The Edge of Light (52 page)

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Authors: Joan Wolf

Tags: #Historical Fiction, #General, #Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #Great Britain, #Kings and Rulers, #Biographical Fiction, #Alfred - Fiction, #Great Britain - Kings and Rulers - Fiction, #Middle Ages - Fiction, #Anglo-Saxons - Kings and Rulers - Fiction, #Anglo-Saxons, #Middle Ages

BOOK: The Edge of Light
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“Gloucester,” Alfred said that night as he discussed the situation with the ealdormen and thanes who were in attendance at Winchester for the court. “Gloucester is in Mercia, true, but it is overdose to the Wessex border for me to be comfortable.”

“The Danes have finished giving away the lands of eastern Mercia,” said Cenwulf, shire thane of Dorset. “Perhaps Guthrum now looks to do the same with the lands of the west. The soil about Gloucester is rich and fertile, and the Severn flows wide and deep there toward the sea. The Danes are never happy far from the sea.”

There was the faintest of lines between Alfred’s fair brows, “My understanding was that Guthrum was to leave the west of Mercia to Ceolwulf,” he said.

Ethelnoth of Somerset snorted. “Who can put faith in the word of a Dane?”

“No Saxon can, that is certain,” said the Ealdorman of Hampshire.

Alfred had decided. “We had better keep a troop of men at Cirencester,” he said. “From Cirencester, scouts can keep watch on the road out of Gloucester, can give us fair warning if the Danes look to be thinking of invasion.”

“Keeping men at Cirencester would be wise, my lord,” agreed Godfred of Dorset. “We ealdormen can go by turn in sending men to keep the watch. No need to lay the burden on your own household.”

Ethelnoth of Somerset said, “If you desire, my lord king, I can send a troop of my fastest-riding men to Cirencester in the morning. They can keep a close watch on Gloucester, observe if there seems to be any suspicious gathering of an army.”

Alfred thought for a long moment, then slowly nodded. “All right,” he said. “I do not need a fighting force, you understand, just good men with fast horses. And if there is any news, they are to come to me, not to you, Ethelnoth.”

“Yes, my lord,” said Ethelnoth of Somerset. “I understand.”

The royal household did not go to Dorchester to hold Christmas that year. There was sickness reported among the resident household at Dorchester, and so Alfred decided to break with tradition and celebrate the Christmas holidays at Chippenham.

Thus far the Danes in Gloucester had remained quiet. At the beginning of December the men of Somerset had been replaced in Cirencester by the men of Dorset, and with winter settling in, Alfred thought it highly unlikely that the Danes would attempt to move out of their Gloucester base.

Erlend, who had slipped as unobtrusively as he could manage it into Alfred’s household, accompanied the royal family to Chippenham, and watched the Christmas festivities with a thoughtful eye. In some ways, he thought, this Christian feast of Christmas was like to the Norse winter feast of Yule. There was a Yule log laid upon the fire, in the old Norse way; the hall was decorated with evergreens from the forest; and a pig was roasted for the festival banquet. But the religious aspects of this Christmas were foreign to him.

Erlend had not been free to ask questions about Christianity when last he had been at Alfred’s court, as he had been masquerading as a Christian himself. But in his present situation he could ask as many questions as he liked. And the person he found himself questioning the most was the king.

Alfred truly believed in this religion of his. The more Erlend questioned him, the clearer that fact became. Alfred believed in this Father-God, in this Christ who was God’s son, and he believed that this God actually intervened in the lives of men.

“It is divine providence that rules our lives, Erlend,” Alfred said to him. “Not fate, as you would have it. Always within us, God is working. It is our fault if we do not listen and hear.”

This belief was at the very core of the man that was Alfred; Erlend could see that. He tried to comprehend what Alfred meant by this “divine providence” of his, but it was difficult. Fate was a concept any Dane understood thoroughly. This other was somewhat more complicated.

The royal household gathered at Chippenham that Christmas was considerably smaller than was usual. The king’s companion thanes had been in the field for a large part of two years; many of them had not seen their kin during all that time. Now, at Christmas, with the Danes quiescent in Gloucester for the winter, Alfred had allowed those men who so desired to go home for the feast. About sixty of the hundred thanes who comprised the king’s personal guard had chosen to do so.

There were many West Saxons who rendered up thanks to God that Christmastide for the peace that reigned in Wessex. The thanes and ceorls who comprised the various shire fyrds knew heartfelt gratitude to be at home this Christmas with their families. The men of Wessex had been in the field against the Danes for almost two years, but there had been no battles, and few West Saxons had been killed. The Danes were in Mercia; Wessex was at peace.

God’s blessing on the king.
It was a toast heard again and again throughout the land that Christmastide.
God bless King Alfred.
Because of Alfred, because of his courage and his resolution, they had defeated the Danes. Thanks be to God, Wessex was at peace.

The feast of the Epiphany, the twelfth day of Christmas, was celebrated at Chippenham with a great hunt and a great feast. A small amount of snow had fallen the day before, just enough to dust the world with purest white and make it sparkle in the winter sun. Elswyth had ridden out with the men and brought down her own hart.

The following day dawned gray and bitter, Elswyth awoke to find Alfred pacing up and down the floor of their sleeping room, fully dressed and wrapped in a warm cloak. One look at his face was enough to tell her that he had a headache.

There was nothing to be done, of course. That was the worst part of it all, that there was nothing to be done. At least, she thought, the feasting was over. He could keep to his room for the day without fear of disappointing anyone.

He did not want cold cloths for his head, he just wanted to be left alone, so she dressed and went out into the hall to have her breakfast.

“The king is ill today,” she said quietly to the thanes. “You will have to go hunting without him.”

No one wanted to go hunting if the king was ill. Consequently, most of the thanes were in the hall when Cedric, shire thane of Wiltshire, came galloping into the courtyard demanding to see the king.

“You cannot,” he was told at first. Then, when he blurted his news out to all the hall, Elswyth ran to get Alfred.

Erlend could tell immediately that Alfred was in pain. It was there in the set of his mouth, in the shadows under his eyes, in the way he held his head.

“My lord king,” said Cedric of Wiltshire, “you must flee from here. The Danes are coming down the Fosse Way. Hundreds of them, my lord! All on horse! They are making straight for Chippenham. And they are but five miles away!”

There was a moment of appalled silence. Everyone was looking to Alfred. Erlend felt sick to his stomach. He said, “Guthrum is seeking to capture you, my lord. He must know you are here at Chippenham. It is not an invasion, not with only a few hundred men. He is seeking you.” Now everyone was staring at Erlend. “You must get away from here, Alfred!” Erlend said urgently, meeting the shadowed eyes of the king. “You must save yourself!”

The door to the hall opened and Flavia and Edward came in from the outside. Erlend saw Alfred look to the door, then to Elswyth, who was standing beside him. “Saddle the horses,” he said, and his clipped voice sounded perfectly normal. “We must all get away from Chippenham. We cannot risk being caught here with the children.”

“Where shall we go, my lord?” It was Brand speaking as the men began to run for the doors. “To Selwood?”

There was a moment’s silence. “No,” said Alfred. “We will ride for Somerset. It was the men of Dorset let the Danes go by; I will not trust my family to Dorset,” He looked past Brand. “Where is my reeve? He had better send the serving girls out to nearby farmhouses. I do not want any women left here at Chippenham when the Danes ride in.”

“I am here, my lord,” said the reeve of Chippenham, stepping forward to receive his orders.

Elswyth said, “Flavia, Edward, go and put on your warmest clothing.” It was the voice her children never disobeyed. “Tell Tordis to dress Elgiva warmly also. Quickly, now!” As the children ran for their sleeping room, Elswyth turned toward her own room to dress herself in warm clothes for riding.

It took only ten minutes before the horses were saddled and the whole of the party that would ride out of Chippenham was mounted and in the courtyard. Edward and Flavia were perched before two of the thanes, while Elgiva had been given into the charge of Edgar. The dogs ran underfoot; Alfred had refused to leave his dogs for the Danes. The day was damp and bitter cold; the wind smelled of snow. Finally the royal party cantered out of Chippenham and turned south and west, toward Somerset and Ealdorman Ethelnoth, whose loyalty to Alfred was not to be questioned.

The steady three-beat stride of his cantering horse was an agony for Alfred. There was grayness all about him; his senses had almost completely gone. All that was left was a furnace of pain in his head. He heard Elswyth say, “Give me your reins, Alfred,” and he let her take them. He couldn’t see well enough to steer. It was a monumental effort just to stay in the saddle.

It had always been one of his greatest fears, that a headache would strike at a time when he was desperately needed. Before every battle he had prayed, “Not now, dear God. Please, not now.”

He set his teeth against the blinding agony in his head. Just breathe, he thought. Breathe in, breathe out. In. Out. One and two and one and two. The pain would stop. Another few hours and it would stop.

He would stay in the saddle. If it killed him, he would stay in the saddle.

“Where are we?” he asked.

“A few miles west of the Fosse Way,” he heard Elswyth’s voice reply.

“No main roads,” he said. “Keep to the smaller roads. Keep going southwest, toward Cheddar.”

“All right,” she said. “We will.”

Breathe in. Breathe out. One and two. His body was staying in the saddle from instinct alone. He wrapped his fingers in his horse’s gray mane. God, if only he could see!

After two hours of riding, they halted to rest the horses and to give the children a respite. A number of the men went into the forest to relieve themselves, and Elswyth gave her children some bread and cheese.

Alfred did not dismount. He sat on his stallion, his face as gray as his horse’s coat, his eyes half-closed, his teeth set in his lower lip, and it was plain to Erlend that only the force of his will was keeping the king in the saddle.

“I want to ride with Erlend!” It was Flavia’s voice, and he looked down to see the child standing before him.

“Flavia …” Elswyth started to reprimand, but Erlend put in, “I will be glad to take her, my lady. My horse is strong yet, and I am lighter to carry than most of the thanes.”

“He is a Dane.” Erlend did not recognize the voice but it came from the ranks of the thanes.

“Flavia may ride with Erlend.” It was Alfred’s voice, a little hollow-sounding but still clear. “Let us go,” he added. The thanes began to swing up into their saddles.

They rode more slowly now, not to strain the horses. Flavia leaned against Erlend’s chest and dozed. Erlend looked down at the small golden head nestled so trustingly against him, and felt his heart contract. He spread his cloak so that it covered her more closely.

What would have happened to Alfred’s children, Alfred’s wife, had Guthrum caught them at Chippenham?

Erlend had no doubt at all of what would have happened to Alfred.

He looked up from Flavia to the man who was riding now directly before him. Elswyth still had Alfred’s reins, Erlend saw. No one had volunteered to take them from her; Silken was the only horse that Alfred’s gray would tolerate so close to him. They were going single file along a narrow forest path, with Brand and a few other thanes leading the way. Great snow-dusted trees enclosed the track on both sides, and the dogs ran steadily and faithfully at the heels of Alfred’s stallion. They had long since ceased to chase into the woods on a stray scent.

The men of Dorset had been on guard at Cirencester. Dorset, Erlend thought, Dorset was the home shire of Alfred’s nephew Athelwold. Guthrum knew about Athelwold. Erlend himself had told his uncle about the dissatisfied son of Athelstan and his hatred of Alfred.

Name of the Raven, could it be that Guthrum had managed to approach Athelwold? Some sort of treachery was involved in this move of Guthrum’s out of Mercia—of that Erlend was certain. Several hundred mounted men could not have moved onto the Fosse Way without being spied by the scouts Alfred had posted at Cirencester. But if those scouts were Athelwold’s men … then perhaps they had been told not to report Guthrum’s move to the king.

It occurred to Erlend, as his horse stepped over the twigs and small branches that the wind and the snow had brought down onto the forest track, that Guthrum had broken his word again, a word that Erlend’s life had been pledged to secure. But at the moment Erlend could feel no care for his own safety. He was too full of horror at the thought of what would have happened had Guthrum managed to catch Alfred at Chippenham.

The blood eagle. He had never seen it done, but he had heard enough about it to know what a torture it could be if the executioner was minded to draw it out. He looked at the man in front of him, at the flexible back moving in rhythm to the motion of his horse’s slow trot.

That perfect-looking body of Alfred’s, he thought, was no stranger to pain. He was blind right now from the pain in his head. He must be, else he would never have allowed Elswyth to take his reins.

It was headaches he suffered from, then. And he had lived with them since he was a child.

Elswyth turned in her saddle to look at her husband. The sting of cold air had brought a rosy glow to her usually creamy skin. Erlend had never seen such an expression on her haughty high-bred face. She said nothing, but in a moment had faced front again.

The expression on Elswyth’s face matched the feeling in Erlend’s stomach. And it was at that moment that the Dane finally understood that he did not dislike Alfred of Wessex at all. If anything, the feeling he had for the West Saxon king was quite the opposite of dislike, was in fact far more nearly akin to love.

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