Read Defiant Unto Death Online
Authors: David Gilman
Blackstone made no reply. The conspirators needed as many fighting men as they could muster but to become involved in French conspiracies and politics was to walk in a maze of intrigue, betrayal and murder. It was a sport for nobles, not a fighting man.
One of the dogs defecated onto the rush-strewn floor, and yelped when another of the nobles kicked it away. Blanche threw a handful of powder into the flames, a mixture of sulphur, arsenic and antimony, used during the great pestilence against rat fleas as well as for its aroma, to veil the stench.
âEdward
will
invade. Street criers in London have brought in five hundred archers. The English nobles have committed to Edward. This situation is one he's always dreamed of, an attack from the north
and
the south. And this time he will help Navarre become the power behind the Crown,' said de Mainemares, the noble who had kicked the dog. âCharles of Navarre remains a festering wound in King John's side.'
De Graville lowered his voice, as if the whisper lessened his guilt of conspiracy. âFrance's strength will come from the English King's invasion,' he said. âThe Dauphin is a boy. He's weak and debt-ridden.'
âAnd what then?' Blackstone asked. âYou'll murder him as well as his father? This is more than a King against a King. It's family business. King Edward wants to secure the greatest amount of territory for his children as much as King John wishes to keep France secure for his. It's what we all do. We fight and take what we can for ourselves so that our children have a future.' Blackstone pulled open the heavy chestnut doors. âI'm going home. Thank you for your hospitality, Blanche. I believe that what my Lord de Mainemares says is true: Edward will invade. But to place your lives under the protection of the Dauphin is foolish. You underestimate your enemy. King John is no fool. He'll have you where he wants you.'
A conspiracy needed guile and sworn secrecy and the Norman barons had the one but not the other. Secrets leaked out like whey through a cheesemaker's cloth.
Jean de Harcourt strode angrily towards him as Blackstone faced him.
âYou sell your sword, Thomas!' de Harcourt said.
For a moment Blackstone allowed the Count's grip to stay on his arm. âAnd I always choose the paymaster,' he said quietly, and then easily loosened his closest friend's grip.
âJean!' Sir Godfrey called. âThomas is his own man. Always has been.' He limped to the doorway and extended his hand. Blackstone grasped it. âYou were a self-willed and insolent bastard of an archer, Thomas â more than most â but your sword has served this family and your King. You're not a part of this. Go in peace with Christiana and the children. You'll hear no more from us on this matter. I'll go to King Edward. I've sworn my fealty once; I'll do it again. And this time we will give him Normandy and he will give us the France we need.'
The heavy doors closed behind Blackstone, their sullen echo thudding into his heart. It felt as though his friend had been entombed.
It was bad enough that Blackstone and Jean de Harcourt had parted in ill temper; when he gathered his family to return home, a shame-faced Henry stood with Guillaume and confessed to losing his treasured knife.
âYou don't deserve the honour!' Blackstone thundered. âYou need to learn when privilege is bestowed on you! You searched the riverbed?' The answer was already obvious when he looked at the boy's wet clothing.
âI did, Father, diligently.'
âBut you weren't damned well diligent enough to keep from losing it. Agnes cares more for her cloth doll than you do for a gift of great value. It shames the memory of the brave man who wore it and gave up his life.' He turned away with a dismissive gesture. âYou ride behind the wagon. Master Guillaume is your squire; he'll suggest a suitable penance.'
As the wagon carrying Christiana and Agnes rocked along the rutted track Christiana stayed silent. A boy's duty would always be harsher than that of a girl's. Guillaume rode with Henry at his side on a gelded palfrey.
âFather's still quiet,' Henry said. âI've really angered him.'
âHe's worried about my Lord de Harcourt. These are dangerous times, Master Henry,' said Guillaume.
âIs he worried about us?'
âOf course. He's your father.'
âShould I ride with Mother and Agnes, do you think?'
âMen-at-arms don't ride in wagons. I've told you that before.'
âOr on a mare,' Henry said, remembering.
âOr on a mare,' Guillaume answered. Henry fell silent because men-at-arms did not chatter like girls either. He hoped his father's anger and concern would settle by the time they reached home.
It was a day's travel with the wagon, though this time it seemed even slower and more ponderous than usual, which had more to do with Blackstone's mood than the well-travelled road. He had always felt the simple joy of going home, to lazy smoke from the cooking fires drifting above the broad expanse of the valley and wooded hills that contrasted with the high, shadowed walls of Harcourt. But this time he could not dispel the incessant voice urging him to go back and do more to convince Jean not to travel to Rouen for the planned meeting with the King's son.
As they turned towards the hamlet where his villagers went about their work, they stopped whatever they were doing and bowed their heads in honour of their lord who passed by.
They and their master could not know on that cold morning in late March as they welcomed Sir Thomas Blackstone home, that violence more savage than anything they had thought possible would soon descend upon them.
The rider appeared four days later.
Old Hugh took the mud-splattered man from Castle de Harcourt to his mistress and she in turn called Blackstone.
âMarcel?'
âMy lord.'
âYou're soaked. No, no, don't stand. Stay seated at the fire.'
The old man gratefully accepted Blackstone's charity to stay on the fireside stool, but he seemed close to tears.
âWhat's wrong?' Blackstone asked Christiana.
âThe nobles went to Rouen and Blanche has gone after them. She's armed herself, she's convinced Jean is going to be killed,' she told him.
âWhy would the Dauphin kill Jean? Whatever they're planning they're in it together,' Blackstone said.
Christiana turned to the old man. âTell Sir Thomas what happened.'
âA messenger arrived late last night, after my Lord de Harcourt had left for Rouen. I overheard what it was not my privilege to hear. Two weeks ago the King was to attend a wedding outside of Paris, but a plot was discovered to capture and imprison him and the Dauphin. The King changed his plans and evaded his attackers.'
âThen your master would have known of this,' Blackstone said.
The old man shook his head. âThose who plotted do not know they were betrayed, and my master was not involved. It was the King's son-in-law who planned it.'
âNavarre would kill to get the crown,' Blackstone said. âHe's the one who's convinced Jean and the others. Who warned the King?'
âMy lady believes it was one of the Count's friends,' the old man answered.
Blackstone felt the alarm squeeze his chest. If Jean had been betrayed then it was by one of the men, all friends, in the great hall that day.
âDid she take anyone with her? Soldiers? A squire?' Blackstone asked the steward.
âNo, my lord,' the servant said. âShe went alone. I didn't know what to do.'
âWhat about Sir Godfrey?' Blackstone asked.
âTo England,' the servant replied.
Blackstone refrained from allowing his irritation at Blanche's action to show. The old man had been a servant since childhood at Castle de Harcourt. Blackstone knew him as a trusted retainer, a man who had helped ease his own broken body in his first faltering steps to recovery. He nodded at the servant. âYou were correct in coming to me. Go to the kitchen and tell Beatrix to feed you and that you are to sleep near the fire. Tomorrow, return to Harcourt and wait for news from me or Guillaume.'
The steward bowed and turned away.
âThomas, you have to go after her,' Christiana said.
âAnd do what? If she's so determined to interfere in her husband's affairs, what right do I have to stop her? I don't want to get caught up in their plans. My duty is to you and the children and my people here.'
âThomas! She cared for you!'
â
You
cared for me!' he shouted. It was a mess, a god-awful dung heap of a mess and he was being dragged into it.
âHelp them, Thomas. She'll fight tooth and claw to stop Jean from being hurt or dishonoured. They gave us shelter when we were both abandoned in the world.'
âAs a favour to the King of England!'
âShame on you! They weren't duty-bound to offer their friendship! Nor was Jean to accept you as a man-at-arms. Their obligation ended when you were strong enough to leave their household. Blanche will kill any man who tries to hurt Jean, just as I would for you.'
Blackstone felt her stinging rebuke. No matter how much he argued to the contrary, his wife's love for him would settle any dispute. It was easier to lay siege to a fortified town than scale the heights of her determination.
Her voice softened. âBlanche is my lady and my friend. Help her, Thomas. For me. She tried to stop me going to Paris.' She leaned into his chest. Blackstone kissed her hair.
âIf my men saw how easily I yielded to you, I'd have a mutiny on my hands,' he said.
âI didn't have to convince you. I could read your thoughts all the way home. You just needed to know it was all right to leave me and the children. And your men would never dare question your decisions.'
âUnlike my wife,' he said.
âThey don't know the Thomas Blackstone that I know,' she answered, bravely ignoring the fear that lodged in her heart whenever he left her to confront danger.
In the hours before first light Guillaume saddled his master's horse and fastened his shield and Wolf Sword to the pommel. The younger man's loyalty and fighting skills had been proven over the years at Blackstone's side and his master had no hesitation in leaving the safety of his family in the squire's keeping.
âYou'll stay here for a day and a night,' Blackstone told him. âIf I'm not back by then, or you have not heard from Castle de Harcourt, you will take Christiana and the children down to Chaulion and stay behind the walls. Tell Guinot to hold against any attack. Have men on the road between here and Harcourt and others on the road to Rouen. If the King sends armed men on either of these roads it will mean I've run into trouble. Escape while you can. He won't harm the people here. Tell them to deny me and swear their allegiance to him. Make them understand that the King will not harm his subjects, especially if they have been under threat from a war lord like me.'
âThey won't turn their backs on you, Sir Thomas,' Guillaume said.
âThey'll have to. Those are my orders,' Blackstone said.
Blackstone left his horse outside the city walls in the care of a blacksmith known to him, so that the great beast and his coat of arms would not raise curiosity or attract unwanted attention. One of the stalls held Blanche's chestnut mare. She was here, then, and had taken the same precaution as him.
Blackstone had walked through Rouen's narrow streets years before when Jean de Harcourt had taken him into the great castle to see for himself the Duchy of Normandy's seat of power. Now that the King's son had been given that title and responsibility for the region, in the hope of bringing the Norman barons and landowners under the King's control and making them more receptive to the increase in salt and hearth taxes, there were more soldiers than Blackstone had seen before. They moved through the alleyways and market stalls making random checks and searches of people in the streets. When Blackstone was an English archer riding with Sir Gilbert and Godfrey de Harcourt, they had gazed down onto the city's battlements and seen the banners of the French army and its nobility that had gathered days before the battle at Crécy. It had always been a wonder to him how so many thousands of men could be accommodated within the confines of the city's walls. Now as he walked the labyrinthine streets it was not difficult to imagine men quartered in every house and stinking alleyway. The streets were wide enough for two carts to pass side by side, but the throngs of people moved laboriously, shuffling between street and alley as overburdened pack donkeys were whipped and cajoled, jostling for passage past street vendors and their trays. Men and women, bent double from the loads of firewood and charcoal on their backs, shouted obscenities to those moving too slowly. The stench of urine and excrement wafted from narrow side streets where men and women squatted to relieve themselves. The cacophony of voices rose and fell, competing with the tavern signs clanging in the wind that funnelled into the constricted streets.
Blackstone's mail and surcoat were concealed beneath his cloak, and he kept its cowl pulled over his scarred face. It was not likely that common men and women in the streets of the great Norman capital would recognize him, but he did not wish to risk drawing the attention of the soldiers. Only when he reached the entrance of the great castle and the guards that stood before them did he show his face.
âI have a message for the Countess de Harcourt et Ponthieu. Is she here?'
The men did not step aside in deference to his rank.
âNo one's allowed inside. And there's no woman come through these doors, whether it's a countess or a whore.' The soldiers grinned, their manner almost a taunt to Blackstone. The guard's impertinence signalled that the Dauphin's soldiers carried their lord's authority in this troublesome duchy. Perhaps they would welcome a challenge so that a local knight could be thrown into the dungeon. Anything to teach the Normans a lesson, and in their ignorance they took him to be Norman. Blackstone knew that confrontation would serve no purpose.