'And the woman of gold?'
She said nothing to that.
'Is it you?' I asked,
'The sun dimmed when I was born,' she said, 'so I am a woman of darkness and of silver, not of gold.'
'So who is she?'
'Someone far away, Uhtred, far away,' and she would say no more. Perhaps she knew no more, or perhaps she was guessing.
We reached Cippanhamm late on the eleventh day of Yule.
There was still frost on the furrows and the sun was a gross red ball poised low above the tangling black branches as we came to the town's western gate. The city was full, but I was known in the Corncrake tavern where the redheaded whore called Eanflaed worked and she found us shelter in a half-collapsed cattle byre where a score of hounds had been kennelled. The hounds, she said, belonged to Huppa, Ealdorman of Thornsaeta, but she reckoned the animals could survive a night or two in the yard.
'Huppa may not think so,' she said, 'but he can rot in hell.'
'He doesn't pay?' I asked her.
She spat for answer, then looked at me curiously. 'I hear Leofric's here?'
'He is?' I said, heartened by the news.
'I haven't seen him,' she said, 'but someone said he was here. In the royal hall. Maybe Burgweard brought him?' Burgweard was the new fleet commander, the one who wanted his ships to sail two by two in imitation of Christ's disciples. 'Leofric had better not be here,' Eanflaed finished.
'Why not?'
'Because he hasn't come to see me!' she said indignantly, 'that's why.' She was five or six years older than I with a broad face, a high forehead and springy hair. She was popular, so much so that she had a good deal of freedom in the tavern, that owed its profits more to her abilities than to the quality of the ale. I knew she was friendly with Leofric, but I suspected from her tone that she wanted to be more than friends.
'Who's she?' she asked, jerking her head at Iseult
'A queen,' I said.
'That's another name for it, I suppose. How's your wife?'
'Back in Defnascir.'
'You're like all the rest, aren't you?' She shivered. 'If you're cold tonight bring the hounds back in to warm you. I'm off to work.'
We were cold, but I slept well enough and, next morning, the twelfth after Christmas, I left my six men at the Corncrake and took Iseult and Haesten to the king's buildings that lay behind their own palisade to the south of the town where the river curled about the walls. A man expected to attend the witanegemot with retainers, though not usually with a Dane and a Briton, but Iseult wanted to see Alfred and I wanted to please her. Besides, there was the great feast that evening and, though I warned her that Alfred's feasts were poor things, Iseult still wanted to be there. Haesten, with his mail coat and sword, was there to protect her, for I suspected she might not be allowed into the hall while the witanegemot debated and so might have to wait until evening for her chance to glimpse Alfred.
The gatekeeper demanded that we surrender our weapons, a thing I did with a bad grace, but no man, except the king's own household troops, could go armed in Alfred's presence. The day's talking had already begun, the gatekeeper told us, and so we hurried past the stables and past the big new royal chapel with its twin towers. A group of priests was huddled by the main door of the great hall and I recognised Beocca, my father's old priest, among them. I smiled in greeting, but his face, as he came towards us, was drawn and pale. 'You're late,' he said sharply.
'You're not pleased to see me?' I asked sarcastically.
He looked up at me. Beocca, despite his squint, red hair and palsied left hand, had grown into a stern authority. He was now a royal chaplain, confessor and a confidant to the king, and the responsibilities had carved deep lines on his face. 'I prayed,' he said, 'never to see this day.' He made the sign of the cross. 'Who's that?' he stared at Iseult.
'A queen of the Britons,' I said.
'She's what?'
'A queen. She's with me. She wants to see Alfred.'
I don't know whether he believed me, but he seemed not to care. Instead he was distracted, worried, and, because he lived in a strange world of kingly privilege and obsessive piety, I assumed his misery had been caused by some petty theological dispute. He had been Bebbanburg's mass priest when I was a child and, after my father's death, he had fled Northumberland because he could not abide living among the pagan Danes. He had found refuge in Alfred's court where he had become a friend of the king. He was also a friend to me, a man who had preserved the parchments that proved my claim to the lordship of Bebbanburg, but on that twelfth day of Yule he was anything but pleased to see me. He plucked my arm, drawing ma towards the door. 'We must go in,' he said, 'and may God in his mercy protect you.'
'Protect me?'
'God is merciful,' Beocca said, 'and you must pray for that mercy,' and then the guards opened the door and we walked into the great hall. No one stopped Iseult and, indeed, there were a score of other women watching the proceedings from the edge of the hall.
There were also more than a hundred men there, though only forty or fifty comprised the witanegemot, and those thegns and senior churchmen were on chairs and benches set in a half circle in front of the dais where Alfred sat with two priests and with ?lswith, his wife, who was pregnant.
Behind them, draped with a red cloth, was an altar on which stood thick candles and a heavy silver cross,