Blood Royal. Vanora Bennett
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Название: Blood Royal

Автор: Vanora Bennett

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007322664

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СКАЧАТЬ there had had to be dropped. His aching hands were slipping on his reins.

      From somewhere up ahead, in a gap in the wind, he heard, with dread, a burst of music. The horns. It took him a moment to understand that they weren’t signalling an advance. There were drum-beats too; and a thin wail of fifes. With relief, and astonishment, he thought: it’s music. He stretched in the saddle, peered through the gathering dark; willed his eyes and ears to make sense of it. But even before he did he found his horse stepping forward with new vigour in its stride, as hundreds of others all around speeded up their pace too, and squared their shoulders. He heard marching songs; and a drift of suddenly cheerful deep voices, and the quicker, louder tempo of the archers’ heavy footsteps, coming back to the riders over the insistent drum-beats. The wet no longer seemed so daunting. Owain even found himself whistling. The music would be an order from the King himself, he knew, and he found himself lost in admiration, as he’d so often been during the three months of this campaign, at the King’s instinct for drooping spirits; the deft ways he knew to raise morale.

      When Owain recognised the leader of the group of horsemen he now made out trotting back down the English line, against the flow of soldiery, his heart filled with a joy as intense as that of a child seeing its father. Henry, the King, his master, was coming, with his body as jaunty in the saddle as if he hadn’t been riding for ten hours. His face was glistening with water under his raised visor, but he had fire still in his eyes and a face full of smiling understanding as he stopped here and there to clap one soldier on the back or shout a word of encouragement to another.

      The King reined in his shining black palfrey as Owain, tall and proud in the saddle, trotted past, feeling the energy of those big, intelligent royal eyes like heat. ‘Tudor!’ he heard; and he bobbed his head manfully, trying to restrain the beaming smile he wanted to give at being singled out. ‘Good man; we’ll be pitching camp just up ahead,’ the King said briskly. His voice was deep and confident. ‘There’s a wood. You’ll see. Get a dozen of your men into it for kindling. The rest can do tents for everyone. We need good big fires. Get everyone dry. Cheer us all up.’

      ‘Sir!’ Owain said, and, as the horsemen spurred on back down the line, he let the smile out onto his face, and set himself to imagining the big blaze of a fire he was going to organise.

      He’d been called back from the studies the King had permitted him to begin at Oxford, to join the King’s French campaign, setting off from Southampton in the summer in the fleet of ships that had assembled to fight at an undisclosed location across the Channel. He hadn’t wanted to come; hadn’t wanted to fight; above all, hadn’t wanted to fight Catherine’s father’s forces. But there was no disobeying orders. When John of Bedford had said his brother the King wanted Owain on hand, in case the need arose during the campaign for negotiations with the French King (since his previous trip to Paris, Owain was deemed to know the French court), he’d dared to ask, with a hint of sullenness: ‘But can I come back afterwards and continue my studies?’ Now, three months on, he could hardly remember the boy who could have felt aggrieved at commonsense Duke John’s mild answer: ‘It all depends on the King. Duty comes first. You know that.’ He did, now. He knew about combat: the fear, the euphoria, and the need to obey orders. He’d been put to fight in the siege of Harfleur; he’d thought it would be a life of sneers at the Welshman, and he’d hate it. But he’d quickly found he was considered as much a part of the force as any real Englishman as long as he did his best; and by the time the dignitaries of Harfleur came out through the shattered walls to surrender to the King he’d been cheering as loud and as joyfully as any of Henry’s English knights. These days, he never even thought about following orders, or about whether he felt it morally justified to make war in France. He’d been swept away by the logic of where he was and who he was with. He’d stopped caring about anything else. What drove him to ride until his limbs felt they might fall off his body was no longer obedience, or thought, or principle. He just wanted Henry’s eyes approvingly on his. He craved that lopsided, energetic grin; the clap on the back. Like every other soldier in the force, he took orders now out of sheer love.

      The French army was waiting for them beyond the woods where they camped. In the last of the luminous grey light, Owain could see the rooftops and drifting smoke of the villages of Rousseauville and Azincourt. ‘They’re behind there,’ his subaltern said, careful to keep fear out of his voice. ‘And over there. And there.’

      No one knew how they knew it; no one would say such a thing to his fellows; but it didn’t take long for the knowledge to spread that there were at least three times as many French soldiers over there as there were English over here. And horsemen; hundreds upon hundreds of powerful horsemen; while this little English force was mostly made up of yeomen archers in ordinary leather jerkins, who, apart from their bows, had only the most basic of equipment – axes at their girdles and pikes to force their way into the thickest fighting.

      But as the darkness hemmed in the English troops, in the exposed, perilous fields and copses that God and the King had chosen for them, Owain and dozens of other English knights – and Owain Dwn, another Welshman of his own age, the sparkling-eyed grandson of Henry Dwn, a fighter who’d taken Henry of England’s peace – brought forth fire from great steaming bonfires. Owain leaned as close as he dared to the flames, watching the merry orange crackle and spit of them, observing his men stretch arms and rub feeling back into their legs; feeling the despair lift from his own flesh like the damp evaporating from his skin. The earth smelled fresh and full of life underfoot. His subaltern was already supervising the first batch of men who were cleaning and greasing and sharpening blades for the morning. There would be time for everything: time to prepare; to rest; to eat; and to pray, just as there always was with Henry. The smell of sizzling rabbits and game birds rose through the smoke. Priests were passing from encampment to encampment, blessing men in batches. The air was alive with expectant talk and the neighing of horses scenting battle; and everywhere you looked men were singing and stamping their feet to the music. There was no reason to lose hope.

      Owain reached into his bag for his box – with pens and ink inside; with pieces of parchment cut small for this life on the move. His other love. The finished poems lay under a cloth; the untouched sheets lay above. He couldn’t write here. It was too muddy, too uncertain. But he’d be comforted, at least, by reading some of the thousands of words he’d penned, in quieter times, about the Rose. He leafed through the sheets.

      ‘The Lover rides through the darkness,’ he read, ‘in wind, and rain, and pain. But wherever he goes he carries the memory of the Rose in his heart.’

      ‘We beat them at Crecy, we beat them at Poitiers,’ his subaltern was carolling from the weapons tent; and the men greasing his saddle bawled back, ‘We’ll beat them todaaaay!’ Owain crossed himself at that. But there was a smile on his face. Even that brief glimpse of the inexpert words he’d struggled so hard to compose – and so often got into trouble for wasting his time on – reminded him of the true purpose of his life, even beyond this. ‘Amen,’ he murmured, and, putting the box away, strode into the tent to join in the singing.

      Charles, Duke of Orleans, walking into the blackness outside the French commander’s tent to consider the order he’d just been given, wondered how the English managed to make so much noise. They were thundering away over there, singing, eating, drinking, belching, farting, shouting. As far as his eye could guess at shapes, there were French horses tethered by French tents stretched out all the way to the horizon. He knew there must be many, many more French soldiers in these fields than the English could possibly have mustered. But the men he could make out closest at hand – silhouettes gathered round their smoking mounds of embers – were hunched and miserable. There were no musical instruments playing here. (Perhaps the Constable should have let the six thousand men offered by the burghers of Paris come; they might not have known how to fight but they’d probably have been a dab hand at picking out a tune on a pipe. Then again, you couldn’t have city people in a battle; what did commoners know of war?) The French cavalry horses were all but silent. So were the men; though in two or СКАЧАТЬ