and he was always able to find an escape route from any trap Hereward had designed for him. Even so, it was a disconcerting and embarrassing experience for the Duke.
However, Hereward soon had to face yet more disappointment.
Eadric, his English rebels and their Welsh allies had abandoned Chester and fled to the relative safety of Wales as soon as they heard that William’s murderous campaign had turned westwards. The Normans were able to ride into the burgh unopposed, depriving Hereward of any more opportunities to snipe at them. William licked his wounds and sent for reinforcements. Hereward moved inland, towards Stafford, and found a remote place to camp and plan his next move. It also provided an opportunity to make a tally of the significant booty he had taken from William at Chat’s Burn. It was a major windfall: there was a considerable amount of money, enough to keep his campaign going for some time, although not enough to entice the Danes into more action. There was also a plentiful supply of food, armour and clothes, plus over sixty horses, including nearly thirty cavalry destriers.
To celebrate, Hereward declared two nights of feasting and the entire contingent was given a pouch of silver each, enough to keep a family for the best part of a year. But the celebrations were short-lived. Within days, more bad news arrived — and continued in a steady stream over the ensuing weeks.
When they had reached the safety of their homeland, the Welsh had told Eadric the Wild that, having witnessed William’s unrelenting determination and gruesome tactics, they were gravely concerned about their future security and would not be returning to England to continue the rebellion. Eadric’s daughters had been taken hostage to persuade him to submit, and he had returned to Chester to bow to William.
In the South West, Count Brian the Breton, the new Lord of Cornwall, had driven Harold’s sons back to Ireland. Their siege of Montacute had failed, and the defenders had been relieved by the Norman lord Geoffrey of Coutances, at the head of a large force that included a significant number of Englishmen from London, Winchester and Salisbury.
Disastrous news also came from the North. Of the brave men who had fought so well at York, only Siward Bjorn was prepared to continue the rebellion. Cospatrick, cowed by William’s merciless slaughter of the people of the North, was not prepared to leave the safety of Scotland and had been made Earl of Dunbar by King Malcolm. Worst of all, Earl Waltheof, horrified by the slaying of thousands of innocents in the North, had thrown himself at the mercy of William, who forgave him, and had become betrothed to William’s niece, Lady Judith.
Finally, finding that he had few honourable companions left and unable to persuade King Malcolm to do any more than offer a safe haven, Edgar the Atheling had become dispirited and was preparing to go to the court of Philip of France, to raise support for an attack on Normandy from the south.
Hereward found the depressing reports hard to take, especially the news of brave Eadric’s submission and that of the courageous Waltheof, who had decapitated Normans at York as if they were daisies in a field.
Hereward’s men were stood down and given leave until the autumn. They were to return at the beginning of October, after the harvest. The rendezvous would be at a ford over the Great Ouse just outside Huntingdon, a place all soldiers knew well. Standing the men down was a huge risk, as many might not return, but Hereward had no choice. He had no more speeches to give and no more rallying calls to issue. He had not given up, but he did not know how to continue.
His senior retinue stayed with him. Edwin had no family left, as his father and brothers had died on Senlac Ridge. Although Edmund had a family in Kent, he refused to go, perhaps fearful of what he might find. As for Gohor, he let his men go, but he decided to stay; he had adopted the womenfolk in his care, just as they had adopted him, and he now felt part of the family.
Now, as a renegade band of just fourteen souls, they travelled through England’s heartland in an arc from the Avon and the Thames to the Stour and the Trent. They kept on the move, stayed away from villages and burghs, and spoke only to the poor people of the land in their isolated communities. From a distance, they watched the Normans build their mottes and baileys and saw their soldiers scurrying about their duties.
Hereward avoided the subject of the rebellion and would not be drawn on his thoughts or his state of mind.
Accompanied only by his daughters, Gunnhild and Estrith, he made a private pilgrimage to the holy sisters at Hereford, and from there to visit Torfida’s grave. On his return, he offered few details of the trip, except to say that the nuns had taken her to a wonderful resting place in a clearing she often talked about, deep in the forest and close to the summit of Pennard Hill near Glastonbury.
There were commanding views across the water meadows below that were not unlike the fens of his own home. Glastonbury Tor stood proudly in the distance, a towering symbol of Harold, of Wessex and of England. The grave had been marked by an oak sapling, reared from an acorn gathered from the place where she had died. The nuns had called the clearing ‘Torfida’s Glade’ and made pilgrimages there to pray.
Hereward was content that it was an idyllic resting place for his wife, where her soul could mingle with the heritage of the wildwood.
27. The Brotherhood
In the middle of August 1070, Hereward announced that he would like to undertake another pilgrimage. It would be to Bourne, his Lincolnshire home, a place he had not visited in a very long time and somewhere his girls had never seen. This journey would not be a private one; he wanted his companions to see the enigmatic Fens and his unremarkable birthplace.
In the turmoil of a conquered England, he had no idea if his family would still be there. He had often thought about them and had vowed that, when the time was right, he would return.
Several days later, they could see in the distance the small bronze cross above the unassuming wooden church of Bourne. Little seemed to have changed as they moved through ever-widening clearings of the Bruneswald to reveal fenlands stretching far into the distance. The Fens were just as challenging as the Pennines, but the trials were different. The most ominous presence was the ground itself, often an impenetrable melange of water and earth, matted by centuries of the decay and renewal of reeds, moss and sedge. There were many rivers and streams, but their courses were concealed by undergrowth so dense, it made them unnavigable.
To the north-east was The Wash and the beginnings of the North Sea, but where land ended and sea began was impossible to chart and constantly changing. There were few landmarks or vantage points and the ground was so unpredictable, it would bear the weight of a man in one moment, but become a deep bog in the next. The few settlements that did exist stood on higher ground, often no more than a few feet above the vast quagmire.
Bourne was on the western periphery of fenland, on the old Roman route north, with the giant Bruneswald to the west, and the morass of the wetlands to the east. Before they got to the village, Hereward made a private excursion to Gythin’s cottage nearby. It had become an overgrown ruin, but he found the small mound, marked by a pile of stones, where his father and his men had buried her pitiful remains seventeen years ago. He stayed and reflected for over an hour, evoking memories of his wayward youth and the needless tragedy that had befallen a harmless woman.
Later, when he had regained his small band of followers and they were within a mile of the village, Alphonso noticed something about twenty yards off the track. It looked like a pile of discarded clothes in the thick undergrowth.
Martin’s equally sharp vision recognized the bundle immediately. ‘It’s a child.’ He rushed over, picked up the lifeless little heap and brought it to Hereward.
It was indeed a child, a little boy, filthy and cold to the touch and barely breathing.
Hereward sensed danger. ‘The fact that he’s here could mean that all is not well in Bourne. Alphonso, go and see what’s happening. Let’s move into the trees and get some nourishment into this boy.’
Alphonso was soon back with a shocked look on his face. He pulled Hereward away from the others and sat him on the trunk of a fallen tree. ‘The Normans are there; they are inside the longhouse. I counted nine horses.’
Hereward made to get up, thinking the village was in imminent danger.
Putting a heavy hand on his shoulder, Alphonso shook his head. ‘I’m sorry, we’re too late. There are bodies all over the village and all the houses are burned to the ground except the longhouse and the church.’ He then hesitated for a moment and swallowed hard. ‘There are three heads on lances outside the church. I think one is the