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Authors: Terrence O'Brien

The Templar Concordat

BOOK: The Templar Concordat
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Table of Contents
 
 

 

THE  TEMPLAR  CONCORDAT

 

By

 

Terrence P. O’Brien

 

 

 

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental

 

Copyright 2010 by Terrence P. O’Brien

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the US Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system without the prior written permission of the author. EF.

 Ardgroom Circle 0618

 

 

 

 

 

To Kathy, for her support, patience, and love.

 

 

 

 

 

I’d like to thank the loyal group of readers and editors who assisted with this work. Peggy Miller provided proofreading and editorial assistance, Jim Bosley and Waldo Gibson uncovered inconsistencies invisible to the author, Louise Bosley had insights into the characters I hadn’t seen, Rich Hartzell’s tactical knowledge was invaluable, and my wife, Kathy, always supported and encouraged the endeavor from beginning to end… and of course Max, who sat by the computer watching each and every keystroke.

 

Prologue
 

 

Marseilles - Tuesday, October 10, 1307

The captain of the king’s guard leaned on the pommel of his saddle, wiped the perspiration from his face, and dropped the reins so his destrier could munch on the sweet grass. October wasn’t supposed to be this hot, but the two days since he and his company had left Avignon had been nothing but sweltering, dusty, humid, and buggy. He turned in his saddle and waited for the strung out line of horsemen to tighten up their formation. He couldn’t even see the rear of the column when he looked back along the road through the narrow valley, and for a unit of only two-hundred men, that was inexcusable.

He would speak to the sergeants. When they arrived in Marseilles the next day, he wanted the company to look sharp. The king’s guard had to look like the king’s guard, not a bunch of louts. And they had to fight like the king’s guard. Besides himself, not a man in the column wore a helmet or had a weapon buckled around his waist. In the heat, they had piled weapons, mail, and helmets on the backs of supply horses, and most rode in just breeches and an open jerkin. True, it was peacetime, they were in France, and the heat was ungodly, but they were still the king’s guard.

Tomorrow he would make his name wiping out the forty Templars in Marseilles. They never surrendered, so what choice would he have? Besides, the Pope’s man in Avignon said, “No survivors.” But would his two hundred men be enough?

He was still turned back toward the column when he felt the slight vibration of hoof beats. Puzzled, he glanced again at his troops and saw all the horses moving at a slow walk to tighten up the line.

“Sergeant, do you hear that?” the Captain asked the man behind him.

“Hear what, Sir? Oh, God save us!” The sergeant pointed east.

Fifty knights in full charge crested the top of the low hills to the east and made straight for them at top speed. Red crosses blazed on the white tunics of fifty charging Templars. Fifty lances pointed at them and thundered closer every second. The captain’s horse spun around and he saw his startled men dragging shields off pack horses, struggling to pull swords from the bundles tied to the backs of their own horses, and looking for lances on the pack mules. The captain drew his own sword, ordered the sergeants to set up a defensive formation, and rode back along the line.

He looked west for a place they might defend and froze at the sight of another fifty red Templar Crosses charging from that direction. There was no time. Both lines of charging knights smashed into the disorganized column at the same time. The unit from the east hit the front of the column and the unit from the west hit the back half of the column.

The two groups of attacking knights passed each other as they crashed through their prey, neither stopping when they hit the enemy, but riding straight through and over their victims, then wheeling around and coming back for another attack.  But this time they stayed in the midst of the carnage, hacking, slashing, and stabbing with swords, axes, and maces until they finished their bloody work.

“That was vile work,” said the Marshall of the Knights Templars. “I’ve seen many battles, but I don’t count this as a battle. It’s hardly a victory I want to remember.”

He looked with disgust at the Templar priest moving among the wounded administering last rites. The priest was followed by a knight who efficiently and mercifully dispatched the wounded.

The Marshall rode with the commander through the flies, the stink, and the gore where the Templars were piling weapons and supplies on the backs of the uninjured horses from the king’s guard. Dead men’s horses would serve new masters.

“Vile times,” replied the commander. “A vile king and his vile Pope. They can’t expect us to play any different. You know why these vermin were riding to Marseilles. It’s to roast our arses at the stake and steal our fleet. At least the fleet’s safe now.”

“Yes, fleet and arses are both safe for a while. You finish this mess. I’m heading back to Marseilles.” The Marshall turned his horse and left the valley at a trot, with his squire trailing behind him.

 

*     *     *

The previous night, the Templar Admiral and Marshall both hunkered over a chart on a wooden table while the Admiral traced his route with his finger. “Conditions can’t be any better. Clear skies, tide going out, and an offshore wind are gifts from God. A sailor can’t ask for any more.” The admiral drained his pewter mug and called to the landlord for more ale.

“I wish you fair winds, my friend. And just ask God for luck. Don’t ask for anything else. It’s too confusing. See, if he grants you good luck, that covers everything else.” The Marshall looked down into his ale and swirled it around. “You know what this means.”  He drained the mug.

The admiral nodded, but said nothing.

“I don’t like it. A retreat is still a retreat, no matter what you call it, even if you call it a ‘strategic redeployment of forces.’” The Marshall spat on the sawdust floor of the tavern.

“Bernard, let it go. The ships are loaded, the men are ready, and we’re going to do this.” He pointed toward the harbor. “And I’m going to take that fleet, that one right out there, through the Pillars of Hercules, out of the sunny Mediterranean, and up to that godforsaken place they call Britain.” He grinned and laughed. “Been there once, swore I’d never go back, but I do remember the way. We’ll be ready on Friday morning. We leave with the tide.”

“Well, load all the cargo and supplies you want, but you’re not going anywhere until that shipment arrives. A rider said it will be here tomorrow night, but not before the king’s guard arrives. So, they have to go.” The Marshall slowly drew his finger across his throat. Neither man would mention out loud the cargo they waited for was the Templar treasure.

“You can bet it won’t be early, and probably late, so we still have to deal with the king’s men tomorrow.” The Marshall tugged at his white tunic, emblazoned with a red cross. “And when we meet them tomorrow, that may be the last time this cross sees battle. Two-hundred years of honor and now we go sniveling into the night.”

“Cheer up, my friend.” The admiral laughed and jabbed the air with his mug as he talked. “All the other Templars will vanish before king and Pope strike on Friday. Gone. Disappeared. Shazzam! At least you get to kick some ass on the way out.” He lowered his voice and leaned closer. “If the special cargo had been on time, the fleet would already be gone, you’d be on the way to Zurich, the king’s guard would get here and find no Templars to roast and no fleet to steal, and,” he slapped the table, “you’d have no ass to kick. Now, I’d say that’s lucky for you.”

 

Marseilles - Friday, October 13, 1307

Eight knights, six mounted sergeants, and ten squires sat quietly on their horses watching the Templar fleet leave the Port of Marseilles for the last time. Each ship moved into line in turn and slowly glided toward the mouth of the harbor. Galley oars flashed in the morning sun and spray, well-wishers cheered from the docks, and the ships eased away from their home port for the last time. Those merchant men and fighting ships were the Mediterranean’s most powerful naval force and the Marshall commanded them, as he commanded all the military units of the Order, but he knew he would never see this command again.

He silently watched the lead ship clear the harbor and hoist its sail. The huge red cross on the white sail snapped and billowed in the breeze. For a hundred years Turks, Saracens, African pirates, and all the scum of the sea turned tail and ran when they saw that sail bearing down on them. The fleet protected convoys and took pilgrims, rich pilgrims who could afford it, to the Holy Land. But now the fleet was leaving the Mediterranean, leaving it to whatever ragtag bunch of floating fools wanted it.

The Marshall turned to his squire and sat up straight in the saddle. “Pay attention, you. This is something you’ll not see again. Observe the price of success, honor, gallantry, and courage.” He paused and considered for a moment.  “Or, perhaps it’s the price of arrogance, greed, and stupidity?  We grew from nine penniless knights in Jerusalem to the most powerful force in Europe over the last two-hundred years. Military, banking, and commerce were all ours. And now? Now we are engaged in what the Templar Council calls a ‘strategic redeployment of forces.’ Pretty words. Very pretty.”

The Marshall pointed to the fleet. “We’re splitting the Order, lad. They go to Britain where our British Templars have Roselyn waiting for something like this. And we and the rest of the Order in Europe go to the mountains in Helvitia. Zurich, where the snow is over the horses’ heads, mountains touch the sky, and there’s not a flat space for a good battle for miles. Find a warm cloak, my young friend. Find it before you need it.”

The Marshall knew today was the day King Philip of France and Pope Clement would strike at the Templars everywhere. The king would use the sword, and the Pope would use his power as head of the Church to dissolve the order and brand them all as heretics, apostates, idolaters, and necromancers. The king’s guard had been sent to Marseilles to both ambush the Templars this morning and keep their fleet from sailing.

When the Templar Council first learned about the treachery of the king and Pope, they determined to fight them. They haggled for a week, but cooler heads had convinced them they could beat the king, or they could beat the Pope, but they couldn’t beat both of them at the same time. So, now they would shed their identity as Templars, disappear from their fortresses and estates before king and Pope could strike, and reorganize themselves under different names and different banners. Never again would the world know who they really were or what they could really do.

But the treasure, thought the Marshall, it’s always about treasure. And now it’s sailing away. The king wants it. The Pope wants it. Every duke, earl, bishop, and stable boy in the land wants it. And now it’s sailing away, and a pox on all of you. Choke on your gold and die.

“Don’t worry,” the Grand Master of the Templars had told him weeks earlier. “This will all work. Just make sure the men and treasure get where they need to be. We move slowly, don’t let on we know, throw a bunch of parties, live large, and pretend we are best friends with Pope and king. Business as usual right up to the final days. Then the fleet sails with men and money, all the other men capable of getting to Zurich take off, and I stay here entertaining the king. The king can send his soldiers, and the Pope can send his bishops and guards, but we’ll be gone. Vanished.”

BOOK: The Templar Concordat
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