The Aenglisc retired some distance from the fort to bury their dead. The wind bore the distant sound of their singing into the heart of the Combrogi fortress. They were the Combrogi’s enemies but they grieved like any other men. Dan felt the regret, the sorrow and the pride of those who sang war songs for their dead comrades. He was glad when the burials finished sometime between dusk and full darkness. He missed Frontalis’s faith. He missed Bryn’s voice. In the silence of the night it seemed a colder more brutal world, and Dan wished he and Ursula had a way to leave it. Death was everywhere around him, snapping at his heels, in the last thoughts of his enemies and the first thoughts of his friends. Would this be his last sunset? He breathed in the multi-layered stench of the fortress and longed to be home. Ursula had retired to her tent, exhausted by the tantalising presence of magic beyond her reach. Her nerves were worn raw with the desperation of her need for the magic. It was an addiction she had not known she had acquired. Dan felt for her but there was nothing he could give her but his sympathy and Ursula had little use for that. Arturus had doubled the guard overnight but there seemed to be no need. All was quiet, but for the small sounds of sleeping men and animals, the blast of the horn to signal watch change, the small scufflings and fidgetings and quiet exchange of pleasantries that accompanied each handover. Dan was restless. He and Taliesin had tried to take on the merlin form to spy on the Aenglisc but had been unable to make it work. Dan thought they were both too tired but refrained from saying so. Taliesin’s pride would admit no physical weakness, though Dan could not remember him caring much about such things when he’d first met him in Macsen’s world.
The morning showed Dan the Aenglisc at their fires, eating their now meagre supplies, and cleaning and sharpening their weapons. Just before noon Rhonwen produced an eerie green mist that rolled like some vile toxic cloud all around the fort. It reeked of sulphur and was clearly created to disguise the activities of the enemy. The fort became an island surrounded by an apparently poisonous sea. Arturus instructed all food to be covered up in the great hall to prevent it spoiling, should the green cloud be harmful. Once more, Arturus stood on the battlements with his white shield aloft and gave the orders to fire occasional volleys of stones into the evil-looking mist. He was well aware that he had limited supplies of missiles but he loosed them anyway. Dan wondered at his wisdom. He knew the ballista used specially made pottery spheres, which shattered on impact. These had the double advantage of producing lethally sharp shards once fired which wounded as well as stunned and rendered them unusable to the enemy. It had taken months for the relatively poor craftsmen of Camulodunum to reproduce this Roman trick and Arturus still had fewer examples of the clay shot than he would have wished.
Perhaps Arturus was wiser than Dan realised and the blind shooting worked, because no Aenglisc breached the walls. By late afternoon the mist died away to reveal yet more bodies on the scarp slope. By late evening, the unmistakable stench of sickness reached the hill fort. The men from Cado had done their work; the river was contaminated and most of the Aenglisc were affected, doubled up with cramps or vomiting their guts up and worse. That night was unseasonably warm with thick cloud cover burying the moon. The smell from the Aenglisc camp turned Dan’s stomach. Everywhere smelled too badly and the inactivity and strain of being under siege was beginning to affect the men. Everyone was irritable and Dan struggled to retain his own good humour. He sat by the fire with Ursula and helped her sharpen her sword and spear. She was tense and grim looking.
‘Dan, what if I die here?’
‘What? What can I say? You might die, Ursula, this is war. You’ll be a target if the Aenglisc have any sense.’ He couldn’t think of anything very reassuring to say but continued anyway.
‘But the Aenglisc are all ill – they’ll be less effective. I think they’ve got food poisoning or something.’
‘It doesn’t seem very fair does it – poisoning them first?’
‘Like Arturus says, he’s High King because he wins, not because he’s a hero.’
‘I’m scared, Dan.’
‘I know.’ Dan wanted to touch her, comfort her, but did not know how.
They gazed moodily into the fire together. Waiting was the hardest part. After the evening meal, which no one ate very enthusiastically – it was like eating in a sewer – Arturus gathered everyone together to talk about his battle plan. It was simple – at dawn he intended to charge the Aenglisc and destroy them. Though simple it would involve some reconstruction of the fort itself, as its only entrance and exit was both narrow and inaccessible. Under the cover of darkness the men were to cut new gateways in the fort’s fabric, large enough for several men to ride through at once. It was an insane idea and yet Arturus had it all planned out so meticulously that he persuaded them that it could work. They would have to work in shifts through the night. Dan was given the task of disguising the noise of such wholesale building work – with music. Most of the men and Ursula were to be involved in removing the fortifications, so the few who were left were chiefly those who were incapacitated in some way. Dan was left with Bryn, Taliesin, two horsemen injured when they’d lost control of their horses, the lituus and tuba players, and a man with a drum. Dan split the men into two shifts and did what he could to amplify whatever sounds they managed to produce. It seemed to work and those busy labouring joined in when they could, so that it must have sounded to Aenglisc ears like some all night carousel. How those not working slept at all was something of a mystery. By dawn, however, Dan was reduced to teaching the men football chants, Bryn had lost his voice and even Taliesin’s calloused fingers were bleeding from playing too much. It was a relief when Arturus called them all together again.
‘This is it. This is our chance to finish what I started with the High King Ambrosius ten years ago. Beyond these walls lies the biggest army the Aenglisc have ever produced. We have down there the Bretwalda of Britannia, Hengest’s heir and all the most land-hungry, power-crazed leaders of the Aenglisc. If we kill them all now their ambitions for Britannia will be destroyed. We will be in a position to drive the Aenglisc out of Britannia and restore the Saxon shore. Gather your weapons, mount up, ready the fire drums, and we will be victors before noon!’
It was not the most inspiring speech that Dan had ever heard but it seemed to work. There was no cheering, but then they did not wish to alert the Aenglisc to the imminent attack. Ursula found Dan in amongst the milling men and beasts.
‘You will take Braveheart?’ Dan said.
She nodded dumbly.
‘You will be fine. I know you can do this. You are Boar Skull after all.’
Dan knew she wished he would be by her side, fighting with all his old berserker skill. He shrunk from the thought of all the killing and the pain to come. He pulled his hood over his head as if that would make a difference. He was very afraid that Ursula would die. His fear for her overcame his natural reticence and he hugged her briefly.
‘Be lucky, Ursula.’
He could feel her fighting to keep her composure. Her face was the dead pan, sullen one of old. She did not trust herself to speak but nodded again briefly and strode off to mount her horse. Braveheart followed her through the furious activity of the men rushing for their posts. In the makeshift stable she found her horse. The Sarmatians had given her a groom to care for the horse and the fine scale armour with which it had been supplied. The groom bowed when he saw her and she nodded somewhat imperiously. She had to lead these men, these proud, brave men. She was almost as afraid of failing them, as she was afraid of death. Someone darted suddenly from the shadows.
‘Bryn!’
‘Let me fight with you!’
‘Bryn, you know you can’t,’ Ursula said firmly.
‘I can ride as well as Cerdic’s men – the light cavalry.’
‘I know you can, Bryn, but you must stay with Dan. I fear he may need you.’
‘What, to sing again?’ Bryn managed to fill those simple words with contempt. ‘Brother Frontalis would have me be a monk. I am a sworn warrior. My place is with Braveheart, fighting.’
Ursula choked back her sympathy and put all the steel she could muster into her response.
‘Your place, Bryn, is with your liege lord as you swore on the road to Alavna. Would your father have had you abandon your lord because he chooses a difficult road?’
Bryn coloured and Ursula was a little ashamed of her blatant manipulation.
‘Go to him, Bryn. Arturus may have need of him and he of you. That is your duty.’
Bryn bowed stiffly and with a stony face replied, ‘As you say, Lady Ursa.’
Fury evident in every tense line of his body, Bryn did as he was told.
Ursula exhaled slowly, trying to calm herself. She needed to concentrate. She accepted help from the groom and rode to the crowded muddy field that was the hill fort. Tents and cooking pots had been removed and stowed away. They would have no immediate need of them. After the battle they would be dead or victorious and either way they would not sleep at Baddon Hill again. It was still early and everyone was tired after the night’s hard labour, but Ursula did not need Dan’s special perception to feel the anticipation and the fear.
Arturus found Ursula in the melee. ‘Lady Ursa, I am going to remain here with Dan and Taliesin in case Rhonwen tries something unexpected. All my hopes ride with you. Take my shield and hold it high as the signal to ride. I will tell Dan to give you my message. Please take this also.’ He handed her a full-face mask of gold, modelled on some idealised Roman god. There were eye-shaped holes through which she could see and two finely modelled nostrils through which she could breathe. He helped her to fasten it around her head with leather bands so that it stood slightly proud from her face, overlapping the front of her helmet. She fought a terrifying sense of claustrophobia.
‘It belonged to Ambrosius. It will terrify the Aenglisc and may well preserve your beauty. Go with God, Lady Ursa, and all the hopes of Britannia.’ He smiled almost wistfully and was gone. She rode slowly to what would become the front of the Sarmatian force, next to Cynfach. Brother Frontalis was busy blessing the men. His sonorous voice giving comfort was the only sound that could be heard above the noise of last minute weapon and kit adjustments. Fantastic. She was not only leading the best horsemen in Britannia down a slope of suicidal steepness but she was also hampered by a vast shield slung across her back while her vision was restricted by some mask. When Frontalis came to her and said, ‘Bless you, my child,’ her ‘Amen’ had never been more heartfelt. It was time.