These men were a law unto themselves, their invaluable skill setting them above the conventions of rank. Mainly Welshmen and brought up to the craft since birth, working open-cast coal seams, they were digging a tunnel underground to a point directly beneath the wall , supporting their work with wooden props. Once completed, the tunnel would be filled with pitch-soaked furze and dry wood and bladders of pork fat, then set ablaze. As the props burned away, the tunnel would cave in, bringing down the wall above, in this case a section of the eastern rampart. It was dirty, difficult work and the rate of pay reflected it. Dai ap Owain and the men literally beneath him earned a shilling a day, which was as much as a fully accoutred knight could expect to command.
"What do I tell him, Dai?"
"Tell him we"ll be done by prime and that we need more oil and brushwood."
Eric looked doubtful. "No sooner?" he mistakenly asked, envisaging Guyon"s displeasure.
"If my lord desires such a thing, let him come down and dig himself. A fo ben, bid bont!"
Eric retreated. "Prime," he said to Guyon, "and they need tinder and oil. I"ll go and see to it," and he disappeared before Guyon could flay him alive with the edge of his tongue.
By mid-morning, the grey light of dawn had brightened into a strong blue heat and the arrows that swished between besieger and besieged were hard black shafts raining down from a cloudless sky. Guyon shot a glance at his archers.
Half of them had set aside their bows and had begun preparing their short swords and round shields for the imminent a.s.sault. This was the lull , the still before the storm. Guyon"s fingers twitched on Arian"s reins. He made a conscious effort to relax as the stall ion side-stepped, soothing him with soft words and a smoothing hand on the sleek, silk neck.
It had taken three weeks to come this far, and not without trials. Walter de Lacey might be a fool in the political sense, might be a child-molesting murdering pervert, but it did not prevent him from being a skilled soldier and tactician. Their siege machines had been sabotaged by a daring night raid and a couple of attempts to take the keep with scaling ladders had been repelled. The enmity was intense, each foothold gained paid for in blood.
Guyon rubbed his sweating palms on his chausses. He had never wanted a thing so much in his life as to take Thornford and tear its occupant apart piece by little piece. He did not think of Eluned. To have done so now would have overset his balance and thus far he had kept it well on the level.
Over by the water b.u.t.ts two sappers were swilling water down, their bodies lithe, hard and small . He had never met a man of the trade much above five feet in height. Indeed Dai, their foreman, frequently stood on a mounting block or a keg so that he could address Guyon at eye level. Fiercely independent and forthright, Dai saw no reason to back down from a point of view just because he lacked stature, and the men who knew him had long since ceased to make the mistake of patronising him.
He was at the mine now, supervising the blaze which had been kindled an hour since. Guyon switched his hungry gaze again to Thornford"s defences, a muscle bunching and releasing in his jaw. The stone curtain wall had replaced a wooden palisade about ten years ago when Welsh raids had been particularly savage. The original wooden keep had been rebuilt in stone and now stood three levels high. It did not approach the impregnable grandeur of Ravenstow - few strongholds did - but it was certainly stout enough to repel the Welsh and several weeks of determined, conventional siege.
"It"s going to go," Dai ap Owain lilted, appearing out of nowhere to stand at Guyon"s stirrup.
"Thank Christ for that," Guyon said and signalled his captains to take up their places and make ready their men. They knew what was to be done.
Plans had been discussed last night and in more detail this morning while they waited for the miners to complete their work. If any man bungled it now, it was his own fault, but Guyon did not antic.i.p.ate problems. Eric and de Bec were experienced, dependable men, quite capable of extricating themselves and those beneath their command if a crisis arose.
He looked over his shoulder. G.o.dric was guarding his back, his sorrel fretting and dancing, as anxious as his rider for the action to be upon them. Beside G.o.dric, astride one of the remounts, sat Prys ap Adda, sword drawn, shield held in tight to his body. For all his declaration that he was a clumsy swordsman, Guyon had found little lacking. The Welshman might not have the bulk of the men he would be facing, but he was as fast in motion and ferocious as summer lightning and he, too, had a personal cause to lend vehemence to his sword arm. Had the man been trained to war from birth, Guyon doubted that he could have bested him.
A dull rumbling sound like the roll of summer thunder grew gradually louder and the ground shook. Horses started and shied. The bailey wall collapsed, crashing down into the tunnel, sending loose stones and mortar bounding across the courtyard floor. Smoke and thick dust mingled upwards, in an obscuring cloud.
"There"s pretty for you!" Dai breathed exultantly.
Guyon was not listening. "Forward!" he roared, flinging all his pent-up tension into the cry as, clapping spurs to Arian"s flanks, he bolted for the gap.
He, G.o.dric and Prys erupted simultaneously through the gaping hole, Guyon driving straight ahead, his companions to right and left. Eyes streaming, lungs choking on the boiling fog, Guyon rode down three of the defenders who were not swift enough to scatter before his rage.
Arian barged past them, felling two among the debris. Guyon cut down the third. The stall ion killed one man before he could rise. Guyon brained the other with his shield, dealt with another on a vicious backswing and swung the horse towards the inner bailey, the entrance to which was defended by two iron-bound gates, four fingers thick and secured on the inside by a ma.s.sive bar which took the strivings of at least four stout men to lift from its slots.
"Ravenstow a moi!" Guyon bellowed and the men of his group disengaged so they could to run or ride with him, leaving the soldiers under Eric"s command to take care of the outer ward. From the direction of the western wall walk, the wind fed them the yell s of de Bec"s group on the scaling ladders and the deadly whiz of arbalest quarrels.
"The ram!" Guyon shouted and the order was pa.s.sed swiftly down the line. The huge oak trunk with its reinforced pointed iron head was run forward by fifteen men-at-arms, coughing and sneezing in the clogged air. One of them screeched and fell , an arrow in his leg. Guyon leaped down from the stall ion and took his place, the exhilaration of battle coursing through him.
"Heave!" he cried and the ram thrust forward and smacked against the gate, boomed and rebounded. "Back ... heave ... back ... heave ..."
And the rhythm was taken up and echoed down the line. Much to the appreciation of the men, Guyon began a crude song in English about the broaching of a difficult virgin.
A sword clanged on a nearby shield as Prys felled a defender. An arbalest bolt crashed into the ram hard by Guyon"s thrusting shoulder. A moment later another one swished past his ear.
"Get that sniper!" he broke off singing to bellow furiously. "Before he gets me! No dolts, don"t stop!
G.o.d"s death, you weren"t as hesitant as this when you hit the London stews last summer!"
Bawdy guffaws, capping remarks and renewed efforts greeted his outburst. The dinted head of the huge oak log pounded against the solid planks. Guyon began to sweat with effort. His breath grew harsh in his throat; his mouth was dust-dry. With salt-stung eyes he glanced around, a.s.sessing the ward. Behind and around them many of the lesser combatants had begun to cry quarter rather than die and Eric"s men were effectively dealing with those who preferred to fight on.
"Lord Guyon!" rasped the soldier beside him.
Sunlight glinted from his helmet as he jerked his head energetically at the gates. Guyon squinted at him and then at their target, and abruptly stood up and raised his hand. The singing raggedly ceased. The men rested the ram and stared with their lord towards the scuffed, surface-splintered but otherwise intact gates. Guyon hefted his shield, wiped his hand across his upper lip and commanded forward his two most accurate archers to train their sights upon the gap as the great, thick planks began to swing inwards.
A dour soldier wearing a leather gambeson filled the entrance, grey-streaked hair falling to his shoulders. He was weaponless, not even an eating knife about his person and behind him, like the contents of a stoppered wineskin, cowered what seemed to be all the inhabitants of the inner ward.
"My lord, we yield ourselves and this keep to your mercy," he said formally, eyes betraying all the fear that his deliberate deep voice did not.
Guyon said nothing but gestured the men at his back to slip within and take up defensive positions. Prys spoke to him quickly in Welsh.
Guyon answered with a single terse word and did not look away from the man they were facing.
"It is no trick, lord," the spokesman said with dignity. "I would rather open to you now and spare the lives of good men, than fight to the last drop of blood for such a one as Walter de Lacey. If that is treason, then so be it." His head came up proudly.
There was a rumble of a.s.sent from the crowd behind him.
"And precisely where is Walter de Lacey?" Guyon asked in a hard voice.
"He went over the west wall in the early hours of this morning, and his guard with him. I am Wulfric, the constable"s deputy and former bodyguard to Lord Ralph. There is no one else here of any higher authority. You killed the man he left in command on the first charge." He shrugged his broad shoulders. "Lord Walter knew he could not hold this place, not without aid. He"s gone down the border to look for it, but with the King"s forces stretched across Wenlock Edge, I doubt he"ll find it, sire, unless it comes from Wales."
Guyon"s sword hand twitched and the blade came up in response to his rage and frustration.
Over the wall and through his fingers like a fish through a hole in a net. "Eric," he said over his shoulder. "Find out who was on duty at the west wall last night and bring him to me."
Eric acknowledged, a chill running down his spine as if it was his own back that was laid bare to the lash.
Guyon returned his attention to the Saxon. "What about the child?"
The man shook his head. "He is here my lord, but not well , not well at all . He and his mother are both suffering from the b.l.o.o.d.y flux and like to die of it."
Guyon gaped at him stupidly. In his mind there was only one child, his Eluned, but of course to this man the query could only pertain to de Lacey"s heir. "Not the boy," he said: "the Welsh girl."
The man looked perturbed. "My lord, she"s dead. On the first night it happened. She managed to escape him and jumped off the wall walk yonder." He looked behind him at the faces shielded by his bulk. "Nick there was on duty and tried to grab her, but he was too late, just missed the edge of her shift."
The young man nodded, his Adam"s apple bobbing up and down. "Did my best, but she was slippery as an eel."
"No!" Prys shouted, shaking his head in violent denial. "He"s lying. It is not true, it is not true!" He lunged at the spokesman, who staggered and put up his hands to protect his head. Guyon intercepted him, but his mind was detached as he separated Prys from his victim and braced himself against the Welshman"s onslaught. Then Eric pinioned Prys in his frenzy and led him aside. As if from a distance, Guyon heard Prys vomiting. His own body trembled with a deadly mixture of fury and fatigue. Somewhere at the back of his mind, he supposed that it was a mercy Eluned was dead.
The old man wiped a streak of blood from the corner of his mouth, his eyes going sidelong to the retching Welshman. "We buried her in the garth near the churchyard, me and Nick. Lord Walter said to throw her in the ditch, but we couldn"t do that. Lady Mabell gave us a sheet to wrap her in ... we did our best, lord."
Guyon bit the inside of his mouth. "For which you have my thanks," he acknowledged. "It will not go forgotten, I promise you."
They parted to let him through and he went across the ward and up the forebuilding stairs into the hall , his step no longer light with the spark of battle, but heavy, as though the spurs clipping his heels were fashioned of lead. It was all for nothing. De Lacey still owned life, limb and liberty.
He was suddenly aware of the myriad minor cuts and bruises he had sustained in the heat of the fray. The keep had still to be cleared and inspected and sh.o.r.ed up against a possible counter-attack, and a report made to Henry whom he was to join as soon as all was finished here.
Only it was not finished, and perhaps never would be.
Sitting in the rushes a few yards from where he stood, one of the servants" children was playing with her straw doll , expression intent as she decorated its ragged sacking dress with a necklace of delicate amber beads.
Guyon put his face in his hands and wept.
CHAPTER 28.
When Judith arrived at Thornford in response to an urgent summons from her husband; it was sunset of the second day and work still hard afoot to repair the worst of the miners" ravages.
In the outer ward, scene of so much previous destruction, small cooking fires burned as normal, tended by the soldiers" women and the smell s of bread and pottage wafted enticingly on the evening wind. Judith guided Euraidd between the fires. A bat swooped low overhead, casting for insects in the gloaming. Broken arrows and lances littered the ground.
A groom held Judith"s mare and Guyon himself stepped from the shadows to lift her from the saddle. His lids were heavy and dust-rimmed.
Sweat and battle dirt gleamed in the creases of his skin, but the narrow semblance of a smile glinted before he stooped to give her a scratchy kiss.
"You made good speed, Cath fach," he approved. "I had not thought to see you until tomorrow noon at least."
"Needs must when the devil drives," she answered lightly, her eyes full of concern.
His smile vanished. "Yes," he agreed blankly and turned, his arm around her waist, to face the keep. "Needs must."
Judith eyed him thoughtfully. His letter had informed her of the victory and asked her to come quickly, little else, and she had hailed the messenger back from his refreshment to rea.s.sure her that Guyon was not wounded. First qualm of terror dissolved, she had set out to pump the man for the information not contained in the letter.
"I"m sorry, Guy," she said softly and pressed his arm.
He made a rueful gesture. Faced by the thought of being unable to go on, he had felt a desperate need for the comfort of Judith"s forthright, astringent presence and, despite its stilted brevity, his letter had come straight from the heart. Indeed, had he paused for rational thought at the time of writing, he would have left her at Ravenstow rather than command her here to the shambles of a recent battleground - but yesterday there had been little room for reason.
"I suppose it is for the best," he owned as they entered the inner ward. "When you crush a flower it fall s to pieces. G.o.d"s eyes, Judith, if only I had--"
"Guyon, no!" She stood on tiptoe to press her palm against his lips. "You must not shackle yourself with guilt. Rhosyn would have taken her chances on the drovers" roads far more recklessly were it not for your warnings. At least you sought to protect her and the children."
"But it was not enough."
The stubble p.r.i.c.kled her palm as his lips moved. Judith studied him narrowly. "When did you last eat and sleep?"
Guyon took her hand away to grasp it in his. "You sound like my mother," he said with a hint of weary amus.e.m.e.nt.
"Who by all accounts was a woman of sense," she retorted. Her brow wrinkled. "Why send for me if you did not want to be nagged?"
"Because ..." He drew a sharp breath as if to change his mind, then stopped and faced her, sc.r.a.ping a hand distractedly through his hair which was in sad need of cutting. "Oh curse it, Judith, because you are the most infuriating, stubborn and capable woman it has ever been my misfortune to know!"
She burst out laughing. "Is that a compliment or an insult?"
"To be honest, I do not know!" He set his hands on her shoulders. "All I do know is that I need you as I"ve never needed anything in my life."
Judith gasped and staggered. He was pungent with horse and sweat and smoke. His armour could have stood up of its own accord so strong were the mingled aromas.
"And why precisely should you need me?" she demanded archly. "Apart from the obvious."
He grinned at that, shaking his head at her tart perception, but sobered quickly as they began to walk again. "Apart from the obvious, I need you to organise this shambles so that more than just cold pottage and dried meat graces the table.
The servants don"t know their heads from their heels and Lady Mabell is in no fit state to organise them. I do not have the time."
"Lady Mabell is here?"
"And her son." A frown drew his brows together. "They are both sick with the b.l.o.o.d.y flux. Look at them if you will , but I suspect it is in G.o.d"s hands now."
There was something in his tone, a harshening that made Judith regard him with sharp curiosity.
He paused at the foot of the forebuilding steps, fist gripped tightly on the hilt of his sword, as if holding it down in the scabbard.
"What is to become of them if they survive, Guy?"
He followed her gaze to his clenched fist and removed it carefully from the grip before he answered, his nonchalant shrug belied by the grim set of his jaw. "The lands will be forfeit because de Lacey has rebelled against his King, but they were only his by right of marriage anyway. I suppose the child will inherit them when he is of an age to do so and in the meantime Henry will appoint a warden. The convent is the best place for Lady Mabel."
"And de Lacey?" she asked.
"Is bound for h.e.l.l !" he snarled. "The reckoning is only postponed, not abandoned."
Judith found Lady Mabell and the child in a chamber off the hall . The floor was strewn with new rushes and the bed had been made up with clean linen, but the air was still fetid with the stench of bowel sickness. Judith went to the shutters and threw them back, opening the room to an arch of smoky twilight sky. Helgund always swore that night vapours were bad for the lungs, but Judith had slept too often beneath the stars to give any credence to such superst.i.tion. Besides, night vapours were a sight more sweet-smelling than the human ones of the moment.
Sounds drifted up from the bailey; the good-natured raillery of two serjeants, the outlandish Welsh singing at the miners" fire, the neigh of a truculent destrier.
The woman on the bed thrashed and moaned.
Judith went to her and laid a gentle hand on the hot forehead. Mabell de Serigny raised sunken lids and struggled to focus. Her head rolled on the pillow and a shudder racked her wasted body.
Red stars of fever burned on the points of her cheekbones and her breath laboured in her lungs: a matter of time only, Judith thought, and short at that.
The child in the crib was awake and alert. As she approached him, his eyes locked on hers and tenaciously followed her movement. They were his father"s eyes, ale-brown in colour, the tone echoed in the thick, straight hair. He drew his knees up to his chest and wailed hoa.r.s.ely.
Judith bent and picked him up. He was hot to her touch, but not burning and, as far as she could see, his condition was not yet mortal.
"Poor mite," muttered Helgund as she set down Judith"s basket of medicines. "What kind of life is he going to make with the start he"s had?" She came to peer into the infant"s face and crossed herself at the marked resemblance to his sire.
"Better than the life he would have had otherwise," Judith answered as she laid him back down and set about mixing a soothing potion to ease Mabel"s pain. "A mother who cannot speak, who never wanted him and a father who has bullied, deceived and butchered and who harbours a vicious l.u.s.t for young girls. What kind of example would he have had as he grew up? At least now he has a chance to learn honour and decency."