Название: Blood Royal
Автор: Vanora Bennett
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Историческая литература
isbn: 9780007322664
isbn:
Although he knew with utter certainty that the flower of French chivalry, assembled here, must beat the English, the Duke of Orleans was surprised, when he looked at his own long, thin fingers – a poet’s hands, his wife called them; war wasn’t his calling – to see they were trembling.
Right is on our side, he reminded himself, reaching for the rosary around his neck. Right is on our side. The flower of French chivalry has assembled to do God’s will.
The Duke of Orleans was a man of simple, straightforward beliefs, or he wanted to be, if his treacherous hands would not betray him. A usurper had come to French shores with a wrongful claim to French lands. God, and the French nobility, under the Oriflamme, would smite him down.
But as his fingers touched the beads, and his lips danced through Ave Marias and Pater Nosters, he found himself trying not to remember all those long-ago battles when the French nobility had been destroyed by a cruel God’s favour for the English armies of earlier kings.
And when he thought of his order for tomorrow – the order just given him by the Constable of Albret, who was to be commander for the day, because the King himself couldn’t be on this battlefield – he couldn’t help the prickling of his scalp that he couldn’t believe was fear.
He wasn’t going to obey that order, of course. No one but a king had the right to order a prince of the blood royal to do anything less than heroic in battle.
He wasn’t going to stay at the back with his men.
He was going to join the charge.
Charles of Orleans had allowed two grooms into his tent at dawn to put on his armour. Once mounted, he’d cantered down from the royal enclosure to the encampment where his own troop had spent the night. No fires; it was too far from the woods; the men’s faces were as grey as the skies. Their leather sallets were soaking and looked as heavy as his glittering breastplate. He thought: The subaltern’s not up to it. He should have found them better shelter. But he contained his irritation and politely told the subaltern to take charge of the men on his behalf during the battle. ‘I will be in the charge,’ he said impassively; choosing not to see the man’s look of fear.
Now, with a gauntleted hand over his eyes to keep the day’s early drizzle out, he was standing in the shelter of an outcrop of trees on a slight swell of land, watching the other army rouse itself below. His spirits were higher than they’d been all night. The English force moving around like ants in the mud was much smaller than all that noise in the night had suggested. He could hardly see any horses. The English were encircled; in visible danger; they must be discouraged at the sea of French soldiery facing them. And their tents were grey and brown with mud; none of the magnificence there of the French equipment. He doubted their weapons and their tired campaign horses were much good either.
Owain was part of the group of knights called to the King’s tent at break of day to hear Mass. Owain had dozed a little by the dying fire – he half-remembered being happy in the dream, and feeling the butterfly kiss of eyelashes on his skin and yielding female flesh in his arms – but the damp streaks of colourless light that he’d seen on the horizon as he startled back into wakefulness, signalling time running out before it all began, filled him with dread. He was grateful for the armour that hid his pale face and racing heart. But, standing in front of the King’s stained tent, he was heartened by the sight of Henry, looking far younger than his twenty-eight years, with every sinew of him hard and ready, pulling on his metal plates, cursing ruefully – ‘bloody hands shaking; it’s the excitement, always like this’ – then devoutly bowing his head in prayer and taking the Sacrament in his mouth.
We’re all afraid, Owain thought, reassured. He knows that. Even he is. Fear is natural. Nothing to reproach myself with.
Yet Henry showed no more signs of fear. He got up calmly on his grey charger and gave orders to each of the knights. Owain’s troop was to be in the rear of the charge. Infantry to take the lead; follow up the arrows. Archers in flanks to left and right.
Then the King rode off among the men saddling horses or strapping quivers and axes on themselves, stretching bowstrings taut, restringing them, testing the blades of weapons wrapped in old rags to keep out the damp, binding up their feet. Every few minutes he stopped to talk, leaning down over his horse’s great thick powerful neck, and what he said, in that brisk, no-nonsense, calm voice, with a hint of a laugh in it, was the same for every group of soldiers he addressed. You can see the danger we’re in; the only way out is to win. Owain, back with his own men, making sure they were properly armed and ready before mounting his own dappled horse, strained to hear that beloved voice as hard as every other knight and footsoldier. And, in his heart, he joined their nervous cheers at that first mention of victory. The cheers got louder and more confident when Henry said, in a rhythmic, swinging echo of the song they’d been singing in the night: ‘Don’t forget – we beat them at Crecy! We beat them at Poitiers!’ Every now and again, some bright spark would yell back, ‘We’ll beat them todaaaay!’ And the King would clap him appreciatively on the back, and move on.
But Owain’s heart, like that of every other English soldier, almost burst with devotion and breathless pride when Henry, having reached the front of the camp, first pointed out the jostling mass of French horsemen, ready to be off over there, yelled a few more words of encouragement to the entire English force, then swung off his horse.
On foot, with his sword held high in front of him, he roared to the joyful infantrymen crowding behind him, ‘Henry! Henry!’, and, without Owain quite having understood that the battle was beginning, led them in a surging charge over the soggy ground towards the French.
It was still raining. Water dripped into Charles, Duke of Orleans’ eyes from his helmet. He was running through the October woods, panting like an animal, as wet under his armour as everything in the watery gloom outside. He was running through branches looming out of the fog like outstretched arms, hooking at him, hooking at his sword.
He couldn’t breathe. He stumbled; stopped; crawled into the doubtful safety of a leafless bush; and lay there, shutting out the world with arms over his head, sobbing in air, feeling the boom of his heart against his breastplate, not listening to the noises behind him.
He knew what he’d see if he looked back again. A grey-brown writhing hell of dying men, with Englishmen crawling all over them. He knew what he’d feel, too: a grey-brown horror of shame.
His men would be back there somewhere, still.
He should have stayed with them.
All the princes of the blood should have stayed with their men.
But none of them had. They’d all ignored the Constable’s orders. They’d all left their men. They’d all jostled to the front line in their heavy armour, kicking and whacking and hacking at each other to get a place. They all wanted the glory.
He’d felt the glory, all right: when the horn had sounded and his horse had surged forward at a furious gallop, thundering over the mud, with its red and gold caparison flying, while he crouched over the pommel, jaw clenched, eyes narrowed, ready for combat, ready for death. There’d been glory surging through his veins like alcohol; a red haze in front of his eyes.
But only for a moment.
Then his horse had sunk into the mud under him.
He’d managed to roll free. But it was a long, dazed moment before СКАЧАТЬ