Death Of Kings - Death of Kings Part 7
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Death of Kings Part 7

*Cumbraland,' I said.

They all sneered at that. *From Cumbraland, eh?' the first man said, *well you can't pay in sheep dung here.' He laughed, amused at his own joke.

*Who do you serve?' I asked him.

*The Jarl Cnut Ranulfson,' the second man answered, *and even in Cumbraland you must have heard of him.'

*He's famous,' I said, pretending to be awed, then paid them with the silver shards of a chopped-up arm ring. I haggled with them first, but not too strongly because I wanted to visit this town without arousing suspicion, and so I paid silver I could scarce afford and we were allowed into the muddy streets. We found shelter in a spacious farm on the eastern side. The owner was a widow who had long abandoned raising sheep and instead made a livelihood from travellers seeking the hot springs that were reputed to have healing powers, though now, she told us, they were guarded by monks who demanded silver before anyone could enter the old Roman bathhouse. *Monks?' I asked her, *I thought this was Cnut Ranulfson's land?'

*Why would he care?' she demanded. *So long as he gets his silver he doesn't mind what god they worship.' She was a Saxon, as were most of the folk in the small town, but she spoke of Cnut with evident respect. No wonder. He was rich, he was dangerous and he was said to be the finest sword fighter in all Britain. His sword was said to be the longest and most lethal blade in the land, which gave him the name Cnut Longsword, but Cnut was also a fervent ally of Sigurd. If Cnut Ranulfson knew that I was on his land then Buchestanes would be swarming with Danes seeking my life. *So are you here for the hot springs?' the widow asked me.

*I seek the sorceress,' I said.

She made the sign of the cross. *God preserve us,' she said.

*And to see her,' I asked, *what do I do?'

*Pay the monks, of course.'

Christians are so strange. They claim the pagan gods have no power and that the old magic is as fraudulent as Ludda's bags of iron, yet when they are ill, or when their harvest fails, or when they want children, they will go to the galdricge, the sorceress, and every district has one. A priest will preach against such women, declaring them heretic and evil, yet a day later he will pay silver to a galdricge to hear his future or have the warts removed from his face. The monks of Buchestanes were no different. They guarded the Roman bathhouse, they chanted in their chapel and they took silver and gold to arrange a meeting with the aglaecwif. An aglaecwif is a she-monster, and that is how I thought of aelfadell. I feared her and I wanted to hear her, and so I sent Ludda and Rypere to make the arrangements, and they returned saying the enchantress demanded gold. Not silver, gold.

I had brought money on this journey, almost all the money I had left in the world. I had been forced to take the gold chains from Sigunn, and I used two of those to pay the monks, swearing that one day I would return to retrieve the precious links. Then, at dusk on our second day in Buchestanes, I walked south and west to a hill that loomed above the town and was dominated by one of the old people's graves, a green mound on a drenched hill. Those graves have vengeful ghosts and, as I followed the path into a wood of ash, beech and elm, I felt a chill. I had been instructed to go alone and told that if I disobeyed then the sorceress would not appear to me, but now I fervently wished I had a companion to watch my back. I stopped, hearing nothing except the sigh of wind in the leaves and the drip of water and the rush of a nearby stream. The widow had told me that some men were forced to wait days to consult aelfadell, and some, she said, paid their silver or gold, came to the wood, and found nothing. *She can vanish into air,' the widow told me, making the sign of the cross. Once, she said, Cnut himself had come and aelfadell had refused to appear.

*And Jarl Sigurd?' I had asked her. *He came too?'

*He came last year,' she said, *and he was generous. A Saxon lord was with him.'

*Who?'

*How would I know? They didn't rest their bones in my house. They stayed with the monks.'

*Tell me what you remember,' I asked her.

*He was young,' she said, *he had long hair like you, but he was still a Saxon.' Most Saxons cut their hair, while the Danes prefer to let it grow long. *The monks called him the Saxon, lord,' the widow went on, *but who he was? I don't know.'

*And he was a lord?'

*He dressed like one, lord.'

I was dressed in mail and leather. I heard nothing dangerous in the wood and so went onward, stooping beneath wet leaves until I saw that the path ended at a limestone crag that was slashed by a great crevice. Water dripped down the cliff face, and the stream gushed from the crevice's base, churning itself white about fallen rocks before sluicing into the woods. I looked about and saw no one, heard no one. It seemed to me that no birds sang, though that was surely my apprehension. The stream's noise was loud. I could see footprints in the shingle and stone that edged the stream, though none looked fresh, and so I took a deep breath, clambered over the fallen stones and stepped into the cave's slit-like mouth that was edged by ferns.

I remember the fear of that cave, a greater fear than I had felt at Cynuit when Ubba's men had made the shield wall and come to kill us. I touched Thor's hammer that hung at my neck and I said a prayer to Hoder, the son of Odin and blind god of the night, and then I groped my way forward, ducking under a rock arch beyond which the grey evening light faded fast. I let my eyes grow used to the gloom and moved on, trying to stay above the stream that scoured through the bank of pebbles and sand that grated beneath my boots. I inched my way forward through a narrow, low passage. It grew colder. I wore a helmet and it touched rock more than once. I gripped the hammer that hung about my neck. This cave was surely one of the entrances to the netherworld, to where Yggdrasil has its roots and the three fates decide our destiny. It was a place for dwarves and elves, for the shadow creatures who haunt our lives and mock our hopes. I was frightened.

I slipped on sand and blundered forward and sensed that the passage had ended and that I was now in a great echoing space. I saw a glimmer of light and wondered if my eyes played tricks. I touched the hammer again, and then put my hand on the hilt of Serpent-Breath. I was standing still, hearing the drip of water and the rush of the stream, and listening for the sound of a person. I was gripping my sword's hilt now, praying to blind Hoder to guide me in the blind darkness.

And then there was light.

Sudden light. It was only a bundle of rushlights, but they had been concealed behind screens that were abruptly lifted and their small, smoky flames seemed dazzlingly bright in the utter darkness.

The rushlights were standing on a rock that had a smooth surface like a table. A knife, a cup and a bowl lay beside the lights, which lit a chamber as high as any hall. The cave's roof hung with pale stone that looked as if it had been frozen in mid-flow. Liquid stone, touched with blue and grey, and all that I saw in an instant, then I stared at the creature who watched me from behind the rock table. She was a dark cloak in the darkness, a shape in the shadows, a bent thing, the aglaecwif, but as my eyes became used to the light I saw that she was a tiny thing, frail as a bird, old as time and with a face so dark and deep-lined that it looked like leather. Her black woollen cloak was filthy and its hood half covered her hair that was grey-streaked black. She was ugliness in human guise, the galdricge, the aglaecwif, aelfadell.

I did not move and she did not speak. She just gazed at me, unblinkingly, and I felt the fear crawl in me, and then she beckoned to me with one claw-like hand and touched the empty bowl. *Fill it,' she said. Her voice was like wind on gravel. *Fill it?'

*Gold,' she said, *or silver. But fill it.'

*You want more?' I asked angrily.

*You want everything, Kjartan of Cumbraland,' she said, and she had paused for the space of an eye-blink before saying that name, as if she suspected it was false, *so yes. I want more.'

I almost refused, but I confess I was frightened of her power, and so I took all the silver from my pouch, fifteen coins, and put them in the wooden bowl. She smirked as the coins clinked. *What do you want to know?' she asked. *Everything.'

*There will be a harvest,' she said dismissively, *and then winter, and after winter the time of sowing, and then another harvest and then another winter until time ends, and men will be born and men will die, and that is everything.'

*Then tell me what I want to know,' I said.

She hesitated, then gave an almost imperceptible nod. *Put your hand on the rock,' she said, but when I put my left hand flat on the cold stone she shook her head. *Your sword hand,' she said and I obediently laid my right hand there instead. *Turn it over,' she snarled, and I turned the hand palm upwards. She picked up the knife, watching my eyes. She was half smiling, daring me to withdraw my hand, and when I did not move she suddenly scored the knife across my palm. She scored it once from the ball of my thumb to the base of my small finger, then did it again, crosswise, and I watched the fresh blood well from the two cuts and I remembered the crosswise scar on Sigurd's hand. *Now,' she said, putting the knife down, *slap the stone hard.' She pointed with a finger to the smooth centre of the stone. *Slap it there.'

I slapped the stone hard and the blow left a spatter of blood drops radiating from a crude daub of a hand-print defaced by the red cross.

*Now be silent,' aelfadell said, and shrugged off her cloak.

She was naked. Thin, pale, ugly, old, shrivelled and naked. Her breasts were flaps of skin, her skin wrinkled and spotted, and her arms scrawny. She reached up and released her hair that had been twisted at the nape of her neck so that the grey-black strands fell about her shoulders in the fashion of a young unmarried girl. She was a parody of a woman, she was the galdricge, and I shuddered to look at her. She seemed unaware of my gaze, but stared at the blood, which gleamed under the flames. She touched the blood with a finger as crooked as any claw, smearing it across the smooth stone. *Who are you?' she asked, and there seemed genuine curiosity in her voice.

*You know who I am,' I said.

*Kjartan of Cumbraland,' she said. She made a noise in her throat that might have been laughter, then moved the bloodstained claw to touch the cup. *Drink that, Kjartan of Cumbraland,' she said, saying the name with sour mockery, *drink all of it!'

I lifted the cup and drank. It tasted foul. Bitter and rank. It was throat-curdling and I drank it all.

And aelfadell laughed.

I remember little of that night, and much of what I do remember I wish I could forget.

I woke naked, cold and tied. My ankles and my wrists were strapped with leather thongs that had been knotted together to drag my hands down to my ankles. A faint grey light seeped through the crevice and tunnel to illuminate the big cave. The floor was pale with bat shit and my skin was smeared with my own vomit. aelfadell, crooked and dark in her black cloak, was crouched over my mail, my two swords, my helmet, my hammer and my clothes. *You're awake, Uhtred of Bebbanburg,' she said. She pawed through my possessions. *And you are thinking,' she went on, *that I would be easy to kill.'

*I'm thinking you would be easy to kill, woman,' I said. My voice was a dry-mouthed croak. I pulled at the leather bindings, but only managed to hurt my wrists.

*I can tie knots, Uhtred of Bebbanburg,' she said. She picked up the hammer of Thor and swung it on its leather thong. *A cheap amulet for a great lord.' She cackled. She was bent, stooped and disgusting. Her claw-like hand tugged Serpent-Breath from its scabbard and she carried the blade towards me. *I should kill you, Uhtred of Bebbanburg,' she said. She scarcely had the strength to lift the great blade, which she rested on one of my bent knees.

*Why don't you?' I asked.

She peered at me. *Are you wiser now?' she asked. I said nothing. *You came for wisdom,' she went on, *so did you find it?'

Somewhere far beyond the cave a cock crowed. I tugged at the bonds again, and again could not loosen them. *Cut the bindings,' I said.

She laughed at that. *I am not a fool, Uhtred of Bebbanburg.'

*You haven't killed me,' I said, *and that might be foolish.'

*True,' she agreed. She slid the sword forward so its tip touched my breast. *Did you find wisdom in your night, Uhtred?' she asked, then smiled with her rotted teeth. *Your night of pleasure?' I tried to throw the sword off by rolling on my side, but she kept it on my skin, drawing blood with the tip. She was amused. I was on my side now and she rested the blade on my hip. *You moaned in the dark, Uhtred. You moaned with pleasure, or have you forgotten?'

I remembered the girl coming to me in the night. A dark girl, black-haired, slender and beautiful, lithe as a willow-wand, a girl who had smiled as she rode above me, her light hands touching my face and chest, a girl who had bent herself backwards as my hands caressed her breasts. I remembered her thighs pressing on my hips, the touch of her fingers on my cheeks. *I remember a dream,' I said surlily.

aelfadell rocked on her heels, rocked back and forth in an obscene reminder of what the dark girl had done in the night. The flat of the sword slid on my hip bone. *It was no dream,' she said, mocking me.

I wanted to kill her then, and she knew it and the knowledge made her laugh. *Others have tried to kill me,' she said. *The priests came for me once. There was a score of them, led by the old abbot with a flaming torch. They were praying aloud, calling me a heathen witch, and their bones are still rotting in the valley. I have sons, you see. It is good for a mother to have sons because there is no love like a mother has for her sons. Have you forgotten that love, Uhtred of Bebbanburg?'

*Another dream,' I said.

*No dream,' aelfadell said, and I remembered my mother cradling me in the night, rocking me, giving me her breast to suck, and I could remember the pleasure of that moment, and the tears when I knew it had to be a dream for my mother had died giving birth to me and I had never known her.

aelfadell smiled. *From now on, Uhtred of Bebbanburg,' she said, *I shall think of you as a son.' I wanted to kill her again and she knew it and she mocked me with laughter. *Last night,' she said, *the goddess came to you. She showed you all your life, and all your future, and all the wide world of men and what will happen to it. Have you forgotten already?'

*The goddess came?' I asked. I remembered talking incessantly, and I remembered the sadness when my mother left me, and I remembered the dark girl saddling me, and I remembered feeling sick and drunk, and I remembered a dream in which I had flown above the world by riding the winds as a long-hulled ship rides the waves of the sea, but I remembered no goddess. *Which goddess?' I asked.

*Erce, of course,' she said as though the question were foolish. *You know of Erce? She knows you.'

Erce was one of the ancient goddesses who had been in Britain when our people came from across the sea. I knew she was worshipped still in country places, an earth-mother, a giver of life, a goddess. *I know of Erce,' I said.

*You know there are gods,' aelfadell said, *and in that you are not so foolish. The Christians think one god will serve all men and women, and how can that be? Could one shepherd protect every sheep in all the world?'

*The old abbot tried to kill you?' I asked. I had twisted onto my right side so my tied hands were hidden from her and I was grinding the leather bonds against a ridge of stone, hoping they would part. I could only make the smallest of movements in case she noticed, and I had to keep her talking. *The old abbot tried to kill you?' I asked again. *Yet now the monks protect you?'

*The new abbot is no fool,' she said. *He knows Jarl Cnut would flay him alive if he touched me, so instead he serves me.'

*He doesn't mind you're not a Christian?' I asked.

*He likes the money Erce brings him,' she sneered, *and he knows Erce lives in this cave and that she protects me. And now Erce waits for your answer. Are you wiser?'

I said nothing again, puzzled by the question, and it angered her.

*Do I mumble?' she snarled. *Has stupidity furred your ears and stuffed your brain with pus?'

*I remember nothing,' I said untruthfully.

That made her laugh. She squatted on her haunches, the sword still resting on my hip, and started to rock backwards and forwards again. *Seven kings will die, Uhtred of Bebbanburg, seven kings and the women you love. That is your fate. And Alfred's son will not rule and Wessex will die and the Saxon will kill what he loves and the Danes will gain everything, and all will change and all will be the same as ever it was and ever will be. There, you see, you are wiser.'

*Who is the Saxon?' I asked. I was still dragging my bound wrists on the stone, but nothing seemed to be fraying or loosening.

*The Saxon is the king who will destroy what he rules. Erce knows all, Erce sees all.'

A scuffle of feet in the entrance passage gave me a moment's hope, but instead of my men appearing it was three monks who ducked into the cave's gloom. Their leader was an elderly man with wild white hair and sunken cheeks, who stared at me, then at aelfadell, then back to me. *It's really him?' he asked.

*It's Uhtred of Bebbanburg, it's my son,' aelfadell said, then laughed.

*Good God,' the monk said. For a moment he looked frightened, and that was why I still lived. Both aelfadell and the monk knew I was Cnut's enemy, but they did not know what Cnut wanted of me and they feared that to kill me would offend their lord. The white-haired monk came towards me, gingerly, frightened of what I might do. *Are you Uhtred?' he asked.

*I am Kjartan of Cumbraland,' I said.

aelfadell cackled. *He is Uhtred,' she said. *Erce's drink does not lie. He babbled like a baby in the night.'

The monk was frightened of me because my life and death were beyond his comprehension. *Why did you come here?' he asked.

*To discover the future,' I said. I could feel blood between my hands. My rubbing had opened the scabs on the cuts aelfadell had inflicted on my palm.

*He learned the future,' aelfadell said, *the future of dead kings.'

*Did it tell of my death?' I asked her, and for the first time saw doubt on that wrinkled-hag face.

*We must send to Jarl Cnut,' the monk said.

*Kill him,' one of the younger monks said. He was a tall, strongly-built man with a hard long face, a hook of a nose and cruel unforgiving eyes. *The jarl will want him dead.'

The older monk was uncertain. *We don't know the jarl's will, Brother Hearberht.'

*Kill him! He'll reward you. Reward us all.' Brother Hearberht was right, but the gods had filled the others with doubt.

*The jarl must decide,' the older monk said.

*It will take three days to fetch an answer,' Hearberht said caustically, *and what do you do with him for three days? He has his men in the town. Too many men.'

*We take him to the jarl?' the older monk suggested. He was desperate for an answer, flailing at any solution that might spare him from making a decision.

*For the sake of God,' Hearberht snapped. He strode to the pile of my possessions, stooped, and straightened with Wasp-Sting in his hand. The short blade caught the wan light. *What do you do with a cornered wolf?' he demanded, and came towards me.

And I used all my strength, all that strength that years of sword and shield practice had put into my bones and muscle, the years of war and readying for war, and I thrust my bent legs and pulled my arms, and I felt the bonds loosening and I was rolling back, throwing the blade off my hip, and I started to shout, a great war shout of a warrior and reached for Serpent-Breath's hilt.

aelfadell tried to pull the sword away, but she was old and slow, and I was bellowing to fill the cave with echoes and I seized the hilt and swung the blade to drive her back, and Hearberht checked as I rose to my feet. I half stumbled, the bonds still wrapped about my ankles, and Hearberht saw his opening and came in fast, the short blade held low ready to rip up into my naked belly and I swatted it aside and fell on him. He went backwards and I stood again and he hacked the blade at my bare legs, but I parried him and then stabbed down with Serpent-Breath, my sword, my lover, my blade, my war companion, and she gutted that monk like a fish under a razor-edged knife, and his blood spread on his black robe and turned the bat shit black, and I went on ripping her, unaware that I was still shouting to fill the cave with rage.

Hearberht was squealing and shaking and dying, and the other two monks were fleeing. I ripped the bonds off my ankles and pursued them. Serpent-Breath's hilt was slippery with my blood, and she was hungry.

I caught them in the woods, not fifty paces from the cave's mouth, and I felled the younger monk with a blow to the back of his head, then caught the older by his robe. I turned him to face me and smelt the fear that fouled his robe. *I am Uhtred of Bebbanburg,' I said, *and who are you?'

*Abbot Deorlaf, lord,' he said, falling to his knees and holding his clasped hands towards me, and I held him by the throat and buried Serpent-Breath in his belly, and I sawed her there, opening him up, and he mewed like an animal and wept like a child and called on Jesus the Redeemer as he died in his own dung. I cut the younger monk's throat, then went back to the cave where I washed Serpent-Breath's blade in the stream.

*Erce did not foretell your death,' aelfadell said. She had screamed when I tore the bonds off my wrists and seized the sword from her, yet now she was oddly calm. She just watched me and was apparently unafraid.

*Is that why you didn't kill me?'

*She didn't foretell my death either,' she said.

*Then maybe she was wrong,' I said, and fetched Wasp-Sting from Hearberht's dead hand.

And that was when I saw her.

From a deeper cave, from a passage that led into the netherworld, Erce came. She was a girl of such beauty that the breath stopped in my lungs. The dark-haired girl who had ridden me in the night, the long-haired girl, slender and pale, so beautiful and calm and as naked as the blade in my hand and all I could do was stare at her. I could not move, and she gazed back at me with grave, large eyes and she said nothing and I said nothing until the breath caught in me again. *Who are you?' I asked.

*Dress yourself,' aelfadell said, whether to me or the girl I could not tell.