Three Great English Victories: A 3-book Collection of Harlequin, 1356 and Azincourt. Bernard Cornwell
Читать онлайн книгу.follow you like a dog,’ Thomas said, ‘but it will be dangerous for you.’
‘I shall get the armour back,’ Jeanette said, ‘and that is all that matters. Are you praying to St Renan?’
‘To St Sebastian,’ Thomas said, ‘and to St Guinefort.’
‘I asked the priest about Guinefort,’ Jeanette said accusingly, ‘and he said he had never heard of him.’
‘He probably hasn’t heard of St Wilgefortis either,’ Thomas said.
‘Wilgefortis?’ Jeanette stumbled over the unfamiliar name. ‘Who is he?’
‘She,’ Thomas said, ‘and she was a very pious virgin who lived in Flanders and grew a long beard. She prayed every day that God would keep her ugly so that she could stay chaste.’
Jeanette could not resist laughing. ‘That isn’t true!’
‘It is true, my lady,’ Thomas assured her. ‘My father was once offered a hair of her holy beard, but he refused to buy it.’
‘Then I shall pray to the bearded saint that you survive your raid,’ Jeanette said, ‘but only so you can help me against Sir Simon. Other than that I hope you all die.’
The garrison at Guingamp had the same wish, and to make it come true they assembled a strong force of crossbowmen and men-at-arms to ambush the Englishmen on their way to Lannion, but they, like Jeanette, were convinced that La Roche-Derrien’s garrison would make their sally on the Friday and so they did not leave till late on Thursday, by which time Totesham’s force was already within five miles of Lannion. The shrunken garrison did not know the English were coming because Duke Charles’s war captains, who commanded his forces in Guingamp while the Duke was in Paris, decided not to warn the town. If too many people knew that the English had been betrayed then the English themselves might hear of it, abandon their plans and so deny the Duke’s men the chance of a rare and complete victory.
The English expected victory themselves. It was a dry night and, near midnight, a full moon slid out from behind a silver-edged cloud to cast Lannion’s walls in sharp relief. The raiders were hidden in woods from where they watched the few sentinels on the ramparts. Those sentinels grew sleepy and, after a time, went to the bastions where fires burned and so they did not see the six ladder parties creep across the night fields, nor the hundred archers following the ladders. And still they slept as the archers climbed the rungs and Totesham’s main force erupted from the woods, ready to burst through the eastern gate that the archers would open.
The sentinels died. The first dogs awoke in the town, then a church bell began to ring and Lannion’s garrison came awake, but too late for the gate was open and Totesham’s mail-clad soldiers were crying havoc in the dark alleys while still more men-at-arms and archers were pouring through the narrow gate.
Skeat’s men were the rearguard and so waited outside the town as the sack began. Church bells were clanging wildly as the town’s parishes woke to nightmare, but gradually the clangour ceased.
Will Skeat stared at the moon-glossed fields south of Lannion. ‘I hear it was Sir Simon Jekyll who improved your looks,’ he said to Thomas.
‘It was.’
‘Because you told him to boil his arse?’ Skeat grinned. ‘You can’t blame him for thumping you,’ Skeat said, ‘but he should have talked to me first.’
‘What would you have done?’
‘Made sure he didn’t thump you too much, of course,’ Skeat said, his gaze moving steadily across the landscape. Thomas had acquired the same habit of watchfulness but all the land beyond the town was still. A mist rose from the low ground. ‘So what do you plan to do about it?’ Skeat asked.
‘Talk to you.’
‘I don’t fight your goddamn battles, boy,’ Skeat growled. ‘What do you plan to do about it?’
‘Ask you to lend me Jake and Sam on Saturday. And I want three crossbows.’
‘Crossbows, eh?’ Skeat asked flatly. He saw that the rest of Totesham’s force had now entered the town so he put two fingers to his lips and sounded a piercing whistle to signal that his own men could follow. ‘Onto the walls!’ he shouted as the hellequin rode forward. ‘Onto the walls!’ That was the rearguard’s job: to man the fallen town’s defences. ‘Half the bloody bastards will still get drunk,’ Skeat growled, ‘so you stay with me, Tom.’
Most of Skeat’s men did their duty and climbed the stone steps to the town’s ramparts, but a few slipped away in search of plunder and drink, so Skeat, Thomas and a half-dozen archers scoured the town to find those laggards and drive them back to the walls. A score of Totesham’s men-at-arms were doing much the same – dragging men out of taverns and setting them to loading the many wagons that had been stored in the town to keep them from the hellequin. Totesham particularly wanted food for his garrison, and his more reliable men-at-arms did their best to keep the English soldiers from drink, women or anything else that would slow the plunder.
The town’s garrison, woken and surprised, had done their best to fight back, but they had responded much too late, and their bodies now lay in the moonlit streets. But in the western part of the town, close to the quays which fronted the River Léguer, the battle still went on, and Skeat was drawn to the sound. Most men were ignoring it, too intent on kicking down house doors and ransacking warehouses, but Skeat reckoned no one in town was safe until all the defenders were dead.
Thomas followed him to find a group of Totesham’s men-at-arms who had just retreated from a narrow street. ‘There’s a mad bastard down there,’ one of them told Skeat, ‘and he’s got a dozen crossbowmen.’
The mad bastard and his crossbowmen had already killed their share of Englishmen, for the red-crossed bodies lay where the street bent sharply towards the river.
‘Burn them out,’ one of the men-at-arms suggested.
‘Not before we’ve searched the buildings,’ Skeat said, then sent two of his archers to fetch one of the ladders that had been used to scale the ramparts. Once the ladder was fetched he propped it against the nearest house and looked at Thomas, who grinned, climbed the rungs and then clambered up the steep thatch. His broken rib hurt, but he gained the ridge and there took the bow from his shoulder and fitted an arrow onto the cord. He walked along the rooftop, his mooncast shadow long on the sloping straw. The roof ended just above the place where the enemy waited and so, before reaching the ridge’s peak, he drew the bow to its full extent, then took two steps forward.
The enemy saw him and a dozen crossbows jerked up, but so did the unhelmeted face of a fair-haired man who had a long sword in his hand. Thomas recognized him. It was Sir Geoffrey de Pont Blanc, and Thomas hesitated because he admired the man. But then the first bolt whipped so close to his face that he felt the wind of its passing on his cheek and so he loosed, and he knew the arrow would go straight into the open mouth of Sir Geoffrey’s upturned face. He did not see it strike, though, for he had stepped back as the other crossbows twanged and their bolts seared up towards the moon.
‘He’s dead!’ Thomas shouted.
There was a tramp of feet as the men-at-arms charged before the crossbowmen could reload their clumsy weapons. Thomas stepped back to the ridge’s end and saw the swords and axes rise and fall. He saw the blood splash up onto the plastered house fronts. Saw the men hacking at Sir Geoffrey’s corpse just to make certain he was really dead. A woman shrieked in the house that Sir Geoffrey had been defending.
Thomas slithered down the thatch and jumped into the street where Sir Geoffrey had died and there he picked up three of the crossbows and a bag of bolts that he carried back to Will Skeat.
The Yorkshireman grinned. ‘Crossbows, eh? That means you’ll be pretending to be the enemy, and you can’t do that in La Roche-Derrien, so you’re waylaying Sir Simon somewhere outside the town. Am I right?’
‘Something like that.’