‘I will hear no more,’ Louis snapped. ‘You will not dispute with me. If you better knew your place, we would have sons by now.’
‘If you better knew yours, I could give them to you. How can I bear children when you do not sow the seed? Perhaps we should indeed seek an annulment.’
Louis’s colour darkened. ‘That is enough! You take my words and you twist them until they become snakes. Since you ask me to sow seed, I will do so.’ He began undressing and gestured her to lie down on the bed.
Alienor swallowed, feeling sick. She had not bargained for this. She knew it was just another way of him putting her in her place, and a part of his inadequacy that he could only do the deed these days if driven by fervent religious passion or rage. She started to shake her head.
‘Do as I say!’ He grabbed her arm and shoved her down. At first she fought him, but he bent her arm behind her back and hurt her so much that she gave in.
At least it was swift. Louis had been told by his advisers that the longer a man remained within a woman’s body, the more vitality she took from him to heat her own cold humours, and that intercourse could seriously weaken a male constitution. Within seconds he was shuddering through his crisis, his voice locking in his throat and releasing in a series of small stutters.
‘There,’ he panted as he withdrew from her. ‘I have given you the means; now go and pray on your knees and make me a child.’
Alienor managed to leave the room with a straight back and her head carried high, but once outside, she doubled over and retched. When she reached her own chamber, she did fall on her knees and pray. With Louis’s seed sticky on her thighs, she asked God to forgive her sins and grant her the blessing of a child, and then, she prostrated herself and vowed on the bones of Saint Radegund that she would win free of this marriage whatever the cost.
26
Hungary, Summer 1147
It began raining again as the cart in front of Alienor shuddered to a halt, its wheels bogged down in the soupy mud churned up by the passage of the endless train of French soldiers and pilgrims. German crusaders had preceded them like a swarm of locusts, stripping the ready supplies, alienating the native populations, and turning the roads into pig wallows.
Soldiers and pilgrims hastened to lend their shoulders to the back of the cart while others threw down logs and hurdles into the mire to add purchase. As they heaved and pushed, one man fell; when he staggered to his feet again he was dripping like a primordial demon. Another lost his shoe in the slurry and had to grope with his hands like a beggar hunting through a bowl of pottage for meat.
Geoffrey de Rancon handed Alienor a mantle of robust waxed leather and a cowled hood of the same. ‘Good Christ, madam,’ he muttered, ‘we’ll not reach the border before sunset at this rate.’
Grimacing, Alienor struggled into the garment. It had not properly dried out from the last occasion she had used it, and the smell of beeswax and leather was permeated by that of damp and smoke. By the time they made camp tonight, she would stink like a charcoal burner, but it was preferable to being soaked to the skin and covered in glutinous mud like most of these poor wretches.
After much heaving, cursing and struggling, the cart eventually sucked out of the ooze and rolled on its tortuous way, but more carts were following, and the same fate awaited them. Alienor had no idea where Louis was, save somewhere ahead, and in truth she did not care, as long as he was out of her sight.
They had been on the road for six weeks, having set off from Saint-Denis at the end of May. On a burning hot day, in the presence of Pope Eugenius, Louis had received the oriflamme banner from the hands of Abbé Suger as part of an elaborate ceremony to bid Godspeed and success to the French army as it embarked on the long march to Jerusalem via the bone-bleached battlefields of Edessa, Antioch and Tripoli. Alienor had sweltered in the many layers of her formal attire. Adelaide too, and for a moment the women had been in accord as they stood side by side, struggling to cope with the heat.
Louis had retired to dine in the cool of the abbey with His Holiness and various clerics. Everyone else had to wait outside, and Alienor added inconsideration and disparagement to her grievances.
At least she did not have to travel with Louis. The army was divided into sections and she rode either with the non-combatants and the baggage in the centre, or else with the men of Aquitaine under the leadership of Geoffrey de Rancon. The latter suited her very well indeed, for among her own she was respected.
Alienor tried not to dwell on the farewells she had made on the steps of Saint-Denis, but still the visions came. The hard hug from Petronella and the tears welling in her sister’s eyes had reminded Alienor of their father leaving for Compostela.
‘What will I do without you?’ Petronella had sobbed.
‘Survive,’ Alienor had replied, her throat swollen with emotion and her eyes full of tears. ‘Survive, my sister, and care for Marie until I return.’
‘As if she were my own daughter,’ Petronella wept.
The children had not been present among the gathering at Saint-Denis. Alienor had kissed Marie farewell earlier in the guest house. She had told her daughter she would bring her jewels from Constantinople, silks and frankincense from far lands and a candle from the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem to light her way on God’s path. And then she had gone from the room, closed the door on her child and buried her emotions deep.
Thunder rumbled in the distance and Alienor shuddered. Ten days ago on the road from Passau to Klosterneuburg a cart had been struck by lightning and the driver and horses killed instantly.
‘Let us hope the worst holds off until we have crossed the Drava,’ muttered her constable, Saldebreuil de Sanzay, glancing at the sky from under the rim of his helm. ‘The last thing we need is a flood.’
Alienor agreed with him and sent up a silent prayer. Of late she had developed an active interest in the weather. When it rained, roads swiftly turned into quagmires and traversing rivers became a matter of life and death. Crossing the Rhine and the Danube had been moderately simple due to decent barges on the one and a fine bridge on the other. Alienor thought they should have taken the sea route via Sicily, but Louis had refused because of the enmity between Roger of Sicily and Konrad, Emperor of Germany. Louis had not wanted to risk upsetting the Germans so instead they were following the land route to Constantinople. Thus far they had travelled through Metz, Worms, Wurzburg, Ratisbon, Passau and Klosterneuburg heading for the crossing of a tributary of the Danube lying across their path into Bulgaria.
Shortly after noon, they arrived at the site where the Germans had camped a week previously as they prepared to cross the Drava. The ground was muddy and waterlogged. The surrounding area had been stripped of resources; the horses had eaten all the immediately available grass and Louis’s army had to make do with what they had brought with them. Since half of that was in bogged-down carts stretching back down the road, neither man nor beast was going to eat or be comfortable for some time.
The few ships, barges and rafts at the bank were insufficient to carry the horses. Two rafts proved large enough to take a couple of carts at each crossing and twenty people, but the going was painfully slow. The horses had to be swum across, and although entering the river the bank was shallow, the opposite side was steeper and the state of the bank worsened as each animal churned up the mud when lunging to gain solid ground.
Alienor watched with trepidation as her groom took her dappled gelding. The current was not particularly swift, but the river was muddy and turbid and her mind filled with images of an aquatic monster dragging horse and rider under. She had read stories in bestiaries about such creatures. Crocodiles for certain. Were there crocodiles in Hungary?