 |
 | The
Dominican friar arrived at Castillon d’Arbizon in the autumn dusk, just as the
watchman was shutting the western gate.
A fire had been kindled in a big brazier that stood inside the gate’s
arch to warm the town’s watchmen on what promised to be the first chill night
of the waning year. Bats were
flickering above the town’s half-repaired walls and about the tower of the high
castle which crowned Castillon d’Arbizon’s steep hill.
God
be with you, father, one of the watchmen said as he paused to let the tall
friar through the gate, but the watchman spoke in Occitan, his native tongue,
and the friar did not speak that language and so he just smiled vaguely and
sketched a sign of the cross before he hitched up his black skirts and toiled
up the town’s main street towards the castle.
Girls, their day’s work finished, were strolling the lanes and some of
them giggled for the friar was a fine looking man despite a very slight
limp. He had ragged black hair, a
strong face and dark eyes. A whore
called to him from a tavern doorway and prompted a cackle of laughter from men
drinking at a table set in the street.
A butcher sluiced his shopfront with a wooden pail of water so that
dilute blood swilled down the gutter past the friar while above him, from a top
floor window where she was drying her washing on a long pole, a woman screamed
insults at a neighbour. The western
gate crashed shut at the foot of the street and the locking bar dropped into
place with a thud.
The
friar ignored it all. He just climbed
to where the church of Saint Sardos crouched beneath the pale bastion of the
castle and, once inside the church, he knelt at the altar steps, made the sign
of the cross and then prostrated himself.
A black-dressed woman praying at the side-altar of Saint Agnes made the
sign of the cross and, disturbed by the friar’s baleful presence, hurried from
the church. The friar, lying flat on
the top step, just waited.
A
town sergeant, dressed in Castillon d’Arbizon’s livery of grey and red, had
watched the friar climb the hill. He
had noticed that the Dominican’s robe was old and patched and that the friar
himself was young and strong, and so the sergeant went to find one of the
town’s consuls and that official, cramming his fur trimmed hat onto his grey
hair, ordered the sergeant to bring two more armed men while he fetched Father
Medous and one of the priest’s two books.
The group assembled outside the church and the consul ordered the
curious folk who had gathered to watch the excitement to stand back.
There is nothing strange, he said
officiously.
But
there was. A stranger had come to
Castillon d’Arbizon and all strangers were cause for suspicion, and so the
crowd stayed and watched as the consul pulled on his official robe of grey and
red cloth trimmed with hare fur, then ordered the three sergeants to open the
church door.
What
did the people expect? A devil to erupt
from Saint Sardos’s? Did they think to
see a great charred beast with crackling black wings and a trail of smoke
behind his forked tail? Instead the
priest and the consul and two of the sergeants went inside, while the third
sergeant, his stave of office showing the badge of Castillon d’Arbizon which
was a hawk carrying a sheaf of rye, guarded the door. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> The crowd waited. The
woman who had fled the church said that the friar was praying.
But he looks evil, she added, he looks
like the devil, and she made the sign of the cross.
9.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size:12.0pt;font-family:
Arial;mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-GB;
mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA'>
When
the priest, the consul and the two guards went into the church the friar was
still lying flat before the altar with his arms spread wide so that his body
made the shape of the cross. He must
have heard the nailed boots on the nave’s uneven flagstones, but he did not
move, nor did he speak.
Paire? Castillon d’Arbizon’s priest asked
nervously. He spoke in Occitan and the
friar did not respond. Father? The priest tried French.
You
are a Dominican? The consul was too
impatient to wait for any response to Father Medous’s tentative approach. Answer me! He also in French, and sternly too, as befitted Castillon
d’Arbizon’s leading citizen. Are you a
Dominican?
The
friar prayed a moment longer and then brought his hands together above his
head, paused for a heartbeat, then stood and faced the four men.
I
have come a long way, he said imperiously, and need a bed, food and wine.
You
are a Dominican? The consul repeated
his question.
I
follow the blessed Saint Dominic’s way, the friar confirmed. The wine need not be good, the food merely
what your poorest folk eat, and the bed can be of straw.
The
consul hesitated. The friar was tall,
evidently strong and just a bit frightening, but then the consul, who was a
wealthy man and properly respected in Castillon d’Arbizon, drew himself up to
his full height. You are young, he
said accusingly, to be a friar.
It
is to the glory of God, the Dominican said dismissively, that young men
follow the cross instead of the sword.
I can sleep in a stable.
Your
name? The consul demanded.
Thomas.
An
English name! There was alarm in the
consul’s voice and the two sergeants responded by hefting their long staves.
Tomas,
if you prefer, the friar said, seemingly unconcerned as the two sergeants took
a menacing pace towards him. It is my
baptismal name, he explained, and the name of that poor disciple who doubted
our Lord’s divinity. If you have no
such doubts then I envy you and I pray to God that he grants me such
certainty.
You
are French? The consul asked.
I
am a Norman, the friar said, then nodded.
Yes, I am French. He looked at
the priest. Do you speak French?
I
do, the priest sounded nervous, some.
A little.
Then
may I eat in your house tonight, Father?
The
consul would not let Father Medous answer, but instead instructed the priest to
give the friar the book. It was a very
old book with worm-eaten pages and a black leather cover that the friar
unwrapped. What do you want of
me? He demanded.
Read
from the book, the consul demanded. He
had noticed that the friar’s hands were scarred and the fingers slightly twisted. Damage, he thought, more fitting for a
soldier than a priest. Read to
me! The consul insisted.
You
cannot read for yourself? The friar
asked derisively.
Whether
I read or not, the consul said, is not your business. But whether you can read, young man, is our
business, for if you are not a priest then you will not be able to read. So read to me.
The
friar shrugged, opened a page at random and paused. The consul’s suspicions were roused by the pause and he raised a
hand to beckon the sergeants forward, but then the Dominican suddenly read
aloud. He had a good voice, confident
and strong, and the Latin words sounded like a melody as they echoed from the
church’s painted walls. After a moment
the consul held up a hand to silence the friar and looked quizzically at Father
Medous. Well?
He
reads well, Father Medous said weakly.
The priest’s own Latin was not good and he did not like to admit that he
not entirely understood the echoing words, though he was quite sure that the
Dominican could read.
You
know what the book is? the consul demanded.
I
assume, the friar said, that it is the life of Saint Gregory. The passage, as you doubtless recognised,
there was sarcasm in his voice, describes the pestilence that will afflict
those who disobey the Lord their God.
He wrapped the limp black cover about the book and held it out to the
priest. You probably know the book as
the Flores Sanctorum?
Indeed,
the priest took the book and nodded at the consul.
That
official was still not entirely reassured.
Your hands, he said, how were they injured? style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> And your nose? It was
broken?
As
a child, the friar said, holding out his hands, I slept with the cattle. I was trampled by an ox. And my nose was broken when my mother struck
me with a skillet.
The
Consul understood those everyday childhood accidents and visibly relaxed. You will understand, father, he said to
the friar, that we must be cautious of visitors.
Cautious
of God’s priests? The Dominican asked
caustically.
We
had to be sure, the consul explained.
A message came from Auch which said the English are riding, but no one
knows where.
There
is a truce, the friar pointed out.
When
did the English ever keep a truce? The
Consul retorted.
If
they are indeed English, the Dominican said scornfully. Any troop of bandits is called the English
these days. You have men, he gestured
at the sergeants who did not understand a word of the French conversation, and
you have churches and priests, so why should you fear bandits?
The
bandits are English, the consul insisted.
They carried war bows.
Which
does not alter the fact that I have come a long way, and that I am hungry,
thirsty and tired.
Father
Medous will look after you, the consul said and he gestured at the sergeants
and led them back down the nave and out into the small square. There is nothing to worry about! the
consul announced to the crowd. Our
visitor is a friar. He is a man of
God.
The
small crowd dispersed. Twilight
wreathed the church tower and closed about the castle’s battlements. A man of God had come to Castillon d’Arbizon
and the small town was at peace.
The
man of God ate a dish of cabbage, beans and salt bacon. He explained that he had made a pilgrimage
to Santiago de Compostela in Spain to pray at the tomb of Saint James and now
he was walking to Avignon to fetch new orders from his superiors. He had seen no raiders, English or
otherwise, he told Father Medous.
We
have seen no English in many years, Father Medous said, making a hasty sign of
the cross to avert the evil he had just mentioned, but not so long ago they
ruled here. The friar, eating his
meal, appeared not to be interested.
We paid taxes to them, Father Medous went on, but then they went and
now we belong to the Count of Berat.
I
trust he is a Godly man? Friar Thomas asked.
Very
pious, Father Medous confirmed. He
keeps some straw from the manger at Bethlehem in his church. I would like to see that.
His
men garrison the castle? The friar
demanded, ignoring the more interesting topic of the baby Jesus’s bedding.
Indeed,
Father Medous confirmed.
Do
the garrison hear mass?
Father
Medous paused, obviously tempted to tell a lie, then settled for a half
truth. Some do.
The
friar put down his wooden spoon and stared sternly at the uncomfortable priest.
How many are they? And how many of
them hear mass?
Father
Medous was nervous. All priests were
nervous when Dominicans appeared, for the friars were God’s ruthless warriors
in the fight against heresy and if this tall young man reported that the folk
of Castillon d’Arbizon were less than pious then he could bring the Inquisition
and its instruments of torture to the town.
There are ten of them in the garrison, Father Medous said, and they
are all good Christians. As are all my
people.
Friar
Thomas looked sceptical. All of them?
They
do their best, Father Medous said loyally, but . . . he paused again,
evidently regretting that he had been about to add a qualification and, to
cover his hesitation, he went to the small fire and added a log. The wind fretted at the chimney and sent a
back draught of smoke whirling about the small room. A north wind, Father Medous said, and it brings the first cold
night of the autumn. Winter is not far
off, eh?
But? The friar had noted the hesitation.
Father
Medous sighed as he took his seat.
There is a girl. A
heretic. She was not from Castillon
d’Arbizon, God be thanked, but she stayed here when her father died. She is a beghard.
I
did not think the beghards were this far south, the Friar said. Beghards were beggars, but not just
any importunate folk. Instead they were
heretics who denied the church and denied the need to work and claimed all
things came from God and therefore that all things should be free to all men
and women, and the church, to protect itself against such horrors, burned the beghards
wherever they were found.
They
wander the roads, Father Medous pointed out, and she came here, but we sent
her to the bishop’s court and she was found guilty. Now she is back here.
Back
here? The friar sounded shocked.
To
be burned, Father Medous explained hurriedly.
She was sent back to be burned by the civil authorities. The bishop wants the people to see her death
so they know the evil is gone from among them.
Friar
Thomas frowned. You say this beghard
has been found guilty of heresy, that she had been sent here to die, yet she is
still alive. Why?
She
is to be burned tomorrow, Father Medous said hastily. I had expected Father Roubert to be
here. He is a Dominican like yourself
and it was he who discovered the girl’s heresy. Perhaps he is ill? He did
send me a letter explaining how the fire was to be made.
Father
Thomas looked scornful. All that’s
needed, he said dismissively, is a heap of wood, a stake, some kindling and a
heretic. What more can you want?
Father
Roubert, the priest explained, insisted that we use small faggots and that
they stand upright. He illustrated
this requirement by bunching his fingers like sticks of asparagus. Bundles of
sticks, he wrote to me, and all pointing to heaven. They must not lay flat.
He was insistent about that.
Father
Thomas smiled as he understood. So the
fire will burn bright, but not fierce, eh?
She will die slowly.
It
is God’s will, Father Medous said.
Slowly
and in great agony, the friar said, relishing the words, that is indeed God’s
will for heretics.
And
I have made the fire as he instructed, Father Medous said weakly.
Good. The girl deserves nothing better, the friar
said, and mopped his dish with a piece of dark bread. I shall watch her death with joy and then walk on. He made the sign of the cross. I thank you for this food.
Father
Medous gestured at his hearth where he had piled some blankets.
You are welcome to sleep here.
I
shall, Father, the friar said, but first I shall pray to Saint Sardos.
I have not heard of him, though.
Can you tell me who he is?
A
goatherd, Father Medous said. He was
not entirely sure that Sardos had ever existed, but the local people insisted
he did and had always venerated him.
He saw the lamb of God on the hill where the town now stands.
It was being threatened by a wolf and he
rescued it and God rewarded him with a shower of gold.
As
is right and proper, the friar said, then stood. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> You will come and pray to the blessed Sardos with me?
Father
Medous stifled a yawn. I would like
to, he said without any enthusiasm.
I
shall not insist, the friar said generously.
Will you leave your door unbarred?
My
door is always open, the priest said, and felt a pang of relief as his
uncomfortable guest stooped under the door’s lintel and went into the night.
Father
Medous’s housekeeper smiled from the kitchen door. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> He’s a good looking one, she said, for a friar.
Is he staying tonight?
He
is, yes.
Then
I’d better sleep in the kitchen, the housekeeper said, because you wouldn’t
want a Dominican to find you between my legs at midnight.
He’ll put us both on the fire with the beghard.
She laughed and came to clear the table.
The
friar did not go to the church, but instead went the few paces down the hill to
the nearest tavern and pushed open the door.
The noise inside slowly subsided as the crowded room stared back at the
friar’s unsmiling face. When there was
silence the friar shuddered as though he was horrified at the revelry, then he
stepped back into the street and closed the door. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> There was a heartbeat of silence inside the tavern, then men
laughed. Some reckoned the young priest
had been looking for a whore, others merely supposed he had opened the wrong
door, but in a moment or two they all forgot about him.
The
friar limped back up the hill to Saint Sardos’s church where, instead of going
into the goatherd’s sanctuary, he stopped in the black shadows of a
buttress. He waited there, invisible
and silent, noting the few sounds of Castillon d’Arbizon’s night.
Singing and laughter came from the tavern,
but he was more interested in the footsteps of the watchman pacing the town
wall that joined the castle’s stronger rampart just behind the church.
Those steps came towards him, stopped a few
paces down the wall and then retreated.
The friar counted to a thousand and still the watchman did not return and
so the friar counted to a thousand again, this time in Latin, and when there
was still nothing but silence above him he moved to the wooden steps that gave
access to the wall. The steps creaked
under his weight, but no one called out.
Once on the wall he crouched beside the high castle tower, his black
robe invisible in the shadow cast by the waning moon. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> He watched down the wall’s length where it followed the hill’s
contour until it turned the corner to the western gate where a dim red glow
showed that the brazier was burning strongly.
No watchmen were in sight. The
friar reckoned the men must be warming themselves at the gate.
He looked up, but saw no one at the castle’s
rampart, nor any movement in the two half lit arrow slits that glowed from lanterns
inside the tall tower. He had seen
three liveried men inside the crowded tavern and there might have been others
that he had not seen, and he reckoned the garrison was either drinking or
asleep and so he lifted his black skirts and unwound a cord that had been
wrapped about his waist. The cord was
made of hemp stiffened with glue, the same kind of cord that powered the
dreaded English war bows, and it was long enough so that he was able to loop it
about one of the wall’s crenellations and then let it drop to the steep ground
beneath. He stayed a moment, staring
down. The town and castle were built on
a steep crag around which a river looped and he could hear the water hissing
over a weir and he could just see a gleam of reflected moonlight glancing from
a pool, but he could see nothing else.
The wind tugged at him, chilled him, and he retreated to the mooncast
shadow and pulled his hood over his face.
The
watchman reappeared, but only strolled halfway up the wall where he paused,
leaned on the parapet for a time, then wandered back towards the gate.
A moment later there was a soft whistle,
jagged and tuneless like the song of a bird, and the friar went back to the
cord and hauled it up. Knotted to it
now was a rope that he tied around the crenellation. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> It’s safe, he called softly in English, and then he flinched at
the sound of a man’s boots scuffing on the wall as he climbed the rope.
There
was a grunt as the man hauled himself over the rampart and a loud crash as his
scabbard thumped on the stone, but then the man crouched beside the friar.
Here, he gave the friar an English war bow
and a bag of arrows. Another man was
climbing now. He had a war bow slung on
his back and a bag of arrows at his waist.
He was more nimble than the first man and made no noise as he crossed
the battlement, and then a third man appeared and crouched with the other
two.
How
was it? the first man asked the friar.
Frightening.
They
didn’t suspect you?
Made
me read some Latin to prove I was a priest.
Bloody
fools, eh? the man said. He had a
Scottish accent. So what now?
The
castle.
Christ
help us.
He
has so far. How are you, Sam?
Thirsty,
one of the other men answered.
Hold
these for me, Thomas said, giving Sam his bow and arrow bag, and then,
satisfied that the watchman was out of sight, he led his three companions down
the wooden steps to the alley which led beside the church to the small square
in front of the castle’s gate. The
wooden faggots piled ready for the heretic’s death were black in the
moonlight. A stake with a chain to hold
the beghard’s waist jutted up from the waiting timber.
The
castle’s tall gates were wide enough to let a farm cart enter the courtyard,
but set into one leaf was a small wicket gate and the friar stepped ahead of
his companions and thumped the small door hard. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> There was a pause, then a shuffle of feet sounded and a man asked
a question from the gate’s far side.
Thomas did not answer, but just knocked again, and the guard, who was
expecting his companions to come back from the tavern, suspected nothing and
pulled back the two bolts to open the door.
Thomas stepped into the flame light of two high torches burning in the
inner archway and in their flickering glow he saw the guard’s look of
astonishment that a priest had come to Castillon d’Arbizon’s castle in the
darkness, and the man still looked astonished as the friar hit him hard,
straight in the face and then hit him again in the belly.
The guard fell back against the wall and the
friar clamped a hand across the man’s mouth.
Sam and the other two came through the gate that they locked behind
them. The guard was struggling and
Thomas brought up a knee which made the man give a muffled squeal.
Look in the guardroom, Thomas ordered his
companions.
Sam,
with an arrow on his bow’s string, pushed open the door which led from the
castle’s entrance. A single guard was
there, half standing from a table on which was a skin of wine, two dice and a
scatter of coins. The guard stared at
Sam’s round, cheerful face and he was still staring open-mouthed when the arrow
took him in the chest and threw him back against the wall.
Sam followed, drawing a knife, and blood
slashed up the stones as he cut the man’s gullet.
Did
he have to die?’ Thomas asked, bringing
the first guard into the room.
He
was looking at me funny, Sam said, like he’d seen a ghost.
He scooped up the cash on the table and
dropped it into his arrow bag. Shall I
kill him too? he asked, nodding at the first guard.
No,
Thomas said. Robbie?
Tie him up.
What
if he makes a noise? Robbie, the
Scotsman, asked.
Then
let Sam kill him.
The
third of Thomas’s men came into the guardroom.
He was called Jake and he was a lank, skinny man with crossed eyes.
He grinned at the sight of the fresh blood
on the wall. Like Sam he carried a bow
and an arrow bag, and had a sword at his waist. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> He picked up the wine skin.
Not
now, Jake, Thomas said and the lank man, who looked far older and far more
cruel than the younger Thomas, meekly obeyed.
Thomas went to the guardroom door.
He knew the garrison numbered ten men, he also knew that one was dead,
one was a prisoner and at least three were still in the tavern.
So five men could be left.
He peered into the courtyard, but it was
empty except for a farm wagon heaped with bales and barrels, and so he crossed
to the weapon rack on the guardroom wall and selected a short sword.
He tested the edge and found it sharp
enough. Do you speak French? he asked
the captive guard.
The
man shook his head, too terrified to speak.
Thomas
left Sam to guard the prisoner. If
anyone knocks on the castle gate, he said, ignore it.
If he makes a noise, he jerked his head
towards the prisoner, kill him. Don’t
drink the wine. Stay awake.
He slung his bow on his shoulder, pushed two
arrows into the rope belting his friar’s robe, then beckoned to Jake and
Robbie. The Scotsman, dressed in a
short mail hauberk, had his sword drawn.
Keep it silent, Thomas said to them, and the three slipped into the
courtyard.
Castillon
d’Arbizon had been at peace for too long.
The garrison was small and careless, its duties little more than to levy
tariffs on goods coming to the town and despatching the taxes to Berat where
their lord lived. The men had become
lazy, but Thomas of Hookton, who had pretended to be a friar, had been fighting
for months and his instincts were those of a man who knew that death could be
waiting at every corner. Robbie, though
he was three years younger than Thomas, was almost as experienced in war as his
friend, while cross-eyed Jake had been a killer all his life.
They
began with the castle’s undercroft where six dungeons lay in foetid darkness,
but a flickering rushlight showed in the jailer’s room where they found a
monstrously fat man and his equally fat wife.
Both were sleeping. Thomas
pricked the man’s neck with the sword’s point to let him smell blood, then
marched the couple to a dungeon where they were locked away.
A girl called from another of the cells, but
Thomas hissed at her to be quiet. She
cursed him in return, then went silent.
One
down, four to go.
They
climbed back to the courtyard. Three
servants, two of them boys, were sleeping in the stables and Robbie and Jake
took them down to the cells, then rejoined Thomas to climb the dozen broad
steps to the keep’s door, then up the tower’s winding stair.
The servants, Thomas guessed, would not be
numbered among the garrison, and there would doubtless be other servants, cooks
and grooms and clerks, but for now he worried only about the soldiers.
He found two of them fast asleep in the
barracks room, both with women under their blankets, and Thomas woke them by
tossing in a torch he took from a becket on the stairway.
The four sat up, startled, to see a friar
with an arrow nocked on his drawn bow.
One woman took breath to scream, but the bow twitched and the arrow was
pointing straight at her right eye and she had the sense to stifle her
alarm.
Tie
them up, Thomas said.
Quicker
to slit their gizzards, Jake suggested.
Tie
them up, Thomas said again, and stuff their mouths.
It
did not take long. Robbie ripped a
blanket into strips with his sword and Jake trussed the four.
One of the women was naked and Jake grinned
as he tied her wrists and then hoisted her up to a hook on the wall so that her
arms were stretched. Nice, he said.
Later,
Thomas said. He was at the door,
listening. There could be two more
soldiers in the castle, but he heard nothing.
The four prisoners were all being half suspended from the big metal
hooks that normally held swords and mail shirts and, when the four were
silenced and immobilised, Thomas went up the next winding stair to where a
great door blocked his path, Jake and
Robbie followed him, their boots making a slight noise on the worn stone
steps. Thomas motioned them to silence,
then pushed on the door. For a moment
he thought it must be locked and so he pushed harder and the door jerked open
with a terrible shriek of rusted metal hinges.
The sound was fit to wake the dead and Thomas stood, appalled, to stare
into a great high room hung with tapestries.
The squeal of the hinges died away, leaving silence.
The remnants of a fire burned in a big
hearth and gave enough light to show that the hall was empty.
At its far end was a dais where the Count of
Berat, the lord of Castillon d’Arbizon, would sit when he visited the town and
where his table would be placed for any feasts. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> The dais was empty now, except that at its rear, hidden by a
tapestry, there was an arched space where another flicker of light showed
through the moth-eaten weave.
Robbie
slipped past Thomas and crept up the side of the hall beneath the slit windows
that let in slanting bars of silvered moonlight. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> Thomas put an arrow on the black bow, then drew the cord and felt
the immense power of the yew stave as he took the string back to his right
ear. Robbie glanced at him, saw he was
ready, and so reached out with his sword to pull back the threadbare tapestry.
But
before the blade even touched the tapestry it was swept aside as a big man
charged Robbie. He came roaring and
sudden, astonishing the Scot who tried to bring his sword back to meet the
attack, but Robbie was too slow and the big man leaped on him, fists flailing,
and just then the big black bow sang.
The arrow, that could strike down an armoured knight at two hundred
paces, slid through the man’s rib cage and span him around so that he flailed
bloodily across the floor. Robbie was
still half under him, his fallen sword clattering on the thick wooden floorboards.
A woman was screaming.
Thomas guessed the wounded man was the
castellan, the garrison’s commander, and he wondered if the man would live long
enough to answer some questions, but Robbie had drawn his dagger and, not
knowing that his assailant was already pierced by an arrow, was flailing the
short blade at the man’s fat neck so that a sheet of blood spilled dark and
shining across the boards and even after the man had died Robbie still gouged
at him. The woman screamed on.
Stop her noise, Thomas said to Jake and
went to pull the heavy corpse off the Scot.
The man’s long white nightshirt was red now. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> Jake slapped the woman and then, blessedly, there was silence.
There
were no more soldiers in the castle. A
dozen servants were sleeping in the kitchens and store rooms, but they made no
trouble. The men were all taken down to
the dungeons, then Thomas climbed to the keep’s topmost rampart from where he
could look down on the unsuspecting roofs of Castillon d’Arbizon, and there he
waved a flaming torch. He waved it back
and forth three times, threw it far down into the bushes at the foot of the
steep slope on which the castle and town were built, then went to the western
side of the rampart where he laid a dozen arrows on the parapet.
Jake joined him there.
Sam’s with Sir Robbie at the gate, Jake
said. Robbie Douglas had never been
knighted, but he was well born and a man at arms, and Thomas’s men had given
him the rank. They liked the Scotsman,
just as Thomas did, which was why Thomas had disobeyed his lord and let Robbie
come with him. Jake laid more arrows on
the parapet. That were easy.
They
weren’t expecting trouble, Thomas said.
That was not entirely true. The
town had been aware of English raiders, Thomas’s raiders, but had somehow
convinced themselves that the raiders would not come to Castillon
d’Arbizon. The town had been at peace
for so long that the townsfolk were persuaded the quiet times would go on.
The walls and the watchmen were not there to
guard against the English, but against the big companies of bandits that
infested the countryside. A dozy
watchman and a high wall might deter those bandits, but it had failed against
real soldiers. How did you cross the
river? he asked Jake.
At
the weir, Jake said. They had scouted
the town in the dusk and Thomas had seen the mill weir as the easiest place to
cross the deep and fast-flowing river.
The
miller?
Scared,
Jake said, and quiet.
Thomas
heard the crackling of breaking twigs, the scrape of feet and a thump as a ladder
was placed against the angle between the castle and the town wall.
He leaned over the inner parapet.
You can open the gate, Robbie, he called
down. He put an arrow on his string and
stared down the long length of moonlit wall.
Beneath
him men were climbing the ladder, hoisting weapons and bags that they tossed
over the parapet and then followed after.
A wash of flame light glowed from the open wicket gate where Robbie and
Sam stood guard, and after a moment a file of men, their mail clinking in the
night, went from the wall’s steps to the castle gate. style="mso-spacerun:
yes"> Castillon d’Arbizon’s new garrison was arriving.
A
watchman appeared at the wall’s far end.
He strolled towards the castle, then suddenly became aware of the sound
of swords, bows and baggage thumping on stone as men clambered over the
wall. He hesitated, torn between a
desire to get closer and see what was really happening and a wish to find
reinforcements, and while he hesitated both Thomas and Jake loosed their
arrows.
The
watchman wore a padded leather jerkin, protection enough against a drunkard’s
stave, but the arrows slashed through the leather, the padding and his chest
until the two points protruded from his back.
He was hurled back, his staff fell with a clatter, and then he jerked in
the moonlight, gasped a few times and was still.
What
do we do now? Jake asked.
Collect
the taxes, Thomas said, and make a nuisance of ourselves.
Until
what?
Until
someone comes to kill us, Thomas said, thinking of his cousin.
And
we kill him? Jake might be cross eyed,
but he held a very straightforward view of life.
With
God’s good help, Thomas said and made the sign of the cross on his friar’s
robe.
The
last of Thomas’s men climbed the wall and dragged the ladder up behind
them. There were still half a dozen men
a mile away, across the river and hidden in the forest where they were guarding
the horses, but the bulk of Thomas’s force was now inside the castle and its
gate was again locked. The dead
watchman lay on the wall with two goose-feathered shafts sticking from his
chest. No one else had detected the
invaders. Castillon d’Arbizon either
slept or drank.
And
then the screams began.
|
|