The Lords of the North. Bernard Cornwell

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The Lords of the North - Bernard Cornwell


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Baðum (pronounced Bathum) Bath, Avon Bebbanburg Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland Berrocscire Berkshire Cair Ligualid Carlisle, Cumbria Cetreht Catterick, Yorkshire Cippanhamm Chippenham, Wiltshire Contwaraburg Canterbury, Kent Cumbraland Cumbria Cuncacester Chester-le-Street, County Durham Cynuit Cynuit Hillfort, nr Cannington, Somerset Defnascir Devonshire Dornwaraceaster Dorchester, Dorset Dunholm Durham, County Durham Dyflin Dublin, Eire Eoferwic York Ethandun Edington, Wiltshire Exanceaster Exeter, Devon Fifhidan Fyfield, Wiltshire Gleawecestre Gloucester, Gloucestershire Gyruum Jarrow, County Durham Hamptonscir Hampshire Haithabu Hedeby, trading town in southern Denmark Heagostealdes Hexham, Northumberland Hedene River Eden, Cumbria Hocchale Houghall, County Durham Horn Hofn, Iceland Hreapandune Repton, Derbyshire Kenet River Kennet Lindisfarena Lindisfarne (Holy Island), Northumberland Lundene London Onhripum Ripon, Yorkshire Pedredan River Parrett Readingum Reading, Berkshire Scireburnan Sherborne, Dorset Snotengaham Nottingham, Nottinghamshire Strath Clota Strathclyde Sumorsæte Somerset Suth Seaxa Sussex (South Saxons) Synningthwait Swinithwaite, Yorkshire Temes River Thames Thornsæta Dorset Thresk Thirsk, Yorkshire Tine River Tyne Tuede River Tweed Wiire River Wear Wiltun Wilton, Wiltshire Wiltunscir Wiltshire Wintanceaster Winchester, Hampshire

       PART ONE

       The Slave King

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      I wanted darkness. There was a half-moon that summer night and it kept sliding from behind the clouds to make me nervous. I wanted darkness.

      I had carried two leather bags to the small ridge which marked the northern boundary of my estate. My estate. Fifhaden, it was called, and it was King Alfred’s reward for the service I had done him at Ethandun where, on the long green hill, we had destroyed a Danish army. It had been shield wall against shield wall, and at its end Alfred was king again and the Danes were beaten, and Wessex lived, and I dare say that I had done more than most men. My woman had died, my friend had died, I had taken a spear thrust in my right thigh, and my reward was Fifhaden.

      Five hides. That was what the name meant. Five hides! Scarce enough land to support the four families of slaves who tilled the soil and sheared the sheep and trapped fish in the River Kenet. Other men had been given great estates and the church had been rewarded with rich woodlands and deep pastures, while I had been given five hides. I hated Alfred. He was a miserable, pious, tight-fisted king who distrusted me because I was no Christian, because I was a northerner, and because I had given him his kingdom back at Ethandun. And as reward he had given me Fifhaden. Bastard.

      So I had carried the two bags to the low ridge that had been cropped by sheep and was littered with enormous grey boulders that glowed white when the moon escaped the wispy clouds. I crouched by one of the vast stones and Hild knelt beside me.

      She was my woman then. She had been a nun in Cippanhamm, but the Danes had captured the town and they had whored her. Now she was with me. Sometimes, in the night, I would hear her praying and her prayers were all tears and despair, and I reckoned she would go back to her god in the end, but for the moment I was her refuge. ‘Why are we waiting?’ she asked.

      I touched a finger to my lips to silence her. She watched me. She had a long face, large eyes and golden hair under a scrap of scarf. I reckoned she was wasted as a nun. Alfred, of course, wanted her back in the nunnery. That was why I let her stay. To annoy him. Bastard.

      I was waiting to make certain that no one watched us. It was unlikely, for folk do not like to venture into the night when things of horror stalk the earth. Hild clutched at her crucifix, but I was comfortable in the dark. From the time I was a small child I had taught myself to love the night. I was a sceadugengan, a shadow-walker, one of the creatures other men feared.

      I waited a long time until I was certain no one else was on the low ridge, then I drew Wasp-Sting, my short-sword, and I cut out a square of turf that I laid to one side. Then I dug into the ground, piling the soil onto my cloak. The blade kept striking chalk and flints and I knew Wasp-Sting’s blade would be chipped, but I went on digging until I had made a hole large enough for a child’s burial. We put the two bags into the earth. They were


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