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Authors: Michael Jecks

BOOK: Fields of Glory
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13 July

Berenger rose as the first horns blared through the early morning. ‘On your feet!’ he shouted to his men, making a dishonest display of enthusiasm for leadership.
In truth, he would have much preferred a cup of warm, spiced ale and another hour under his cloak.

It was still dark, yet all around him men were stirring and grumbling, many searching for a bush or tree to piss against, while others packed belongings and adjusted their coats against the
chill. Out at sea, ships waited, and more were being beached and unloaded.

‘Aye, there’ll be a fight before we see home again,’ Jack Fletcher said in his heavy Ousham accent, hoicking up his hosen. Berenger had known him longest, and Jack was the man
he relied on to give him the mood of the men. ‘Those sailor boys have an easy time of it, eh? Buggering off back to port, guzzling the best wine and ale while we march the soles of our boots
thin all the way to bloody Paris. The buggers.’

Berenger grinned.

‘How do you think the men are doing?’ he asked.

Jack shrugged. ‘Clip’s whining wors’n ever; Wisp’s worried, as usual, but he’s keeping it quiet. You know what he’s like.’

Berenger knew all too well. Will the Wisp was lanky and clumsy and always fretting: would they win a good reward for their effort, would his bag hold for their campaign, would the rains come on
and ruin his boots? In Wisp’s life there were so many things to worry about.

‘The others?’ he asked.

‘Oliver has toothache; Eliot’s upset because his harrier bitch was kicked by a packhorse and she’s limping; Matt’s on about needing a whore; Gil wants an ale; Jon is
hungry; Walt didn’t sleep. It’s the usual moaning and griping, but they’re fine. It’s when they stop bleating you need to worry. That’s when they’re plotting
mutiny!’

Berenger pulled the straps tight on his pack. He wanted to ask about the boy, but there was no point. Of all the men under Berenger, Jack was the most loyal. He would protect any man from the
vintaine, especially a youngster, to the utmost limit of his strength. ‘What of Geoff?’

‘He’s just missing his wife and boys, as usual.’

Berenger nodded. Geoff was always sombre at the beginning of a campaign. Berenger had seen it before. His protectiveness towards Ed was just his paternal nature coming to the fore.

Clip had relit the fire, and now the men were heating flat stones. Most men did not bother with an early meal, but Berenger insisted that, when possible, each man should have something inside
them to sustain them for the day’s march. Each had mixed oats with flour and water, some with honey, to make little cakes. It was a trick they had learned from the Scots.

However, during this campaign there was no telling where they would find supplies. Berenger decided he would keep a store. That way, if the French laid waste the farms before them on their
march, they would always have some food.

While their cakes cooked, Berenger wandered amongst the other members of his vintaine, stopping and talking to each.

There were too few. Grandarse had been right on that. Berenger was the leader of sixteen men, where there should have been twenty, fifteen excluding Ed – he couldn’t add Ed to the
complement. Not yet. Not until they’d seen how he would behave in a fight.

Berenger saw a messenger pick his way across to Grandarse. The old man nodded and looked across at Berenger meaningfully. Picking up his hot oatcake, Berenger blew on it, saying, ‘Hurry up
and eat, boys. It looks like we’ll be working for our money today.’

Béatrice walked slowly amidst the throng that day. A solitary young woman, with dank and matted hair beneath a tatty wimple, she attracted little attention. It was how
she liked it. For the first time in days she almost felt safe.

She had left the weary men at the little chapel, where they deposited Hélène’s body for her. Since then, she had been trailing along with columns of refugees.

Here, the rutted road was a mess of mud, human ordure and abandoned belongings. Men and women trudged along wearily, carrying their possessions on their backs, under their arms, or on small
carts. She saw a man with a tottering pile of tightly-bound bales of clothing crammed into an unwieldy barrow suddenly stop as the topmost ones fell into the mud. He stood, distraught, staring at
them, as though that was the ruin of his life, while the endless line of people passed by him without comment. No one could spare even a word of sympathy. Not now. Everyone was too scared: too
exhausted.

A child of perhaps eight years was darting from one adult to another, snot running from her nose, crying and calling for her mother. One bent old woman, grey of face and hair, meandered from the
road and through a collection of nettles, and then slumped to the ground like one who had given up. Béatrice knew she would die there. And nobody would help.

Béatrice herself was too weary.

The whole world seemed on the move: everybody’s faces taut with fear, all so sunk in despair that they had no thoughts for others. Ahead, Béatrice saw a priest with his servants,
striding with the careful haste of a cockerel sensing a fox in pursuit, avoiding glances to either side in case he might see someone who needed his help. Here, surely, he should have paused,
prayed, offered some kind of assistance to these suffering people. It was his job, his God-given
duty
.

Her experience at Hélène’s cottage had utterly destroyed her faith in the priesthood. They were
hypocrites
, she thought bitterly, demanding that others should help
their fellow men, but then averting their own gaze from those in need. Unless they could pay, of course. Like the priest who had offered to help her – but only if she would become his
whore.

But today, the priests themselves were fearful. Peasants, burghers, even the rich were scared – and who could blame them? All were terrified of the English.

The enemy would soon be upon them, and then the terror would start. Everyone knew what it was like to have an army arrive. The countryside would be devastated, fields and pasture would be
ravaged, local stores emptied, and the people . . . well, the people would be lucky if they lived. Stories of the depredations of the English were rife, and everyone had heard tell of their
behaviour in previous raids. They would ride over a wide front and slay all who stood in their path. If a town or city refused to let them in, they would have to suffer the torments of siege and
starvation, and if the place fell, their reward would be wholesale slaughter: men and boys murdered, women raped by whole companies of men, their children spitted on lances for the amusement of the
troops.

So Béatrice walked unmolested among the people fleeing the rumour of invasion. Even here, in the lanes near Carentan, no one was interested in one young woman. There were too many others
– maids who had fled their masters’ houses, women from the farms who had been sent away by tearful parents, those without homes who had nothing to tie them to a town – all were on
the road now.

No one hindered her, but no one aided her. She stumbled as she went, but she could survive.

She
would
survive. Her thirst for vengeance would keep her alive.

Sir John returned with Grandarse. The knight wanted to see how the vintaine was shaping up. Long ago, he had served under two commanders, and both had taught him much about
handling men: the first by his utter disregard for them and their feelings, the second by his commitment to his archers and men-at-arms. Men, any men, deserved respect. The alternative was
mutiny.

‘I give you a good day,’ he said to the men as they bickered about their fires.

They were an interesting group, he thought. He knew their leader, of course. Grandarse was a cantankerous, foul-mannered and still more foul-spoken, unrepentant old sinner. Sir John had known
him for many years. Berenger, too, was someone he recognised. The man’s face was familiar, although he couldn’t immediately recall where they had met before. No matter. It would come to
him.

‘All right, you daft churls, listen!’ Grandarse said. ‘Will, that means you too. We are to march south and west from here, and check the country for more Frenchies. Hoy! Clip,
are you listening? I know your brain’s in your arse, but this could be important! We are to scout, and if we find strong forces we’re not to engage them, but come straight back. Do you
understand?’

Sir John eyed the vintaine. They knew their jobs. They must ensure that no French forces could surprise the English while the ships continued to be unloaded.


Hoy
! I said:
do you understand
, you thieving scrotes?’

There was a weak chorus of, ‘Yes, we heard you,’ and, ‘Aye, we did.’ Jack snorted and pulled out his sword, studying the blade. Others were similarly undemonstrative.

Sir John took a step forward and waited until he had their attention. These were experienced professionals who had fought together for years. They were confident, if undemonstrative. They had
nothing to prove. Sir John was aware he could rely on them.

‘I am glad you are here with us,’ he said clearly. ‘The King is determined to bring the French to battle, but to do that will be difficult. We need to fight on ground of
our
choosing, and not see our men frittered away in silly fights. That is why I’ve picked you, since you are the most reliable vintaine. Do you have any questions?’

‘Do we march soon?’ Will asked.

Sir John gave a grin that, to Berenger, made him look like a Lyme pirate. ‘As soon as the ships are empty, the King will move. You have been on chevauchée with him before. You will
all have rich pickings. Other men have made so much money from taking hostages and winning gold that they have been able to build their own manors and live like lords. You can too!’ He
cleared his throat. ‘The King intends this war to bring the French to their knees and accept him as their rightful ruler. To celebrate his arrival, he has knighted his son and many other
nobles. Before the end of the campaign, he will give the same honours to others who serve him faithfully, be they ever so young,’ he added, looking straight at Ed. ‘So serve your King
honourably and well, all of you, and you will be richly rewarded!’

He waved a hand, encompassing the landscape.

‘Look at this land! It’s so verdant and rich, even the peasants have money. Well, we’re going to ruin their lives. Our orders are to wage
dampnum
. You all know what that
means.’

He looked about and saw the older men nodding grimly. Newer recruits, and the boy, looked baffled.

Berenger summed it up. ‘Dampnum means terror: we wage war through the people. Wherever we go, we’ll take their food, their money, their silver and plate. Everything else, we
burn.’

Sir John nodded approvingly. ‘Aye. It means creating such misery that the folk demand that their masters come and protect them, or they will surrender. It means that we shall make this a
land of ghosts.’

Grandarse nodded, then thundered to his men: ‘And now, you idle buggers, get your fingers out of your arses! We have work to do.’

Béatrice was passing a little tumbledown home when she saw the huddle of old rags. It was already past noon, and at first she scarcely paid it any attention. But her
gown was tattered and frayed, her shoes worn, and, struck with hope that there might be a good cloak to keep the night’s cold at bay, or shoes, she hurried over to the bundle before someone
else in the struggling column could spy them.

It was an old woman.

The old dear lay on her back with her pale eyes staring up at the sky, and Béatrice felt the breath catch in her throat at the sight. Long white hair spread from her head all about her
like a halo. She was no rich burgher’s wife, with her face lined and sunburned like that.

Her clothing was russet and green, but at her flank the material was stained with blood. Béatrice thought she must be dead. There was no point being sentimental. She moved closer,
thinking to take the cloak but, as she did so, the old woman’s eyes turned to her. Aware, but dulled.

Béatrice swallowed. ‘Who did this?’

‘A fool who thought I was rich,’ the woman croaked bitterly. Her lip trembled. ‘He gained little by his treachery.’

Béatrice moved to her side and knelt in the damp grass. A twig stuck in her knee, but she scarcely felt it as she studied the bloody cloth. There was no hissing from the wound, which she
knew was fortunate, but it had bled a great deal. The cloth was sodden.

‘Can you rise?’

‘What do you think?’ the woman said, but she allowed the girl to help her to a sitting posture, the breath sobbing in her throat.

‘We must get you out of the roadway for the night,’ Béatrice said, looking at the hovel. There was space in there for them both to sleep in the dry.

‘Move me in there and I’ll die. If I am to die anyway, what is the point?’ the old woman grumbled.

‘At least I can stay dry while I nurse you in there.’

‘That’s the trouble with the young. Always thinking of their own comforts,’ the woman said tartly, but her eye held a glint of amusement that shone through her pain.

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