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Thomas did not answer at once. Had G.o.d given him a duty? If so he did not want to accept it, for acceptance meant believing in the legends of the Vexilles. Thomas, in the evening after he had met Brother Germain, had talked with Mordecai in Sir Guillaume's garden, asking the old man if he had ever read the book of Daniel.
Mordecai had sighed, as if he found the question wearisome. 'Years ago,' he'd said, 'many years ago. It is part of the Ketuvim, the writings that all Jewish youths must read. Why?'
'He's a prophet, yes? He tells the future.'
'Dear me,' Mordecai had said, sitting on the bench and dragging his thin fingers through his forked beard. 'You Christians,' he had said, 'insist that prophets tell the future, but that wasn't really what they did at all. They warned Israel. They told us that we would be visited by death, destruction and horror if we did not mend our ways. They were preachers, Thomas, just preachers, though, G.o.d knows, they were right about the death, destruction and horror. As for Daniel... He is very strange, very strange. He had a head filled with dreams and visions. He was drunk on G.o.d, that one.'
'But do you think,' Thomas had asked, 'that Daniel could foretell what is happening now?'
Mordecai had frowned. 'If G.o.d wished him to, yes, but why should G.o.d wish that? And I a.s.sume, Thomas, that you think Daniel might foretell what happens here and now in France, and what possible interest could that hold for the G.o.d of Israel? The Ketuvim are full of fancy, vision and mystery, and you Christians see more in them than we ever did. But would I make a decision because Daniel ate a bad oyster and had a vivid dream all those years ago? No, no, no.' He stood and held a jordan bottle high. 'Trust what is before your eyes, Thomas, what you can smell, hear, taste, touch and see. The rest is dangerous.'
Thomas now looked at Sir Guillaume. He had come to like the Frenchman whose battle-hardened exterior hid a wealth of kindness, and Thomas knew he was in love with the Frenchman's daughter, but, even so, he had a greater loyalty.
'I cannot fight against England,' he said, 'any more than you would carry a lance against King Philip.'
Sir Guillaume dismissed that with a shrug. 'Then fight against the Vexilles.'
But Thomas could not smell, hear, taste, touch or see the Vexilles. He did not believe the king of the south would send his daughter to the north. He did not believe the Holy Grail was hidden in some heretic's fastness. He believed in the strength of a yew bow, the tension of a hemp cord and the power of a white-feathered arrow to kill the King's enemies. To think of dark lords and of heresiarchs was to flirt with the madness that had harrowed his own father.
If I find the man who killed my father,' he evaded Sir Guillaume's demand, 'then I will kill him.'
'But you will not search for him?'
'Where do I look? Where do you look?' Thomas asked, then offered his own answer. 'If the Vexilles really still exist, if they truly want to destroy France, then where would they begin? In England's army. So I shall look for them there.' That answer was an evasion, but it half convinced Sir Guillaume, who grudgingly conceded that the Vexilles might indeed take their forces to Edward of England.
That night they sheltered in the scorched remains of a farm where they gathered about a small fire on which they roasted the hind legs of a boar that Thomas had shot. The men-at-arms treated Thomas warily. He was, after all, one of the hated English archers whose bows could pierce even plate mail. If he had not been Sir Guillaume's friend they would have wanted to slice off his string fingers in revenge for the pain that the white-fledged arrows had given to the hors.e.m.e.n of France, but instead they treated him with a distant curiosity. After the meal Sir Guillaume gestured to Eleanor and Thomas that they should both accompany him outside. His squire was keeping watch, and Sir Guillaume led them away from the young man, going to the bank of a stream where, with an odd formality, he looked at Thomas. 'So you will leave us,' he said, 'and fight for Edward of England.'
'Yes.'
'But if you see my enemy, if you see the lance, what will you do?'
'Kill him,' Thomas said. Eleanor stood slightly apart, watching and listening.
'He will not be alone,' Sir Guillaume warned, 'but you a.s.sure me he is your enemy?'
'I swear it,' Thomas said, puzzled that the question even needed to be asked.
Sir Guillaume took Thomas's right hand. 'You have heard of a brotherhood in arms?'
Thomas nodded. Men of rank frequently made such pacts, swearing to aid each other in battle and share each other's spoils.
'Then I swear a brotherhood to you,' Sir Guillaume said, 'even if we will fight on opposing sides.'
'I swear the same,' Thomas said awkwardly.
Sir Guillaume let Thomas's hand go. 'There,' he said to Eleanor, 'I'm safe from one d.a.m.ned archer.' He paused, still looking at Eleanor. 'I shall marry again,' he said abruptly, 'and have children again and they will be my heirs. You know what I'm saying, don't you?'
Eleanor's head was lowered, but she looked up at her father briefly, then dropped her gaze again. She said nothing.
'And if I have more children, G.o.d willing,' Sir Guillaume said, 'what does that leave for you, Eleanor?'
She gave a very small shrug as if to suggest that the question was not of great interest to her. 'I have never asked you for anything.'
'But what would you have asked for?'
She stared into the ripples of the stream. 'What you gave me,' she said after a while, 'kindness.'
'Nothing else?'
She paused. 'I would have liked to call you Father.'
Sir Guillaume seemed uncomfortable with that answer. He stared northwards. 'You are both b.a.s.t.a.r.ds,' he said after a while, 'and I envy that.'
'Envy?' Thomas asked.
'A family serves like the banks of a stream. They keep you in your place, but b.a.s.t.a.r.ds make their own way. They take nothing and they can go anywhere.' He frowned, then flicked a pebble into the water. 'I had always thought, Eleanor, that I would marry you to one of my men-at-arms. Benoit asked me for your hand and so did Fossat. And it's past time you were married. What are you? Fifteen?'
'Fifteen,' she agreed.
'You'll rot away, girl, if you wait any longer,' Sir Guillaume said gruffly, 'so who shall it be? Benoit? Fossat?' He paused. 'Or would you prefer Thomas?'
Eleanor said nothing and Thomas, embarra.s.sed, kept silent.
'You want her?' Sir Guillaume asked him brutally.
'Yes.'
'Eleanor?'
She looked at Thomas, then back to the stream. 'Yes,' she said simply.
'The horse, the mail, the sword and the money,' Sir Guillaume said to Thomas, 'are my b.a.s.t.a.r.d daughter's dowry. Look after her, or else become my enemy again.' He turned away.
'Sir Guillaume?' Thomas asked. The Frenchman turned back. 'When you went to Hookton,' Thomas went on, wondering why he asked the question now, 'you took a dark-haired girl prisoner. She was pregnant. Her name was Jane.'
Sir Guillaume nodded. 'She married one of my men. Then died in childbirth. The child too. Why?' He frowned. 'Was the child yours?'
'She was a friend,' Thomas evaded the question.
'She was a pretty friend,' Sir Guillaume said, 'I remember that. And when she died we had twelve Ma.s.ses said for her English soul.'
'Thank you.'
Sir Guillaume looked from Thomas to Eleanor, then back to Thomas. 'A good night for sleeping under the stars,' he said, 'and we shall leave at dawn.' He walked away.
Thomas and Eleanor sat by the stream. The sky was still not wholly dark, but had a luminous quality like the glow of a candle behind horn. An otter slid down the far side of the stream, its fur glistening where it showed above the water. It raised its head, looked briefly at Thomas, then dived out of sight, to leave a trickle of silver bubbles breaking the dark surface.
Eleanor broke the silence, speaking the only English words she knew. 'I am an archer's woman,' she said.
Thomas smiled. 'Yes,' he said.
And in the morning they rode on and next evening they saw the smear of smoke on the northern horizon and knew it was a sign that the English army was going about its business. They parted in the next dawn.
'How you reach the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, I do not know,' Sir Guillaume said, 'but when it is all over, look for me.'
He embraced Thomas, kissed Eleanor, then pulled himself into his saddle. His horse had a long blue trapper decorated with yellow hawks. He settled his right foot into its stirrup, gathered the reins and pushed back his spurs.
A track led north across a heath that was fragrant with thyme and fluttering with blue b.u.t.terflies. Thomas, his helmet hanging from the saddle's pommel and the sword thumping at his side, rode towards the smoke, and Eleanor, who insisted on carrying his bow because she was an archer's woman, rode with him. They looked back from the low crest of the heath, but Sir Guillaume was already a half-mile westwards, not looking back, hurrying towards the oriflamme.
So Thomas and Eleanor rode on.
The English marched east, ever further from the sea, searching for a place to cross the Seine, but every bridge was broken or else was guarded by a fortress. They still destroyed everything they touched. Their chevauchee chevauchee was a line twenty miles wide and behind it was a charred trail a hundred miles long. Every house was burned and every mill destroyed. The folk of France fled from the army, taking their livestock and the newly gathered harvest with them so that Edward's men had to range ever further to find food. Behind them was desolation while in front lay the formidable walls of Paris. Some men thought the King would a.s.sault Paris, others reckoned he would not waste his troops on those great walls, but instead attack one of the strongly fortified bridges that could lead him north of the river. Indeed, the army tried to capture the bridge at Meulan, but the stronghold which guarded its southern end was too ma.s.sive and its crossbowmen were too many, and the a.s.sault failed. The French stood on the ramparts and bared their backsides to insult the defeated English. It was said that the King, confident of crossing the river, had ordered supplies sent to the port of Le Crotoy that lay far to the north, beyond both the Seine and the River Somme, but if the supplies were waiting then they were unreachable because the Seine was a wall behind which the English were penned in a land they had themselves emptied of food. The first horses began to go lame and men, their boots shredded by marching, went barefoot. was a line twenty miles wide and behind it was a charred trail a hundred miles long. Every house was burned and every mill destroyed. The folk of France fled from the army, taking their livestock and the newly gathered harvest with them so that Edward's men had to range ever further to find food. Behind them was desolation while in front lay the formidable walls of Paris. Some men thought the King would a.s.sault Paris, others reckoned he would not waste his troops on those great walls, but instead attack one of the strongly fortified bridges that could lead him north of the river. Indeed, the army tried to capture the bridge at Meulan, but the stronghold which guarded its southern end was too ma.s.sive and its crossbowmen were too many, and the a.s.sault failed. The French stood on the ramparts and bared their backsides to insult the defeated English. It was said that the King, confident of crossing the river, had ordered supplies sent to the port of Le Crotoy that lay far to the north, beyond both the Seine and the River Somme, but if the supplies were waiting then they were unreachable because the Seine was a wall behind which the English were penned in a land they had themselves emptied of food. The first horses began to go lame and men, their boots shredded by marching, went barefoot.
The English came closer to Paris, entering the wide lands that were the hunting grounds of the French kings. They took Philip's lodges and stripped them of tapestries and plate, and it was while they hunted his royal deer that the French King sent Edward a formal offer of battle. It was the chivalrous thing to do, and it would, by G.o.d's grace, end the harrowing of his farmlands. So Philip of Valois sent a bishop to the English, courteously suggesting that he would wait with his army south of Paris, and the English King graciously accepted the invitation and so the French marched their army through the city and arrayed it among the vineyards on a hillcrest by Bourg-la-Reine. They would make the English attack them there, forcing the archers and men-at-arms to struggle uphill into ma.s.sed Genoese crossbows, and the French n.o.bles estimated the value of the ransoms they would fetch for their prisoners.
The French battleline waited, but no sooner had Philip's army settled in its positions than the English treacherously turned about and marched in the other direction, going to the town of Poissy where the bridge across the Seine had been destroyed and the town evacuated. A few French infantrymen, poor soldiers armed with spears and axes, had been left to guard the northern bank, but they could do nothing to stop the swarm of archers, carpenters and masons who used timbers ripped from the roofs of Poissy to make a new bridge on the fifteen broken piers of the old. It took two days to repair the bridge and the French were still waiting for their arranged battle among the ripening grapes at Bourg-la-Reine as the English crossed the Seine and started marching northwards. The devils had escaped the trap and were loose again.
It was at Poissy that Thomas, with Eleanor beside him, rejoined the army.
And it was there, by G.o.d's Grace, that the hard times began.
Chapter 10.
Eleanor had been apprehensive about joining the English army. 'They won't like me because I'm French,' she said.
'The army's full of Frenchmen,' Thomas had told her. 'There are Gascons, Bretons, even some Normans, and half the women are French.'
'The archers' women?' she asked, giving him a wry smile. 'But they are not good women?'
'Some are good, some are bad,' Thomas said vaguely, 'but you I shall make into a wife and everyone will know you're special.'
If Eleanor was pleased she showed no sign, but they were now in the broken streets of Poissy, where a rearguard of English archers shouted at them to hurry. The makes.h.i.+ft bridge was about to be destroyed and the army's laggards were being chivvied across its planks. The bridge had no parapets and had been hurriedly made from whatever timbers the army had found in the abandoned town, and the uneven planking swayed, creaked and bent as Thomas and Eleanor led their horses onto the roadway. Eleanor's palfrey became so scared of the uncertain footing that it refused to move until Thomas put a blindfold over its eyes and then, still shaking, it trod slowly and steadily across the planks, which had gaps between them through which Thomas could see the river sliding. They were among the last to cross. Some of the army's wagons had been abandoned in Poissy, their loads distributed onto the hundreds of horses that had been captured south of the Seine.
Once the last stragglers had crossed the bridge the archers began hurling the planks into the river, breaking down the fragile link that had let the English escape across the river. Now, King Edward hoped, they would find new land to waste in the wide plains that lay between the Seine and the Somme and the three battles spread into the twenty-mile-wide line of the chevauchee chevauchee and advanced northwards, camping that night just a short march from the river. and advanced northwards, camping that night just a short march from the river.
Thomas looked for the Prince of Wales's troops while Eleanor tried to ignore the dirty, tattered and sun-browned archers, who looked more like outlaws than soldiers. They were supposed to be making their shelters for the coming night, but preferred to watch the women and call obscene invitations. 'What are they saying?' Eleanor asked Thomas.
'That you are the most beautiful creature in all France,' he said.
'You lie,' she said, then flinched as a man shouted at her. 'Have they never seen a woman before?'
'Not like you. They probably think you're a princess.'
She scoffed at that, but was not displeased. There were, she saw, women everywhere. They gathered firewood while their men made the shelters and most, Eleanor noted, spoke French. 'There will be many babies next year,' she said.
'True.'
'They will go back to England?' she asked.
'Some, perhaps.' Thomas was not really sure. 'Or they'll go to their garrisons in Gascony.'
'If I marry you,' she asked, 'will I become English?'
'Yes,' Thomas said.
It was getting late and cooking fires were smoking across the stubble fields, though there was precious little to cook. Every pasture held a score of horses and Thomas knew they needed to rest, feed and water their own animals. He had asked many soldiers where the Prince of Wales's men could be found, but one man said west, another east, so in the dusk Thomas simply turned their tired horses towards the nearest village for he did not know where else to go. The place was swarming with troops, but Thomas and Eleanor found a quiet enough spot in the corner of a field where Thomas made a fire while Eleanor, the black bow prominent on her shoulder to demonstrate that she belonged to the army, watered the horses in a stream. They cooked the last of their food and afterwards sat under the hedge and watched the stars brighten above a dark wood. Voices sounded from the village where some women were singing a French song and Eleanor crooned the words softly.
'I remember my mother singing it to me,' she said, plucking strands of gra.s.s that she wove into a small bracelet. 'I was not his only b.a.s.t.a.r.d,' she said ruefully. 'There were two others I know of. One died when she was very small, and the other is now a soldier.'
'He's your brother.
'Half-brother.' She shrugged. 'I don't know him. He went away.' She put the bracelet on her thin wrist. 'Why do you wear a dog's paw?' she asked.
'Because I'm a fool,' he said, 'and mock G.o.d.' That was the truth, he thought ruefully, and he pulled the dry paw hard to break its cord, then tossed it into the field. He did not really believe in St Guinefort; it was an affectation. A dog would not help him recover the lance, and that duty made him grimace, for the penance weighed on his conscience and soul.
'Do you really mock G.o.d?' Eleanor asked, worried.
'No. But we jest about the things we fear.'
'And you fear G.o.d?'
'Of course,' Thomas said, then stiffened because there had been a rustle in the hedge behind him and a cold blade was suddenly pressed against the back of his neck. The metal felt very sharp.
'What we should do,' a voice said, 'is hang the b.a.s.t.a.r.d properly and take his woman. She's pretty.'
'She's pretty,' another man agreed, 'but he ain't good for anything.'
'You b.a.s.t.a.r.ds!' Thomas said, turning to stare into two grinning faces. It was Jake and Sam. He did not believe it at first, just gazed for a while. 'It is you! What are you doing here?'
Jake slashed at the hedge with his billhook, pushed through and gave Eleanor what he thought was a rea.s.suring grin, though with his scarred face and crossed eyes he looked like something from nightmare. 'Charlie Blois got his face smacked,' Jake said, 'so Will brought us here to give the King of France a b.l.o.o.d.y nose. She your woman?'
'She's the Queen of b.l.o.o.d.y Sheba,' Thomas said.
'And the Countess is humping the Prince, I hear,' Jake grinned. 'Will saw you earlier, only you didn't see us. Got your nose in the air. We heard you were dead.'
'I nearly was.'
'Will wants to see you.'
The thought of Will Skeat, of Jake and Sam, came as a vast relief to Thomas, for such men lived in a world far removed from dire prophecies, stolen lances and dark lords. He told Eleanor these men were his friends, his best friends, and that she could trust them, though she looked alarmed at the ironic cheer which greeted Thomas when they ducked into the village tavern. The archers put their hands at their throats and contorted their faces to imitate a hanged man while Will Skeat shook his head in mock despair.