Shadow on the Crown (15 page)

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Authors: Patricia Bracewell

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #11th Century

BOOK: Shadow on the Crown
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“Do you threaten my children, you Norman bitch?” He shook her, and for the first time in her life she was afraid of what a man might do to her.

“My lord, I do not!” she gasped through rattling teeth. “I meant only to remind you that you have many folk in your realm, and not all of them are English.” She tried to calm her voice, to speak with the gravity of a priest or a councilor. “If you hold all the Danes in your kingdom responsible for the actions of one man, my lord, then you do them a grave injustice. My blood, too, is Danish, yet I am loyal to my king. Surely I am not alone in this.”

She looked into his eyes, and her stomach twisted with fear as she realized that he was too far gone in drink to listen to reason.

“I know your blood well enough, bitch,” he snarled at her. “Best you be wary of mine. If you do not fear the Danes, then I suggest you cultivate some fear of me!” He shook her again, but although Emma writhed in his grasp, she could not get away from him. “I bought and paid for you with English gold, and I have yet to see any decent return for my money, not even the seed of a half Norman brat taking root in your belly. Perhaps I have been at fault, treating you too gently. Mayhap you prefer more barbarous treatment, in keeping with your ancestry.”

“No, my . . .” she began, but he cuffed her again.

Dazed by the force of this second blow, she barely struggled as he wrestled her to the bed. When he threw her roughly to the mattress she tried to curl herself into a ball, but he used his knee to trap her legs. One of his hands sprawled against her face, stifling her scream and pushing her head down hard against the bedding. With his other hand he grasped the skirt of her gown, rucking it up to bare her legs and thighs, and she knew then what he would do. She felt his weight on top of her, driving the air from her lungs so that she had to struggle to breathe against the hand that covered her nose and mouth. She arched her back, trying to ease the agonizing pressure on her scalp from the tug of her long hair, trapped beneath the weight of their two bodies.

She pushed against his chest with her hands, clawing at him, desperate for air. But Æthelred had been wielding a sword since he was a child. His arms were strong, and her fists had no effect on him. Panicking, she feared that she must suffocate there underneath his weight, until finally he raised himself above her and she was able to snatch a breath. She used it to scream as he brutally thrust himself inside her over and over.

When he was done he collapsed on top of her once more, but he’d moved his hand from her face, and she opened her mouth on a sob to draw in a lungful of blessed air. He roused himself at that, grasping her head with both hands, holding her down as he covered her mouth with his and thrust his tongue inside her, robbing her of breath once more and making her panic swell again. He ground his mouth against hers, using his teeth to score her lips before lifting his head. When she looked at his face, only inches from hers, she saw her blood on his mouth.

“I should have done that from the first,” he said, “marked you as my property. You are not a Dane, lady, nor even a Norman anymore. You have my English seed inside you, and that makes you an English woman and nothing else. Never forget it again.”

He stood up then, and she turned onto her side, crawling up farther onto the bed and pulling her knees up to her chest. She did not see him leave.

News of the massacre on the Feast of St. Brice reached Athelstan as he was hunting in Hwicce Wood. He listened to the lurid reports in disbelief, then immediately set out for Oxford with a small company to discover what truth lay behind the grisly tales.

They approached the settlement of Pallig and Gunhild late in the afternoon of a mid-November day, accompanied by a dismal, steady rain. The outer palisade stood deserted, the gate yawned wide, and a rank stench filled the air. In the center of the compound, a gruesome pile of charred human remains, slick and wet from the rain, lay open to the sky. Beyond it, the great wooden hall and its outbuildings stood whole and intact, but devoid of any signs of life.

Athelstan dismounted, skirted the gory remains of the pyre, and went into the hall. The place had been stripped to the walls. All the furniture, the hangings—everything was gone. The hard-packed dirt floor had been dug up in several places in search, he guessed, of any hoard that may have been hidden there.

Setting his men the task of burying the remains in the dooryard, Athelstan made his way into Oxford town itself. He passed the burned-out hulk of St. Frideswide’s church but did not stop to inspect it. He had seen enough to confirm the grim rumors. What he wanted to know was if anyone had escaped the king’s wrath. He wanted to discover what had happened to Pallig’s wife and infant son.

He found the shire reeve in the local tithe barn overseeing the sorting of clothing, furniture, cooking pots and utensils, tools, even armor and weapons. Athelstan could guess where it had all come from—confiscated from the poor wretches who had been slaughtered at the king’s command. The administrative arm of his father’s kingdom worked as efficiently as one could wish. These items would be cataloged and sold among the locals, with most of the proceeds going to the king. Nothing would be destroyed or wasted. Except lives.

His interview with the reeve was brief. The man assured him that he had fulfilled the king’s command, and that no one had escaped the king’s justice.

“We struck before dawn with over a hundred men,” he said. “They had watchers at the gate, but we got to ’em before they could raise the alarm. Caught ’em sleepin’, mostly, although that whoreson Pallig put up the devil of a fight before we gutted him. His woman was no easy mark, either. She could sling an ax like a woodsman, that one. Used it to try to keep us from that cub of hers. Murdered two of my men, for all the good it did her.” He grinned and winked, then inclined his head in the direction of St. Frideswide’s. “The ones in the church were townsfolk, living among us as if they belonged here. Filthy Danes.” He turned and spat. “They thought the priest might save ’em, but he was with us. We had a goodly crowd by then, and Father Osbern himself set the thatch alight. The good Lord gave us a fair sky and, oh, it was a mighty burning!” He gave a nod of satisfaction. “I reckon it was a good day’s work, St. Brice’s was.”

Athelstan cursed as he turned away. Good work, indeed. The men of Oxford had followed the king’s orders to the letter. As for the rest of the country, even the king would likely never learn how many hundreds had been murdered and how many had managed to escape the sword, for surely not every Dane had been butchered. And just as surely, Athelstan knew, someone would carry word of the massacre to Swein Forkbeard and tell him that his sister and her son were among the Danish dead.

There would be a price to pay for the slaughter of St. Brice’s Day. Blood would beget blood, and Swein would not let this outrage go unanswered.

By the time Athelstan made it back to Winchester two days later he had heard many more reports of killings that had been carried out in London, Warwick, and Shrewsbury. With each new account his anger increased. Ignoring courtly protocol he strode directly into his father’s inner chamber and slammed both hands on the table before the king.

“Why did you do it?” he demanded. “What possessed you to put so many innocents to the sword?”

His father looked up, pursed his lips, and with a flick of his hand dismissed his steward and the clerk who had been scribbling away at a table nearby. Sitting back in his great chair, the king folded his arms in front of him and gazed darkly upon his son.

Athelstan, watching his father, thought that he looked like the very picture of God that was in the psalter given to him by his grandmother. There he sat, the Lord of Judgment, granting redemption or damnation as he saw fit.

“The Dane who threatened me,” Æthelred said slowly, “claimed that he was part of an army. You heard him. You spoke with him yourself.”

“Yes, I spoke with him! He was mad! He raved! There was no army!”

“There is no army now.” Æthelred’s voice was calm. “My reeves have seen to that. They put only armed men to the sword.”

“You are misinformed,” Athelstan said stonily. “They put women and children to the sword. In Oxford they burned them alive in the church where they sought sanctuary.”

Æthelred waved a hand. “That was done in error.”

Athelstan gaped at him. An error, he called it. Yet there was no sign of regret on the king’s countenance, only mild irritation.

“It was done in your name!” Athelstan cried. “The deed is upon your soul.”

“Not mine alone. I took counsel from my advisers.”

“Then you were ill counseled! Whose advice did you seek? Let me guess. Eadric of Shrewsbury, who makes no secret of his hatred of the Danes who settled near his lands? Æthelmær of Oxford, who will probably double the size of his holdings as a result of this? Abbot Kenulf—”

“I consulted the men who would be the first to die should our enemy attack us from within!” Æthelred cut him off. “The kingdom is safer now that our enemy has been destroyed. I am safer!”

Athelstan stared at his father. How could a king be so blind to the consequences of what he had done?

“You have not destroyed an enemy, my lord,” he insisted. “You have created one. This act will come back to haunt you. Hundreds are dead at your behest. Pallig is dead, even though you gave him the gold to build his hall and granted him the land on which it stood. His wife, Gunhild, and their small child are dead. Think you that her brother, Swein Forkbeard, the fiercest of all the Danish warriors since Alfred’s time, will not seek vengeance?”

“If so, then he will do it from outside the kingdom, not from within! I could not allow my enemies to dwell within my very borders, making themselves fat off our lands while they wait for a signal to turn upon us and attack. Wiser men than you have given their blessings to this action. They do not question the judgment of their king.”

“The Danes living among us had no reason to attack, my lord. Now you have given them one. Mark my words, father, you will regret this unholy act. We will all of us regret it!”

“Your regrets interest me not!” the king spat. “We are finished here. Hubert!”

The king’s steward stepped into the chamber, bowed to his lord, and stood next to Athelstan, staring at him pointedly.

Frustrated and angered by his father’s resistance to logic, Athelstan slapped his hand on the table, turned, and stalked out of the room.

His father was a fool. He was wealthy, powerful, and blessed by God, yet still he was a fool. He was making decisions that would lead inexorably to disaster. It was like using Greek fire to douse a flame. And Athelstan greatly feared that now that the blaze had truly begun, they would none of them escape it.

Æthelred scowled as Athelstan withdrew from the chamber. His foolish son did not understand. How could he? He had not seen Edward’s wraith, had not been burdened with the foreknowledge of his own doom—had not been forced to take measures to prevent it.

But with this act that his son found so repellant he had triumphed over his enemies and over the vengeance that his dead brother sought to exact from beyond the grave. He had preserved his kingdom and his crown.

And surely he had banished forever the hideous specter that so haunted and tormented him.

“My son chides me, Hubert,” he said, “for defending the kingdom that he will one day inherit. He would pit his youthful wisdom against my experience and knowledge.”

“He is seventeen, my lord. Consider that when you were seventeen you had been wearing a crown for over seven summers. Perhaps your son believes that he is just as capable as you were then.”

Æthelred frowned. Athelstan was still a whelp. He did not have the experience needed to understand the minds of men.

“At seventeen I was much older than my years,” he said. “My son, though, has not yet mastered the skills of a leader. He commands his few hearth guards, but he has not been tested.”

“Yet, my lord, he did you a great service recently, did he not? Intervening when the Dane would have taken your life? Thus, he has shown skill and loyalty. Perhaps such a service should be rewarded with some form of recognition, some visible symbol of your regard for him.”

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