Read Defiant Unto Death Online
Authors: David Gilman
Longdon smiled and hobbled away.
Blackstone looked up to his son. âYou made my heart swell with pride, Henry.'
He could see the boy's tears forming, but Blackstone's stern look gave him no permission to yield to emotion. He lifted Agnes from Christiana's arms, flinching from his wound. âWere you scared?' he asked the child who clung to him.
She nodded, nuzzling his neck.
âSo was I,' he told her.
âYou're never scared,' she said.
âAlways, if I think of anything happening to you.'
âBut I'm all right now, Papa.'
He kissed her forehead and returned her to her mother's arms. He could see bruises and welts through Christiana's grubby shift.
âWe have clothes for you, and a physician,' he said, laying a hand gently on her thigh.
âYou would have had our daughter killed,' she said.
Blackstone could not bring himself to answer the accusation.
âIt would have been better had he killed me. He beat your whore with knotted rope and had me crawl around the yard a dozen times in penance,' she said. âA woman raped who conceives a child is complicit in the act. De Marcy took my last shred of dignity, Thomas. And I am left with the guilt of an honourable squire's death. I mourn Guillaume more than my own shame. He was the best among us.'
The men stepped away; only Jacob stayed close, holding the lead to her horse, deferentially turning his face away.
Blackstone ignored his presence. âYou're my wife, mother of my children, lady of my house.'
She tugged the love token from her cuff and tossed down the embroidered cloth, the winged bird still entrapped â as were they by their destiny.
âMy father's coat of arms. Did you know?'
Blackstone knew denial was useless. âSome years later, yes. It was my burden.'
Neither spoke. Whatever they had was lost in a long sorrowful look. She finally nodded and kicked the horse forward, tugging the lead from Jacob's hand, forcing him to step aside. Henry's horse followed skittishly.
At the forest's edge, Blanche de Harcourt shook her hair free from her bascinet and rode forward to meet Christiana. Blackstone and Jacob watched the beaten woman press her mentor's hand to her lips.
âShe'll be cared for, Sir Thomas. Her wounds will heal,' Jacob said.
âYes,' Blackstone answered. âYou'll have more than my thanks, John.'
âI'll take friendship as payment if it's on offer, Sir Thomas.'
âGiven,' said Blackstone.
Killbere cantered his horse forward. âThe castle?' he said looking at Jacob.
âEighty or more of his men dead. Will Longdon's archers did most of the killing. I've left twenty men at the gate; they're guarding de Marcy and Girolami. Ten of ours dead. Some wounded. His plunder's in there. Wagon-loads.'
âHoly Blood of the Cross, a bargain at that! We'll live like kings. Right, Thomas, are we to fight these dog turds? There'll be enough slaughter today to last us a while.'
âGet to your men, John. Be ready for de Marcy's routiers, they'll want their plunder one way or the other.'
âAye, my lord,' Jacob answered and ran back towards the line of men formed up for battle.
âGilbert, they'll strike whatever happens to me. They'll come at you straight on, at the run. You've told the men what to do?'
âA dozen times and more. You need to be at their front, man.'
âDe Marcy first. Then we'll see.'
Blackstone's weariness showed. He folded Christiana's token against the wound in his side and secured it by tightening his sword belt.
âCut the bastard's throat and be done with it. Let it go, man. What's the point?' Killbere urged him.
âI want him under my sword.'
âThomas,' Killbere groaned. âThomas ⦠sweet, merciful God, he's a stain from the devil's loins. Tie him to a stake and burn him if you must have revenge, but you're hurt, and those men you killed took their toll. In truth, you're in no condition to take him. And he carries as great a hatred as you.'
âGilbert, I've known you since I was a boy, and you've always been a belligerent, conceited bastard with an unmerciful heart.'
âThis is no time for compliments, Thomas.'
Blackstone lifted the sword. âSo if he kills me, show him no mercy and slaughter him however you choose.'
Killbere made no humour from it, but nodded and spurred the horse away. Thomas Blackstone would face his own destiny.
Memories of men standing before their enemy, calling out for a champion, appeared like a vision in his mind's eye. Drums and trumpets, ten thousand banners, lances held high, armour embellished by surcoats of every hue. Pomp and ceremony declaring war as, shoulder to shoulder, men jostled for position to be the first to attack, to seek the glory that would live on in their family history and be recounted by troubadours.
Not this day.
Two belligerent forces faced each other across three hundred yards of open field. Men lost to peace, devoted to war without glory, intent only on profit. No banners or royalty, no surge of pride for a king, a prince or a cause. They were there for the killing, for those who slaughtered the most would sell their skills to the highest bidder.
The Savage Priest strode out of the gates wearing mail without armour, ready to strike hard and fast with agility. He seemed bigger than Blackstone remembered â his sallow face more gaunt, his dark-ringed eyes sunk deeper into his skull. His shield bore no markings; his black surcoat covered his mail. He appeared from the shadows of the great gates, as would the Grim Reaper.
Gilles de Marcy stopped ten paces away.
âI will punish your mortal body, Thomas Blackstone, and inflict more pain than you have known, and when you beg for mercy I'll cut out your eyes and tongue, and render you blind and speechless. And then, in front of your wife and children I will cut out your heart and leave your corrupt flesh on this field for the crows and ravens. Without Christian burial your soul will be damned.'
Blackstone had no doubt that a demonic force sheltered within the Savage Priest, but he had cut him once before in the darkened streets of a captured city and he bled like any other man. De Marcy's words had no effect. He raised his shield and, as split and battered as it was, its declaration,
Defiant unto Death,
could still be seen. Blackstone gripped Wolf Sword and strode forward without challenge or battle cry, chilled by his own hatred.
The Savage Priest ran at him and the two men struck, shields clashing, followed by vicious, hammering blows. Blackstone's weight and height gave him a brief advantage, but de Marcy's knights had weakened him against the strength and skill of a fresh fighter. He feinted, half turning from his wounded side, trying to draw de Marcy in, but the killer priest stepped back, found his balance and struck hard. The blow stunned Blackstone; he went down on one knee and the roar from the routiers surged across the field, but still de Marcy did not press home his advantage. Again he stepped back, waiting for the moment Blackstone was half raised, off balance. Then he struck again, two massive blows that cut through shield and broke mail. Blackstone's shield fell. De Marcy's men edged forward, war dogs on a leash, wanting the kill. Their captains screamed to hold them back, de Marcy's rank and reputation enough to hold them in check. The Savage Priest would kill Blackstone and then, when his head was hoisted on a lance, Blackstone's disheartened men would be vulnerable.
Blackstone took a blow on Wolf Sword's crossguard, twisted, and threw himself against de Marcy, so that they stood face to face, the priest's glowering black eyes glinting in the darkness of his visor. Their chests heaved desperately for air, grunting with exertion as, sweat-soaked, they grappled, neither yielding. Blackstone rammed his shoulder against de Marcy's shield, forcing strength into his legs, making the killer take two paces back, but he quickly retaliated and barged Blackstone, striking hard and fast, grunting with effort, determined to take the man's legend as a trophy. Five, six, seven times he powered his blade onto Wolf Sword, but Blackstone twisted, half turned, used the sword's pommel to crack down against de Marcy's helmet. Stunned, the Savage Priest faltered, regained his stance, brought up his shield and struck down again and again. Blackstone took the punishment, feeling his arms weakening against the power of the blows, knowing he risked death but wanting to tire his attacker..
And then Blackstone felt the surge of fresh strength settle within him, as if those he had vowed to avenge now bore witness. He moved in quickly before de Marcy delivered the next blow. His free hand gripped de Marcy's scabbard belt and he yanked, tipping the man down. Wolf Sword smashed away the black shield; then Blackstone kicked up the man's visor. De Marcy's distorted face revealed the shock from the blow, but his unrelenting desire to kill Blackstone fed the hatred to retaliate. He rolled clear with a vicious swipe that cut through Blackstone's leg mail. It was not a crippling injury and the pain made no impression. De Marcy followed his advantage and rained down blows, grunting and cursing with the effort. Blackstone deflected every strike and then stepped to one side as de Marcy delivered what should have been a maiming strike against his sword arm. He backhanded de Marcy with Wolf Sword's pommel and felt bones crack in the man's face.
Flat-footed, de Marcy was rocked back by the impact. His sword arm barely half-raised, Blackstone swept his blade down against his opponent's gauntlet, shattering his wrist. De Marcy's body crimped with the excruciating pain. Blackstone rammed the Wolf Sword's narrow point through mail into the vulnerable shoulder and de Marcy cried out in agony. Blackstone kicked his legs away and as the priest thudded to the ground he dropped his full weight onto the man's chest. A fine spray of bloody air plumed from the stunned priest's face. De Marcy's eyes blinked in disbelief.
âYou bastard knight ⦠you archer scum,' he gasped. âYou'll ⦠die on this ⦠field with me.'
A blurred image through sweat-streaked eyes showed Blackstone a bellowing mass of attacking men. Their faces contorted, their roar muted in his mind to a dull, flat gathering of sound like a wave about to break. His knee crushed down; his crooked left arm pressed against de Marcy's throat, forcing his struggling head back into the grass.
Blackstone pulled free his archer's knife, held the Savage Priest's eyes with his own. âThen die under an archer's knife,' he grunted; then he slammed down the visor and pushed the blade through the slit. In his steel tomb the Savage Priest screamed as his feet drummed on the bloodied ground. His body bucked, but Blackstone kept his weight on him and pressed the knife harder. De Marcy's black eyes dimmed, his last sight in this world the face of the man who killed him. Blackstone turned his gaze away before the dying killer's stare sucked his soul into hell.
The breaking tide of men was within twenty paces. Blackstone reached for his sword, but was overtaken by the whispering hail that fell and then thudded into their bodies. He saw that a hundred men must have fallen in an instant, and, as another storm of arrows reached further into the attacking routiers, Killbere and John Jacob surged past with Meulon and Gaillard beside them. Blackstone stood across the Savage Priest's body and let the men swirl around him.
The day was already won.
The battle lasted two hours, the fight so vicious that many were executed while begging for mercy. Few prisoners were taken. Once Killbere's men and John Jacob's Gascons hurled themselves in the vanguard of the battle, Blanche de Harcourt's men became the unstoppable tide of destruction. Many of de Marcy's men ran into the high forests to escape. Few stood their ground once their advantage was lost.
Afterwards, Blackstone allowed nearly two hundred of the Savage Priest's men â Englishmen, mostly veterans of Poitiers, and another sixty Gascon survivors â to swear fealty to him. The most vicious, whose crimes he learnt about from de Marcy's clerks, he hanged on a bleak, windswept day. Twenty-seven Englishmen and eleven Germans and Hungarians kicked their lives away on the end of a rope, the driving rain across the valley tightening the hemp, contorting faces into grotesque gargoyles. The monks and whores would join the camp followers' train, as did two French physicians who had been captured by de Marcy.
Most men who fought accepted death, but the greatest fear of even the most vicious among them was that they might die unshriven of their sins. Cistercian monks from a nearby abbey went among the dying to grant absolution. Monastic scribes recorded that a mass grave was dug before the winter snows fell on the pass. Several hundred bodies were interred from what became known as âLa Battaglia nella Valle dei Fiori'
.
Months later the events at the Battle at the Valley of Flowers found their way back to the English court where the story of Thomas Blackstone, outlawed knight, soon became a greater legend.
The camp followers, their base lives worthless without the soldiers, went out from the forest to help the wounded. Christiana allowed one of the whores to wash her and a physician to tend her wounds. Blackstone was still on the field of battle with Killbere and the aftermath of the fighting. She did not allow the woman to bathe Agnes, which she did herself. Her daughter was fed and clothed and then slept the undisturbed sleep of childhood. Henry had made his way from the forest to find his father.
âThere's no knowing where our hearts take us, Christiana,' Blanche de Harcourt told her. âYou chose him when he was the scourge of our nation. Now, he's my family's friend, and your husband. You should stay with him; he hasn't condemned you for the violation, and he'll stand by your shame. Why desert him now?'
âI cannot explain what cripples my heart, Blanche. It is a small death that grows colder each day. My father was a gentle knight who nurtured me as a child when my mother died, and then saw me safe into your care.' She looked down at her dirt-encrusted, broken nails, still caked with blood. âThe filth clings to me as does the thought of his death at Thomas's hands. That, and all that has happened. It changes everything for me.'