King
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Synopsis
The thrilling next instalment in the epic LIONHEART series from Sunday Times Bestselling author, Ben Kane.
Warleader
Autumn 1192. With Jerusalem still in the Saracens' hands, and a peace treaty agreed with their leader Saladin, Richard the Lionheart is free at last to travel back to his strife-ridden kingdom. By his side at every turn is the loyal knight Ferdia, also known as Rufus. Together they will face not just Richard's archenemy Philippe Capet of France, but also the king's treacherous younger brother, John.
Captive
Shipwrecked on the Italian coast, the king and his small group of companions are forced into a perilous journey through lands controlled by their enemies. Shortly before Christmas 1192, Richard is taken prisoner near Vienna by Duke Leopold of Austria. Kept prisoner for several months, the king is then handed over to Henry VI, the Holy Roman Emperor. His captivity lasts for another year, fanning the flames of unrest in his territories in England and beyond.
Negotiator
Talks between Richard's mother Queen Alienor and Henry VI last for months, but finally reach a bitter agreement. The extortionate sum demanded to free the king will empty the treasury and bleed England dry. Philippe Capet and Richard's brother John collude, offering vast sums to see the king kept captive for longer. Their efforts are in vain, leading Philippe to pen a letter to John including the famous line: 'Look to yourself, the devil is loose.'
King
Crowned for a second time to wash away the shame of his captivity, Richard restores order in England, forgiving John his shameful behaviour. His next task is to recover territories lost to Philippe Capet, and to re-establish his dominance over the French king. Forging clever alliances, building strategic castles and when obliged, waging war, the Lionheart carves a unique path into history.
Publisher: Orion
Print pages: 432
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
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King
Ben Kane
Paul Finch, author of Strangers
‘Ben’s deeply authoritative depiction of the time is delivered in a deft manner. I was immersed in the detail of Rufus’s life, with its heat and cold, its odours, foods, clothing, beats, politics and all the other minutiae of the age’
Simon Scarrow, author of the Eagles of the Empire series
‘Kane’s virtues as a writer of historical adventures – lively prose, thorough research, colourful action – are again apparent’
Nick Rennison, The Sunday Times
‘Lionheart has plenty of betrayal, bloodshed and rich historical detail’
Martin Chilton, Independent
‘Plenty of action, blood, scheming, hatred, stealth and politics here, if that’s what you want in your read – and you know it is!’
Sunday Sport
‘To read one of Ben Kane’s astonishingly well-researched, bestselling novels is to know that you are, historically speaking, in safe hands’
Elizabeth Buchan, Daily Mail
‘This is a stunningly visual and powerful read: Kane’s power of description is second to none … Perfect for anyone who is suffering from Game of Thrones withdrawal symptoms’
Helena Gumley-Mason, The Lady
‘Fans of battle-heavy historical fiction will, justly, adore Clash of Empires. With its rounded historical characters and fascinating historical setting, it deserves a wider audience’
Antonia Senior, The Times
‘Grabs you from the start and never lets go. Thrilling action combines with historical authenticity to summon up a whole world in a sweeping tale of politics and war. A triumph!’
Harry Sidebottom, author of the The Last Hour
‘The word epic is overused to describe books, but with Clash of Empires it fits like a gladius in its scabbard. What Kane does, with such mastery, is place the big story – Rome vs Greece – in the background, while making this a story about ordinary men caught up in world-defining events. In short, I haven’t enjoyed a book this much for ages. There aren’t many writers today who could take on this story and do it well. There might be none who could do it better than Ben Kane’
Giles Kristian, author of Lancelot
‘Exceptional. Kane’s excelled once again in capturing the terror and the glory … of the ancient battlefield, and this story is one that’s been begging for an expert hand for a long time’
Anthony Riches, author of the Empire series
‘Carried off with panache and Kane’s expansive, engaging, action-packed style. A complex, fraught, moving and passionate slice of history from one of our generation’s most ambitious and engaging writers’
Manda Scott, author of the Boudica series
‘It’s a broad canvas Kane is painting on, but he does it with vivid colours and, like the Romans themselves, he can show great admiration for a Greek enemy and still kick them in the balls’
Robert Low, author of the Oathsworn series
‘Ben Kane manages to marry broad narrative invention with detailed historical research … in taut, authoritative prose … his passion for the past, and for the craft of story-telling, shines from every page’
Toby Clements, author of the Kingmaker series
‘This thrilling series opener delivers every cough, spit, curse and gush of blood to set up the mighty clash of the title. Can’t really fault this one’
Jon Wise, Weekend Sport
‘Ben Kane’s new series explores the bloody final clash between ancient Greece and upstart Rome, focusing on soldiers and leaders from both worlds and telling the story of a bloody war with style’
Charlotte Heathcote, Sunday Express S Magazine
‘A thumping good read. You can feel the earth tremble from the great battle scenes and feel the desperation of those caught up in the conflict. Kane’s brilliant research weaves its way lightly throughout’
David Gilman, author of the Master of War series
(Those marked * are recorded in history)
Ferdia Ó Catháin/Rufus O’Kane, an Irish noble from north Leinster in Ireland
Rhys, Rufus’s Welsh squire
Katharina, Austrian cook
Jean, orphan boy from Rouen
Robert FitzAldelm, knight, and brother to Guy FitzAldelm (deceased)
Henry, man-at-arms in Southampton (deceased)
Royal House of England:
Richard*, King of England, Duke of Aquitaine
Berengaria*, daughter of King Sancho VI* of Navarre, Richard’s wife
John*, Count of Mortain, Richard’s brother, also known as ‘Lackland’
Alienor* (Eleanor) of Aquitaine, Richard’s mother and wife of Henry FitzEmpress*, King of England, Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou (deceased)
Joanna*, Queen of Sicily, Richard’s sister
Mathilda*, Richard’s sister (deceased), who was married to Heinrich der Löwe*, former Duke of Saxony
Henry* (Hal), eldest son of Henry (deceased)
Geoffrey*, third son of Henry, Duke of Brittany (deceased)
Constance* of Brittany, Geoffrey’s widow
Arthur*, Geoffrey’s young son
Alienor*, Geoffrey’s young daughter
English Royal Court and in England:
André de Chauvigny*, knight and cousin to Richard
Baldwin de Béthune*, knight
Anselm, the king’s chaplain*
William Longchamp*, Bishop of Ely, Richard’s chancellor
Hugh de Puiset*, Bishop of Durham
Geoffrey*, bastard son to Henry, Richard’s half-brother and Archbishop of York
William Marshal*, one of Richard’s justiciars
William Bruyère* and John de Pratelles*, also Richard’s justiciars
Church officials: Archbishop Walter de Coutances* of Rouen, Bishop Hubert Walter* of Salisbury, John d’Alençon*, Archdeacon of Lisieux, Abbot John* of Boxley, Abbot Stephen* of Robertsbridge, Bishop Savaric de Bohun* of Bath, Ralph Besace* and Brother Peter, medical clerics
Nobles: Robert*, Earl of Leicester, William des Roches*, Robert de Turnham*, William, John and Peter de Préaux*, Henry Teuton*, William de l’Etang*, knights
Mercadier*, mercenary captain
Robert de Nunat*, brother of the Bishop of Coventry
Richard de Drune, man-at-arms (deceased)
Henry, squire to King Richard
Other characters:
William*, King of Scotland
Philippe II*, King of France
Alys Capet*, Philippe’s sister, betrothed to Richard in childhood
Bishop of Beauvais*, cousin to the French king
Drogo de Merlo*, nobleman
Raymond*, Count of Toulouse
Hugh*, Duke of Burgundy, cousin to the French king (deceased)
Baldwin*, Count of Flanders
Austria, Italy, Germany and other locations:
Leopold*, Duke of Austria
Heinrich von Hohenstaufen*, King of Germany and the Holy Roman Emperor
Philip von Hohenstaufen*, his brother, who claimed the throne in 1197 after the death of Heinrich
Konrad von Hohenstaufen*, Count Palatine of the Rhine, and Heinrich’s uncle
Agnes von Hohenstaufen*, Konrad’s daughter, and his heiress
Engelbert III*, Count of Gorizia, who co-ruled with his brother, Meinhard II*, Count of Gorizia and Advocate of Aquileia
Roger of Argentan*, knight
Abbot Otto of Moggio
Bertolf, novice monk
Friedrich of Pettau*
Wladislaw*, ruler of Moravia
Hadmar of Kuenrig*, castellan of Dürnstein
Albert of Brabant*, bishopric candidate in Liège (deceased)
Pope Celestine III*, head of the Catholic Church from April 1191 to January 1198
Pope Innocent III*, head of the Catholic Church from January 1198 to July 1216
Otto* of Brunswick, son of Heinrich der Löwe and Mathilda, Richard’s sister, elected as one of two kings of Germany in 1198
Richenza*, Heinrich* and William*, Otto’s siblings
Alienor, lady in Otto’s court
Isaac Comnenus*, former emperor of Cyprus (deceased)
Damsel of Cyprus*, Isaac’s daughter, taken into Richard’s care
Pietro di Capua*, papal legate
Sancho*, Queen Berengaria’s brother and heir to the throne of Navarre
William II de Hauteville*, King of Sicily (deceased)
Gilbert de Vascœuil*, castellan of Gisors
Count Adémar Taillefer* of Angoulême
Geoffrey de Rançon*
Aimar*, Viscount of Limoges
Hugues de Corni*
Bernard de Brosse*
Pierre Basile*, man-at-arms
Bertrand de Gurdon, the seneschal of Châlus
Abbot Milo* of Poitiers
Tancred* of Lecce, former ruler of Sicily (deceased)
Guy de Lusignan*, former king of Jerusalem (deceased)
Isabella of Jerusalem*, half-sister to Sibylla, former Queen of Jerusalem*
Humphrey de Toron*, her husband
Conrad of Montferrat*, Italian-born ruler of Tyre, cousin to the French king (deceased)
Boniface of Montferrat*, Conrad’s brother
Saladin*, Al-Malik al-Nasir Salah al-Dīn, Abu’ al-Muzaffar Yusuf ibn Ayyūb, Sultan of Egypt (deceased)
I was standing in the courtyard of the great castle at Chinon. Bright sunlight lanced down from a vast expanse of blue sky; birds sang happily in the trees beyond the walls. I could hear the excited cries of a child mixed with the barking of a dog. Rhys was nowhere in sight; I was alone, in fact, which struck me as odd. I could see no pages scurrying by on errands, no men-at-arms patrolling the walkway. There were no washerwomen gossiping with servants. Not even a single groom or a stable lad was visible outside the stables.
As my eyes moved to the keep doorway, the king came striding out. I smiled and my mouth opened in greeting, but, to my consternation, black-haired Robert FitzAldelm was right behind him. Another close companion of Richard’s, he was my greatest enemy, and had tried to murder me more than once. My greatest desire was to see FitzAldelm dead, but I had sworn not to kill him.
The king approached, his usually friendly expression absent.
Stay calm, I told myself. You have no reason to worry.
‘Good morrow, sire,’ I said, bending a knee.
There was no reply, and fear spiked me. I stood, but gave no greeting to FitzAldelm. He smirked. Although my mind swirled with the violence I would like to do to him, I kept my face blank.
‘Robert here is making grave accusation against you, Rufus.’ Richard’s tone was cold.
My heart lurched. There was only one thing it could be, but I was damned if I would admit it. FitzAldelm had no proof – Rhys and I had seen to that. I put on my best questioning expression. ‘Indeed, sire?’
‘He says that you foully slew his brother Guy in Southampton ten years ago.’ Richard’s gaze switched to FitzAldelm, who nodded, then came back to me. ‘Hours after you and I met.’
When you saved my life, and I yours, I thought, but could not say it.
‘Well?’ demanded the king.
‘It is not true, sire.’ I acted in self-defence, I wanted to shout.
‘He lies!’ said FitzAldelm. ‘He murdered Guy, sire, for certes.’
‘I did no such thing, sire, and Rhys will say the same. He was with me the whole night.’
There was a trace of what I thought was doubt on Richard’s face now, but an instant later, my hopes were dashed.
‘Robert says he has a witness,’ the king grated. ‘Someone who saw you in the stews, drinking in the very same inn as his brother.’
‘A witness, sire?’ I could not help but scoff. The man-at-arms Henry was long dead. I had slain him in cold blood, as I had not FitzAldelm’s brother – slit his throat, and with Rhys’s help, buried him deep in a midden. The chances of finding another person who remembered me, so many years afterwards, was remote, I told myself. Impossible.
Richard turned to FitzAldelm, as did I.
‘Henry!’ he called. Loud. Confident.
No, I thought in horror. Surely not.
A man appeared in the gateway. Even at a distance, his beard was evident. Closer he came, and the spade shape of it could not be denied. His face was also familiar.
I began to tremble. You are dead, I wanted to shout. I slew you with my own hands, and buried your corpse. With snaking dread, I watched Henry take a knee six paces from the king, and bend his head.
‘Sire.’
‘Rise,’ Richard ordered. To FitzAldelm, he said, ‘This is he?’
‘Yes, sire.’
A curt nod, and he glanced at the newcomer. ‘Name?’
‘Henry, sire. A man-at-arms I am, from Southampton.’
To me, the king said, ‘Do you know this man?’
‘No, sire,’ I lied, somehow keeping a quaver from my voice.
‘You did not see him in the inn the night Sir Robert’s brother was slain?’
Relieved, I said truthfully, ‘No, sire.’
‘He saw you, however. Is that not correct?’
‘It is, sire,’ said Henry, meeting my gaze.
Nausea swept up my throat. Henry was dead, buried, rotted to bone and sinew, yet here he stood, his testimony about to seal my fate with the surety of an enemy’s blade.
‘Look well,’ Richard urged. ‘It was many years ago. Men change.’
‘I am certain, sire,’ Henry answered. ‘His mop of red hair is unmistakable, and his raw-boned face. This is the same man, and I will swear so on a reliquary.’ There was no more sacred oath he could offer to take.
FitzAldelm’s eyes glittered with triumphant malice.
‘Tell us what you saw,’ said the king.
‘He took great interest in a pair of men who had been swiving a whore, sire. When they left, he slipped out after them. One of them, sire, was Sir Robert’s brother.’
‘How do you know?’ said the king sharply.
Henry glanced at FitzAldelm. ‘They are – were – as like as two peas in a pod, sire.’
‘They were ever so, it is true.’ Richard’s gaze bore down on me. ‘Well? What have you to say?’
Uncertain, panicking, I began, ‘Sire, I –’
‘Were you in the tavern?’
I looked at Henry, at FitzAldelm, at the king. I felt like a rat in a trap. Stupidly, I said, ‘I … I was, sire.’
‘I knew it!’ crowed FitzAldelm.
Richard’s mien was thunderous now. ‘And you followed Guy and his squire?’
I considered lying, but my face – already flushing bright red – was betraying me. I did not wish to condemn myself further. ‘I did, sire, but that does not make me a murderer! How could I do such a thing, one man against two?’ I hated my tone, which was as shrill as a fishwife’s.
‘Because your lowlife squire was waiting outside to help you!’ cried FitzAldelm. ‘Sire, I have another witness who saw Rhys leave the royal lodgings not long after Rufus.’
A black, bottomless chasm opened at my feet. In its depths, I glimpsed a reddish-orange glare. Hellfire, I thought, waiting to swallow me. Consume me, because of what I had done.
I stood, numb with shock, as a bristle-headed groom was summoned, a man I did not remember but who was known to the king. His account was damning. He had seen Rhys steal after me and, the following morning, heard us talking about my injured arm.
‘Well?’ Richard roared. ‘What say you now?’
I had nothing to lose. ‘I did kill Guy FitzAldelm, sire, but it was in self-defence.’
‘You stole after him into the alley, and then he attacked you?’ Scorn warred with the disbelief in the king’s face.
‘Yes, sire,’ I protested.
Richard paid no heed. He was calling for his guards. Burly men-at-arms in royal livery, they appeared with the speed of those who had been waiting to be summoned.
I was dragged away, still proclaiming my innocence. Deep in the bowels of the keep, I was hurled into a windowless, fetid, stone-flagged cell. The door slammed shut with an air of finality. I hammered my fists on the timbers. ‘Let me out!’
An uncaring laugh was my reply. It was Robert FitzAldelm – he had followed the men-at-arms.
I pounded on the door again. ‘I am no murderer!’
‘Tell that to the executioner.’
‘The king will never issue such an order!’
An amused snort. ‘You know him less well than you think, then. The date has already been set.’
More than once in my life I had seen men punched in the midriff just below the ribcage, the sweet spot that when struck expelled all the air from their lungs, and sent them floorward, slack-jawed and half unconscious. FitzAldelm’s words hit me with the same force. My legs gave way, and I slumped to the stone flags. I leaned my head against the thick-timbered door, dimly hearing through it FitzAldelm’s footsteps as he walked away.
It was more than my strength could bear to hold me upright. Placing a hand behind me so I did not fall and strike my head, I lay down. Wanting the blackness to take me. Wanting never to wake up and face the cruellest of fates, ordered by my liege lord, whom I loved like a brother.
I closed my eyes.
A hand gripped my shoulder, sending stabs of terror through me.
I woke, sweating, frantic. Instead of cold stone beneath me, I felt planking. Heard the creak of timbers and the gentle slap of water off the hull. My senses returned. The blackness around me that of night-time, not a windowless cell. I was at sea, returning from Outremer, and Rhys had woken me.
He was crouched by my side, his face twisted with worry. ‘Shhhh,’ he hissed. ‘Someone will hear.’
But to my great relief, nobody had. The confrontation with Richard and FitzAldelm had been a vivid nightmare. My dark secret was safe.
For the moment.
Cold seawater squelched in my boots. My tunic and hose, also soaking wet, clung to me. Shivering, I tugged my sodden cloak tight around myself, and turned my back on the south, wishing in vain that that would stop the icy wind from licking every part of my goosebump-covered flesh. Of the king’s score of companions, I was the only unfortunate who had fallen into the sea as we disembarked from our beached ship. Richard stood a dozen paces away, haranguing the pirate captain who had delivered us to this benighted spot, a featureless stretch of coastline with no villages or settlements in sight. Marsh grass and salt pools extended as far as the eye could see, suggesting a long walk inland.
‘Change your clothes now, while you have the opportunity.’
My sour-faced attention returned to Rhys, who had laughed at my immersion as hard as the rest. In truth I could not blame him, nor anyone else. The water had not been deep; I had come to no harm, other than a soaking. And after the travails of the previous few weeks, God knows we needed a moment of levity. Nonetheless, my pride was stinging. I gave him a non-committal grunt.
‘You will catch cold ere we find a place to spend the night.’ Now Rhys’s tone was reproachful. He had already contrived to go through my wooden chest, and was proffering a bundle of dry clothing. ‘Take it – go on.’
Teeth chattering, I studied the group. Few men were paying any attention, busy as they were with selecting whatever gear they could carry. We were all soldiers, I thought. We had suffered and sweated and bled in Outremer together, had seen countless comrades fall to Saracen arrows, or die of thirst and sunstroke. We had cradled our friends’ heads in our laps as they left this life, choking on blood and asking for their mothers.
In the face of that, baring my arse did not matter.
Stripping off my boots and clothes, I gratefully tugged on the new garments, ignoring the comments of Baldwin de Béthune, who noticed what I was at. He was a close friend and, like me, one of the king’s most trusted men. I thought with a pang of de Drune, another friend who would not have missed this chance to jibe. But the tough man-at-arms would poke fun no more. He had been swept overboard during the first of the storms that had battered us since our departure from the Holy Land almost two months before. I hoped his end had been swift.
‘Two hundred marks, and this is where they brought us to land?’ Richard’s volcanic temper showed no sign of abating. He threw a murderous look at the pirate captain, who had wisely retreated to his vessel. When the tide came in, as it would that evening, he and his crew would do their best to push the long, low shape into deeper water. We were not waiting to help.
The pirate was a rogue, I thought, and the price he had charged for our passage was extortionate, but he was not to blame for the beach where we stood. ‘He could do little about the storm, sire.’
Richard glared at me, but I had spoken the truth.
Ferocious autumn gales had battered our large buss all the way from Outremer; we had been fortunate not to drown. At Sicily, the king had decided the open seas were too dangerous, so we aimed our prow for Corfu. Our plan had been to voyage up the more sheltered Adriatic, but further bad weather and an encounter with the pirates had seen Richard drive a bargain with the corsair captain. His two galleys were more seaworthy than the fat-bellied buss which had carried us away from the Holy Land. Or so we thought.
High winds – the bora – had struck soon after our departure from Corfu, and driven us, helpless, up the Adriatic. Three days, or had it been four? My memory could not be relied upon, so exhausted and sleep-deprived was I. Ceaselessly thrown up and down for hour upon hour, from side to side, forward and back, I had vomited until it seemed my stomach itself would come up my red-raw throat. There had been snatched, uncomfortable periods of rest, but never enough. I had forgotten the last time food had passed my lips. When the ship had run aground in the shallows, I had felt nothing but relief. Eager for dry land beneath my feet, paying not enough attention as I prepared to disembark, I had fallen into the sea.
‘Aye, well, there’s nothing to be done about where we are now,’ said the king. ‘And standing around will not get us to Saxony any sooner. Let us go.’
He was not now the godlike figure he had so often been in Outremer. There was no bright sun to wink off his mail, no high-prancing stallion to set him high above us. Even in plain tunic and hose, Richard remained an imposing and charismatic figure. Several inches taller than six feet and broad-shouldered with it, his handsome face framed by windblown red-gold hair, he looked like a king. He acted like one too: fierce-tempered, regal and fearless.
When he led the way, we twenty willingly followed.
I was unsurprised that Rhys was the first with a question. In an undertone, he asked, ‘How far is it to Saxony?’
‘I do not know. Hundreds of miles. Many hundreds.’
I had told him this before, but Rhys’s expression darkened anyway.
‘It will not all be on foot. We will buy horses.’
He rolled his eyes. ‘I would we had left earlier. We might have sailed all the way.’
‘That was never a possibility.’ I explained again to him how the winds and currents that had helped us east across the Greek Sea were too powerful to permit westward travel through the narrow straits that separated Spain from Africa.
Rhys fell silent and, downcast myself by the long journey before us, I began to brood. Landing on the French or Spanish coast might have been an option, but it was precluded by Richard’s long-running enmity with the Count of Toulouse, who, with his Spanish allies, controlled the region. We could not travel up through Italy either, because most of its rulers were in league with the Holy Roman Emperor. Heinrich VI, one of the most powerful monarchs in Europe, historically held no love for Richard because of his support for another Heinrich, der Löwe, the former Duke of Saxony. Recently, the divide between Richard and the emperor had deepened. The French king Philippe Capet had met with Heinrich VI on his way back from the Holy Land, winning him over and forging a new alliance.
Thoughts of Heinrich der Löwe made me remember, wistfully, Alienor, the blonde beauty who had served Matilda, his late wife and Richard’s sister. It had been years since I had seen Alienor, but the mere thought of her quickened my blood. There was even a chance we might meet. Once our roundabout route had taken us through Hungary, we would travel to Saxony, ruled by Richard’s nephew, and further north-east to the lands of Heinrich der Löwe. I prayed that Alienor was alive, and in Heinrich’s service. Then, guilt-ridden for thinking of her while still in love with Joanna, the king’s sister, I put her from my mind.
It was as well that I had elected not to wear my second pair of boots. For an hour or more we trudged through a sandy marshland, its only inhabitants the seabirds that lifted, screeching, at our approach. We waded through saltwater pools; it was my turn to laugh at de Béthune and the rest as they sank to their knees, cursing their own soaking boots. Reaching the shore finally, we came upon a collection of run-down hovels that would struggle to be called a hamlet.
While Richard hung back – a man of his size and stature would stick in anyone’s memory – de Béthune and I went with the royal standard bearer, Henry Teuton, to find out where we were, and to buy any horseflesh that might be on offer. Thanks to the soldiers we had met in Outremer, de Béthune and I had some Italian, and Henry Teuton was fluent in his father’s language. Between us we managed; the silver coins I proffered also loosened tongues. The area we found ourselves in was the county of Gorizia. I thought nothing of the name, but I caught de Béthune’s expression as its ruler, Meinhard II, was mentioned.
Telling his apprentice to fetch out the horses he had, the smith explained that Meinhard co-ruled with his brother, Engelbert III, the lord of the nearest town, also called Gorizia. It lay some miles away, at the foot of the mountains.
As we haggled over the nags, de Béthune risked much by asking about Meinhard’s and Engelbert’s relationship with emperor Heinrich VI. The smith twined a forefinger and middle finger, indicating they were close allies, and my concerns rose.
But the king laughed when de Béthune told him what we had heard. ‘We are in enemy territory from the outset,’ he declared. ‘As it was in Outremer, when Saladin’s men threatened us at every turn.’
Our confidence bolstered by his, we grinned at one another.
William de l’Etang, another of the king’s close companions, frowned. ‘I remember the name Meinhard, sire.’
‘Speak on,’ urged the king.
‘I am sure he is related to Conrad of Montferrat, sire – his nephew, I think.’
De Béthune and I gave each other a look; Richard’s expression tightened.
Conrad had been an ambitious Italian nobleman who rose high in Outremer society. Crowned King of Jerusalem the previous spring, he had been murdered within the week. Everyone in the Holy Land at the time knew that the Assassins – a mysterious Muslim sect – were behind Conrad’s slaying, but malicious gossip spread by Philippe Capet and his followers since had been remarkably effective. Conrad’s family were not alone in believing that Richard was responsible.
‘Better that we should not pretend to be Templars,’ Richard declared. This had been his initial plan. ‘We would draw unwanted attention; our heads must be further below the parapet. Pilgrims, we shall be, then, returning from the Holy Land. Hugo of Normandy will be my name. There is no need for you to have a false identity, Baldwin. You shall act as the military leader of the party.’
This seemed a better ploy, I thought. My relief was momentary, for with his next breath the king ordered Henry Teuton to take one of the four new horses and ride ahead to Gorizia. There he was to ask the authorities for safe passage, a guide and treatment according to the Truce of God, a Church ruling that protected those who had taken the cross from physical violence. Pulling off a magnificent ruby ring, Richard handed it to Henry with the declaration that this should be a mark of his good faith.
Their thoughts on roaring fires and hot meals, few of the group took notice.
I could not believe the risk-taking, however. ‘This is his idea of travelling in secret?’ I whispered to de Béthune.
‘I agree with you, Rufus, but he is our lord.’ He saw my face, and said, ‘Cross him at your peril. He is in a fey mood.’
I saw that de Béthune was right. The king’s bonhomie on the ship had been genuine enough, but the beaching of the vessel in the middle of nowhere, our long trudge to an armpit of a village, the swaybacked, spavined horses – all that had been on offer – and Meinhard being Conrad’s nephew had hit Richard hard. If he could not be a proud Templar, the next best thing was a rich and influential pilgrim. And by his haughty expression, his mind would not be changed. I decided on another course of action.
‘Sire, let me go also.’ Adding that I wanted to improve my German and that Henry was a good teacher was enough. Richard even gave me one of the three remaining nags, a ribby chestnut.
We set off at once. The interrogation began before we had ridden a hundred paces.
‘You vant to learn Tcherman?’ Henry had a thick, hard-to-understand accent.
‘Yes.’ I was not about to admit my main purpose. Henry was a no-nonsense, direct type I could see marching into the castle at Gorizia, loudly asking for all of Richard’s requests. I hoped for a more discreet approach and, if possible, that the ruby ring should stay hidden.
I could tell Henry none of this – dutiful and rigid, he would fulfil the king’s orders to the letter – and so my punishment was to endure a prolonged, finger-wagging lesson in basic German that lasted for the entire ride to Gorizia. I sound ungrateful; Henry was in fact a half-decent teacher, and I learned more in those miles than I had during the entire voyage from Outremer.
Gorizia stood at the foot of a hill upon which perched the castle, Engelbert’s stronghold. The town had its own wall; there were guards at the main gate, but to my relief we passed through unchallenged.
‘Do not look around so much,’ Henry said in an undertone.
I checked my enthusiasm. After the guts of two months at sea, with the only inte
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