They had reached the horses, and as Ector and another man gathered up the animals’ reins, Morfia looked about her at the carnage that surrounded them. She had set out on this journey with a large escort, more than twice as large as she would normally have taken, purely because Baldwin had insisted on it. Her destination had been al Assad, an oasis less than ten miles from the city, where King Baldwin I had maintained a pleasure house for his own use and for the enjoyment of friends and visiting dignitaries, and where her own best and oldest 290
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friend, Alixi of Melitene, was currently awaiting her. She and Alixi had known each other all their lives, their fathers both Armenian noblemen, as well as trading part-ners and comrades since their own boyhood, and Morfia had named her second daughter, Alice, in honor of Alixi.
She herself had been confined to bed for several days after Alixi’s recent arrival, suffering from an ague of some kind, and, unwilling to be seen at less than her best, she had decreed that her friend and several other guests should go ahead of her to the oasis and enjoy themselves while they awaited her there.
The oasis at al Assad had always been a safe place in the past, justifiably famed for its beauty and tranquility, but a credible report had come to the King, on the morning of the day before Morfia was to leave to join her friends, that bandit activity appeared to be strongly on the increase in the region surrounding the oasis, although there had been no activity indicating brigands at or near the oasis itself.
Morfia, cured of her ailment and quietly determined to enjoy the next few days away from the demands of her children, had laughed at Baldwin’s concern when, after reading the report on the brigands, he immediately began to fret over her travel arrangements and her safety. Her patience wearing thin after a few hours of listening to his fretting, however, she had begun to grow angry at what she saw as his silliness until, in a burst of fury that astonished and silenced her, the King had decreed that either she would take a greatly increased escort with her or he would place her under open arrest within the palace.
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She had bowed to his anger, swallowed her own, and taken the larger escort. And now they lay scattered everywhere around her on the rock-strewn sand, inert piles of bloody rags that were twisted, unnaturally sprawled men, the majority of them dressed in the heraldic colors of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. There were others among them, it was true, brigands identifiable by their clothing and weaponry, but even a woman who knew nothing of fighting could see plainly that the attackers had suffered far less in the assault than had her defenders. Now, as she scanned the battlefield, she saw that the fighting appeared to be over. The last of the enemy had vanished or been killed, and most of the men she could now see converging slowly on the spot where she stood with Jubal and the others were unknown to her. She saw a few of her own men among them, but the others, with the exception of two knights in blue surcoats, all wore the same plain brown fustian tunics as Jubal and his three companions, and she turned towards Jubal, frowning.
“Who are you men? I have never seen any of you before. Where have you come from?”
Jubal turned to gaze at her, his face expressionless.
“We are from here, Lady, from Jerusalem. We were on our way home, at the end of an uneventful sweep, and we saw you by the merest chance from over yonder.” He pointed to a low ridge in the middle distance, perhaps three miles from where they stood. “We saw sunlight reflected off your weaponry and stopped to look, and then, because we were looking down from above, we saw the others approaching you from behind your backs, over 292
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there.” He pointed in a different direction. “We knew you could not have seen them, and we knew, from their numbers, that you would need help, and so we came. But they reached you long before we could.” He shrugged wide shoulders. “Nevertheless, we arrived in time to save you, milady, so that is a blessing. Here comes Sir Godfrey. He commands us.”
“But who
are
you?” Her voice was brittle with tension, and he looked at her in surprise, as if she ought to know who they were.
“I am Jubal, milady, of the Patriarch’s Patrol.”
The Patriarch’s Patrol! She had heard the name, of course. Everyone had, by this time, although she had heard of them first from Baldwin. The name had originally been pejorative—a slur bestowed disdainfully in jest at the very outset of things, when the word first emerged that the Patriarch Archbishop had acquired the services of a small band of veteran knights, to whom he had granted the privilege of taking monkish vows in return for dedicating their lives, service, and fighting skills to the Church in Jerusalem in the protection and defense of pilgrims and travelers.
It had been cause for great hilarity at first, this matter of knightly monks or monkish knights. The Knights of the Hospital were healers, not fighters, their “knighthood”
granted simply to give them status for the purpose of raising funds for their work. But these newcomers were being spoken of as
fighting
monks—military clerics! The initial mirth had swelled when it was learned that there were only seven of these foolish people in the beginning. Seven el-
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derly knights—for in this instance, the term “veteran”
had been taken instantly by everyone to mean venerable—undertaking to patrol and pacify all the roads in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The mere idea was ludicrous.
Everyone agreed, however, that there was a grave need for something to be done, for the most recent and outrageous incident had seen a daylight attack on a large party of pilgrims and other travelers almost within sight of the city walls of Jerusalem. A huge band of marauders had killed in excess of three hundred pilgrims and taken more than sixty prisoners to be held for ransom. The King had steadfastly refused to become involved in seeking retribution, claiming, as he always had, that pilgrims and travelers were no concern of his and that common sense dictated that he needed to keep all his forces where they would do the most good in the event of an invasion by the Seljuk armies that were massing on his borders.
The Patriarch had been, everyone agreed, at his wits’
end, and most people conceded that he had then acted out of desperation in this matter of the veteran knights, clutching at whatever straws he could see bobbing on the surface of the waters.
But still,
people said disparagingly,
seven elderly men
…
And then reports had begun to drift in from the desert roads, amazing, awe-stricken tales of small bands of efficient, fearsomely skillful mail-clad warriors wreaking havoc on any brigands foolish or unfortunate enough to come within their ken, then ruthlessly hunting down and exterminating those who thought they had been fortunate enough to escape retribution. The activities of the 294
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brigand bands had quickly become less scandalously visible, and daylight attacks had ceased almost completely within weeks of the first appearance of the new force, so that nowadays, several months later, most of the roads in the kingdom, although certainly not all of them, were clear of threats to travelers, and the only raids reported anywhere in the kingdom were those carried out by large, organized bands like the one that had struck Morfia’s party this day.
People had long since stopped laughing at the Patriarch’s Patrol. The name had gone from being an insult to being an honor.
Now Morfia stood watching the leader of this particular patrol approaching her. His brow furrowed in thought, he was clearly unaware of her presence, and Morfia of Melitene was not accustomed to being unnoticed. She stepped forward and placed herself right in front of him, staring directly into his startlingly vivid blue eyes, and she saw them flare in surprise as he reared back.
Elderly?
she thought.
This fellow is not elderly. He is
mature, but there is nothing old about him. And see how he
looks me up and down. Covered in blood as I am, I must
look monstrous
. She spoke up, forcing him to look up from her stained clothing and meet her eyes.
“I wish to thank you, sir, for my life. I am deeply in your debt, and my husband’s gratitude will, I promise you, be no less than mine.”
A tiny tic appeared between his brows and deepened into a frown. “I would gladly forgo his gratitude and yours, my lady, were your husband to undertake never to Monks of the Mount
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do anything so foolish as to allow you to travel these roads again without a much larger escort.”
Her head snapped up in indignation, although she knew he was right. “You are insolent, sir.”
His frown deepened, and he made no pretense of seeking to placate her. “Is that so, my lady? From gratitude to hostility is not a long journey in your world, it seems. Had we not come upon you when we did, you would have been taken by this time, probably alive, and would now be begging and praying for death. If you think me insolent in saying that, take you a look about you at your dead.”
One of her knights stepped forward, chopping his arm in the air to cut the other short. “Enough, sir,” he snapped. “How dare you speak thus to your Queen!”
Godfrey barely glanced at the man who had challenged him, but his eyes widened again and he repeated her title, pronouncing it slowly and turning it into a question. “My Queen?” His eyes swept her again from head to foot, taking in the condition of her clothing and, no doubt, the disarray of her hair, and probably, now that she came to think of it, her dirt-encrusted face, doubtless smeared with blood from her sticky fingers.
“Aye,” the King’s knight snapped, “the Lady Morfia of Melitene, wife to King Baldwin and Queen of Jerusalem. Kneel and salute her.”
The man Godfrey turned his head slightly and looked at the fellow in obvious disdain, then ignored him completely, turning back to the Queen without another glance at the flushing knight.
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“Your pardon, my lady. Had I known who you are, I would have been less vocal with my criticism. But what I said is true, nonetheless.”
Morfia inclined her head. “I know it is, Sir Knight. I took offense where none was offered. Might I ask you for your name?” Morfia smiled her widest, most effective smile at him, and the knight nodded.
“Aye, my lady. I am Godfrey St. Omer … or I
was
Godfrey St. Omer. Now I am plain Brother Godfrey.”
The Queen smiled again. “I understand your difficulty. For many years I was Countess of Edessa, but now I am Queen of Jerusalem. These titles require … an adjustment before they become familiar. Well then, Brother Sir Godfrey St. Omer, if you will call upon me at the palace, I shall be pleased to express my gratitude, and that of my husband and my children, more formally and more graciously. When may we expect you?”
The knight drew himself erect and held his clenched right fist to his left breast, nodding his head in salutation as he did so. “Forgive me, my lady, but I fear I may not do that. I am a monk now, and albeit but a novice, I am bound by anticipated vows that preclude me from com-mingling with women, even when those women are gracious and queenly—” He hesitated, then continued, with the merest hint of a smile. “Or perhaps that should be
particularly
when those women are gracious and queenly.
Nevertheless, I appreciate the thought of it.” He glanced about him, unsmiling now, then nodded again. “Now, if you will permit me, I shall organize some horses and a conveyance for you—since the carriage in which you Monks of the Mount
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came is unfit for use—and we will escort you back to the city … Presuming, of course, that you wish to return there, rather than continue your journey.”
Morfia nodded. “You are correct, sir. Foolish to continue when so many of my escort have been killed. I shall return to my husband. You may continue with your arrangements.”
A moment later he was gone about his business, and Morfia was left alone to wait while her rescuers organized the means of leading her safely home to her family. She was far from unhappy or impatient over being left to her own devices, however, for she had learned, chillingly and with appalling clarity, that when churchmen said
in the
midst of life, we are in death
, they were being literally truthful. Her own survival of the slaughter that had just occurred was a small miracle that she clutched warmly yet still hazily within her own awareness, taking note of the marvels all around her, now that her life was safe. She was also aware of a need to think about doing something concrete to reward these people who had come to her aid so selflessly, these warrior monks who sought nothing in the way of reward. Although she had uncaringly accepted the common belief that the veteran patrolmen were in-competent and inconsequential, now she owed them her life, and she would never again permit anyone of her acquaintance to demean them or treat them with disdain.
Only a fool, she now knew beyond dispute, would accept the opinions of others about anything without making some attempt to determine the truth of them for herself, and Morfia of Melitene was no fool.
TWO
The twin entrances to the stables that had been bequeathed by the King to house the Patriarch Archbishop’s new peacemakers were barely discernible as entrances to anything, unless you knew what you were looking for, St. Omer thought as they came into view, but even so, they looked strangely deserted, the only visible signs of life being the slow milling of the small herd of horses in the railed paddock close to the ancient southern wall. As he drew closer, however, his eyes adjusting to the glare reflected from the blank stone walls, he made out the shape of a single man, sitting on a leather-backed chair by the larger of the two vaguely rectangular openings. With his chair tilted back against the wall, the fellow looked as though he might be sound asleep, but he was wearing one of the same unremarkable brown fustian tunics that St. Omer’s companions 298