The crossbowman flushed and went back inside.
John smiled a grim little smile, and went back to sorting arrows. In the end he chose five — of forty. Another ten he set aside, and after he’d taken the steel or iron heads off all the rest and thrown the shafts on the inn’s pile of kindling, he straightened the ten he’d chosen over a little fire. A few days later, when the garrison was shooting at the butts, John appeared with his English quiver at his belt — on the wrong side. When I tried to correct this, he laughed at me.
The garrison archers and crossbowmen were loosing at about seventy paces. We stood and watched them, about thirty paces further up-range. John strung his bow, and then, without drawing a breath, loosed an arrow over one of the Genoese.
It struck the distant target.
Every man on the line turned and the Genoese crossbowman began to yell insults.
John raised his bow and loosed the other four arrows in his fingers as fast as I can tell this, the last arrow leaping high into the sun before the first one struck.
When they hit the target a hundred paces distant, they struck one, two, three, four.
I looked at Juan. ‘Why didn’t they kill us all on the beach?’ I asked.
John laughed. ‘I am out arrow.’ He turned his back on the Genoese in contempt. ‘Get I good bow, fight better.’ He shrugged. ‘Sword, horse.’
Juan looked down range at the target and the angry archers. ‘May Saint George and all the saints preserve us,’ he said.
‘Amen,’ I agreed. ‘John, do all the Turks shoot like you?’
He shook his head in disgust. ‘Turks, no.’ He said. ‘Turks and Turcoman not all good archer. Some fall off horse. Horses. Yes? But Kipchak and Mon-ghul ride, shoot, always win.’ He shrugged. ‘Not always. Yes? But many.’
Juan pursed his lips. ‘Yes, John,’ he said.
John was not the only Christian Turk, not by a long chalk. As I later found, the Greek Emperor had a whole regiment of them, and so did some of the lords of Achaea and Romania. But his archery was superb and the tales of his prowess circulated rapidly. Some of our crusaders came to see him shoot and to wager on him. I confess I made a fair packet on him one afternoon, wagering with a dozen former brigands as the marks were moved farther and farther away.
A new shipload — a great round ship — of crusaders had come from Venice. It had aboard a number of Gascons and some other French and German knights. I hadn’t met them yet, but they all came to watch the archery and complain of the heat.
One of crusader knights was d’Herblay. With him as a full retinue of men I knew — some well, like young Chretien d’Albret, who remembered me as a routier only slightly less barbaric than Camus, and many Gascons, Bretons, and Savoyards men-at-arms who clearly viewed me as their lord did, as an enemy. Gascons are the touchiest people on the face of the world. They hate each other, and everyone else, in equal parts, and when one of them achieves a measure of fame, they expect to be treated like Charlemagne and Lancelot all rolled into one. The Bretons were hard men who said little and scowled much. The Savoyards were veteran men-at-arms.
And they were with the Comte d’Herblay. Young d’Albret wore his colours, so that I had some warning that the man was present.
I wanted d’Herblay dead — humiliated and dead. But there was more to it than that. Even while John the Turk took their money with his archery, I was watching them. They swore, they blasphemed, and perhaps more important, their clothing was slovenly and their jupons were all spattered with the rust of their maille, which they probably didn’t trouble to clean over much. The Order drilled its knights and volunteers every day; these crusaders never seemed to practice at all. They ate, they drank, they gambled, and they fornicated. Their state pressed through my hatred of d’Herblay.
These were bad men.
Very like the man I’d once been.
D’Herblay paid over his debt on his wager with a poor grace. ‘And when did you become a little priest, Gold?’ he asked. ‘Have you discovered little boys? Are you pimping for the Pope?’ He nodded and smiled his ironic smile. ‘Of course you are not dead. Of course. When a gentleman wants something done right-’
‘He needs to have the courage to do it himself,’ I said.
I was curious to find that his taunts had very little impact. In a camp in Provence in fifty-seven or fifty-eight, those words would have sent me into a rage. Here, I looked at Juan, who was hard by, and he rolled his eyes. You must imagine us, in our sober brown gowns, neat and clean as new-made pins, and these rust-stained brigands. D’Herblay was himself well dressed, in incongruous and sweat-matted fur and wool. But his men looked like the scrapings of a particularly rancid barrel.
‘You used to have the name of being a fighter, Gold,’ d’Herblay said.
‘I would be delighted,’ I said carefully, ‘to fight you at any time.’
He flashed his fake smile.
‘Daggers, right now?’ I offered.
Juan put his hand on my arm. ‘The order would cast you out. And perhaps excommunicate you.’
‘I don’t give a fuck,’ I said. Ten minute with them, and I was becoming one of them again.
D’Herblay stepped back among his men-at-arms. ‘And be knifed in the back by your thugs?’ he said.
I didn’t even trouble to reply. Just for a moment, I considered drawing my basilard and killing my way through to him.
To the ruin of my career.
And the death of my soul, perhaps. Or perhaps I’d be making the world a better place.
He tried to whip the Gascons into a fury against me, but they didn’t think highly of him, and he left us with a trail of imprecations that might have earned immediate heavenly retribution and made him sound weak — and I found that Fiore’s hand was heavy on my shoulder and Nerio was pressed against my side.
‘Wine,’ Nerio said.
Of all people, Chretien d’Albret came and stood by me when d’Herblay was gone. He was older, heavier, and had a scar on his left arm that ran down on to his hand, a bad wound. He approached me with reserve.
I bowed and then reached out and embraced him. We had, in fact, survived some hard times together. His face brightened as I embraced him.
I introduced him to Juan, and to Fiore, and Nerio, who greeted him with no warmth at all.
Fiore hadn’t met him, but by happenstance had heard me speak of the youngest d’Albret.
‘Ah!’ Fiore said. ‘Sir William speaks of you often.’
As a method of warming an old friend, this line cannot be beaten, and Fiore’s sincerity was indubitable. When we had collected all of John’s winnings we took him back to the English inn, and gave Chretien d’Albret and his friend Henri — I cannot remember his style — at any rate, we gave them some wine and were treated to a long dissertation on the state of politics in the Duchy of Aquitaine, which was of interest only to me. Fiore shuffled in his seat, eager to be back in the yard, and Juan took to peering out the mullioned windows, and eventually I let them go.
D’Albret shook his head when Fiore made his excuses. ‘You are so … mild,’ he said. ‘I remember you, you and Richard, running the inn in that little town we held all winter when you were fighting Camus. When you took me. You remember?’
I laughed. ‘Of course I remember.’
He shook his head. ‘You don’t swear. You are dressed like a monk. D’Herblay says you fucked his wife. Is that true? Or are you really a monk?’
‘He is a coward and a bad lord,’ I said. ‘You should not serve him.’
D’Albret fingered his beard. He had a louse crawling out of his collar, headed for his hair. I remembered living in clothes full of lice.
It seemed a long time ago.
‘You think you could kill d’Herblay?’ he asked, and he cocked an eyebrow.
I didn’t say in a single blow. I shrugged. ‘Any time. But I will spare you my boasts,’ I said.
‘You ran a brothel,’ d’Albret said. He said it in accusation, but the accusation was not hypocrisy. The accusation was You used to be one of us.