“Took you many years,” Cerdic chuckled. “I think we had a good sailing!”
Arthur jabbed with the sword, and Cerdic winced, edged backward.
For how long then has my mother been here?
Medraut was thinking,
For how long
has she been a whore to this Saxon? This Saxon, my own half-brother?
He fell to his
knees, vomited profusely. No one paid him heed.
“Who else is in this?” Arthur snarled. “Someone must be bringing the
trade in? Who supplies the weaponry? The arrows, the swords, the spears?”
Bull’s blood, they had been such blind fools! For all these years they had
known of a Whore of the Hills—there was even a lewd song circulating
about her—but no one had known her to be Morgaine, Medraut’s mother,
the Pendragon’s…what? What had she been? What she was now? And why
should they know? She did not use the name, Morgaine. None other, save
himself and Gweir—ah, and Medraut—and Cerdic, knew her for who she
truly was. God’s blood! Under the scent of their noses she had been the
means of that dreadful trade, a whore’s house where none would suspect
S h a d o w o f t h e k i n g 5 3 1
the visits of men, British or Saxon, where none would question a wagon
waiting outside.
“Gweir,” Arthur ordered, “search outside. If it is not already loaded, there
will be weaponry somewhere.” Gweir nodded, made to leave, paused as Arthur
added, “While you are out there, make an end of the scum secured to that tree.”
To Cerdic, “You ought choose a more competent guard. Yours were asleep.”
There was only the one scream. The driver. The other two at least had the
honour to die silently.
“They made me do it.” Morgaine lifted her tear-swollen eyes at the sound.
“They forced me, I had no choice. I came to Britain because I wanted to see
you, to see my son.” She shrieked as Arthur lurched forward, grabbed her by
the hair, and dragged her from the bed. “Who?” he bellowed, “Who forced
you? Certainly not Cerdic; he might have visited you here, but he could not
have set this little treachery into motion! Who?” She was on the floor, and he
was shaking her, kicking her. The memory of all those dead at Llongborth—all
those British men slaughtered by weaponry provided by a traitor, a British
traitor. Enraged, he had no mercy for her.
Medraut stumbled to his feet, lurched against his father, attempting to stop
him. Cerdic seized the opportunity to run. Like he had always maintained,
Arthur was a fool. Had the position been reversed, he would have not hesitated:
Arthur would be dead, instantly run through. Kill first, then think about the
situation. That was Cerdic’s policy.
As Medraut frantically hauled at the Pendragon’s arm, Cerdic edged for the
door. One, two, three paces. Four—and he was outside, running for the sheer
terror of survival. He saw the horse, Medraut’s, scrabbled into the saddle, heeled
it into a gallop, ducked as a thrown dagger whistled past his shoulder, yelled
for the lazy brute of an animal to move faster. Gweir, running from behind
the bothy tried to launch himself forward, to grab at the bridle, but the horse
swerved, was into the trees, away.
Swearing, Gweir turned to Arthur who cursed more vehemently and more
explicitly. “Shall I run for the horses? Do we track him?”
“To what point? There will be a craft waiting for him somewhere downriver.
He’ll be away, out to sea.” With the first person he should meet, dead, either
for his clothes or for sniggering at a naked man riding a horse. “I hope your
balls get chafed, you dog turd!” Arthur bellowed into the trees, to where the
horse had disappeared. He swung around as a flurry of movement swept from
the doorway. Morgaine! Mithras, he needed her, needed her to talk!
5 3 2 H e l e n H o l l i c k
Hurtling after her, he shouted for Gweir to head her off, but Morgaine had
always been slender, quick on her feet, and she had only the few yards to go.
Desperately, she threw herself into the cave, ran into the darkness, splashing into
the torrent of the river. It was high, running swollen from the rains, coming
up almost to her thighs, the current strong. The first cave, too, was wetter than
usual, water running down the rock walls, dripping into puddles, small pools.
Thrusting her body into half-swim, half-run, she followed the water course.
She had no light, but needed to go further in, hide herself. She ducked under
the water, again tried to swim, but had to claw her way to the surface, grasp at
an overhang of rock to gasp for breath.
Sobbing, she realised this day, this one time when she desperately needed it,
her route of safety could not help her. The water was too high, too strong a
current. Swallowing tears and river, bruised from a battering against rocks and
boulders and fighting for breath, she hauled herself out. The ground was drier
here, the air warmer. These inner caves were almost a constant temperature,
warm for such heavy darkness. She felt along the walls, fumbled for a niche
between the rock that she could press herself into. This was a cave she knew,
but not so well as to be able to move freely about without light. She pressed her
nakedness against the solidity of the rock, was surprised to feel it wet in places,
trickling water, forced herself to be still. To hide. It would be the only way to
remain alive, for Arthur if he found her, she knew, would have her killed.
Thirty-One
Arthur stood one pace inside the darkness, groaned. He could not
go in there. Knew he would have to. Gweir fetched light: two lamps and
a bundle of tallow candles from the bothy. They took a lamp each, sheltered
the flame with their hands, and stepped out into the darkness. The feeble glow
was a pathetic glimmer, overpowered by the immensity of the surrounding
nothingness, the strident awe of complete blackness. Arthur raised his to head
height, attempting to widen the pool, choked down fear as menacing shadows
leapt and danced, exaggerated the cracks and crannies into ominous chasms.
Where in Mithras’s name was the ceiling? The walls trickled with moisture.
Ferns and mosses grew on the rocks, on the walls the light sparked colour,
seeming to make everything move as it swayed, making shadows flicker. Icicles
of rock, thrusting from the floor, dangling from above. Did the floor heave?
“My lord?” Gweir had served the Pendragon long enough to know this fear
of confined spaces. “Sir, I will go in. You wait here.”
“Sod off.” Determined, Arthur strode ahead, holding the lamp as high
as he dared against the drip of water. A maze of tunnels, gape-mouthed, or
low, narrow, and menacing. He followed the river, stepping cautiously over
tumbles of rock, runnels of water, his boot crunching once on a scatter of
bones. He dipped the lamp downward, closing his mind to the sudden sway of
rearing shadow and darkness, shuddered. There was nothing to show they were
human, could well have been the remains of a wolf s or bear’s dinner. But there
again…he swallowed hard, ignored the heavy hammering of his heartbeat, tried
to shove the fear from his mind. The walls were pressing inward, the ceiling
squeezing downward. There must be a ceiling somewhere, just beyond the
reach of light.
No sunlight came here, no sweet bird song or hiss of rain. The ferns and
mosses that adorned the first entrance cave could not grow here, nothing here,
only rock and blackness. No sound beyond the eerie, monotonous drip of
5 3 4 H e l e n H o l l i c k
water. No point in calling out. Morgaine would not answer. He did, though,
just to break that oppressive silence. Was rewarded by a battering of his own
voice, hurling and bouncing from one wall to another, around and around,
echoing, repeating. Mocking.
There were shelves and pockets lodged among the rock, darker spaces
beyond…other caves, other paths. She could be anywhere.
They stayed with the run of the river, to guide them back, as much as to
go forward, searched for what, in the stark confine of this darkness, seemed an
hour or more, but was less than a score of minutes. Arthur was shaking and
sweating, his breathing rasping.
“We would be better to set a guard outside,” Gweir suggested, anxious, for
Arthur’s breathing was becoming as uneasy in this underground world. “We
will not find her in here, and she must come out, eventually.” Practical, he
added, “She may have already ducked behind us.”
Gods! Arthur had not thought of that. “Could she seal the entrance?” he
gasped, “Shut us in?” Never to see daylight again, to die in here confined, in
the evil of blackness…
Gweir assured him not.
This was ridiculous! Arthur lifted his lamp high, swung it in a circle, illumi-
nating the path, narrow here, wetter than other places with water seeping along
the walls, puddling at their feet, running into the flow of the river. Gweir was
not afraid, so why was he? He forced several deep, calming breaths. He would
have to conquer this thing, damn it! Would have to! He banged his hand, hard,
against an overhang of rock, ran the palm against the surface, wrinkling his nose
at the cold feel beneath his hot skin. Screamed as the solidity began to give way,
to topple forward.
Gweir, without the cramped restriction of fear, acted faster than his lord.
Dropping his lamp, he pitched forward, hauled at Arthur, hurling him away,
downward, into the river. The wall ahead crumpled with an enraged roar, a
sound louder than anything Gweir had ever heard. Louder than the clash of
battle, louder than the howl of a winter-raged wind or the crash of overhead
thunder. Rocks fell and rolled, hitting against his legs, his shoulders. Rocks that
shouted and bellowed as they fell in their might of anger, water gushing into
the holes and crannies left behind.
And then there was silence, a dreadful stillness, where only the water dripped,
and the river drifted.
Thirty-Two
Medraut had waited outside the cave, too distraught to follow
his father, attempt to find his mother. It was unseemly for a man to
weep. God’s mercy, but how Cywyllog would lash him for this weakness were
she to know! At this moment he cared not one grain for what she would
think; he sat, knees bent beneath him on the rain-sodden grass, weeping like an
abandoned child. He had ached for so long over the decision whether to come
here again. Or did he forget the woman who had birthed him? Set behind him,
the knowing she lived as a whore to the traders of the lead mines. A whore to