‘What is it, Alcuin?’ the man asked, turning to inspect us. He stood well over six feet and everything about him was on a similar, rather daunting scale. A big round head sat on a thick neck. He had a prominent nose, large grey eyes, and, though he held himself straight, his stomach protruded slightly. I judged him to be about fifty years old, for the hair at his temples was turning white. His most striking feature was his moustache. Long and luxuriant and blonde, it hung down a good six inches each side of his mouth and was carefully groomed. The two hairy strands provided an unexpectedly close match to the two long, blonde braids of the much younger woman at his side. Glancing between them, I concluded that they were father and daughter, not lovers as I had first suspected.
‘Two travellers who I thought might interest you,’ said our guide.
The big man gazed down at me. He was soberly dressed in everyday Frankish indoor costume of a long, dark-brown belted tunic over grey woollen trousers. His wool socks had leather soles in place of shoes, and were held up by strips of cloth wrapped around his legs. He wore no jewellery, though the young woman had a showy necklace of polished amber pieces, each the size of a pigeon’s egg. She had her father’s sturdy build which, thanks to her belt with its gold filigree, gave her a voluptuous figure, wide-hipped and full-breasted.
‘What is your name?’ the big man asked me. His voice was surprisingly high-pitched for such a big man.
‘Sigwulf,’ I replied, ‘and this is my slave, Osric.’
‘They are just arrived, sent by Offa, the king of the English,’ explained the priest.
Intelligent grey eyes searched my face.
‘I see you had good weather during your travels. You have a deep tan.’
‘Until three days ago we enjoyed nothing but sunshine.’
‘And the sunlight hurts your eyes?’
‘An imperfection from birth I prefer to keep covered,’ I answered cautiously.
‘A strange imperfection. It seems to shift from one eye to the other.’
I didn’t know what he was talking about. I fumbled for an answer.
‘The skin around your left eye is lighter where the sun has not touched. Yet you are wearing the patch on the other eye,’ he explained without a trace of irony.
I felt myself flush with embarrassment and glanced across at the priest, Alcuin. He was standing with his hands concealed in his sleeves, looking imperturbable.
‘It would be a courtesy if you removed your eye patch,’ Alcuin suggested.
Reluctantly I reached up and removed the leather cover to my right eye. I remembered how Offa had recoiled.
This time it was very different.
The big man in front of me stared at me closely for several moments.
‘Interesting,’ he said finally. ‘We are told that Alexander of Macedon had just the same condition. His eyes were of different colours. It was a mark of his uniqueness.’ Ignoring Osric, he turned to the priest. ‘We welcome this young man. Find him a place with the paladins and see that he gets fresh clothing.’
It was clear that we had been dismissed, and the priest bowed. Tactfully, I did the same, and the three of us left the room. As the door closed behind us, I remembered Offa’s letter still in my satchel.
‘I forgot to give the chamberlain the letter that King Offa prepared for King Carolus,’ I said to the priest.
The priest raised an eyebrow.
‘That wasn’t the chamberlain. That was Carolus himself, properly known as King of the Franks and Lombards and Patrician of the Romans.’
I was mortified that I had failed to recognize the most powerful ruler in the west.
‘But he was dressed so plainly. .’ I stammered.
‘He loathes wearing costly or fashionable clothing,’ said the priest. ‘Almost as much as he detests being idle. It drives him to distraction. Most of his councillors are using this rain as an excuse to take the day off so he has little to do. I thought he would find your presence a brief diversion.’
I reached into my satchel for the now water-stained parchment.
‘Then shouldn’t I leave this letter with his secretariat.’
‘I’ll deal with it,’ said the priest taking it from me. ‘Incidentally, I come from Northumberland myself. I’m one of the king’s advisers.’
‘Thank you for all your assistance. I hope I will have the chance of meeting you again,’ I said.
Alcuin smiled thinly.
‘You will. Another of my duties is to drum some learning into the heads of royal “guests” like yourself. King Carolus cannot abide idleness in others, any more than in himself.’
I readjusted my eye patch over my left eye.
‘I hope the king will not object if I continue to wear this.’
The priest shrugged.
‘As you wish.’
He escorted us back to the entrance hall and spoke to one of the guards.
‘Have one of your men show this young lord to the quarters for royal guests, and then take his slave to the stores to fetch suitable clothing for him.’
A gust of wind drove the rain horizontally into our faces as we emerged into the open. Osric and I followed the soldier as he ran for the lee of the unfinished meeting hall, then led us around a corner of the building. My eye patch made me blind on my left side and, in trying to keep up with him, I blundered into a massive stone block standing waist high in my path. I was about to step around it when something made me look up. A chill ran down my spine. The stone block was the pedestal of a remarkable statue. It was a bronze horse, twice life size. Every detail was precise — the flaring nostrils, one hoof raised, the arched neck. On its back a rider wore the same short military tunic and heavy military boots I had dreamed of and he was making the same gesture with his arm. The only difference from my dream was the rider’s face. This time he did not look down at me, but stared straight ahead, and it was rain which trickled down from his sightless eyes, not blood.
Chapter Five
From the outside, the quarters where the paladins or royal ‘guests’ were housed could have been mistaken for an army barracks. A long, low barn of a building, it was located at the far side of the palace precinct. The guardsman left me at the threshold and went off with Osric to the royal stores. Eager to get out of the rain, I eased open the heavy door and slipped inside. I was in a room that stretched the full length of the building. Watery-grey light filtered in through a row of small windows. Tables and benches filled the spaces between the double rows of posts holding up the timber roof. The walls were lined by sleeping booths. There were damp areas on the earth floor where the thatch had failed. A fire trench held cold cinders and ash. The place not only looked like a barracks but had the same smell and fug.
A dozen or more men were idling away their time on a rainy day. Most were about the same age or a few years older than me and I took particular note of one shaggy fellow, off by himself to one side. He was seated on a wooden stool and moodily whittling a piece of wood. A much older white-haired man was playing a board game against a dashing-looking opponent whose skin was almost as dark as Osric’s. The others were seated at the central table, leather bottles, drinking horns, cups and bowls in front of them.
‘Hello, Patch,’ said one of them, noticing me hesitating in the doorway. He had curly chestnut hair and an open, smiling face. ‘Come to join the palace companions?’
‘As King Carolus wishes,’ I replied, hoping my Frankish, learned from Arnulf, was not too rustic to be understood.
‘And where are you from?’
‘King Offa of the English sent me.’
‘Isn’t that where that curmudgeon Alcuin comes from?’ asked his companion, a chubby, soft-looking individual with melancholy brown eyes.
‘He’s from further north,’ I said.
‘Stop blathering, Oton, it’s your turn,’ snapped a man I judged to be approaching middle age. His thick, black eyebrows over deep-set eyes made him look fierce and short-tempered, an impression enhanced by his impatient tone.