Michael Jecks - The Outlaws of Ennor

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The ship had been pushed out to sea, and as he watched, he saw the sail drop and ripple in the wind. It was a moment before the ship started to move, helped by the ranks of oars on either side. There were enough men to propel the ship and manoeuvre her for a short distance, and as he watched her, Jean knew he had been betrayed. The men he had thought his companions had deserted him and his fellows; they were doomed.

With that thought, he realised how long he had been staring. He turned just in time to see the sword that swept off his head and his arm in one long blue shimmer of steel.

Baldwin watched the body collapse. Instantly he could smell the foulness in the rotten arm, and he retreated a step.

The men about him were almost all finished. David stood at his side panting, a scratch all down his cheek, from which a pale, watery blood ran steadily. Next to him was Simon, unscathed, while before him two pirates lay, one still twitching, Baldwin saw.

It was not these men who took Baldwin’s attention, though. It was the pirate ship, which was even now heading away from the island. Once it rounded the western tip of Ennor, that would be the end of the matter, he knew. The ship could take to the open sea.

Just then, he saw a great sail above the area of St Nicholas known as St Sampson, white and massive as a cloud, and then, a few moments later, the great hull of the cog herself hove into view.

The vessel moved steadily with the wind, which was almost behind her, and she had already built up speed after passing about the western edge of St Sampson. Now she was moving with great wings of froth at the prow, her bow rising and falling gently, all her motion taking her like an arrow towards her target.

Too late the pirate ship saw the danger. The men ran about the ship, the helmsman leaning on the rudder, the sailors running up the ratlines and out on the yards, hauling on ropes from below while those above untied the reefs, trying to get a few more yards from the wind. It was no good. With a loud cracking noise, the cog drove into the flank of the pirates’ hull, the oak smashed and wrecked, and all those on the beach could hear the terrible cries of the pirates who couldn’t swim as the cog’s bows rammed on, while sailors leaped aboard from the Faucon Dieu and began to finish the butchery.

It was enough. Baldwin couldn’t watch the last of the pirates being cut down and tossed overboard like lures to attract fishes. He supposed that was all they were now, but he did not like the fact, and he also thought to himself that the idea of eating fish on these islands had grown peculiarly abhorrent.

He was about to walk away from the place when there was a familiar roar, and he saw a strange figure striding towards him with a glowering demeanour and a ferocious appearance, largely due to the dagger gripped firmly in his fist. It said much for Baldwin’s impression of Sir Charles that the streamers of kelp which trailed from his arms and legs — and the air of seedy dampness given off by his filthy and now sodden clothing — did nothing to detract from the awesome power which emanated from him.

‘Where are the castle’s men? I want Ranulph de Blancminster now! Where is the coward? May heaven witness that I intend beating him with this dagger, if he won’t meet me in equal combat!’

‘My friend,’ Baldwin said with some tiredness, ‘I think you are a little too late.’

Simon was desperate to see Hamo and make sure that the boy was all right. As soon as the last of the pirates was captured, he left the men there on the beach and ran up the lane which he thought must lead to the priory.

And then he arrived and found the pathetic corpse, and all thoughts of the murders left him. He knelt, gently picking up the lad, while his eyes fogged and the breath threatened to throttle him. There was no need to check whether he was living. The dent in his skull where a mace had struck was all too obvious, and Hamo’s eyes were almost forced from their sockets from the violence of the blow.

‘Simon?’

Baldwin had been with him all the way back from the beach, concerned about his friend, and now he saw the body in Simon’s arms.

‘It’s ironic. I’d intended to save the boy, sending him away from the developing fight, and in so doing, I sent him into the midst of a more brutal battle. In such a way might a man fail his friends. All I wanted to do was save him from the castle and the bloodshed.’

‘I am sure he knew that,’ Baldwin said. ‘Let us take him into the church.’

Simon nodded. ‘I saved his life from the boat, I thought, when I needn’t have bothered — the thing didn’t sink. Now he’s dead, poor lad, because I wanted to protect him. I couldn’t have served him worse had I intended to.’

‘That is what happens sometimes, Simon. All we can do is treat people in the best way we can. No man can tell the consequences of his actions. We must simply behave as best we can.’

Simon bent his head, eyes closed, before walking on towards the church. They laid the small body by the others which were being brought in: the gatekeeper with his hideous wounds, a young monk found in the Prior’s own room, another fellow cut down by the church’s door. The two knelt in front of the altar in prayer for a few moments. It was only a short while later that the noise of wheezing heralded the arrival of the Prior. Cryspyn nodded to them, knelt, made a hasty obeisance, glanced at the dead, and then motioned to Baldwin and Simon to join him.

Baldwin was soon finished, and stood, a hand on Simon’s back. He left Simon there, walking slowly and contemplatively towards the back where Cryspyn waited.

‘I should like to offer you both wine and food when you are ready. I wanted to thank you for your warning this morning. And your friend for his attempt to warn me about the men from Ennor, of course.’

‘That is most kind. We shall be delighted to join you,’ Baldwin said, but his attention was absorbed by Simon’s distress.

Cryspyn saw his gaze. ‘Do you think we could do anything to help him?’

‘He was truly attached to that young fellow. I heard once that a man who saves another’s life can feel more responsibility than the one who has been saved. It is a great duty. And then to lose the life saved, can make a man feel doubly guilty.’

‘Perhaps. And yet it is a greater thing than killing. Killing can be too easy,’ Cryspyn said.

Baldwin surveyed the rows of dead men with Cryspyn. ‘Yes. And too many men learn that skill too young.’

The Prior bent his head sadly. ‘I fear so. Even I once committed that gravest of sins.’

‘You?’

‘What, you didn’t realise?’ Cryspyn said. ‘You think that only the happy, well-behaved monks would be sent here? I am afraid not. Luke was not the only …’

His voice trailed away, and he winced. Baldwin thought it was at a memory, but in reality, the Prior was merely aware of a fresh twinge of pain in his belly. The acid was stirring in his stomach, and swallowing achieved nothing. It had been the same ever since he had returned to his room and encountered the fresh, sweet odour of blood and something else: the taint of sex. He had been told what had happened to young Daniel in there, and it was as though the air that had supported the men who raped and murdered him had forever stained the room.

‘Not the only?’

‘Sorry?’ Cryspyn was brought back with a start. ‘Oh. I assumed you knew about me — I thought everybody knew why I was sent here. You know Abbot Robert, after all. I was sent here after a fight about a woman. I loved her … so did another man. I killed him. That is all. But it was much at the time.’

‘Homicide is always a terrible crime, I suppose,’ Baldwin said, but without censure. He had killed enough men in his time to know that the mere killing of another was not evil — it was the reason for killing that was foul. Sometimes homicide was necessary.

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