I didn’t even notice where we were going until I could see Paris. I only remember the dead and the blank-eyed, then waking in a stinking pile of straw in a barn outside St Cloud. There was sheep-dip in the straw — it was all I could get.
Well, that and Richard Musard, who threw his arms around me as soon as I dismounted. ‘Did you get the sauvegardes?’ he asked, ever practical.
I nodded weakly.
‘We’ll be famous!’ he said. Richard had a great deal more confidence in the honour of Princes than I did just then.
‘Have you got John?’ asked Sam.
Richard nodded. ‘I brought him here on a cart; he’s finally on the mend. The wound festered. .’
Sam nodded. ‘I want to see him.’
I wanted to see him, too. The trip had bound us together.
‘When did you get to St Cloud?’ I asked.
Richard shrugged. ‘As soon as I healed up, we were on the road. Sir John Hawkwood has taken good care of me.’
St Cloud, the very gateway to Paris, had an English garrison, and Sir James Pipe was the captain of it. The King of Navarre was rallying an army — to liberate Paris, or so he said.
After we visited John Hughes, we put our camp gear with his and made up beds of dirty straw. Sir John Hawkwood himself brought me wine, and news, and Perkin sat on a barrel end, repairing my kit. He found me a pair of leather and splint legs — pretty enough, but heavy and clumsy compared to my beautiful steel pair that didn’t quite fit. With the help of a mercenary armourer, he was fitting the legs to me, while I lay on my dirty straw, getting bitten by insects and considering an end to my career of war.
I wanted to be interested in Sir John’s news, and I finally asked, ‘If the King of Navarre is making himself captain of Paris, why the hell did he smash the Jacques? Surely they were on the same side?’
Hawkwood looked away. It was evening, there was a fire burning in the barnyard and Sir John’s twenty or so lances were cooking their food or watching their servants cook. The fire backlit his face and made his expression hard to read.
‘I’m not sure whether my employer knows from day to day what he’s doing,’ he admitted. ‘But unlike all the other sides, he pays regularly.’
‘How many sides? The Navarrese, the English, the Dauphin, the Parisians, the Jacques — have I left anyone out?’ I asked.
Hawkwood continued to watch the women by the fire. ‘Well, there’s the Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope — and the King of France, in England.’ He shrugged. ‘I’m not really jesting — the Pope and the Emperor have their fingers in this dough. The Pope is supposedly working to raise the King’s ransom.’
You have to remember that back then, the Pope was a Frenchman who lived in Avignon, not an Italian in Rome. Eh?
‘But when Charles of Navarre smashed the Jacques,’ I insisted, ‘he was attacking his own power base.’
‘Worse,’ Sir John said. ‘He was helping the Dauphin recruit — even though I understand the Dauphin found it prudent to spend the time in Burgundy, leaving his wife to face the Jacques. Eh bien?’
Perkin coughed in his hand, and arranged my rolled-up riding cloak as a pillow so I could sit. Then he elevated my right knee, which was less swollen.
Hawkwood laughed. ‘A pox on your coughing, you rogue. I’ve heard the story and I’m as curious as the next varlet. Did you cuckold the Dauphin?’
‘No!’ I said with, I confess, a little too much spirit.
Sir John smirked. ‘Of course not. But every French knight is looking for you. I promise you, lad, it’s going to be rough on you. Word is she came to your room to thank you and you, ahem, took advantage of her.’
‘I was never alone with her,’ I hissed.
‘Course you weren’t.’ Sir John grinned. ‘Well, it’s one conquest the French can’t take back, eh?’ He got to his feet and said, ‘I was going to ask you and Sam to join me as a lance — the money is the best it’s ever been — but I think Paris might be a little hot for you this year. Best you go back to Gascony.’
I all but ground my teeth in frustration. I thought of the knight with the broken arm on the bridge — I’d never seen his face, the bastard, but he was her husband. I’d saved his life, and he’d done this: poisoned the well against me — with words.
My beautiful deed of arms, ruined by malicious gossip.
For the first time, I began to hate the French.
I left the suburbs of Paris a day later, with my knee almost a normal size and my fever abating. I didn’t wear harness for a day, but the woods were full of desperate men, and our second day south of the bridge, Sam put an arrow in a lout by the roadside, and we stopped by the cooling corpse so I could put on the whole harness.
It wasn’t very pretty any more.
My breast and back had a dozen creases and a deep pit in the front where I’d taken the bolt on the bridge of Meaux. There was rust darkening the bottom of every crease — the best squire in the world can’t get into the bottom of a crease every day. My left shoulder piece was badly deformed by another crossbow bolt. My helmet had two dozen cuts and nicks, each with a corresponding dent. My beautiful leg armours were gone, replaced by leather and splint — done by an enthusiastic amateur, and a livid blue-purple that didn’t match any other part of my harness. My arm harnesses were still beautiful, although somewhat hacked about. The brazen edging on the elbows had several deep cuts.
My gauntlets were a book in which you could read every missed parry and botched cover of my last ten months.
I walked with a limp and I leaned too far to the right when I rode.
But two armoured men and an armed archer seemed enough to keep the roads empty. We passed the village of the dead — we didn’t go through. The bell tower was silent.
We didn’t mention our own dead, but we both knew we’d lost men. I won’t say their shades came to our fires, but I will say that I thought about them a great deal, especially Rob, whose death seemed the most unfair.
There were flowers in fields that should have been tilled, and many, many scavengers in the air and on the ground, peasants who moved silently from field to field, slithering like animals — mere movement, and feral movement at that, along the hedgerows.
A day north of Tours, we saw a party approaching — half a dozen knights and men-at-arms, with a closed box being carried by two mules, and a cart, and a dozen mounted crossbowmen. We watched them carefully, but I knew the arms — the flag was that of Jehan le Maingre, whom I had last seen being taken prisoner before Poitiers.
We were the smaller party, and we had only a small flag of truce, which Perkin bore on his spear below the arms of the Prince of Wales. I was minded to ride around them, but Richard was sure we’d get a good reception from such a famous knight, and he rode across the fields to them with Perkin at his side.
My heart hammered in my chest. I was afraid that at any moment they’d kill him. I had lost any faith I’d ever had in chivalry. I trusted my friends and no one else. I had even been a trifle uneasy with Sir John Hawkwood.
At any rate, Richard came back quickly, and I could see from his riding that something was wrong. Perkin stuck to him like glue.
Richard reined in. ‘It’s Le Maingre,’ he said. ‘He demands to fight you. He says it is a matter of honour — a private quarrel — and so, despite his state as a prisoner, he can fight. Or so he says.’
‘He’s still a prisoner of the Prince,’ Perkin said. ‘And you, sir, are wounded. You cannot fight him.’
I shook my head. ‘What the hell? Why does Jehan le Maingre want to fight me?’
Across the fallow field, 200 paces distant, a shining figure detached from the column and started toward us. His horse’s hooves raised puffs of dust from the field. He was moving quite fast. He had a lance.
If anger can be read in the way a man rides — and it can — this was rage.
‘By the passion of Jesus,’ I swore and seized a lance from Sam. Sam’s face was a study in disinterest and he said just one word.