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Authors: The Outlaw Knight

Elizabeth Chadwick

BOOK: Elizabeth Chadwick
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Copyright © 2013 by Elizabeth Chadwick

Cover and internal design © 2013 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

Cover design by Suzan Zucker

Cover images © CollaborationJS/acrangel-images.com; © BackyardProduction/Istockphoto.com; © mammuth/istockphoto.com

Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious and used fictitiously. Apart from well-known historical figures, any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

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Originally published in 2000 in Great Britain by Little, Brown and Company. Published in paperback in 2001 by Warner Books. Reprinted in 2005 (twice) by Time Warner Books. Republished in 2006 by Sphere, an imprint of Little, Brown Book Group, London.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Chadwick, Elizabeth.

The outlaw knight / Elizabeth Chadwick.

pages cm

“Originally published in 2000 in Great Britain by Little, Brown and Company. Published in paperback in 2001 by Warner Books. Reprinted in 2005 (twice) by Time Warner Books. Republished in 2006 by Sphere, an imprint of Little, Brown Book Group, London.”

(pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Knights and knighthood—Fiction. 2. Great Britain—History—Medieval period, 1066-1485—Fiction. I. Title.

PR6053.H245O95 2013

823’.914—dc23

2013017031

1

The Palace of Westminster, December 1184

Although it was not much past midday, the murky winter afternoon was already yielding to dusk. The sleety rain, which had put a stop to weapons practice outside, hurled against the shutters like glass needles. Every torch and sconce was ablaze, every brazier in use. Beyond their puddles of light and warmth, in the stairwells and dark walkways of Westminster’s sprawl of buildings, a dank chill waited to envelop anyone foolish enough to step outside without a cloak.

Seated in a window embrasure of the White Hall, Fulke listened to the growl of the wind and buffed his new shield to smooth the scores and scratches sustained that morning. His father had given it to him at Martinmas when Fulke had turned fifteen, a man’s accoutrement quartered in the FitzWarin colors of indented red and white.

“Hah, sixes, I win!” cried a triumphant voice.

Raising his head from the shield Fulke glanced over at the dice game which was occupying Prince John and the other squires of Ranulf de Glanville’s retinue. Money chinked as a curly-haired squire swept a pile of coins from the trestle into the palm of his hand. Prince John, who was almost eighteen, scowled and reached into the pouch at his belt to toss more silver onto the board.

Fulke might have joined them except he had no more than a silver halfpenny to his name. Had the sport been arm wrestling he would have taken part. Unlike Madame Fortune, skill and brawn were dependable and he possessed an abundance of both.

The other lads had called him bumpkin and clod when he arrived from the Welsh Marches nine months ago. They had stolen his clothes, tripped him on the stairs, and emptied a piss-pot over him while he slept. It had taken them a week to learn the hard way that whatever Fulke received was returned twofold. They still called him bumpkin, but these days it was a nickname, a sign of acceptance into their company, if not their rank.

That he had a position in John’s retinue was by way of a favor to his father from King Henry who valued the loyalty of the FitzWarin family. Fulke knew that John would never have chosen him for a companion, and the feeling was mutual.

Fulke looked again at the dice players. John caught his eye and glowered. “In Christ’s name, stop making love to that accursed shield and bring some more wine.” He waved his empty cup at Fulke. An amethyst ring flashed on his middle finger.

“Sir.” Fulke laid his shield carefully aside, fetched the flagon from the sideboard, and approached the game.

“Fancy your chances, Bumpkin?” asked the curly-haired squire.

Fulke smiled, his flint-hazel eyes brightening. “I fancy yours more, Girard.” He nodded at the new pile of coins on the trestle. “I’ll arm wrestle you for them if you like.” Having poured the wine into John’s cup, he left the flagon for the others to help themselves.

Girard snorted. “I’m not falling for that one again!”

Fulke’s smile broadened into a grin and he flexed his forearm where rapidly developing muscle tightened the sleeve. “That’s a pity.”

Girard made a rude gesture and scooped up the dice. Fulke stayed to watch him throw a total of three and lose his winnings, then sauntered back to the window embrasure and his shield. Two padded benches sat either side of the latched shutters and between them was a gaming table on which John’s tutor, Master Glanville, had placed a heavy wooden chessboard.

Leaning on his shield, Fulke contemplated the ivory pieces with a feeling of nostalgia bordering on homesickness. He imagined his family’s manor at Lambourn: the faces of his brothers etched in firelight as they played knucklebones by the hearth; his mother sewing by the light of a sconce; he and his father playing chess in an embrasure just like this one, his father’s brow puckering as he considered his next move. Fulke knew he was gilding the image for his present comfort but, there was still an underlying truth and solidity to the picture. While not wretchedly homesick, he missed the warmth and companionship of his family. He often thought it a pity that his father’s next move had been to send him here to learn the skills of knighthood among the highest in the land.

“It is a great honor that King Henry has done our family,” Fulke le Brun had said to him last spring having returned from attendance at court. “Not only will you be tutored by Ranulf Glanville the Justiciar, but he will mingle with men of influence who may be able to help us.” Fulke could remember the flush to his father’s sallow complexion, the spark of ambition in the deep brown eyes. “Whittington could be ours again.”

“What’s Whittington?” Fulke’s youngest brother Alain had piped up. He was only four years old and unlike the older boys had yet to have the FitzWarin cause célèbre drummed into him blood and bone.

“It’s a castle and lands belonging to us,” said their mother, gathering Alain into her arms. “Your papa’s family held it in the days of the first King Henry, but then it was taken away from them during a war and never restored. Your papa has been trying to get it back for a long time.” It was a tale told in simple terms that a small child could understand, and her voice was level, omitting the antagonism and bitterness that had built and festered over the years of striving.

“Too long,” said Fulke le Brun. “Roger de Powys claims Whittington as his, but he has no right.”

“If King Henry loves you enough to make me Prince John’s attendant, why doesn’t he give you Whittington?” Fulke had wanted to know.

“It is not as simple as the King’s word,” his father had said. “Our right has to be proven in a court of law and sometimes if a matter is awkward or seen as a mere quibble, it is pushed aside for more pressing concerns. God knows I have tried. The King has made promises, but it is not as important a matter to him as it is to me.” He had looked intensely at Fulke and gripped his shoulder, man to man. “Ranulf de Glanville is well positioned to hear our plea, and he will be your tutor. Do your best for him, and he will do his best for you.”

And Fulke had done his best because it was not within his nature to shirk and he had as much pride as his father. His ability to fathom accounts had increased beyond all measure beneath the Justiciar’s instruction and he had picked up the broader points of Latin and law. What Master Glanville made of him, however, he did not know for his tutor was a solemn man in late middle age, not much given to open praise.

Fulke pushed his hair off his forehead and grimaced. He was not sure that being educated at court was a grand privilege at all. Being at Prince John’s beck and call was a nightmare. At home, Fulke was the heir to his father’s lands, cherished, sure of his status, lording it affectionately over his five brothers. Here he was of minor rank, a nobody to be used as John saw fit.

There was a sudden flurry at the dice table as Prince John shot to his feet sending the flagon that Fulke had so recently replenished crashing to the floor. “You thieving sons of whores, get out, all of you!” John gestured wildly at the door. “You’re all leeches. There’s not one of you worth a pot of piss!”

Fulke slid out of his corner and started to follow the other squires from the chamber.

“Not you, Bumpkin,” John snarled. “Get me some more wine.”

“Sir.” Expression blank, Fulke stooped to the flagon in the rushes near John’s feet. An ugly dent married its silver-gilt belly.

“You shouldn’t have left it on the table,” John said petulantly. “It’s all your fault and you can pay for a new one.”

It would have been wiser to keep quiet but Fulke refused to bow to tyranny. “That is unjust, sir.”

John eyed him through narrowed lids. “Are you arguing with me?”

Fulke stood up, the damaged flagon in his hand. “It is true that I left the flagon here when I should have replaced it on the sideboard, but I did not knock it off the table.”

John jabbed a warning forefinger. “You’ll pay and that’s an end to it. Now fetch more wine and make haste.”

Scarcely bothering to bow, Fulke strode from the room. Despite the winter chill, he was scalding with fury. “I won’t pay him a single fourthing,” he muttered as he flung into the hall beyond the chamber and marched down its length to the butler’s table at the far end.

“For Prince John,” he said woodenly to the attendant.

The butler eyed the damage with pursed disapproval. “How did this happen?”

“An accident.” Even though Fulke wanted to throttle John, honor and discretion fettered his tongue in front of others.

“That’s the third ‘accident’ this month then.” The butler set the flagon beneath a wine tun and turned the spigot. “These flagons don’t grow on trees, you know. Cost half a mark each, they do.”

Close on seven shillings, Fulke thought grimly: a week’s wages for a mounted sergeant and beyond his own reach unless he appealed to his father or spent an entire week arm wrestling for the funds.

Although John had bid him make haste, Fulke lingered over his return to the royal apartment, giving his anger time to cool. He was partially successful. By the time he banged on the door and entered with the flagon, his resentment had banked to a smolder.

John had unlatched the shutters by the chessboard and was leaning against the window splay, gazing into the stormy dusk. Darts of wind-driven sleet hurled past the embrasure. The courtyards and alleys were in darkness—no torch would remain lit in this weather—but there were glimmers and flickers of light from the occupied halls, and the watchmen had built a brazier in a sheltered corner of the ward. Further away, the windows of the great abbey glittered like dark jewels.

John turned, one fist curled around his belt, the other resting on the shutter. “You took your time.”

“There were others waiting the butler’s service, sir,” Fulke lied and poured wine into John’s cup. “Do you want me to leave now?” He tried to keep the hopeful note from his voice but knew he hadn’t succeeded when he saw John’s expression grow narrow and mean.

“No, you can stay and keep me company. You do little enough to earn your supper.” The Prince gestured to the flagon. “Pour yourself a measure. I don’t like to drink alone.”

Fulke reluctantly tilted a couple of swallows into one of the squires’ empty cups. The wind whipped the wall hangings and the candles guttered in the sconces, threatening to blow out and leave them in darkness.

“How many brothers do you have?”

Fulke blinked, unsure what to make of the Prince’s mood except to know that it was ugly. “Five, sir.”

“And what do they inherit?”

“I do not know. That is for my father to say.”

“Oh come now. You are his heir. Everything will go to you.”

Fulke shrugged. “That may be true, but none of my brothers will go wanting.”

“And you think there will be no resentment that you receive the lion’s share?”

“Not enough to cause a lasting rift between us,” Fulke said. “Even if I quarrel with my brothers on occasion, blood is still thicker than water.”

John snorted with sour amusement. “Is it indeed?”

“In my family it is.” Fulke took a mouthful of wine and knew that he was standing on perilous ground. John was the youngest of Henry’s children, born after the family inheritance had been apportioned among the other sons, none of whom was willing to give up one iota of what was theirs. John Lackland he was called, often to his face. Glancing at the wild, dark night, feeling the sting of wind-borne sleet against his skin, Fulke began to understand. And that he, in his favored position of eldest son, his inheritance secure, was being made a scapegoat. “My father says we are one body. The head cannot function without a torso or limbs. What you do to one, you do to all.”

“My father says,” John mimicked. “Christ, do you know how often you trot that out?”

Fulke flushed. “If I do it is because he speaks sense.”

“Or perhaps because you are a child who has not learned to think for himself.” John cast him a scornful look and closed the shutters on the wildness outside. The candles ceased to gutter and a sudden silence settled over the room, permeated with the smoky scent of burning wax. The Prince sat down moodily at the chessboard and fingered one of the bishops. “What do you say to a wager, Bumpkin?” John gestured to the chessboard.

“A wager?” Fulke’s heart sank.

“Defeat me at chess and I’ll let you off the price of the flagon.”

Fulke did not miss the taunting note in John’s voice. The Prince was an accomplished chess player and his skills had been honed by their tutor Master Glanville, whose incisive intelligence had led to him being appointed Justiciar. Fulke’s own skills were erratic, developed not so much from logic and instruction as enjoyment of the game and the ability to think fast on his feet.

“If you wish it, sir,” he said with resignation and sat down.

John smiled and swiveled the checkered board so that the white pieces were his. “My move first,” he said.

Fulke knew that whatever he did, he could not win. If he lost to John then he would have to find the price of the flagon. If he were victorious, John would find other, subtle, malicious ways of punishing him. The safest ploy was to lose as quickly as possible and then lather the Prince in flattery. It was what any of the other squires would do.

Fulke reached to a knight, fully intending to give John the conquest, but against the main tide of his will, a perverse cross-current altered the move, and it became an open challenge.

John narrowed his eyes. “Where did you learn that one?”

“From my father,” Fulke said to be irritating. It was strange. Now that battle was joined, he could feel the certainty and arrogance of that cross-current growing within him, becoming his true self. He was as good as John, but in a different way, that was all. If he played by John’s tactics, he would be defeated whatever the outcome. But if he played to his own rules, then he was free and damn the consequences.

John tried to maneuver him into a corner but Fulke kept his distance, making little sallies that constantly ruined John’s strategy. The Prince grew increasingly frustrated, as much by Fulke’s audacious baiting as by the fact that he was unable to pin him down. He swallowed two more cups of wine; he fiddled with his ring and tugged at the sparse growth of black beard on his chin, his expression growing stormier by the moment.

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