A King's Betrayal (28 page)

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Authors: Linda Sole

BOOK: A King's Betrayal
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Thirty Seven
 
Beth heard the church bells ringing.  She was at the edge of the woods close to the village gathering wood for her fire when they began.  Watching as the people poured out of their cottages, she wondered whether the news was good or bad.  In August Mistress Grey had come to tell her that there was news from France.

‘It is said that the fleet landed safely on French soil and there is a siege of Harfleur.  Master Steward says that the lord sailed with the fleet and will fight with the Duke of Gloucester’s men.’

‘He told me that he meant to fight,’ Beth said.  ‘What will happen here if he is killed?’

‘Master Steward says that he has but female cousins.  If the title falls to the Crown and the King’s gift, we may have a new lord here.’

‘Then we must pray that he returns,’ Beth said.  ‘Sir William is a just man and I think we could fare worse.  Another lord might not allow me to take game from his woods.’

‘I dare say he would hang you,’ Mistress Grey looked at her thoughtfully.  ‘Did you tell the lord about the child?’

‘No.  She is not his.  Why should I tell him?’

‘I think he might be angry if he learned of it from another.’

‘Who will tell him?’

Mistress Grey pursed her lips.  ‘Not I, Beth – but there are others who might see a chance to make trouble for you.’

‘I live quietly in the woods.  No one bothers me there.’

‘You can’t face another winter there, Beth.  If you will not think of yourself, consider the child.  Your cottage is empty and people murmur their discontent.  There are families who need more space and they grumble that you waste what is yours, though they dare not disobey the lord by taking it for themselves.’

‘You told me the priest speaks against witchcraft.  Would it be safe for me to come to the cottage?’

‘He has curtailed his sermons since the lord spoke with him.  You might be safer in the village than the woods, Beth.  I often lie awake at night and think of you alone with the child.  Supposing one of the men took it into his head to pay you a surprise visit?  You are so vulnerable there alone in the woods.’

‘I thought John Blacksmith might seek revenge when he was banished, but he did not.’  Beth’s look hardened.  ‘Since they hung Marthe I have carried a sharp knife.  If anyone attempted to rape me I should kill him.’

‘And then they would come for you and hang you, as they did Marthe.’

Beth sighed because she knew the older woman was right.

‘Perhaps I shall come to the village when the lord returns.’

Mistress Grey made the sign of the cross over her breast.  ‘May God keep him safe and bring him back to us.  He hath protected you, Beth.  Even though he is away, the villagers know that he would take revenge for any harm that came to you.’

Adding one last stick to her bundle as the sound of the church bells died away, Beth saw that Mistress Grey was hurrying towards her.  She waited until the woman came up to her.

‘What news?’ she asked.

‘They say that there has been victory at Harfleur.’

‘Will the army come home now?’

‘I do not know.  It is usually the way after a great victory.  The men suffer sickness and hardship in war and the winter is coming.  I think the King will return and plan a new campaign for the spring.’

‘I have made up my mind.  If Sir William returns I shall come to the village,’ Beth said.  ‘But if he does not I shall stay in the woods.

‘I shall pray for his safe return.’

‘Do you need anything for yourself or your family?’

‘My granddaughter hath a chill and that usually turns to her chest.  If you can prepare a cure for her I shall bring you some meat when we kill the goat.’

‘Thank you.’  Beth smiled at her.  ‘I must buy some more hens for the winter.  I will give you something for your son to sell for me.’

She bid her friend farewell and turned to walk back to the hut.  The child grew heavy on her back and was beginning to whimper, though she seldom cried for long periods.  Beth was thoughtful as she wondered what part Sir William had played in the siege of Harfleur.  Was he still alive or did he lie sick and wounded, perhaps dying?  She thought that if something happened to him she might do better to load what she could of her possessions on her handcart and leave this place.  Without his protection she would no longer be safe, even in the woods.

             

 
 

William sat his great war horse, lifted the visor of his bascinet and looked about him.  The sky was overcast with large fluffy clouds, which for the moment hid the sun. In the distance he could see the sails of a mill hanging limply for want of a stiff breeze.  Men were sitting or lying on the ground, some so exhausted by dysentery and sickness that they wore nothing on their lower half.  The affliction of watery bowels made it easier to fight wearing only their tunics and armour on the upper half of their bodies, leaving them free to defecate wherever they happened to be without the bother of letting down their hose.  Yet despite their sickness, they had just fought and won a great battle at Harfleur.

             
The King had brought his forces to the walls of the city, building ramparts and trenches, and carrying out mining activities, which were meant to breach the defences but this had failed because the French had forestalled them.  Henry then brought up great battering rams and several large stone-throwing machines, sending the missiles hurling over the walls to rain death and destruction on the people inside.  The French fought off this action by pouring boiling oil over the men attempting to climb the ladders lodged against the walls, and their archers shot flaming arrows at the English towers and the attacking forces from the battlements.  Any man brave enough to try and lead an attack might be covered in quick lime and sulphur, which burned the skin and made the victims scream in agony.

             
Both sides used their cannon to what effect they could; some of the English guns had barrels of more than twelve feet in length and could hurl heavy stones over the walls, wrecking the roofs of the people’s houses.  Time and again they knocked holes in the walls, but overnight the French filled them, yet time was with the attacking forces.  The constant battering, smoke and injury inflicted must begin to wear down the spirit of the defending forces and the people of Harfleur.

             
The King was ever present, supervising the gunnery, encouraging the men to renew their efforts and raising a cheer.  Despite his resentment against Henry’s father, William came to admire him for his bravery, his skill as a commander and his energy.  When others drooped from heat or exhaustion, the sight of the King in full armour riding amongst them gave the ranks new heart and even the sick managed to raise a ragged cheer for him.  Henry V of England was a formidable soldier and ruthless both in battle and in the matter of the traitors.  The ringleaders of the plot against him had already been executed.

As the days became weeks food grew short for both the people of the town and the English army.  In the camps situated near the marshes, the air was unhealthy and the weather, hot at first, contributed to the frequent outbreaks of sickness, but it was as the autumn began to bring damp and mist that the outbreaks of fever and dysentery had become far worse.  Men were dying; amongst them Bishop Courtney and Michael de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, some of the more notable, as well as more than two thousand common soldiers and knights.

             
One death that had affected William more than most was that of Hugh de Bracie.  William had been sent for as the afflicted knight lay on his deathbed, his body ravaged by the bloody flux, his strength almost gone.

             
He clutched William’s hands in his.  ‘Promise me that you will tell Beatrice of the girl,’ he gasped.  ‘I meant to write but there was no time. I wronged Beatrice by keeping what was hers but would make amends.  She will find what she seeks amongst my things.  Promise me that you will tell her.  I shall die easier if you give me your word, de Burgh.’

             
You have it,’ William said.  ‘I promise to do what I can for the girl – whether she be Richard’s bastard or no.’

             
‘Thank you.  It may all be fancy.  I have made my peace with God – but I should have done more for Beatrice and her child; Richard’s child.  Tomas will provide for his own sons.  I have no wife or child and all that I own is my sister’s and her daughter’s, if she lives.  Promise me that you will see my sister knows of my wishes - and tell her about the girl in the wood.  Remember that the girl could be Richard’s bastard.  Help her to find her mother. It haunts me that I did nothing when I might.  I beg you to keep your promise.’

             
‘I give you my word.  Rest easy now, sir.  Your sister shall know all that I know.’

             
William bent to kiss his cheek and tears ran from the corner of the knight’s eye before he closed them.  He died that night, just one more who had taken sick from eating ruined fruit, shellfish that was bad, and unfermented wine, which was the fare given to men used to a very different diet at home. The men needed good plain food, ale and clean water, because there had been too many deaths from sickness rather than in the battle.

Now that Harfleur had fallen, it was William’s job to find the men under his command a place to sleep in comfort, preferably a farm or an estate where the lord was well disposed to the English and would give food and ale in return for coin.

             
He had seen a prosperous estate just a short ride away.  Despite his own weariness, he would find somewhere to bed down his men for the next few days and food before the order came to march on.  William had sought forgetfulness when he took the duke’s gold, believing that if he left England and answered his country’s call he would find peace of mind – but
she
was still there.

             
She haunted his dreams and his every waking moment, except when he fought or was concerned for the men in the ranks.  He had brought more than fifty men to Gloucester’s army, all of whom he equipped with a sword of two shillings worth, a leather hauberk and a good scabbard, costing him as much as five shillings per man. Of those still living and able to fight, he had ten men-at-arms who wore a chain mail hauberk, leggings of chain, a helm, greaves and gauntlets as well as a breastplate..  William’s own armour consisted of all these things and more and weighed almost 80lbs, costing him more than twenty pounds of good silver.  Besides the men-at-arms he had twelve pikemen and four archers.  He had to feed his men and pay them two silver pence a day for the foot soldiers and four for the trained men.

His men were more fortunate than some yet despite that almost half had died, either in battle or of sickness.  Many others who fought for a different lord had nothing but a cheap sword they had bought themselves, which might break in the heat of battle, a leather hauberk and a hard leather cap.  They were vulnerable and too many died easily. As he looked about him William saw gunners, archers, men on foot who fought bitter hand to hand battles, living and dying together as did their leaders.  Death was no respecter of wealth and privilege and many a knight lay beside the peasant who had fought with him. William did what he could to help the wounded, even those who owed him no allegiance, but if the wound became infected, as it often did, the men died in pain and weeping for their mothers.

He was not certain what the King intended next, but he had done his duty by the man whose gold he had taken.  He would go home now, taking the handful of men who had survived with him.  Perhaps next spring he would once again take to arms if the chance was offered, but for now he needed a time of rest and peace to regain his strength.

             
A smile touched William’s mouth, as he thought of the woman that he now knew would never let him be free.  He had believed that he would be content if she became his leman but now he knew that he wanted more – he would ask her to be his wife.

             
He felt the confidence surge through him.  She was too proud to be his whore but she would come to him as his wife and bear his children.

 

 

‘What are you intentions now, Sire?’ Raoul inquired.  ‘You have won a victory here but little is gained.  It would surely be better to go on rather than go home and return in the spring – yet I have heard your council advise it.’

             
‘My council believe that we have suffered too many losses and should regroup, lick our wounds and come again when the weather improves, but I think we should press on.  I have not yet fought the enemy on the field and to win a true victory this is what I must do.  Only if I defeat the flower of France’s nobility on the field shall I gain the moral right to rule.’

             
‘It is a risk, Sire.  Your forces are depleted and I know that some of your army has decided to go home.  Yet I agree with you that it would be foolish to let the advantage you have won slip.’

             
‘I shall prove that I am a worthy general and the true ruler of France.  If I can but tempt the French army into the field I believe we shall prevail.  Right is on my side and God will be with us, as he has been at Harfleur.  I have your word that Burgundy will not turn against me?’

             
‘He has given his word.  Besides, he thinks it to his advantage to stand aside at this time.’

             
‘I am indebted to him.’

             
‘You will not abandon Harfleur?’

             
‘A holding force under the command of my uncle, Thomas Beaufort, will remain to guard our interests.’  Henry fixed him with an intent stare.  What of you, sir?  Do you intend to return to Burgundy?’

             
‘I have upwards of a hundred men at your disposal, Sire.  I am yours to command.’

             
‘Then march with us,’ Henry said.  ‘Your loyalty shall not go unrewarded.’

             
Raoul inclined his head.  ‘I believe it will not be easy, but if God is with us we shall be victorious.’

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