The Mistress Of Normandy (36 page)

Read The Mistress Of Normandy Online

Authors: Susan Wiggs

Tags: #Romance, #Historical Romance, #Medieval Romance, #Love Story, #Medieval France, #Medieval England, #Knights, #Warriors

Flinging down the torch, she lifted her skirts and ran with terrified speed toward the battlements. Taking the stairs two at a time, she reached the wall walk just as the bombs detonated.

Smoke and sparks rocketed skyward. The noise of the explosion ripped through the air like hellish thunder. Stables, kennel, and stockyard came alive with the sounds of animal panic.

Soldiers poured from the barracks; castle folks streamed from the keep.

The discharges continued in a fearsome series of loud cracks. Lianna’s eyes stung; her throat burned. Smoke roiled through the yard, and someone shouted that he’d been blinded. Wailed prayers and frightened pleas rose from the crowd.

When the blasting ceased, Lianna ran back down to the bailey. Choking, she fought her way across the blackened and smoldering ground. A few of the charges had failed to detonate, but they’d managed to bring out the French knights.

A gust of wind parted the smoke. As the sulfurous fog thinned, Lianna heard a collective gasp.

“She comes from the dead,” someone called. Others made signs against sorcery and sank to their knees. Lianna could well understand the gesture; Gervais had told them she was dead. To the stupefied crowd it must seem she’d appeared by magic, on a swirl of smoke.

A jostling movement caught her eye. Struggling, sputtering, and sporting a livid bruise on his face, Gervais Mondragon was dragged forth by Batsford and Jack.

He spied Lianna, cursed viciously, and bellowed to his men, “Stop them, you fools!”

The men started forward.

“Do so at Mondragon’s peril” came a commanding voice from the battlements.

As one, the crowd in the bailey glanced up. Looking regal, Chiang stood high on the gunner’s walk. Four round iron eyes glared at Gervais. Jack shackled Mondragon’s hand to the well sweep; then Jack, Batsford, and Lianna hurried off.

“One move,” Jack growled, clutching his wounded side. “One move, and those guns go off, and you’re porridge.”

A fearful murmur rippled through the crowd. Macée, robed in scarlet, tried to run toward the well. “Gervais! Oh, God—” Cursing, Guy held her back.

Batsford held a cloth-wrapped bundle. “Lord Rand’s
cotte d’armes,
” he said triumphantly. “And the chancery seal.”

“Form up,” Jack yelled at the soldiers. “You’re to be locked in the granary.”

The French sergeant planted his feet. “We obey no sniveling English cripple.”

Jack brandished his maimed hand. “
This
cripple holds your fate.” Four heated iron bars lowered toward four touchholes.

“Hold!” Gervais’s voice vibrated with fear. “God have mercy, do as he says. I order you to obey the Englishman.”

The man glared at Gervais, then at Jack. “I bow to no lowborn archer.” He whipped a dagger from his badric.

Quicker by half, Jack drew his own blade. No sooner did Lianna see the flash of steel than the blade sank to the haft in the Frenchman’s chest. He fell, dead.


Sir
Jack Cade,” Jack said fiercely. “Now, to the granary with your smelly hides.”

The men, prodded by Dylan and Jack, filed away.

Lianna turned to the household knights. Jehan and his men stood uncertainly before the stables. Some had known her all her life, others had served under Aimery the Warrior, all had sworn fealty to her husband. Yet they were French; they’d supped at Gervais’s table.

“We’re with you, my lady,” said Jehan. “Mondragon disarmed us. The dauphin’s knights treated us like scum.”

She sent him a grateful look, then darted a worried glance at the brightening sky. “Four hours to noontide,” she said. Could they reach Agincourt before the executioner’s ax fell?

Jehan shouted orders; grooms scurried to the stables. Jufroy hurried to raise the portcullis and lower the drawbridge.

Bonne assumed a bossy air. “The baron will return soon, and he’d be loath to see you idle. Haul away this mess.” The maid, now a knight’s lady, spoke with new authority. “We must prepare a feast. Oh, and Roland, fetch that Englishman from the cellar.”

Henry’s scout, Lianna recalled. Thank God Gervais hadn’t killed the man.

Jack and Bonne walked with her to the gate. She hugged them both. “See to that wound, Jack.”

He nodded and stepped away. “Just bring my lord home.”

“And get the remaining charges out of the bailey.”

Gervais, lashed to a saddle, his horse’s reins in Batsford’s capable hands, glared at Lianna. “Fool. All Picardy could have been at our feet. We could have been good together, you and I.”

“Nothing that you have touched could ever be good,” she retorted.

“Gervais!” Hair unbound, red robe fluttering, Macée raced across the bailey. She threw herself against his horse, her hands clutching at her husband.

Lianna expected him to dismiss his grasping wife. Instead he leaned down as far as his bound hands would allow and accepted her long, fierce embrace. A woodcock chirruped.

Impatient to the point of desperation, Lianna signaled to Batsford and cantered across the drawbridge, into the northern woods. Chiang and the English scout accompanied them. They paused to loose Charbu from where she’d tethered him.

As they rode through the awakening woods, she prayed they’d reach Agincourt in time.

Gervais stared stonily ahead. But something gleamed in his dark eyes—something that sent a shaft of fear streaking through Lianna.

* * *

The sun stood high and cold, directly overhead. Rand’s guards, hardened by the day of slaughter that had preceded this day, showed no emotion as they led the prisoner from Château Agincourt to a muddy clearing.

Mutters of “traitor” and “bastard” rippled through the ranks of men who had gathered to witness the execution. The vilest catcalls issued from a large contingent standing beneath the standard of the white rose of York.

“Enguerrand Sans Tache” came a bold, contemptuous voice. “Today we’ll see this field spotted with your traitor’s blood.”

Rand ignored the taunt as he passed the king. Pale and strained, Henry said, “Rand, I’m sorry.” He looked suddenly very old. “I didn’t love you as well as she.”

“Justice must be served this day,” said a Yorkshireman.

Rand stood silent as a priest chanted in a monotone. The executioner, his garb black, his ax shining, waited by a makeshift block, freshly cut from the Tramecourt woods.

Rand felt no fear; he was beyond terror. Instead he felt empty, washed clean of all emotion.

As the priest droned on, Rand wondered again at his utter aloneness. He’d wanted to see Lianna, to make his peace with her before he died, but she’d robbed him even of that.

Vaguely he became aware of a stir far away, in the ranks. They’re all clamoring for my blood, he thought. Was yesterday not enough for them? He glanced at the king. A herald appeared; Henry and his councillors retreated to the rear of the crowd. The Yorkists pressed closer. Amazing, that they still had stomachs for another killing only a day after the slaughter of some eight thousand men.

Rand craned his neck to see the fields and woods one last time. But the outside world was already closed off to him by the forest of blood-hungry men who formed a circle around him.

He closed his eyes. Above the relentless droning of the priest, he heard distant shouts, the pounding of hoofs. More spectators. Few had cared that he’d lived, yet it seemed hundreds wanted to see him die.

Hands gripped his shoulders. He opened his eyes. The executioner stood before him.

“Your collar, sir,” said the hooded man, touching the opening of Rand’s tunic.

Rand reached up to help. For the deadly blade to rive a clean cut, his neck must be bared. A shiver passed through him as he felt the caress of a cool autumn wind on his flesh. “I have no coin to pay you the customary boon,” he said.

“I’ve been paid.”

Rand wondered whether his death were to be financed by the Yorkists—or by King Henry himself. “Make it a clean cut, will you?” he muttered.

The priest’s voice and the rolling timbre of a drum rose in crescendo. “Have done already,” called a Yorkshireman. The executioner gestured at the block.

Rand stepped forward and knelt. The axman’s assistant put a hand on his back. To steady my body for the blow, Rand thought. He uttered a brief, disjointed prayer for absolution. With an absurdly misplaced sense of annoyance, he noticed that the noises around him had risen. Not even a moment of respectful silence would mark his passing.

Then he became aware of movement; voices penetrated the loud surge of blood in his ears. Someone shouted, pleaded...

A trick of the wind or of his own feverish imaginings made him feel a sudden and unaccountable jolt of life. That voice, that lilting, female voice. His heart always heard, no matter how faint her cries.

The heavy hand left his back. Rand glanced at the axman. Although a hood masked the burly man’s face, Rand sensed hesitation in the wary stance, in the loosened grip on the ax.

“Let her through,” someone said. “God’s mercy...”

The executioner looked over Rand’s shoulder. Seized by unbearable hope, Rand shot to his feet.

He turned.

She smiled.

Like an ivory-robed vision, her silver hair streaming, she burst through the ranks of men. Adoration and astonishment unfurled in Rand as she came catapulting, weeping, laughing, into his arms.

“I love you, Rand,” she declared. “I love you. I’ve come to tell you about it.”

His heart bursting with joy, he held her fiercely. She smelled of fresh winds and woodlands, the fragrance soothing after the dankness of the cell. Bending his head, he kissed her deeply, thoroughly, with a desperation that left them both breathless.

“Ah,
pucelle,
you choose the oddest moments to do my bidding. Say again that you love me.”

“I love you,” she breathed. “
Je t’adore.
I’ll say it in a thousand tongues.”

He looked upon her and for a moment saw the cautious girl she had been when they’d first met. In the next instant he saw the woman she had become—strong, decisive, and now able to speak of love as easily as she spoke of guns and wars. He touched her cheek. A sublime peace invaded his soul. Love seemed to spill from her like sunbeams; her smile had the power to bring the gods to earth. He’d carry that image of her into eternity.

“I love you, Lianna. Now I can die well, knowing you have answered my dreams. Tell Aimery for me, when he’s older...”

She reared back. “
Nom de Dieu,
you will not die at all. I did not risk my life only to hear you vow to die well!”

Confused, he studied the depths of her moon-silver eyes. “Would that I could tell you elsewise, but—”

“Come away from this gruesome place.” She tugged at his sleeve.

He eyed the circle of soldiers. Some looked relieved, others resentful. Rand said, “My love, I am not free to go.”

“You are, my lord,” called a bell-toned voice. Like ebbing waves the men fell back, creating a cleft in their ranks to allow King Henry to pass. Batsford and Chiang hurried in his wake.

Face pale, Henry approached. Flouting protocol, he wrapped Rand in a brief, fierce embrace. “By the holy rood,” Henry breathed. His voice trembled with unaccustomed emotion. “And to think I nearly let this injustice be done.” He stepped back but still held Rand’s hand, grasping it like a lifeline. “Much folly has been committed at Agincourt,” he said. “I won a battle, but what does it mean? That I am King of England and France?”

Lianna gasped softly. Henry must have heard, for he turned to her, his face mild. “France will always be France, no matter who wears her crown.” Taking her hand as well, he joined it with Rand’s. “Kingdoms may be traded. But not hearts.”

Rand had then, among the loud bursts of disbelief and joy that clamored in his head, a clear sense of the king’s humanity, his fallibility.

But when Henry stepped away, his face was washed clean of emotion. Only close inspection revealed glints of residual horror in his dark eyes. Gravely he nodded to Lianna.

“Your wife, my lord, has seen justice served. She, with some divine intervention, I presume—” he sent a wry look at Batsford, who flushed deeply “—managed to break her bonds and ride to Bois-Long, where with a force of only ten men she gained entrance.” He held out his hand. In it lay the chancery seal. “She brought me this, and your
tabard
as well—the one Mondragon wore.”

Stunned, Rand stared at her. For the first time he recognized the shadows and pallor of fatigue on her face. “Lianna, how did you get in?”

She tilted her chin up. “I swam the moat.”

Love and pity surged through him. He knew well what that perilous swim must have cost her, and yet she had braved her terror of water for him. “Oh,
pucelle...

One of York’s men said, “Could the woman not have fabricated this evidence? Surely her husband owns more then one tabard.”

Henry eyed the man coldly. “Not one marked by Mondragon’s blood, blood that matches the wound he took in the skirmish at the baggage park.”

“Treachery from a French whore,” the man maintained.

Henry drew himself up. “And the chancery seal?”

The man ducked his head and retreated.

Henry gestured toward a wagon fort formed by a circle of baggage tumbrils. Gervais stood in the middle of the circle. “Mondragon just dictated a full confession to a scribe.” With a satisfied air Henry turned to Chiang. “I marked your gunner’s art during the battle yesterday. Who are you, and why did you fight for England?”

Rand held his breath and squeezed Lianna’s hand. She sent him a perplexed look.

Chiang bowed. “I am Chiang, Your Grace,” he said in clipped English. “I gave you my service to fulfill...an old obligation.”

“You must tell me of this,” said the king. “Perhaps there’s a place for you, as my master of artillery.”

Disappointment shadowed Lianna’s face. “He’ll leave us, I think.” She took a deep breath. “’Tis fitting, somehow.”

“More than you could know,” Rand murmured. He watched as the brothers put their heads together and spoke of glories to come for the House of Lancaster. “Princes both,” Rand said, “but only one will be remembered by the chroniclers.”

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