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Authors: Mark Tompkins

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BOOK: The Last Days of Magic
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When their time came, the men in Strongbow’s group, like the others, were required to remove their clothing before being led into the yard of the slave market. Their hands were bound behind them to a ring in one of the many short posts dotting the auction ground. Interested buyers strolled among them, inspecting the wares, writing their bids in blue paint on a particular slave’s chest, crossing out any previous bid.

Aoife was interested. The only daughter of Tigernan Ua Ruairc, the current king of Leinster, she had heard of Strongbow’s abnormality. As she walked into the market, she could hear the slave crier: “The Earl of Pembroke! Come see why they call him Strongbow!” A large crowd had gathered to do just that, talking excitedly among themselves. “Buy him for your daughter and your grandsons will be renowned throughout the five kingdoms.”

Aoife pushed to the front of the crowd and gave a small gasp.

“Let’s see this Strongbow in his full glory,” she said to her attendants. “Stroke him.”

The two girls moved eagerly forward and, with shouted encouragement of the crowd, began to arouse Strongbow. He raised his head and expressionlessly locked eyes with Aoife. She looked at the long list of bids that already ran down his chest to his abdomen and, turning to the slave master, asked, “How long until bidding on this one closes?”

“If my lady would like to make a fair offer, we’ll call the auction complete.”

Aoife took the small brush from him, crossed out the last bid, and wrote another, twice as high.

Strongbow’s appeal to Aoife extended beyond her bed, for she married him a year later, and a year after that he was elected king of Leinster. When King Henry heard that Strongbow had become a king, he thought he finally had a powerful ally among the Celts. But when his envoy arrived, delivered by the Vikings under a flag of truce, he discovered that Strongbow had become Irish and had no interest in helping the English.

“S
O
THAT

S
WHY
Strongbow was his nickname,” Anne said with a laugh. She stopped abruptly and frowned. “Are you sure de Vere will be safe?”

“We will make sure of it, my sweet queen, by sending the largest army by far that has ever sailed aginst Ireland, ten times the size of Strongbow’s force. All paid for by the pope’s Jews.”

“But tell Us, Our noble king, does de Vere really have to meet with Jews, and in Our palace? They make Us uncomfortable.”

“They bring gold and silver, more than We can trust with anyone but de Vere.”

The Jewish financiers were delivering the first installment of funds for the Irish campaign. The Vatican had agreed to send Richard a total of over four hundred thousand pounds, a sum many times more than the Crown’s annual peacetime tax revenue. Anne had already ferreted out this information. Resisting pressure from the Exchequer to cut her lavish expenses, which were blamed for the Crown’s deficit the previous year, Anne had cornered de Vere a month earlier with pointed questions about the agreement with the Vatican. Looking through the figures during one of their private sessions, she had quickly identified a portion of the budget with the most potential.

“De Vere tells Us that a large amount is being provided for new ships. More than one hundred thousand pounds.”

Richard sat up and studied her face. “Does he? Well, We must have a fleet of ships for the invasion. What are you plotting?”

“Our dear king, can you not just press merchant ships into service?”

“Of course. We can do as We like. But, Our clever queen, by building new ships We buy the support of the high guilds, particularly the shipwrights and blacksmiths.”

“You are their king. They have no choice but to support you.”

“Even a pressed ship has the legal right to a charter fee, and many of them would need expense for refitting.”

“We are told that the charter fee is but ten pounds, and how much refitting will really be required for such a short journey?” She slid one of her delicate hands between her legs and began to stroke herself. “We are hoping, Our kind and generous husband, that you will consider transferring forty thousand to Our allowance. It would be but meager compensation for having to suffer through your distraction and de Vere’s coming absence.”

“No,” he said, watching her movements.

She continued to touch herself, looking at him, knowing that his no was a playful no.

He leaned against her body, embraced her. Placing his head against her small, sharp breasts, he said, “We will transfer fifty thousand to your allowance, Our queen.”

For the second time that afternoon, Anne brought herself to climax while Richard watched.

. . . . .

The next morning Richard strode into the crowded chamber that had been set up as a war room. De Vere, Mortimer, and the Earl of Nottingham, Richard’s appointed war council, were standing at the counting table laughing at some comment when the steward announced Richard’s arrival. All in the room hurriedly bowed. With a casual wave of his hand, Richard motioned for them to rise and joined his earls. De Vere would command the invasion with Mortimer as his second, while Nottingham had been appointed marshal and would led the troops in battle.

The chancellor of the Exchequer was laying out small gold and silver bars on one end of the counting table, the bars that de Vere had received from the Vatican’s Jews in exchange for an unsigned note from the Crown. Next to them was a stack of wooden bars, blanks, signifying the balance of the funds the Vatican had agreed to provide.

Down the length of the table, squares had been marked off with white paint and labeled by account, including ships, mustering, horses, staples, and supplies. Wages, one of the largest expenses, were divided among knights, archers, infantry, and retainers. At the far end of the table was an unlabeled square, which everyone knew belonged to Richard. The game was simple: the more money that ended up in Richard’s square, the more Irish land would be granted to each of the three earls of the war council.

As the chancellor double-checked the stacks of gold, silver, and blanks against his ledger, Richard walked around and stroked the end of the table where his box, waiting for its gold, was marked off. “Chancellor, did you bring your pot of white paint?” Richard asked.

“Yes, Your Royal Majesty, of course.”

“Then bring it over here and make another square next to Ours.”

The chancellor motioned to one of his assistants, who hurried over with a small paint pot and marked off a new square.

“Not as large as Ours, you fool. All right, now give Us that brush and move out of Our way.” Richard scrawled
“50,000”
next to the new square. “Chancellor, this is for Our queen.”

“As you direct, Your Royal Majesty.”

“Well, go ahead, move counters into it.” Richard tossed the brush at the chancellor, who caught it clumsily, white paint splattering onto his sleeve. “And it would be better for you if We did not hear that you are bothering Our queen again about her expenses.”

“Of course, Your Royal Majesty. My only concern was for your—”

Richard cut him off with one of his waves and turned away from the counting table to the map table. Fifteen feet long and six feet wide, the tabletop was painted with a map of England and Wales,
showing each county and its sheriff. Several scribes hovered nearby with small pieces of parchment on which would be listed directives to the sheriffs or commitments received from them. The parchment notes would then be pinned onto the relevant county.

Nottingham began to speak. “Your Royal Majesty—”

Only to be interrupted by de Vere, who placed a hand on his shoulder and said, “I am sure we will find fifty thousand for the queen.”

Richard glanced at de Vere with a smile. “You will find it and more from the ships’ allowance. We have decided to press merchant vessels into service.”

“What of the shipwright contracts already signed, Your Royal Majesty?” asked Mortimer gently.

“Yes, what of the shipwrights? Tell Us, de Vere, and the promises made to the blacksmiths,” Richard replied. Almost half the two-hundred-pound cost of a new sixty-five-ton troopship was for forged-iron clinch nails.

All eyes turned to de Vere. “We will exchange the shipwright contracts for generous licenses for timber from Ireland. Any contracts the shipwrights have already placed with the blacksmiths for nails will be exchanged for arrowhead contracts. We will need—what did you say, Nottingham?—a million and a half arrowheads?”

Nottingham nodded.

De Vere continued, “Also, with contracts for modifications to the merchant ships and orders for new arms, armor, and supplies, the high guilds will be supportive enough of the invasion.”

“So We direct,” said Richard, and the scribes began scribbling. “Come, Nottingham, show Us how you will prepare.”

The men gathered around the map table. “Finding that many suitable ships and making any needed modifications will take some time,” said Nottingham.

“You have twenty-four months until the fleet sails, no longer,” Richard replied.

Nottingham called his secretary forward and directed while
pointing at the map, “Dispatch surveyors to all ports from Thames to Exeter plus Somerset, Devon, Cornwall, Bristol, and Lancashire. Add the ports in Wales as well. They’re to inspect all ships from sixty to one hundred tons and compile a list of those suitable for the transport of troops or horses and any modifications required. A separate list is to be made of ships from forty to sixty tons for the transport of supplies. All reports are to be received by my office within the next three months.”

“Good,” said Richard, smiling and rubbing his hands together. “This will be a fun game. If Our new Sidhe allies come through, then any old ship can make the short crossing.”

“And if these faeries cannot protect our ships, Your Royal Majesty?” asked Nottingham.

“Then no ship, not even those newly built, can survive the crossing, and your son will be most pleased at his early inheritance.”

Nottingham laughed, as was required. “On another matter, Your Royal Majesty, may I have your warrant to conscript supplies, men, and horses? An allocation has been drawn up by county, and it just awaits your approval to send word to the sheriffs.” Nottingham held out a document, which Richard did not take.

“You can conscript the men and the supplies, but not the horses. We do not want the sheriffs to send us their old, broken-down nags. You will pay one pound apiece for young, fast mounts. And let the sheriffs know that if any but their fastest are sent, they will incur a penalty of Our design.”

Richard walked back to the counting table. All squares remained empty except for the queen’s, which contained a stack of blanks and two small gold bars from the Jews’ initial payment. Richard picked up the gold. “We shall deliver this to Our queen.”

The assembly bowed as Richard left. To replace the bars, an officer of the Exchequer set two blanks, each bearing a gold dot, in the queen’s square and painted a red stripe on them to signify that payment had been made.

The war council gathered around the counting table and conferred with the Chancellor and his officers. Figures were consulted and discussed. Squares began to be filled.

They knew that transport was not going to be as simple as Richard had said. Tonnage had become the standard measure of shipping, a ton being the capacity to carry eight full wine barrels. While any old ship could indeed act as a troop carrier, it would need to be at least sixty tons to be efficient. The two dozen ships designated for the vanguard would also need bow and stern castles added to protect archers during the landing. However, most of the refurbishment funds would be spent on transports for the seven thousand horses Richard had decided to take.

As strong as they were, horses possessed fragile legs, and any that arrived injured, sick, or even irritable would be useless to the invasion force. Horses were also expensive. While one pound would buy a spry horse for an archer, a knight’s warhorse, trained to charge a forest of pikemen and not flee the mayhem of close combat, cost twenty-five pounds or more. For their transport the largest ships were needed, to which would be added sturdy gangways, stalls, and hurdles, as well as dry-storage lockers for fodder. Fortunately, Kellach had assured de Vere that replacement horses could be captured in Ireland; otherwise several times as many would need to be shipped, as horses were killed at a much faster rate than were their riders.

The need to transport thousands of horses came from the battle plan developed by Richard himself. None of the English infantry, and few of its knights, could survive in close combat against the Irish Gallowglass wielding deadly, long-headed axes. Richard reasoned that mounted archers could quickly reposition and flank advancing Gallowglass, so his bold and unprecedented plan called for using mounted archers with longbows for the bulk of the English force. This also helped alleviate Nottingham’s expressed concerns about sending infantry against the Sidhe, as he did not know how good Irish faeries were with a sword. On the counting table, the square for archer salaries was filling; these men would not be conscripts.

BOOK: The Last Days of Magic
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