The Warrior Chronicles

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The Warrior Chronicles Page 191

by Bernard Cornwell


  I went to his bedside and knelt. ‘I have been granting small gifts as remembrances,’ Alfred said.

  ‘You were ever generous, lord King,’ I lied, but what else does one say to a dying man?

  ‘This is for you,’ he said, and I heard Ælswith’s sharp intake of breath as I took the newly written parchment from her husband’s feeble hand. ‘Read it,’ he said, ‘you can still read?’

  ‘Father Beocca taught me well,’ I said.

  ‘Father Beocca does all things well,’ the king said, then moaned with pain, which caused a monk to go to his side and offer him a cup.

  The king sipped, and I read. It was a charter. The clerk had copied much of it, for one charter is much like another, but this one took my breath away. It granted me land, and the grant was not conditional, like that which Alfred had once used to give me an estate at Fifhidan. Instead it conveyed the land freely to me and to my heirs or to whoever else I chose to grant that land, and the charter laboriously described the boundaries of the land, and the length of that description told me that the estate was wide and deep. There was a river and orchards and meadows and villages, and a hall at a place called Fagranforda, and all of it in Mercia. ‘The land belonged to my father,’ Alfred said.

  I did not know what to say, except to utter thanks.

  The feeble hand stretched towards me and I took it. I kissed the ruby. ‘You know what I want,’ Alfred said. I kept my head bowed over his hand. ‘The land is given freely,’ he said, ‘and it will give you wealth, much wealth.’

  ‘Lord King,’ I said, and my voice faltered.

  His feeble fingers tightened on my hand. ‘Give something back to me, Uhtred,’ he said, ‘give me peace before I die.’

  And so I did what he wanted, and what I did not wish to do, but he was dying, and he had been generous at the end, and how can you slap a man who is in his last days of life? And so I went to Edward and I knelt to him, and I put my hands between his and I swore the oath of loyalty. And some in the hall applauded while some stayed resolutely silent. Æthelhelm, the chief adviser in the Witan, smiled, for he knew I would now fight for Wessex. My cousin Æthelred shuddered, for he knew he would never call himself king in Mercia so long as I did Edward’s will, while Æthelwold must have wondered if he would ever take Alfred’s throne if he had to fight his way past Serpent-Breath. Edward pulled me to my feet and embraced me. ‘Thank you,’ he whispered. That was Wednesday, Woden’s Day, in October, the eighth month of the year, which was 899.

  The next day belonged to Thor. The rain did not stop, coming in huge swathes that swept across Wintanceaster. ‘Heaven itself is weeping,’ Beocca told me. He was crying himself. ‘The king asked me to give him the last rites,’ he said, ‘and I did, but my hands were shaking.’ It seemed Alfred received the last rites at intervals through the day, so intent was he on making a good end, and the priests and bishops vied with each other for the honour of anointing the king and placing a piece of dry bread between his lips. ‘Bishop Asser was ready to give the viaticum,’ Beocca said, ‘but Alfred asked for me.’

  ‘He loves you,’ I said, ‘and you’ve served him well.’

  ‘I have served God and the king,’ Beocca said, then let me guide him to a seat beside the fire in the great room of the Two Cranes. ‘He took some curds this morning,’ Beocca told me earnestly, ‘but not many. Two spoonfuls.’

  ‘He doesn’t want to eat,’ I said.

  ‘He must,’ Beocca said. Poor dear Beocca. He had been my father’s priest and clerk, and my childhood tutor, though he had abandoned Bebbanburg when my uncle usurped its lordship. He was low-born and ill-born, with a pathetic squint, a misshapen nose, a palsied left hand and a club foot. It was my grandfather who saw the boy’s cleverness and had him educated by the monks at Lindisfarena, and Beocca became a priest and then, following my uncle’s treachery, an exile. His cleverness and his devotion had attracted Alfred, whom Beocca had served ever since. He was old now, almost as old as the king, and his straggly red hair had turned white, his back was bent, yet he still had a keen mind and a strong will. He also had a Danish wife, a true beauty, who was the sister of my dearest friend, Ragnar.

  ‘How is Thyra?’ I asked him.

  ‘She is well, thanks be to God, and the boys! We’re blessed.’

  ‘You’ll be blessed and dead if you insist on walking the streets in this rain,’ I said. ‘No fool like an old fool.’

  He chuckled at that, then made a small impotent protest when I insisted on taking his sopping wet cloak and placing a dry one around his shoulders. ‘The king asked me to come to you,’ he said.

  ‘Then the king should have told me to go to you,’ I said.

  ‘Such a wet season!’ Beocca said. ‘I haven’t seen rain like this since the year Archbishop Æthelred died. The king doesn’t know it’s raining. Poor man. He strives against the pain. He can’t last long now.’

  ‘And he sent you,’ I reminded him.

  ‘He asks a favour of you,’ Beocca said, with a touch of his old sternness.

  ‘Go on.’

  ‘Fagranforda is a great estate,’ Beocca said, ‘the king was generous.’

  ‘I have been generous to him,’ I said.

  Beocca waved his crippled left hand as if to dismiss my remark. ‘There are presently four churches and a monastery on the estate,’ he went on crisply, ‘and the king has asked for your assurance that you will maintain them as they should be maintained, as their charters demand, and as is your duty.’

  I smiled at that. ‘And if I refuse?’

  ‘Oh please, Uhtred,’ he said wearily. ‘I have struggled with you my whole life!’

  ‘I will tell the steward to do all that is necessary,’ I promised.

  He looked at me with his one good eye as if judging my sincerity, but seemed pleased with what he saw. ‘The king will be grateful,’ he said.

  ‘I thought you were going to ask me to abandon Æthelflaed,’ I said mischievously. There were few people I would ever talk to about Æthelflaed, but Beocca, who had known me since I was a stripling, was one.

  He shuddered at my words. ‘Adultery is a grievous sin,’ he said, though without much passion.

  ‘A crime too,’ I said, amused. ‘Have you told that to Edward?’

  He flinched. ‘That was a young man’s foolishness,’ he said, ‘and God punished the girl. She died.’

  ‘Your god is so good,’ I said caustically, ‘but why didn’t he think to kill her royal bastards as well?’

  ‘They have been put away,’ he said.

  ‘With Æthelflaed.’

  He nodded. ‘They kept her from you,’ he said, ‘you know that?’

  ‘I know that.’

  ‘Locked her away in Saint Hedda’s,’ he said.

  ‘I found the key,’ I said.

  ‘God preserve us from wickedness,’ Beocca said, making the sign of the cross.

  ‘Æthelflaed,’ I said, ‘is loved in Mercia. Her husband is not.’

  ‘This is known,’ he said distantly.

  ‘When Edward becomes king,’ I said, ‘he will look to Mercia.’

  ‘Look to Mercia?’

  ‘The Danes will come, father,’ I said, ‘and they’ll begin with Mercia. You want the Mercian lords fighting for Wessex? You want the Mercian fyrd fighting for Wessex? The one person who can inspire them is Æthelflaed.’

  ‘You can,’ he said loyally.

  I gave that statement the scorn it deserved. ‘You and I are Northumbrians, father. They think we’re barbarians who eat our children for breakfast. But they love Æthelflaed.’

  ‘I know,’ he said.

  ‘So let her be a sinner, father, if that is what makes Wessex safe.’

  ‘Am I supposed to tell the king that?’

  I laughed. ‘You’re supposed to tell Edward that. And tell him more. Tell him to kill Æthelwold. No mercy, no family sentimentality, no Christian guilt. Just give me the order and he’s dead.’

  Beocca shook his head. ‘Æt
helwold is a fool,’ he said accurately, ‘and most of the time a drunken fool. He flirted with the Danes, we cannot deny it, but he has confessed all his sins to the king and been forgiven.’

  ‘Forgiven?’

  ‘Last night,’ Beocca said, ‘he shed tears at the king’s bedside and swore allegiance to the king’s heir.’

  I had to laugh. Alfred’s response to my warning had been to summon Æthelwold and believe the fool’s lies. ‘Æthelwold will try to take the throne,’ I said.

  ‘He swore the opposite,’ Beocca said earnestly, ‘he swore on Noah’s feather and on the glove of Saint Cedd.’

  The feather had supposedly belonged to a dove that Noah had released from the ark back in the days when it rained as heavily as the downpour that now drummed on the roof of the Two Cranes. The feather and the saint’s glove were two of Alfred’s most precious relics, and doubtless he would believe anything that was sworn in their presence. ‘Don’t believe him,’ I said, ‘kill him. Or else he’ll make trouble.’

  ‘He has sworn his oath,’ Beocca said, ‘and the king believes him.’

  ‘Æthelwold is a treacherous earsling,’ I said.

  ‘He’s just a fool,’ Beocca said dismissively.

  ‘But an ambitious fool, and a fool with a legitimate claim to the throne, and men will use that claim.’

  ‘He has relented, he has made confession, he has been absolved, and he is penitent.’

  What fools we all are. I see the same mistakes being made, time after time, generation after generation, yet still we go on believing what we wish to believe. That night, in the wet darkness, I repeated Beocca’s words. ‘He has relented,’ I said, ‘he has made confession, he has been absolved, and he is penitent.’

  ‘And they believe him?’ Æthelflaed asked bleakly.

  ‘Christians are fools,’ I said, ‘ready to believe anything.’

  She prodded me hard in the ribs, and I chuckled. The rain fell on Saint Hedda’s roof. I should not have been there, of course, but the abbess, dear Hild, pretended not to know. I was not in that part of the nunnery where the sisters lived in seclusion, but in a range of buildings about the outer courtyard where lay folk were permitted. There were kitchens where food was prepared for the poor, there was a hospital where the indigent could die, and there was this attic room, which had been Æthelflaed’s prison. It was not uncomfortable, though small. She was attended by maidservants, but this night they had been told to make themselves beds in the storerooms beneath. ‘They told me you were negotiating with the Danes,’ Æthelflaed said.

  ‘I was. I was using Serpent-Breath.’

  ‘And negotiating with Sigunn too?’

  ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘and she’s well.’

  ‘God knows why I love you.’

  ‘God knows everything.’

  She said nothing to that, but just stirred beside me and pulled the fleece higher about her head and shoulders. The rain beat on. Her hair was golden in my face. She was Alfred’s eldest child and I had watched her grow to become a woman, had watched the joy in her face fade to bitterness when she was given as wife to my cousin, and I had seen the joy return. Her blue eyes were flecked with brown, her nose was small and upturned. It was a face I loved, but a face that now had lines of worry. ‘You should talk to your son,’ she said, her voice muffled by the fleece bedcover.

  ‘Uhtred spouts pious nonsense to me,’ I said, ‘so I’d rather talk to my daughter.’

  ‘She’s safe, and your other son too, in Cippanhamm.’

  ‘Why is Uhtred here?’ I asked.

  ‘The king wanted him here.’

  ‘They’re turning him into a priest,’ I said angrily.

  ‘And they want to turn me into a nun,’ she said just as angrily.

  ‘They do?’

  ‘Bishop Erkenwald administered the oath to me, I spat at him.’

  I pulled her head out from under the fleece. ‘They really tried?’

  ‘Bishop Erkenwald and my mother.’

  ‘What happened?’

  ‘They came here,’ she said in a very matter-of-fact voice, ‘and insisted I went to the chapel, and Bishop Erkenwald said a great deal of angry Latin, then held a book to me and told me to put my hand on it and swear to keep the oath he’d just said.’

  ‘And you did?’

  ‘I told you what I did. I spat at him.’

  I lay in silence for a while. ‘Æthelred must have persuaded them,’ I said.

  ‘Well I’m sure he’d like to put me away, but Mother said it was Father’s wish I took the vows.’

  ‘I doubt that,’ I said.

  ‘So then they went back to the palace and announced I had taken the vow.’

  ‘And put guards on the gate,’ I said.

  ‘I think that was to keep you out,’ Æthelflaed said, ‘but you say the guards are gone?’

  ‘They’re gone.’

  ‘So I can leave?’

  ‘You left yesterday.’

  ‘Steapa’s men escorted me to the palace,’ she said, ‘then brought me back here.’

  ‘There are no guards now.’

  She frowned in thought. ‘I should have been born a man.’

  ‘I’m glad you weren’t.’

  ‘And I would be king,’ she said.

  ‘Edward will be a good king.’

  ‘He will,’ she agreed, ‘but he can be indecisive. I would have made a better king.’

  ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘you would.’

  ‘Poor Edward,’ she said.

  ‘Poor? He’ll be king soon.’

  ‘He lost his love,’ she said.

  ‘And the babies live.’

  ‘The babies live,’ she agreed.

  I think I loved Gisela best of all the women in my life. I mourn her still. But of all those women, Æthelflaed was always the closest. She thought like me. I would sometimes start to say something and she would finish the sentence. In time we just looked at each other and knew what the other was thinking. Of all the friends I have made in my life, I loved Æthelflaed the best.

  Sometime in that wet darkness, Thor’s Day turned into Freya’s Day. Freya was Woden’s wife, the goddess of love, and for all of her day the rain continued to fall. A wind rose in the afternoon, a high wind that tore at Wintanceaster’s thatch and drove the rain in malevolent spite, and that same night King Alfred, who had ruled in Wessex for twenty-eight years and was in the fiftieth year of his life, died.

  The next morning there was no rain and little wind. Wintanceaster was silent, except for the pigs rooting in the streets, the cockerels crowing, the dogs howling or barking and the thud of the sentries’ boots on the waterlogged planks of the ramparts. Folk seemed dazed. A bell began to toll in mid-morning, just a single bell struck again and again, and the sound faded down the river valley where floods sheeted the meadows, then came again with brutal force. The king is dead, long live the king.

  Æthelflaed wanted to pray in the nuns’ chapel, and I left her in Saint Hedda’s and walked through the silent streets to the palace where I surrendered my sword at the gatehouse and saw Steapa sitting alone in the outer courtyard. His grim, skin-stretched face that had terrified so many of Alfred’s enemies was wet with tears. I sat on the bench beside him, but said nothing. A woman hurried past carrying a stack of folded linens. The king dies, yet still sheets must be washed, rooms swept, ashes thrown out, wood stacked, grain milled. A score of horses had been saddled and were waiting at the courtyard’s farther end. I supposed they were for messengers who would carry the news of the king’s death to every corner of his kingdom, but instead a troop of men, all in mail and all helmeted, appeared from a doorway and were helped up into their saddles. ‘Your men?’ I asked Steapa.

  He gave them a sour glance. ‘Not mine.’

  They were Æthelwold’s men. Æthelwold himself was the last to appear and, like his followers, he was dressed for war in a helmet and mail. Three servants had brought the troops’ swords from the gatehouse and men milled about in search
of their own blade, then strapped the swords and belts about their waists. Æthelwold took his own long-sword, let a servant buckle the belt, then was helped up onto his horse, a big black stallion. He saw me then. He kicked the horse towards me and pulled the blade out of its scabbard. I did not move, and he curbed the stallion a few paces away. The horse flailed a hoof at the cobblestones, striking a spark. ‘A sad day, Lord Uhtred,’ Æthelwold said. The bare sword was at his side, pointing down. He wanted to use it and he dared not use it. He had ambition and he was weak.

  I looked up into his long face, once so handsome, now ravaged by drink and anger and disappointment. There was grey at his temples. ‘A sad day, my prince,’ I agreed.

  He was measuring me, measuring the distance his sword needed to travel, measuring the chance he would have to escape through the gate arch after striking the blow. He glanced around the courtyard to see how many of the royal bodyguard were in sight. There were only two. He could have struck me, let his followers take care of the two men, and be gone, all in a moment, but still he hesitated. One of his followers pushed his horse close. The man wore a helmet with closed cheek-plates, so all I could see of his face were his eyes. A shield was slung on his back and on it was painted the head of a bull with bloodied horns. His horse was nervous and he slapped its neck hard. I saw the scars on the beast’s flanks where he had used his spurs deep and hard. He leaned close to Æthelwold and said something under his breath, but was interrupted by Steapa, who simply stood up. He was a huge man, frighteningly tall and broad and, as commander of the royal bodyguard, permitted to wear his sword throughout the palace. He grasped his sword’s hilt and Æthelwold immediately pushed his own blade halfway back into its scabbard. ‘I was worried,’ he said, ‘that the damp weather would have rusted the sword. It seems not.’

  ‘You put fleece-grease on the blade?’ I asked.

  ‘My servant must,’ he said airily. He pushed the blade home. The man with the bloodied bull’s horns on his shield stared at me from the shadows of his helmet.

  ‘You’ll return for the funeral?’ I asked Æthelwold.

  ‘And for the coronation too,’ he said slyly, ‘but till then I have business at Tweoxnam.’ He offered me an unfriendly smile. ‘My estate there is not so large as yours at Fagranforda, Lord Uhtred, but large enough to need my attention in these sad days.’ He gathered the reins and rammed back his spurs so that the stallion leaped forward. His men followed, their horses’ hooves loud on the stone.

 

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