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Authors: Morgan Llywelyn

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BOOK: The Wind From Hastings
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“Considering? What are you talking about, madam?”
She tried to look mealy-mouthed. “Why, I know that I should not like to ride through Londontown and over the bridge at the river gate if my former husband's head were stuck up on a pole on that bridge!”
For the second time in my life I heard the sound of the sea roaring in my ears, and the world swirled away from me in a reddish blackness.
“She's awake, Your Grace,” a dim voice said somewhere above me. I struggled to open my eyes, but when I did so the world swooped so dizzily that I closed them again. I realized I was lying in a little wooded glade off the road and people were leaning over me. The coolness of the glade made me shiver and brought back my senses a bit.
Bishop Wulfstan knelt beside me; I knew his soft, kind voice. “Please, my dear, open your eyes again!”
I did so. The King was there, too, standing with a flushed face and a bare head. “Aldith!” he spoke sharply.
I turned my face away. “Take him away from me, Wulfstan!” I pleaded. There was much whispering and tramping about, then the good Bishop knelt by me again and took my hand.
“The King is gone, my lady. But he was sore hurt that you sent him away.”
“I would send him to the … I would send him away forever if I could!”
“Your Grace!” The noble Bishop was shocked. “The King cares for you very much! He was most upset when he heard you had fainted and fallen from your horse. And in your condition, a fall can be so dangerous!”
“My condition?” I came fully out of my swoon then. “You are mistaken, my Lord Bishop! If you suppose me to be with child you are muchly mistaken!”
His seamed and stubbly face sank in disappointment. “But if Your Grace is not … then … ?”
“I was told by the King's mother that Prince Griffith's head is on a pole in London!” I cried out to him, letting some of the pain escape my soul through my lips. “She wanted to hurt me and she did!”
Wulfstan looked as wounded as I felt. “God forgive the woman! That was a cruel thing to do, my lady, whatever reason she may have had! Of course it was a frightful shock to you! You should have been prepared in a gentler way; I myself could have told you, at the right time, without putting it so bald!”
I felt sick. Not with the morning sickness of a life to come, but with the rotten sickness of grief still carried. “It's true then, Wulfstan? What she said?”
His eyes answered me.
They brought my children to me. Llywelyn smoothed my hair and kissed my cheek, bringing the
tears to my eyes at last. Rhodri trotted up to me on his chubby little legs, thick as oil beakers. He showered me with wet kisses, then clasped his fingers in the ruby collar I wore and asked if he might have it. I heard one of the housecarles mutter to another, “The young Welsh puppy takes after his sire; I see he grabs what he wants free-handed!” In my tormented mind I entered a mark against that man.
The loveliest of my children, my little Nesta, was laid in my arms. In that crowd of sand-colored Saxons she glowed like a mountain rose. Eyes like velvet, with dark lashes spiked like the points of a star. Pink cheeks, skin translucent as goat's milk, red lips always pouted for a kiss. Wherever my children are is home, and no price was too high to pay for their ransom! I wrapped her silken curls around my fingers and felt strength come back into my body. I would give Gytha no more satisfaction that day.
“Osbert, give me your arm. We must not delay the King.”
A great crowd of merchants, reeves, bishops, nobles and doxies met us outside the New Gate, together with the Lord Mayor. Some exceedingly dull things were said by all the important men present, which took up most of the morning, and then at last we entered the city.
I had last seen York as a town whose festival had ended, when even the drunkest villein had sobered up and staggered off to his cottage and his angry wife. Garlands of dried leaves and early flowers hung dispiritedly here and there, and pennons with the device of Godwine were still nailed above door lintels. But the city of London was very different indeed. It bore the bustle and gaiety of a place where the festival never quite ended, where there was always more ale to be drunk and more girls to be pinched.
The King's party formed itself into a parade within the shadow of the old Roman wall encircling the city. For the occasion I wore a crown, not the one Harold
had set upon my head at York Minster, but a bulky gold thing with a sharp edge not sufficiently padded. I could feel it biting into my forehead. The trumpeters and heralds led off; the King, simply dressed but richly bejeweled, rode alone. Behind him paced the Mayor and Stigand, Archbishop of Canterbury. Then I followed at a slight distance on my palfrey, accompanied by the young wives of four of the crown stewards. One of the housecarles—not Osbert—held my horse's bridle, though the animal was quiet from the long journey and I could have handled him even if he was not.
Gytha was somewhere behind us. I hope she ate dust.
Harold's triumphal parade through London was to travel east across the Wall Brook and then double back along the Thames to the West Palace on Thorney Island. All of the city seemed to be an open marketplace, and merchants constantly besieged our caravan, begging the King's patronage. Harold was in a good humor and a generous mood; several times he ordered a halt while he selected laces and trinkets for me. But he did not proffer them himself; they were carried back to me by pages. Harold as a doting husband was something I did not expect or believe, but it pleased the spectators and delighted the merchants.
We had dinner at a tented pavilion on Cheapside Street. We were escorted to our seats by Stigand, who was both dignified and controversial. The table itself was raised on a high dais so that all might see us, and unusually high chairs were furnished as well, even fitted with the nicety of soft cushions. The King flung his aside with a snort of contempt, whereupon I immediately dispatched a page to retrieve it and add it to my own.
A great feast was served us even as cartloads of food were distributed to the rest of our party. I nibbled on some fowl boiled in sweet almond milk. Stigand urged me to try a concoction of onions, eggs and saffron which he was enjoying heartily. I tasted it, assured him
it was delicious, and left it cooling on my plate, but at least we had engaged in some conversation.
Stigand was well known to me as the subject of much gossip, so that I was interested to observe him firsthand. I pretend to dislike such tittle-tattle, but I am secretly fascinated by people who have an aura of scandal about them. Stigand had been an ally of Harold's father while serving as Bishop of Winchester. At that time a man named Robert the Norman was Archbishop of Canterbury. King Edward was known to be considering William the Bastard as his possible heir, and of course Archbishop Robert was sympathetic to the idea of having his countryman assume the English throne. In 1052, at the urging of the Godwines, a popular uprising resulted in Robert's being driven from the country, and Stigand became Archbishop of Canterbury in his place.
My sympathies are with the outcast, so I was not prepared to view Stigand with friendly eyes. And, truly, nothing in his countenance encouraged me. The man had an almost reptilian head, with scaly skin and flat, cold eyes. There was none of Wulfstan's sweet saintliness about him; I understood why he was reluctant to let himself be seen in Rome when Pope Leo IX summoned him in reply to the deposed Robert's desperate appeal. Stigand chose instead to stay in England, where he had powerful friends, and was therefore condemned in absentia and excommunicated. Which made him an outcast too, I suppose, but that did not improve my feelings toward him.
Such was the influence of the Godwines that he continued to hold the archbishopric in defiance of the Pope, even after the death of old Earl Godwine the next year. Several more popes tried in vain to dislodge him, but the man was as fixed as a tick on a hound's hide, clinging to power and enlarging his sphere as the Godwines enlarged theirs.
In all that time no English bishop came to him for consecration. Even when Harold was crowned King he
chose Eldred of York for the duty of coronation which customarily should have been Canterbury's. Yet Stigand remained a powerful presence; his lifelong loyalty to the Godwines gave him an influence that was hated but could not be denied. Looking at him, I was reminded of all the comely and loving faces that had surrounded my Griffith at Rhuddlan—and yet Griffith had been betrayed. What sort of man was Harold that he commanded the absolute fealty of the Fallen Angel of Canterbury? Was it possible that Stigand genuinely believed, as so many others did, that England's future rested safest in Harold's hands?
Looking at Stigand I was frightened, for I felt that my life and my fate were totally given over to strangers. Wulfstan seemed to represent the forces of goodness; Stigand represented ambition and implacable will. England must not be conquered by foreigners—I was in agreement with that—but when both good and evil were on our side, which would win?
Was there enough of Wulfstan in the King to win God's support, I wondered. But then I had another, depressing thought; in a lifetime I have begun to learn that even the best man does not always win. There seemed no doubt that Harold would eventually have to fight for his country, and the outcome would not be determined by the simple forces of my childhood faith.
I lost my taste for food entirely and sat picking at my nails until the meal was over.
Mounted once more, we rode south toward the river. I turned in my saddle and managed to catch Osbert's eye; he spurred his horse to my side.
“Osbert, by what way do we go?”
“The London Bridge, my lady.”
I tightened my grip on the reins until my horse tossed his head in protest, but I had to steady my nerves for the question: “Is that where they put … the heads … of England's enemies?”
“Yes, Your Grace.” His expression was impassive.
“Then please send word to my lord the King and ask him to go by a different route, for my sake.”
In a few minutes Harold had turned his horse and ridden back to me, scowling at this disruption of his plans. About us people swirled, a-buzz.
“Is the First Lady ill?”
“Nay, it is the heat of the sun; she wants a shady route!”
Coarse laughter. “It is the heat of the King's loins, I'll wager! I daresay the Lady carries an Atheling in her womb!”
Harold swung in beside me and the chatter ceased. “What nonsense is this?” he demanded, fierce and golden as a lion in the sun.
“My Lord, I rarely ask favors, but I beg you this once. Take some other way; do not go by the bridge!”
For a moment I saw annoyance and anger in his eyes at my presumption. Then he realized what I meant. His expression softened by an eyelash, only enough that I saw it, no one else. “Madam, you would understand that all folk must see me as King. This city supported my father; from it came his strength at court. London must be my conquest as well; we ride through all the town, as planned.”
“And most particularly”—his eyes narrowed, and I felt the force of his will as he pressed it upon me—“most particularly must we
both
ride to the foot of the bridge! All the cityfolk, and all of the court, must see that the past has no claim upon my lady.”
“Please …” I began, horrified.
His voice was cold as he leaned toward me and hissed his command for my ears alone. “You will do as I say, Aldith. You will ride with courage to the foot of London Bridge, and you will look upon whatever is there. You will give no sign of emotion, do you understand? No sign!”
The taste of Stigand's eggs and onions flooded my mouth. I could not speak for fear my dinner would pour forth and disgrace me. My head drooped over
the saddlebow and I nodded, beaten by his will. Harold continued to gaze at me fixedly for a few moments to assure himself that I would obey, then he turned abruptly from me and spurred his horse. Miserable, I fell in behind him, and we rode down the Bishop's Gate Road to the bridge.
The smell of the Thames under an afternoon sun was equal parts of mud and weed and water. A number of people were gathered at the end of the bridge to greet him, including a band of German merchants come to pay their annual trading tribute of cloth, pepper and vinegar. To distract myself from the bridge I tried to smile at them, to take part in the exchange of courtesies. But it was no use. When Harold's attention was fixed on the crowd my head turned of its own accord, and I was gazing at the London Bridge.
A goodly wooden structure, spanning the broad and sluggish river. Wide enough for two wagons abreast to cross it, it had led into the walled city for hundreds of years. It marked the only route across the Thames to the south country, so almost everyone had cause to use it at some time. An ideal place for displaying the trophies of war.
They were there, pole after pole, the length of the bridge: an endless row of pikes topped by blackened objects like charred loaves of bread. The sun and salt air had discolored the heads of England's enemies; time and crows had rendered them unrecognizable. If one was my Griffith, I would never have known him.
BOOK: The Wind From Hastings
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