“Tin?” Owain sounded scornful.
Cadwy nodded solemnly. He was fairly drunk, but so were most of the men around the low table on which the meal had been served. They were all warriors, either Cadwy’s or Owain’s men, though I, being junior, had to stand behind Owain’s couch as his shield-bearer. “Tin,” Cadwy said again, ‘and gold, maybe. But plenty of tin.” Their conversation was private, for the meal was almost over and Cadwy had provided slave girls for the warriors. No one had any attention for the two leaders, except for me and Cadwy’s shield-holder, who was a dozy lad staring slack-jawed and dull-eyed at the slave girls’ antics. I was listening to Owain and Cadwy, but kept so still and straight that they probably forgot I was even standing there. “You may not want tin,” Cadwy said to Owain, ‘but there’s plenty who do. Can’t make bronze without tin, and they pay a fancy price for the stuff in Armorica, let alone up
“7 country.” He jerked a dismissive fist towards the rest of Dumnonia, then gave a belch that seemed to surprise him. He calmed his belly with a draught of good wine, then frowned as though he could not remember what he had been talking about. “Tin,” he finally said, remembering.
“So tell me about it,” Owain said. He was watching one of his men who had stripped a slave girl naked and was now smearing butter on her belly.
“It isn’t my tin,” Cadwy said forcefully.
“Must be someone’s,” Owain said. “You want me to ask Lwellwyn? He’s a clever bastard when it comes to money and ownership.” His man slapped the girl’s belly hard, splattering butter all over the low table and causing a gust of laughter. The girl complained, but the man told her to be quiet and started scooping butter and pork grease on to the rest of her body.
“The fact of the matter is,” Cadwy said forcefully to get Owain’s attention off the naked girl, ‘that Uther let in a pack of men from Kernow. They came to work the old Roman mines, because none of our people had the skills. The bastards are supposed, mark that, supposed to send their rent to your treasury, but the buggers are sending tin back to Kernow. I know that for a fact.”
Owain’s ears had pricked up now. “Kernow?”
“Making money off our land, they are. Our land!” Cadwy said indignantly.
Kernow was a separate kingdom, a mysterious place at the very end of Dumnonia’s western peninsula that had never been ruled by the Romans. Most of the time it lived in peace with us, but every now and then King Mark would stir himself from his latest wife’s bed and send a raiding party over the River Tamar. “What are men of Kernow doing here?” Owain asked in a voice every bit as indignant as his host’s.
“I told you. Stealing our money. And not just that. I’ve been missing good cattle, sheep, even a few slaves. Those miners are getting above themselves, and they’re not paying you like they should. But you’ll never prove it. Never. Not even your clever fellow Lwellwyn can look at a hole in the moor and tell me how much tin is supposed to come out in a year.” Cadwy swiped at a moth, then shook his head moodily. “They think they’re above the law. That’s the problem. Just because Uther was their patron they think they’re above the law.”
Owain shrugged. His attention was back on the butter-smothered girl who was now being chased about the lower terrace by a half dozen drunken men. The grease on her body made her hard to catch and the grotesque hunt was making some of the watching men helpless with laughter. I was having a hard time stopping myself from giggling. Owain looked back to Cadwy. “So go up there and kill a few of the bastards, Lord Prince,” he said as though it was the easiest solution in the world.
“I can’t,” Cadwy said.
“Why not?”
“Uther gave them protection. If I attack them they’ll complain to the council and to King Mark and I’ll be forced to pay sarhaed.” Sarhaed was the blood price put on a man by law. A King’s sarhaed was un payable a slave’s was cheap, but a good miner probably had a high enough price to hurt even a wealthy prince like Cadwy.