Haswold who was disinclined to help. I said I would pay good silver to have a bridge made across the Pedredan, but Haswold declared the war between Wessex and the Danes did not affect him.

'There is madness over there,' he said, waving vaguely at the eastern hills. 'There's always madness over there, but here in the swamp we mind our own business. No one minds us and we don't mind them.'

He stank of fish and smoke. He wore otter skins that were greasy with fish oil and his greying beard was flecked by fish scales. He had small cunning eyes in an old cunning face, and he also had a half-dozen wives, the youngest of whom was a child who could have been his own granddaughter, and he fondled her in front of me as if her existence proved his manhood.

'I'm happy,' he said, leering at me, 'so why should I care for your happiness?'

'The Danes could end your happiness.'

'The Danes?' He laughed at that, and the laugh turned into a cough. He spat. 'If the Danes come,'

he went on, 'then we go deep into the swamp and the Danes go.'

He grinned at me and I wanted to kill him, but that would have done no good. There were fifty or more men in the village and I would have lasted all of a dozen heartbeats, though the man I really feared was a tall, broad- shouldered, stooping man with a puzzled look on his face. What frightened me about him was that he carried a long hunting bow. Not one of the short fowling bows that many of the marsh men possessed, but a stag killer, as tall as a man, and capable of shooting an arrow clean through a mail coat. Haswold must have sensed my fear of the bow for he summoned the man to stand beside him. The man looked confused by the summons, but obeyed. Haswold pushed a gnarled hand under the young girl's clothes then stared at me as he fumbled, laughing at what he perceived as my impotence.

'The Danes come,' he said again, 'and we go deep into the swamp and the Danes go away.'

He thrust his hand deeper into the girl's goatskin dress and mauled her breasts.

'Danes can't follow us, and if they do follow us then Eofer kills them.' Eofer was the archer and, hearing his name, he looked startled, then worried. 'Eofer's my man,' Haswold boasted, 'he puts arrows where I tell him to put them.' Eofer nodded,

'Your king wants a bridge made,' I said, 'a bridge and a fort.'

'King?' Haswold stared about the village. 'I know no king. If any man is king here, 'tis me.' He cackled with laughter at that and I looked at the villagers and saw nothing but dull faces. None shared Haswold's amusement. They were not, I thought, happy under his rule and perhaps he sensed what I was thinking for he suddenly became angry, thrusting his girl-bride away. 'Leave us!' he shouted at me.

'Just go away!'

I went away, returning to the smaller island where Alfred sheltered and where Edward lay dying. It was nightfall and the bishop's prayers to Saint Agnes had failed. Eanflaed told me how Alewold had persuaded Alfred to give up one of his most precious relics, a feather from the dove that Noah had released from the ark, Alewold cut the feather into two parts, returning one part to the king, while the other was scorched on a clean pan and, when it was reduced to ash, the scraps were stirred into a cup of holy water which, ?lswith forced her son to drink. He had been wrapped in lambskin, for the lamb was the symbol of Saint Agnes who had been a child martyr in Rome.

But neither feather nor lambskin had worked. If anything, Eanflaed said, the boy was worse.

Alewold was praying over him now. 'He's given him the last rites,' Eanflaed said. She looked at me with tears in her eyes. 'Can Iseult help?'

‘The bishop won't allow it,' I said.

'He won't allow it?' she asked indignantly. 'He's not the one who's dying!'

So Iseult was summoned, and Alfred came from the but and Alewold, scenting heresy, came with him. Edward was coughing again, the sound terrible in the evening silence. Alfred flinched at the noise, then demanded to know if Iseult could cure his son's illness.

Iseult did not reply at once. Instead she turned and gazed across the swamp to where the moon rose above the mists. 'The moon gets bigger,' she said.

'Do you know a cure?' Alfred pleaded.

'A growing moon is good,' Iseult said dully, then turned on him. 'But there will be a price.'

'Whatever you want!' he said.

'Not a price for me,' she said, irritated that he had misunderstood her. 'But there's always a price.

One lives? Another must die.'

'Heresy!' Alewold intervened.

I doubt Alfred understood Iseult's last three words, or did not care what she meant, he only snatched the tenuous hope that perhaps she could help.

'Can you cure my son?' he demanded.

She paused, then nodded. 'There is a way,' she said.

'What way?'

'My way.'

'Heresy!' Alewold warned again.

'Bishop!' Eanflaed said warningly, and the bishop looked abashed and fell silent.

'Now?' Alfred demanded of Iseult.

'Tomorrow night,' Iseult said. 'It takes time. There are things to do. If he lives till nightfall tomorrow I can help. You must bring him to me at moonrise.'

'Not tonight?' Alfred pleaded.

'Tomorrow,' Iseult said firmly.

Вы читаете The Pale Horseman
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