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William Napier: The Great Siege

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William Napier The Great Siege

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In perfect unison, the fair one had also drawn his sword from his scabbard once again, and was holding the gleaming steel point an unwavering hair’s breadth from Crake’s thin white throat.

‘I say again,’ he said pleasantly, ‘that the boys should be let go.’

Without further discussion, Blackbeard kicked his horse forward over the fallen constable, touching not a hair of his head. He slipped the point of his sword flat between the ropes and the boys’ wrists. One false move and such a blade would have opened a red flood from their veins. But not this swordsman. A sharp twist and the rope was cut, then the next. The boys dropped and staggered back from the cart, shaking their numb hands gingerly. It was their backs that burned with pain.

Blackbeard speared their shirts in the carts with his swordpoint and tossed them over.

‘You,’ said the fairhead to Crake. ‘Strip.’

‘You will not live to see another-’

The swordpoint pricked his throat as delicately as a needle. ‘I said strip. And let’s have no idle threats to accompany your disrobing.’

Eyes black with hatred, Crake removed his cloak and his doublet.

‘More. Much more.’

He removed his shirt and then his linen undershirt and showed his white body. Some women tittered, some looked away.

‘Still more. As bare as a beggar on the heath.’

Eventually the shivering Justice was reduced to nothing but his underwhittles. Only the swordpoint at his throat prevented him from speaking his mind, coursing with direst promises.

The boys got up behind the riders, Nicholas behind Edward Stanley, Hodge behind Smith.

‘This is going to hurt you,’ murmured Stanley over his shoulder. ‘But we need to shift. Hold on.’ Nicholas gritted his teeth.

Stanley’s voice rang out once more. ‘Good people! You have a worm for a Justice. A white and trembling worm. Her Majesty’s representative? Her Majesty deserves better. You should petition her in such terms. Meanwhile, you will see us no more. Our business is elsewhere.’

He and Smith pulled their giant horses around, and the crowd parted before them like the Red Sea before Moses.

8

They cantered out of town, the heavy horses needing whipping over the hard streets, the boys trembling with pain at the jolting. They crossed a wild range of rocky hills and put many miles between them and the town, finding cover in woodland before Stanley pulled up.

‘Tell me,’ he said as they sat on the sweating horse. ‘How the devil did you become vagabonds? Nicholas Ingoldsby is a proud-sounding name for a beggar. I thought such kind had simple peasant names as Jack by the Hedge, or Bedlam Bill.’

Nicholas slipped off the horse’s rump.

‘Hey!’

Nicholas looked up. ‘My father is dead.’

Stanley stared at him, and then dismounted more slowly. He had feared this, the moment he saw it was the young Ingoldsby tied at the cart’s end.

‘When?’

‘The day after you left our house. Crake came — that Justice there. With armed men. There was a struggle and my father was killed by the kick of a rearing horse. I was responsible.’

‘You?’

Nicholas could not speak.

Blackbeard rode into the glade nearby. He seemed to have heard every word from far off.

‘You gave command for the horse to kick out, did you?’ he growled.

Nicholas glared up at him.

‘Well then. You were not responsible.’ He dismounted, jerking his head at Hodge to do likewise. ‘It was in the hands of God.’

‘He speaks the truth,’ said Stanley more gently. ‘Do not punish yourself. As for your father, though I am damnably sorry for it — he is in a better place. Bitter loss though it is to the Order.’

Suddenly, to his shame, tears were coursing down Nicholas’s grimy cheeks.

‘He was the bravest of knights,’ said Stanley, and laid his hand on the boy’s shaking shoulder.

Nicholas felt a wretched weakling, weeping before them. But the fairhaired knight murmured, ‘It takes a man of heart to weep, and a man of wit to know a matter worthy of weeping. I’ve seen a man weep over losing at dice — which was not so worthy. You are your father’s son.’

He glanced around the glade. ‘We wait here till nightfall. Get some sleep. We ride all night.’

‘Cuts first,’ said Blackbeard. ‘Get in the stream over there.’

Hodge and Nicholas found the stream at the edge of the wood, shallow with leafmould, but knelt beside it and washed as best they could. After only one night they already had the sour staleness of prison on their skins — besides weeks of vagabondage. Their single cuts were deep and tender even to a splash of cold water. Thirty such cuts and they would surely have bled to death.

They came back freezing cold, pulling their ragged shirts on.

‘Not yet,’ said Blackbeard.

He pulled a battered flask from his leather pannier and turned them around.

‘I don’t need to warn you this will hurt.’

Whatever he poured from the flask went down their cuts like flame. Nicholas’s ears sang with the pain of it. But they made no noise. A chaffinch sang happily overhead. The sky was blue and clean. The only evil in the world was the evil of men.

The knights gave them their bread and cheese and their blankets and they lay down gingerly on their sides. Blackbeard made them sleep on their backs.

‘It’ll seal the wound quicker.’

Voice already thickening with sleep, Nicholas asked, ‘What was in that flask?’

Blackbeard spoke through a mouthful of bread. ‘Finest French brandy and a good pinch of gunpowder.’

Gunpowder?

Blackbeard grinned. ‘Gunpowder has more uses than blowing heads off Turks.’

When Nicholas awoke it was dark. Hodge still snored beneath his blanket, exhausted by all this travel in foreign parts.

A fire burned low in a shallow pit, and Stanley was turning two leverets on a spit. Blackbeard was quickly skinning a third, and then the mother hare. She was paunched and gutted, her legs and head cut off and skin pulled free and all buried in half a minute.

Stanley questioned Nicholas quietly. Where was his father buried? What was the cause of Crake’s enmity? He could answer neither question, except to say that Crake was a Puritan. But there was more to it than that.

Where were his sisters?

Nicholas told him, and Stanley brooded.

‘This will weigh on you. The responsibility of it. But they will be cared for well enough. One day, in time, you will return.’

‘I mean to.’

‘And where do you and your man make for meanwhile? Are there uncles, cousins?’

‘There are,’ said Nicholas, ‘but none will want to take in the children of a traitor.’

‘Your father was no traitor, and such would be hard to prove before a court.’

Nicholas shrugged. ‘I’d not burden any distant kin, nonetheless. We make for Bristol.’

‘Bristol?’

Nicholas looked at him steadily. ‘To take ship for Malta.’

Slow, uncomforting smiles spread over Smith and Stanley’s faces.

‘Malta?’

‘Malta of the Knights,’ said Nicholas.

‘Well.’ Smith tore off a large chunk from the hare’s thigh and chewed it slowly, savouring this childish fantasy as much as the sweet spring meat.

‘Malta, you say. And how exactly do you propose, you and your steadfast manservant here, to pay for your passage to Malta? Do you imagine Bristol shipmen have charitable hearts? And once at Malta — I presume you’re not going there to grow pomegranates, but to wage noble war upon the Turk — how do you propose to arm yourself? Do you have any idea of how much armour costs? A sword? Or perhaps you’re taking your catapult — the terror of all the sparrows in Shropshire?’

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