by Joan Wolf
Blue eyes widened. Then she answered reluctantly, “Edith.”
“Edith.” He began to walk slowly toward the bed. She watched him come, her eyes wide and frightened, her hands clasped so tightly the knuckles were white. “Are you a serving girl, Edith?” he asked.
Her chin rose a little. “This is my father’s house,” she said.
“Where is your father?”
“You killed him,” came the flat reply.
He too sat on the bed, careful to keep some distance between them. “I never saw your father,” he said. “How can you say I killed him?”
“You . . . your people . . . Guthrum,” she answered. She said his uncle’s name as if it were a curse. “My father tried to protect me from him, and he killed him. Killed him and then ravished me.” She was staring at her hands. “He sent me to your room. He said you wanted me.”
She was a very pretty girl. Her hair was pale brown and fine as silk. Her eyes were a mix of blue and gray. Erlend remembered suddenly an incident that had occurred at Lambourn some weeks ago. One of the minor shire thanes who had a manor near the royal estate had raped the daughter of a ceorl. The ceorl had appealed to the king for justice, and Alfred had made the thane marry the girl.
Erlend had been shocked by the judgment. The girl was of no consequence, far below the social level even of a shire thane. He could not believe that the thane had accepted the king’s decision.
“It was better than being gelded,” Brand had said bluntly when Erlend questioned him. “Nothing makes Alfred more furious than seeing the powerful take advantage of the powerless. The man can count himself lucky all he had to do was marry the girl.” Alfred’s trusted thane had shrugged. “Perhaps it will teach a few others to be more careful. There are whores enough in all the towns. No need to hurt a simple maid.”
Erlend looked now at the slim figure beside him and remembered Brand’s words. No need to hurt a simple maid. He said, “I will not hurt you, Edith.”
She did not move, did not look at him, only sat there, still as a wild creature at bay. “I will not touch you,” he added, clarifying matters as best he could.
At that her head turned. He smiled a little, trying to reassure her. Then, awkwardly he said, “I am sorry about your father.”
Tears brimmed suddenly in her eyes. She nodded, unable to reply.
“Stay the night,” Erlend said. “That way, he will not ...” His voice trailed away. She was looking at him warily. “You can have the bed and I will take the floor,” he said, and her eyes widened in amazement.
And so Erlend Olafson, whose grandfather had deposed a king, who was rightful heir to one of the greatest estates in Jutland, spent the night on the floor so a merchant’s daughter could sleep unmolested in his bed.
* * * *
The royal household remained at Wilton for all of March. The weather was fine and the fields of Wessex went early under the plow. Alfred had brought a hundred of the Danish horses with him to Wilton, and after Easter the ceorls who were members of the Wiltshire fyrd came to Wilton to learn how to ride.
“They need to be able to steer their horses and not fall off,” Alfred warned his wife, who, to the astonishment of no one who knew her, was undertaking to lead this training. For form’s sake, Alfred had assigned a number of his thanes to the task, but everyone knew who was really in charge. “They do not have to ride like centaurs, Elswyth,” he said now warningly. “Do not be too fussy.”
“What are centaurs?” Elswyth asked.
“Creatures out of Greek myth,” Alfred replied. “I saw some paintings of them once when I was in Rome. They are supposedly half-man, half-horse.”
“Do not worry, Alfred,” Elswyth assured him with a sunny smile. “I will not be too harsh on your poor ceorls. I promise.”
Alfred’s heart was not with the horses these days, but with his ships. They were being built at Southampton, and every chance he could get, Alfred rode south to see how the work was coming along.
Erlend had been shocked when first he saw the size of Alfred’s ships. He had not paid much attention to talk of the ships before going to Southampton. The Anglo-Saxons had been too long away from the sea, he had thought, for them to pose any threat to the Danes on that element. Fishing ships were most likely what Alfred was building in the fond hope of challenging the Vikings on the sea.
Then he saw the long ships already in the water at Southampton. Two of them had sixty oars. The sides were higher than the long ships used by the Danes, and they rode extremely steady in the water.
Name of the Raven, Erlend swore under his breath. Where had the West Saxons learned to build such ships?
Then he met the Frisians.
Apparently Alfred had realized his countrymen’s lack of expertise in this area also, and he had induced a whole company of Frisian shipbuilders to come to Wessex to build ships and teach the West Saxons to sail them. Alfred was one of their most enthusiastic pupils.
Erlend had learned to sail a longboat before he was ten, but he deemed it wisest to conceal his knowledge. Alfred already thought him more accomplished than was easily explainable by his fictive background. Add a mastery of sailing to mastery of harp and horse, and his disguise would be in shreds.
The sailing weather was particularly good that spring, and Alfred remained at Southampton for longer than he had originally planned. Erlend and Athelwold were with him. Alfred seemed always to include the two of them, no matter how small the rest of his entourage might be. Athelwold was flattered by the honor. Erlend was beginning to wonder if the reason was that Alfred did not trust them out from under his eye.
One afternoon, some three weeks into their stay at Southampton, Athelwold came seeking Erlend, who was cleaning and oiling his bridle on a bench in the manor hall.
“I have just unearthed a very interesting piece of information,” Athelwold said, sitting beside Erlend and regarding the harper with an air of suppressed excitement.
“Oh?” Erlend looked up from polishing his bit. “And what is that?”
“Alfred has a mistress in the neighborhood.”
Erlend was conscious of a nasty shock of surprise. “A mistress? Alfred? Someone is fooling you.”
Athelwold’s pale blue eyes, lashed by reddish lashes lighter than his hair, were blazing with triumph. “Not so. I learned it from Brand. She is the lady of a small manor near to here, and Alfred lived with her for a full two years before his marriage.”
Erlend felt a surge of relief. “Oh. Before his marriage.” He gave Athelwold a scornful look. “What news is that?”
Athelwold scowled at this lack of enthusiasm. “She is very beautiful, this Roswitha. Very beautiful. Brand told me so.” The pale eyes narrowed. “I wonder if Elswyth knows about her.” He spoke Elswyth’s name as if it were some noxious poison.
Erlend straightened the brow band on his bridle and looked thoughtfully at his companion. Elswyth did not like Athelwold, and when the king’s wife did not like someone, that someone knew it. Unlike Alfred, one was never in doubt as to Elswyth’s feelings. Those she liked, she treated as brothers; those she did not like, she disdained. Whatever else she was, Elswyth was not lukewarm.
Erlend looked now at Athelwold’s excited face and knew that Athelwold would very much enjoy causing trouble between Alfred and his wife. Erlend ran his finger up and down the smooth leather of his bridle and thought that although he too would enjoy seeing the confident king made uncomfortable, he did not want Elswyth to be hurt. So he said to Athelwold sharply, “Be careful you do not make a fool of yourself, Athelwold. Elswyth will never believe ill of Alfred.”
The pale eyes regarded him unblinkingly. Then he said, “I forgot for the moment that you are one of her champions.” The king’s nephew pushed his long lanky form up from the bench and strolled away to the fire. Erlend watched him go, a frown between his triangular dark brows.
* * * *
Alfred was thoroughly enjoying his stay at Southampton. The shipbuilding was progressing sa
tisfactorily, and it seemed every day he learned something new about sailing and the sea. Alfred was always happy when he was learning, and the beautiful weather, and the smell of fresh salty air added zest to his enjoyment. If only Elswyth were at Southampton, he thought as he rode from the harbor through the town late one particularly fine afternoon, then would life be perfect. It would be extremely pleasant not to be retiring every night to a lonely bed.
He walked into his hall as he had every other afternoon for the past three weeks, sunburned and hungry, looking forward to his dinner. He was surprised when Athelwold came up to him and said, “My lord, a visitor arrived for you this afternoon.”
Alfred thought that a ship from France had docked. The books! he thought with pleasure. One could always trust Judith to find what one wanted. “What visitor?” he asked Athelstan’s son, looking around the hall for a strange face.
“My lord, the visitor is awaiting you in your sleeping chamber,” Athelwold said respectfully. “Shall I go—?”
“No.” Alfred gave his nephew an absentminded smile. “I shall go myself.” And he strode across the hall to push open the door to his private room.
When he saw who was awaiting him, he stopped as if he had walked into a wall. “Roswitha!” The thanes in the hall could clearly hear the surprise in that shocked exclamation. Then Alfred turned and closed the door behind him.
Roswitha had heard the surprise too, and she looked at him out of huge frightened gray eyes. “My lord ...” She paused in confusion. “Did . . . did you not send for me?”
Alfred leaned against the closed door. “No,” he said. “I did not send for you.”
She went very pale.
“Sit down,” he said, and watched as she sank a little shakily into the chair near the brazier.
“Indeed, my lord ...” She faltered, looking up at him and biting her full underlip. “I would not have come had I not been told you had sent for me. I do not understand ...”
“No, of course you would not have come otherwise,” he answered. He stepped away from the door and forced a smile. She was looking absolutely terrified. “Come, there is no need to look so frightened. You are making me feel like an ogre.”
A little color came back into her cheeks. “You could never be an ogre, my lord,” she said.
He crossed the room to the bed and sat on its edge, facing her. “Who told you I had sent for you?” he asked.
“I ... The thane.”
“Which thane?” he asked patiently.
“He said his name was Athelwold. He said you wanted to see me, that I was to come with him to Southampton manor.”
“Athelwold,” he said. “I see.”
Silence fell. It had been four years since last they met, and much had happened during that time. They looked at each other, curious and assessing, each taking the other’s measure.
She had not changed at all, Alfred thought. She had ever been one of the most beautiful women he knew, and the years had not changed that. Her beauty still spoke to him of calm and serenity and peace. He thought, suddenly, that it was good to see her, good to know that she was well.
Roswitha thought: How he has changed. Not so much in appearance, she thought as she took in the familiar catlike walk, the darkly gold hair confined by its ubiquitous headband. Though he did look stronger than she remembered, tougher. He was not eighteen anymore.
He had changed in a way that was more subtle, yet even more noticeable. There had always been a sense of authority about Alfred, she thought, even when she had first met him when he was but a boy of sixteen. But now . . . now that air of authority was much stronger. She had felt it as soon as he opened the door. This was a king who was in the room with her now, a king who was looking at her out of Alfred’s familiar golden eyes. She remembered suddenly, vividly, achingly, the day he had bidden her farewell. And bent her head to hide the tears that stung behind her eyes.
“Have you not married?” he was asking, and now his voice was the gentle voice she so loved.
She shook her head.
He looked at that bent golden head and frowned in concern. “Is it that you could not marry, Roswitha? Or that you would not?”
At that she looked up and smiled at him with glittering eyes. “Would not,” she said. Then, softly: “You spoiled me for the rest, Alfred.”
It was the first time she had said his name. She saw it make an impact on him. He said, “Nonsense,” in a clipped, abrupt voice.
She shook her head again.
He looked at her as she sat there, passive and acquiescent in her great beauty, asking him no questions, making no demands. He thought of Elswyth in the same position and immediately banished the thought. Elswyth would never be in the same position. She would have knifed him years ago.
“My dear,” he said gently, “I greatly fear that someone has been playing an unkind trick on us both.”
She nodded and kept looking at him out of those shimmering gray eyes.
“I do not want your reputation to suffer,” he said, and felt like a fool in saying it.
“I do not care about my reputation, Alfred,” she said with the great and genuine sweetness he had once found so entrancing.
What he felt now was a flicker of annoyance. She was not helping him at all. “Roswitha,” he said in a crisper voice, “I am going to have you escorted home.” And watched her cheeks grow pale again.
“My lord . . .” She bit her lip. Her features were pure and perfect. Her nose was small and straight. Alfred thought of the haughty thin-bridged nose that waited for him at Wilton and cursed Athelwold under his breath. Roswitha rose to her feet and began to cross the room toward him. He hastily stood up himself. “I do not understand the motive of this thane,” she said in her childishly pretty voice, “but I am very glad to see you again.” She came quite close to him before she stopped and looked up into his face.
The smell of her was instantly familiar. He knew he had but to make one small move and she would be in his arms. His senses were responding to her nearness, but his brain was saying coldly and clearly: No.
“Roswitha,” he said, “come into the hall and let me order you some food. You must be hungry after your ride, Then I will have Wilfred take you home.”
He did not want to be cruel. In fact, he was feeling rather wretchedly guilty. Why could she not be happily married? He had settled enough money on her, surely. He would see what he could do about finding her a husband, he thought as he put his hand on her arm and marched her to the door of his sleeping room.
The first person he saw as he opened the door was Athelwold. He gave his nephew a look that wiped the smile right off his face, and called to Wilfred to take Roswitha off his hands.
* * *
Chapter 26
Brand was furious when he realized what his careless revelation to Athelwold had precipitated. Athelwold protested innocence, saying that he had wished only to do Alfred a good turn. But all the thanes knew of the antagonism between Athelwold and Elswyth, and none of them harbored any doubt as to Athelwold’s true motives in introducing Alfred’s former mistress into his bedroom.
Erlend thought that he alone understood that the true target of Athelwold’s prank had not been the king’s wife at all, but Alfred himself. It was Alfred’s honor Athelwold had been after, not Elswyth’s betrayal. Erlend was sure of it.
How impossible it would be to explain such a thing to Guthrum, Erlend thought as he lay awake on his bench later in the evening after all else had gone to sleep. The idea that a king could lose the respect of his men because he had lain with a woman other than his wife! How Guthrum would laugh at such a notion.
Erlend put his arms behind his head, stared up at the raftered ceiling, and thought about this.
His father had had other women. Indeed, Erlend had left several bastard brothers behind in the serving hall at Nasgaard when he had taken ship for England. Asmund, too, was known to sleep with one of the serving girls. That was the way of men, or so Erlend had been rear
ed to think. It was not until he had come to Alfred’s court that he had seen otherwise.
Was it this Christianity? he wondered. But Alfred’s thanes were no celibates, that was for certain. When Brand had spoken of the plenitude of whores in the towns, he had spoken from experience. And Brand considered himself a good Christian. Even those thanes who were married and who had left their wives to manage at home while they took service with the king—even those thanes took advantage of whatever willing women might come their way.
Why should they expect Alfred to be different?
For there could be no doubt about it, they did expect him to be different from themselves. If he had taken Roswitha to his bed, Alfred would have lost some of the almost fanatical respect with which most of his thanes regarded him. Erlend knew this to be true, because, oddly enough, it was how he would feel himself. Which was impossible, of course, since he had none of that kind of regard for Alfred at all.
It must be Elswyth who was causing him to feel this way, Erlend thought as he stared through the dimly lit darkness of the hall. It was because he was so fond of Elswyth that he had felt that nasty shock when Athelwold hinted of Alfred’s infidelity. His discomposure could have nothing at all to do with his feelings for the king.
Yet, Erlend thought further, he had nothing to reproach himself for in his fondness for Elswyth. True, he thought her beautiful. True, he found her company enjoyable. But he had never once thought of her as aught but Alfred’s wife. He was not lusting after Elswyth in his heart. He was quite comfortably certain of that.
The drone of snoring in the hall was making Erlend feel sleepy himself. It was so nice and warm under his wool blanket. He yawned, Such deep thinking at so late an hour was too much of a strain. He reached down automatically to touch the harp that was tucked under his bench, closed his eyes, and went to sleep.
* * * *
Erlend was not the only one who lay thinking that night, nor was he the only one to apprehend Athelwold’s true motives in introducing Roswitha into Southampton manor. Alfred had never fully trusted this nephew who was so close to him in age, who had challenged his right to be king, and now Alfred lay awake in his solitary bed and contemplated what he ought to do about Athelwold.