'He says he faced Ubba himself,' Beocca said.
'So who do men think killed Ubba Lothbrokson?' I asked.
Beocca could sense trouble coming and he tried to calm me.
'We can talk of these things later,' he said, 'but for now, Uhtred, join us in prayer.'
He used my name rather than calling me lord because he had known me since I was a child.
Beocca, like me, was a Northumbrian, and he had been my father's priest, but when the Danes took our country he had come to Wessex to join those Saxons who still resisted the invaders.
'This is a time for prayer,' he insisted, 'not for quarrels.'
But I was in a mood for quarrels. 'Who do men say killed Ubba Lothbrokson?' I asked again.
'They give thanks to God that the pagan is dead,' Beocca evaded my question, and tried to hush my voice with frantic gestures from his palsied left hand.
'Who do you think killed Ubba?' I asked, and when Beocca did not answer, I provided the answer for him.
'You think Odda the younger killed him?' I could see that Beocca did believe that, and the anger surged in me.
'Ubba fought me man on man,' I said, too loudly now, 'one on one, just me and him. My sword against his axe. And he was unwounded when the fight began, father, and at the end of it he was dead.
He had gone to his brothers in the corpse-hall.'
I was furious now and my voice had risen until I was shouting, and the distracted congregation all turned to stare at me. The bishop, whom I recognised as the bishop of Exanceaster, the same man who had married me to Mildrith, frowned nervously.
Only Alfred seemed unmoved by the interruption, but then, reluctantly, he stood and turned towards me as his wife, the pinch-faced ?lswith, hissed into his ear.
'Is there any man here,' I was still shouting, 'who will deny that I, Uhtred of Bebbanburg, killed Ubba Lothbrokson in single combat?'
There was silence. I had not intended to disrupt the service, but monstrous pride and ungovernable rage had driven me to defiance. The faces gazed at me, the banners flapped in the desultory wind and the small rain dripped from the edges of the sailcloth awning. Still no one answered me, but men saw that I was staring at Odda the Younger and some looked to him for a response, but he was struck dumb.
'Who killed Ubba?' I shouted at him.
'This is not seemly,' Alfred said angrily.
'This killed Ubba!' I declared, and I drew Serpent-Breath.
And that was my next mistake.
In the winter, while I was shut up in Werham as one of the hostages given to Guthrum, a new law had been passed in Wessex, a law which decreed that no man other than the royal bodyguards was to draw a weapon in the presence of the king. The law was not just to protect Alfred, but also to prevent the quarrels between his great men becoming lethal and, by drawing Serpent-Breath, I had unwittingly broken the law so that his household troops were suddenly converging on me with spears and drawn swords until Alfred, red-cloaked and bare-headed, shouted for every man to be still.
Then he walked towards me and I could see the anger on his face. He had a narrow face with a long nose and chin, a high forehead, and a thin-lipped mouth. He normally went clean-shaven, but he had grown a short beard that made him look older. He had not lived thirty years yet, but looked closer to forty. He was painfully thin, and his frequent illnesses had given his face a crabbed look. He looked more like a priest than the king of the West Saxons, for he had the irritated, pale face of a man who spends too much time out of the sun and poring over books, but there was an undoubted authority in his eyes. They were very light eyes, as grey as mail, unforgiving.
'You have broken my peace,' he said, 'and offended the peace of Christ.'
I sheathed Serpent-Breath, mainly because Beocca had muttered at me to stop being a damned fool and to put my sword away, and now the priest was tugging my right leg, trying to make me dismount and kneel to Alfred, whom he adored.
?lswith, Alfred's wife, was staring at me with pure scorn. 'He should be punished,' she called out.
'You will go there,' the king said, pointing towards one of his tents, 'and wait for my judgment.'
I had no choice but to obey, for his household troops, all of them in mail and helmets, pressed about me and so I was taken to the tent where I dismounted and ducked inside. The air smelled of yellowed, crushed grass. The rain pattered on the linen roof and some leaked through onto an altar that held a crucifix and two empty candle- holders. The tent was evidently the king's private chapel and Alfred made me wait there a long time. The congregation dispersed, the rain ended and a watery sunlight emerged between the clouds. A harp played somewhere, perhaps serenading Alfred and his wife as they ate. A dog came into the tent, looked at me, lifted its leg against the altar and went out again.
The sun vanished behind cloud and more rain pattered on the canvas, then there was a flurry at the tent's opening and two men entered.
One was ?thelwold, the king's nephew, and the man who should have inherited Wessex's throne from his father except he had been reckoned too young and so the crown had gone to his uncle instead.
He gave me a sheepish grin, deferring to the second man who was heavy-set, full-bearded and ten years older than ?thelwold. He introduced himself by sneezing, then blew his nose into his hand and wiped the snot onto his leather coat.
'Call it springtime,' he grumbled, then stared at me with a truculent expression. 'Damned rain never stops. You know who I am?'
'Wulfhere,' I said, 'Ealdorman of Wiltunscir.' He was a cousin to the king and a leading power in Wessex.
He nodded. And you know who this damn fool is?' he asked, gesturing at ?thelwold who was holding a bundle of white cloth.