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Chapter 1
Tamworth, the capital of the kingdom of Mercia
AD826
I move through the hall, wishing there were more people to hide behind. But with Beornwulf, king of Mercia, away with the war band battling the upstart, Athelstan, king of the East Angles, there are too few. I don’t wish to feel the gaze of the king’s wife, Lady Cynehild, cutting me, even from such a distance. She sits on the raised dais, arrayed as though she rules without the aid of her husband. A cold woman, I’ve yet to discover why she detests me so much, but hate me she does. I know that. As does everyone else within that great hall, its blackened rafters reaching far above my head. Not that any of them will tell me why she despises me. I doubt they know the cause of her animosity. When I’ve asked Wynflæd in the past, she’s dismissed my query quickly enough.
‘Icel, why would Lady Cynehild, the queen of Mercia, hate the nephew of one of her husband’s warriors? An orphan boy with no one but his uncle to care for him?’ Her words cut me. I don’t like to be reminded that my mother died birthing me, that I have no father. I’m entirely reliant on my uncle’s goodwill. And before that, on the care of a woman who was not my mother who ensured I lived.
Still, for all Wynflæd’s dismissive words, I know Lady Cynehild watches me.
I nip here and there, bending low, thinking to do all I can to stay out of Lady Cynehild’s sight.
She’s a terrifying woman. I can’t deny it. I’ve known her cold gaze to freeze me, a flick of her fingers to find me running far away from my food, even when my belly growls with fury. On those occasions, I’ve taken shelter elsewhere, been fed by the sympathy of others, by Wynflæd, or Edwin’s mother, by those who don’t sit within the king’s hall for their meals.
‘Where have you been?’ Edwin, my foster brother, hisses the words to me as I rear up beside him. He’s saved me a place on the bench reserved for the children of the ealdormen and the king’s warriors. Edwin always does. I notice his flushed cheeks, his lips set in a thin line of anger, his dark hair as unruly as ever. I also see the stain on the arm of his tunic, no doubt snot from his nose or fat from the piece of meat he thrusts into his mouth even as he speaks.
‘I was with Wynflæd.’
His tutted reply tells me what he thinks of that. ‘You should spend less time with that useless old crone and more time with the horses or the warriors, or with your uncle. They’ll teach you what you need to know.’ His words are mangled round the food he chews, but I understand them all the same. It’s not as though they’re anything new for me to hear.
I shake my head, clearing the long, dark hair from my eyes, reaching across him for a piece of warm bread just out of reach. Taking pity on me, he hands me the bread, while other hungry eyes glower at me from further along the table. I meet those eyes evenly, only turning aside when I fear the scrutiny from the dais. The other youths know that I can’t withstand that gaze. A few smirks remind me they know the Lady detests me.
Some might say it’s an honour that the Lady even knows who I am. I would sooner merge into the tables and stools as the other children do. Why Edwin and I are allowed to claim space here, in the king’s hall, I don’t know. But I know we don’t belong, all the same. I’ve asked my uncle about it, but like Wynflæd, he dismisses my concerns.
‘You are my nephew. The king and queen honour me by feeding you, and Edwin, your foster-brother.’
Again, I begin my familiar retort to Edwin concerning Wynflæd and why I spend so much time with her.
‘She knows a great deal, about the old kings, about Mercia, about healing. You should come and listen to her. It’s all well and good knowing how to kill, but healing is magical.’ We’ve had this argument many times before and will continue to do so. He would rather learn to maim and kill; I would sooner know how to heal.
‘You only spend time with her in the hope she’ll speak about your mother, that you might find out who your father was?’ Edwin’s words are angry. He doesn’t approve of my desire to know who my father was. Edwin thinks I should be content knowing that his mother fed me when I was a babe, that my uncle ensured I lived, that Wynflæd nursed the pair of us through the colds and fevers that we endured when we were small boys. ‘Don’t.’ His single word brings me up short, just as I’m about to resume the argument.
I duck again, using his broader body to shield me from whoever eyes me. Only Edwin looks elsewhere, I realise, seeing his neck turn outwards, and not towards the dais. It’s a warm day. I’ve not noticed the arrival of the warrior because the door stands wide open, the stifled breeze from outside doing little to lift the fug from the interior of the hall, the hum of conversation drowning out all noise from beyond. It smells of cooked meat and rancid fat, and unwashed bodies. I wrinkle my nose, even as I feel my eyes drawn to the figure. I’m standing, even as Edwin pulls me back down, his large hand on my clean tunic. I turn to remonstrate with him, but his other hand, greasy from the meat, covers my lips, head dipping towards the dais, eyes wide with meaning, and slowly, slowly, my mind begins to make sense of all that’s happening.
Cenfrith, my uncle, has returned from the kingdom of the East Angles, but his eyes are hooded, a dirty bandage wrapped round his head, stained black with his blood. More importantly, his face is bleached of all colour, his eyes seeking out the figure on the dais, not me, and my blood runs cold.
My uncle is one of the king’s fiercest warriors, a man I admire and could never hope to emulate.
‘Where is King Beornwulf?’ I mutter through my clenched teeth, but Edwin shakes his head again, hair sticking out with the movement, his greasy hand still over my mouth.
My heart thuds too loudly as silence envelops the hall, all eyes settling on the trembling figure of my uncle.
‘My Lord?’ Lady Cynehild stands, her fine blue dress, despite the terrible heat of a summer’s day in the heart of Mercia, pooling round her, the soft shush of the expensive fabric audible even from where I sit. The colour suits her; I admit that. It brings out the flush of her rosy cheeks and the lightness of her long, tightly braided blonde hair. She’s not a tall woman, but there’s something about her posture that makes her imposing. And terrifying.
‘My Lady,’ my uncle huffs, and I’ve escaped Edwin’s clawing hand and skipped over the bench I perch on, taking my wooden beaker of water to my uncle’s side. He notices the water, not me, swilling it into his parched mouth with a filth-encrusted hand. Dust stains his face, his clothes, and his weapons glisten with what I suspect to be the gore of the battlefield. And he stinks. Of sweat and horses. And perhaps piss as well. I’m staggered by the state of him.
My uncle has fought in many battles for Mercia. I’ve never seen him like this.
‘A rout, My Lady,’ Cenfrith manages to gasp.
I eye the darkened stain of his tunic with worry, considering how Wynflæd would tell me to heal such a wound; with hot water, a little vinegar and then moss and honey to cover it while the skin works to knit together. She would offer a draught to ease the pain.
But my uncle hasn’t finished speaking. Far from it.
‘I regret to inform you that Beornwulf, the first of his name, king of Mercia, is dead. Beornoth, Eadberht, Alhheard and Wynfrith, four ealdormen of Mercia, died with him on the slaughter-field battling the upstart king of the East Angles. Only a few of the king’s household warriors have survived. I’ve ridden hard to bring you the news in fear that King Athelstan of the East Angles will invade Mercia now that he’s slain the king.’
A shriek of horror fills the hall, but it doesn’t come from Lady Cynehild’s mouth, but from another, no doubt one of the recently widowed women. I don’t track the sounds of the sobbing woman as her cries are quickly stifled by others, evidently keen to hear the news. Stunned by it as well. This is King Beornwulf’s second failure in only a year. And this time, it’s a fatal one.
If there was silence in the hall at my uncle’s arrival, it now feels as though no one dare breathe, let alone speak.
I move even closer to my uncle, desperate for him to acknowledge me, Icel, his nephew. I should be the only one who matters to him, even amongst the king’s widowed wife and those who now scent the time has come for them to claim their birthrights.
I’m relieved Cenfrith lives when all others of the king’s warriors are dead. Yet, I fear for his life with the terrible injuries he carries. He needs to get to Wynflæd. She will heal him.
‘Not now,’ my uncle offers, his pained eyes meeting mine for the first time, as he pushes me behind him, out of sight, the strength remaining in his hand assuring me he’ll live.
But, of course, I’ve forgotten about Lady Cynehild and her hatred of me. I think to slip away, but I’m exposed on all sides, and the horrified eyes of Edwin, as he shakes his head from the bench, remind me to stay where I am. Despite the news Cenfrith brings, Edwin thinks only of me, his foster-brother. I’m grateful for his concern.
‘Who—’ the word is cut off, and I swallow once more, fear almost turning my innards to fluid. Lord Ludica has risen from his honoured seat close to Lady Cynehild. While King Beornwulf has been riding to battle, Ludica, Bealdred and Lady Cynehild have ensured Mercia was ruled well. I can determine his intentions now, and yet my concern is for Cenfrith, not Mercia.
Ludica is a youthful man, too young to rule Mercia as he has no battle glory to his name, and yet, with the death of King Beornwulf, he’s the obvious choice to become king. He’s Beornwulf’s closest relative, a cousin, I believe. Not that I pay much attention to the men and women in their rich clothes, with their near-constant arguments and complaints that one or other holds more wealth and honour than them.
The only other choice for Mercia’s next king would be Bealdred, who sits to the other side of Lady Cynehild. Lord Bealdred is an older man, with some battle glory to his name, and much loved by the dead Beornwulf. But Lord Bealdred has already failed to hold Kent against the incursions of the Wessex king. Bealdred is tainted with that failure and doesn’t even think to counter Lord Ludica’s claim from his place beside Lady Cynehild.
Lord Ludica is older than me by only six years and yet thinks to be king. More, he can be deemed a man with seventeen years to his name, whereas I’m still no more than a boy, and scrawny with it. The girls my age tower over me, already becoming women, as Wynflæd tells me, a caution in her eyes that I don’t need.
But I’m still a boy, with messy black hair, stick-thin legs and a nose I hope to grow into one day. I often feel that my features are too large for my slight face. I might overtop Wynflæd but not by a great deal. I wish I were taller, if only so I didn’t spend so much time on tiptoes reaching for objects just out of reach on the shelves in her workshop. I would never think to call myself a man for I am certainly still only a boy and treated as such by those within Tamworth. Ludica is a man in the eyes of everyone here and he’s welcome to it.
Lord Ludica certainly dresses as though he has a royal treasury to support him. I’ve never seen a man wear so much gold and silver in his clothes or round his neck and along his arms. If I wore as many rings as him, I’d never be able to cut the herbs Wynflæd instructs me to slice so small. My arms would shake too much from the weight.
‘When did this happen?’ Lord Ludica’s words crack with surprising force, and a sigh of unease ripples round the room as everyone realises what his words actually mean.
I note the look on Ealdorman Sigered’s face. He’s old and lined with his years, as though a split tree trunk. He should have been with King Beornwulf but arrived at Tamworth, some would say, purposefully, two days too late for the muster.
‘Five days ago,’ my uncle admits, his words softer.
‘Five days is too long. Where have you been?’
But my uncle doesn’t respond. I don’t know where he looks as I still shelter behind him, but I can imagine.
‘The boy,’ Lady Cynehild states, her words flat and unfeeling. I can’t believe she wishes to berate my uncle, here and now, when her husband is dead and Mercia under threat. Yet, the words are unmistakable, ringing through the air, and I feel everyone in that room stare at me. I wish I’d stayed beside Edwin then. Equally, I wish I could dart through the servants and slaves who carry platters of meat, jugs of ale and wine, all held in place as they absorb the news my uncle carries.
But I’m saved from further scrutiny by Mercia’s king-in-waiting. There is no choice. Mercia has few enough æthelings, men deemed worthy of the throne. Of late, Mercia’s kings have spectacularly failed in their duties to provide heirs, preferring to bicker over who should be king, now rather than in the future. And those who did have heirs, have seen them die too soon, or even before they could become king after their fathers.
‘I’ll call my warriors together, prepare a counter strike.’ Lord Ludica strides from his place on the dais, words flung over his shoulder, even as he dismisses my uncle with a contemptuous air.
Ealdorman Sigered doesn’t move with the snapped commands, but Lord Bofa does, Lord Wilfwald as well. Both men must sense a new possibility now that King Beornwulf is dead.
Only then Lord Ludica arrests his forward momentum, seeing me where I cower behind my uncle, and he draws up short, dark eyebrows knit together.
He’s not a tall man. I think he might still have some growing to do. Wynflæd has told me many times that boys will continue to grow taller long after girls have become women. Lord Ludica wears his hair tightly cropped, a black beard and moustache working to cover the youthfulness of his face. I can see the resemblance to King Beornwulf in the sharpness of his nose. But there all similarities end. King Beornwulf was a warrior. Lord Ludica is softened by his time spent sitting close to the king in his royal hall, rather than riding at his side.
It’s almost as though this is the first time Lord Ludica has truly seen me. He stares, his black eyes pits of nothingness, and then shakes his head, remembering he commands here now, and this is not the time to notice a warrior’s nephew, an orphan with no mother or father to speak for him.
‘After we’ve convened the Witan, and I’ve been confirmed as Mercia’s king, we’ll ride to the kingdom of the East Angles,’ he announces, and I expect Lady Cynehild to argue.
I risk peeking out from behind my uncle’s protective back, but she stays silent. Instead, her lips form a tight line. I quickly appreciate why. Lord Ludica might be a young man, but he has a wife already, and even now, Lady Eadburga makes to stand at the urging of her father, Ealdorman Oswine, to replace Lady Cynehild as Mercia’s queen. Lady Cynehild’s marriage to Mercia’s king wasn’t quite the safeguard she thought it was.
For a moment, I think there’ll be a battle as fierce as that which killed King Beornwulf and the four ealdormen of Mercia, but suddenly Lady Cynehild deflates, stumbling for her chair. Her weakness surprises me. Yet, she has no child to rule after King Beornwulf, and with no child, she’s nothing now. She’ll be forced to retire to a nunnery, live a life of quiet contemplation far from the royal court. Never again will she rule Mercia. Never again will she preside over feasts or wear rings that flash with rich gems and jewels. I would feel sorry for her. But I can’t. She’s made my life a misery.
Bishop Æthelweald stands on the dais, summoned from the church inside Tamworth by one of the servants who thinks to earn a reward from him. I’ve not noticed him passing, but evidently my uncle has as he doesn’t startle as I do. The bishop’s hands are clasped before him, eyes lowered in sorrow for all his chest heaves with the speed of his arrival. As he puffs and pants, his rich cloak shimmers in the light from the open doorway. I’ve never liked the older man, just another who knows me and always seems to be there to witness my transgressions, which are few enough, but always seen.
‘We’ll call the Witan for tomorrow morning. It seems that we require a new king and new ealdormen, both.’ Bishop Æthelweald’s words echo through the still subdued hall, the soft weeping of women the only sound to be heard above the thudding of my heart.
I eye Bishop Æthelweald. I detect the hint of eagerness in his clipped words. A king’s death should be a time for mourning, but as with Lady Eadburga, Ludica’s wife, the bishop senses that everything is different. Now he’ll help Mercia’s new king to rule. It will make him even more powerful. I don’t doubt that.
Mercia is to have a new king, Ludica, the first of his name. Perhaps my life will become easier without Lady Cynehild’s keen gaze watching my every movement. It seems the bishop, the lords and Ludica’s wife aren’t the only ones to realise everything has changed with the news my uncle carries.
‘Uncle.’ He staggers before me, almost down on one knee, and I rush to his aid, grateful when Edwin is beside me as well. Then, with the departure of Lord Ludica through the open doorway, and the submission of Lady Cynehild, Edwin and I are released from the hesitancy that has always marked our actions within the king’s hall. ‘We need to get him to Wynflæd.’
This time there’s no argument from Edwin or my uncle. That worries me more than it should. My uncle’s eyes flutter open and closed, even as he rests his full weight against me, head lolling to one side so that I can hear his laboured breathing. He’s almost too heavy for my slight arms and legs to carry, and yet I refuse to buckle. I will support him.
As we make our way outside, the bright light almost blinds me; the world I knew changed in just a few words by the death of the king. I notice my uncle’s solitary horse, Wine. Head down, slick with sweat, mouth foamed from her exertions. One of the stablehands moves to curry the animal, his words soft, while another rushes with a bucket of water for her to drink from. I would go to her, thank her for bringing my uncle back to me, but I hardly know her. She’s my uncle’s horse, not mine.
I’m grateful, even as I realise how few horses there are now. She stands alone outside the stables. Within those stables are the horses of the ealdormen who didn’t escort the king, including the horse used by Lady Cynehild. If I ventured inside the stables, I would find it less than half full. King Beornwulf took his men and his wealth of animals to claim back the kingdom of the East Angles from King Athelstan. None of them has returned, other than my uncle and his faithful mount.
King Athelstan of the East Angles will be wealthy now, and not just in terms of horses. He’ll carry the knowledge that he killed the Mercian king.
I can hardly believe I’ll never see Beornwulf again. His scrutiny was almost as unwanted as Lady Cynehild’s, and yet he was Mercia’s king. Why he’d notice me, I never knew, but he did, and that protected me, even as Lady Cynehild’s disdain ensured I was bossed about by the servants as well as my peers.
I realise I will miss King Beornwulf. That thought surprises me.
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