Bernard Cornwell

The Burning Land


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your gods reward you for good behaviour?’

      ‘My gods are capricious, lord.’ I had learned that word from Bishop Erkenwald who had intended it as an insult, but once I had learned its meaning I liked it. My gods are capricious.

      ‘How can you serve a capricious god?’ Alfred asked.

      ‘I don’t.’

      ‘But you said. …’

      ‘They are capricious,’ I interrupted him, ‘but that’s their pleasure. My task is not to serve them, but to amuse them, and if I do then they will reward me in the life to come.’

      ‘Amuse them?’ He sounded shocked.

      ‘Why not?’ I demanded. ‘We have cats, dogs and falcons for our pleasure, the gods made us for the same reason. Why did your god make you?’

      ‘To be His servant,’ he said firmly. ‘If I’m God’s cat then I must catch the devil’s mice. That is duty, Lord Uhtred, duty.’

      ‘While my duty,’ I said, ‘is to catch Harald and slice his head off. That, I think, will amuse my gods.’

      ‘Your gods are cruel,’ he said, then shuddered.

      ‘Men are cruel,’ I said, ‘and the gods made us like themselves, and some of the gods are kind, some are cruel. So are we. If it amuses the gods then Harald will slice my head off.’ I touched the hammer amulet.

      Alfred grimaced. ‘God made you his instrument, and I do not know why he chose you, a pagan, but so he did and you have served me well.’

      He had spoken fervently, surprising me, and I bowed my head in acknowledgement. ‘Thank you, lord.’

      ‘And now I wish you to serve my son,’ he added.

      I should have known that was coming, but somehow the request took me by surprise. I was silent a moment as I tried to think what to say. ‘I agreed to serve you, lord,’ I said finally, ‘and so I have, but I have my own battles to fight.’

      ‘Bebbanburg,’ he said sourly.

      ‘Is mine,’ I said firmly, ‘and before I die I wish to see my banner flying over its gate and my son strong enough to defend it.’

      He gazed at the glow of the enemy fires. I was noticing how scattered those fires were, which told me Harald had not yet concentrated his army. It would take time to pull those men together from across the ravaged countryside, which meant, I thought, that the battle would not be fought tomorrow, but the next day. ‘Bebbanburg,’ Alfred said, ‘is an island of the English in a sea of Danes.’

      ‘True, lord,’ I said, noting how he used the word ‘English’. It embraced all the tribes who had come across the sea, whether they were Saxon, Angle or Jute, and it spoke of Alfred’s ambition, that he now made explicit.

      ‘The best way to keep Bebbanburg safe,’ he said, ‘is to surround it with more English land.’

      ‘Drive the Danes from Northumbria?’ I asked.

      ‘If it is God’s will,’ he said, ‘then I will wish my son to do that great deed.’ He turned to me, and for a moment he was not a king, but a father. ‘Help him, Lord Uhtred,’ he said pleadingly. ‘You are my dux bellorum, my lord of battles, and men know they will win when you lead them. Scour the enemy from England, and so take your fortress back and make my son safe on his God-given throne.’

      He had not flattered me, he had spoken the truth. I was the warlord of Wessex and I was proud of that reputation. I went into battle glittering with gold, silver and pride, and I should have known that the gods would resent that.

      ‘I want you,’ Alfred spoke softly but firmly, ‘to give my son your oath.’

      I cursed inwardly, but spoke respectfully. ‘What oath, lord?’

      ‘I wish you to serve Edward as you have served me.’

      And thus Alfred would tie me to Wessex, to Christian Wessex that lay so far from my northern home. I had spent my first ten years in Bebbanburg, that great rock-fastness on the northern sea, and when I had first ridden to war the fortress had been left in the care of my uncle, who had stolen it from me.

      ‘I will swear an oath to you, lord,’ I said, ‘and to no one else.’

      ‘I already have your oath,’ he said harshly.

      ‘And I will keep it,’ I said.

      ‘And when I’m dead,’ he asked bitterly, ‘what then?’

      ‘Then, lord, I shall go to Bebbanburg and take it, and keep it, and spend my days beside the sea.’

      ‘And if my son is threatened?’

      ‘Then Wessex must defend him,’ I said, ‘as I defend you now.’

      ‘And what makes you think you can defend me?’ He was angry now. ‘You would take my army to Fearnhamme? You have no certainty that Harald will go there!’

      ‘He will,’ I said.

      ‘You can’t know that!’

      ‘I shall force it on him,’ I said.

      ‘How?’ he demanded.

      ‘The gods will do that for me,’ I said.

      ‘You’re a fool,’ he snapped.

      ‘If you don’t trust me,’ I spoke just as forcibly, ‘then your son-in-law wants to be your lord of battles. Or you can command the army yourself? Or give Edward his chance?’

      He shuddered, I thought with anger, but when he spoke again his voice was patient. ‘I just wish to know,’ he said, ‘why you are so sure that the enemy will do what you want.’

      ‘Because the gods are capricious,’ I said arrogantly, ‘and I am about to amuse them.’

      ‘Tell me,’ he said tiredly.

      ‘Harald is a fool,’ I said, ‘and he is a fool in love. We have his woman. I shall take her to Fearnhamme, and he will follow because he is besotted with her. And even if I did not have his woman,’ I went on, ‘he would still follow me.’

      I had thought he would scoff at that, but he considered my words quietly, then joined his hands prayerfully. ‘I am tempted to doubt you, but Brother Godwin assures me you will bring us victory.’

      ‘Brother Godwin?’ I had wanted to ask about the strange blind monk.

      ‘God speaks to him,’ Alfred said with a quiet assurance.

      I almost laughed, but then thought that the gods do speak to us, though usually by signs and portents. ‘Does he take all your decisions, lord?’ I asked sourly.

      ‘God assists me in all things,’ Alfred said sharply, then turned away because the bell was summoning the Christians to prayer in Æscengum’s new church.

      The gods are capricious, and I was about to amuse them. And Alfred was right. I was a fool.

      What did Harald want? Or, for that matter, Haesten? It was simpler to answer for Haesten, because he was the cleverer and more ambitious man, and he wanted land. He wanted to be a king.

      The northmen had come to Britain in search of kingdoms, and the lucky ones had found their thrones. A northman reigned in Northumbria, and another in East Anglia, and Haesten wanted to be their equal. He wanted the crown, the treasures, the women and the status, and there were two places those things could be found. One was Mercia and the other Wessex.

      Mercia was the better prospect. It had no king and was riven by warfare. The north and east of the country was ruled by jarls, powerful Danes who kept strong troops of household warriors and barred their gates each night, while the south and east was Saxon land. The Saxons looked to my cousin, Æthelred, for protection and he gave it to them, but only because he had inherited great wealth