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Authors: Conn Iggulden

BOOK: Margaret of Anjou
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York looked around him, understanding at last the confusion and utter panic in the king’s followers. He caught a glimpse of Salisbury on his right, still on horseback, making hard work of the fighting against Percy forces. He too was inching his way to the same spot as best he could.

More arrows whirred overhead and York saw one of them crack and shatter into splinters on the stone ground, not far from where the king was being tended. He looked back at Edward in time to see him flinch and duck. York could only admire the courage of the physician coolly wrapping bandages around the king’s throat while Henry pawed weakly at him.

Henry looked up as York’s shadow fell across his face. His eyes widened and he shook his head, recoiling from the surgeon’s touch. Scruton swore softly, seeing the bandages redden again, unaware of the duke or anything else as he fought to save the king’s life. Henry’s head sagged, his eyes showing white as he lost consciousness. For a long moment York could only stare, standing with his sword drawn and held uselessly. All around them, York sensed the fighting intensify between the soldiers in Percy colors and Salisbury’s men, with some of Warwick’s redcoats caught up in the fray. York made a decision, turning to his banner knights. Whatever he had expected or hoped for that day, it was not this.

“Take the king to the abbey, to sanctuary. Guard him well on the hallowed ground, in peril of your lives and good names. Edward? You’ll go with them.”

It was York himself who reached out to touch the surgeon Scruton on the shoulder, interrupting the man at his work.

“Stand back from the king, sir. You may accompany him to the abbey, but he must be moved from this place.”

Scruton looked up for the first time and froze in fear at the sight of York in full armor, standing before him. The surgeon had known the day was going badly for the king’s forces, but seeing the man responsible for it all standing with a drawn sword at his side reduced him to stammering shock.

“He must not, cannot be . . . my lord, he cannot be moved.”

“No. He must be. Stand aside and let my men take him to safety. I will not be denied, sir. I will not see my king trampled by men running berserk in these streets.”

Scruton stood, wiping bloody hands on his apron as he gathered tools and strips of linen back into his bag. One of York’s knights gripped Henry under the arms and another took his feet, bearing him back from the center of the chaos and shouting all around them. The king groaned, near senseless and too weak to respond. York called two more of his captains and a dozen burly soldiers to accompany the king, giving orders to kill anyone who stood in their way, regardless of colors or loyalties. His orders would prevail over all others, he made sure of it. Most importantly, his son would be kept safe. The king’s surgeon found his nerve and fell in behind as the small group took Henry from the fight, heading toward the abbey. York watched his son go until the men were lost behind the still-heaving mass of soldiers.

Salisbury had either dismounted or had his horse killed under him. The earl had fought his way to the same spot of bloody cobbles and torn canvas and was panting hard, flushed and sweating. Sir John Neville stood to guard his father’s back, gazing out at anyone who might try to take Salisbury unawares.

“Where is the king?” Salisbury demanded.

York turned to him, raising his visor to reply.

“I had him taken to the abbey. He was sorely wounded, but I have him now, alive.” Realization of their victory surged in him, filling his chest. “I will have the horns blown and call a truce. There is nothing to fight for now.”

“No!” Salisbury snapped. “You will
not
. There is work for me to finish before I’m done. On our friendship, make a promise to me. You’ll not blow your horns, Richard. Percy and Egremont live. My ending lies ahead.”

York narrowed his eyes at the aggression in both father and son.

“The battle is over,” York said firmly. “Didn’t you hear me say we have the king?” As the head of the Neville family gave no reply, York pointed at his chest. “You gave an oath to follow me, Salisbury.”

He saw a spasm of strain pass across the older man’s face. His son John began to speak, but York glanced coldly at him.

“Close your mouth, boy.”

Furious, Sir John Neville looked away.

“My oath holds,” Salisbury said stiffly, irritated at his son’s humiliation as well as the reminder of his honor. “Give me but an hour. That is all. If I cannot bring the dogs to heel by then, I’ll blow the horns myself. My word on it.”

“An hour, then. I will tell my heralds,” York said, choosing not to press the matter further.

Salisbury turned to watch the course of the fighting going on around the marketplace and York stood still to watch him, seeing further and more clearly than he had before. The fate of the house of York, even the fate of the king, had never been Salisbury’s concern. York considered those of his men who waited on his command all around.

“Force a path to the abbey,” he told them. “God grant Henry lives yet, that I may speak to my king.”

C
HAPTER
16

A
s York left the marketplace, Salisbury took command, bellowing orders to attack the Percy soldiers. Both Earl Percy and Lord Egremont had been forced further down St. Peter’s Street in a running action, away from the failed stand at the marketplace. Salisbury could see the banner of Somerset close by the same group, before the man holding it was killed and it vanished underfoot. Soldiers in red coats pressed them cruelly and some steady part of Salisbury’s mind noted the usefulness of the colors they wore, when all other banners had been broken or trampled.

With a weary breath, he clapped his son John on the shoulder.

“Stay close to me,” he said.

In formation, the Neville soldiers pushed after them. Salisbury could feel his years in every step, but the weakness of his flesh was held at bay by the chance to settle his feud once and for all. York and the king had been taken from the center. The battle then was between Neville and Percy, with the Neville forces two or three times the number of his enemies.

Salisbury and his son marched down St. Peter’s Street after them, in time to see Somerset and his guards smash their way into a pub. A hundred yards further on, Warwick was pressing against the Percy faction, giving them no space to breathe or plan. Yet Somerset had trapped himself and Salisbury saw a chance to put York in his debt. He halted in his rush, gathering men around the broken door of the inn and sending more round to the back of the building so there could be no escape. There was darkness and silence inside and no one was in a hurry to rush on to the swords and axes of those waiting for them.

“A pouch of gold to a knight, a knighthood to a common man,” Salisbury announced to the ranks of soldiers around him. “Whoever brings down Somerset will choose his own reward.”

It was enough to sway the undecided and they rushed the door, four of them pressing through. Salisbury waited as grunting sounds followed, with the clash of metal on armor. More of his men went in and the thumps and cries of pain grew louder, as Salisbury bit his lip in irritation. He wanted to move on, to see the Percy men cut down.

“Quickly, then! More of you!” he snapped.

As he spoke, a figure came out of the door and a hush fell in the street. Somerset’s armor was red with blood, running freely from the oiled surfaces so that he dripped as he stood there on the threshold. He was breathing hard, but when he saw Salisbury, he raised a heavy ax in both hands, his eyes lighting up. There was no sign of those who had gone in against him, nor any of his own guards.

Somerset was alone.

“Neville!” Somerset called, taking a step out into the light. He seemed to have no care for the armed men on all sides. “Traitor, Neville!” he roared.

One of Salisbury’s knights rushed in and Somerset spun to meet him, chopping the ax into the man’s neck with appalling force before he could land a blow.

“Come to me then, Neville!” Somerset yelled, his voice hoarse. “Come, traitor!”

There was something terrible about the bloody duke as he stood there and beckoned them all in. The mob of soldiers stood in superstitious awe, simply staring. Salisbury braced himself to be attacked as Somerset came further out into the street. Another burly yeoman took two quick steps and crashed a sword against Somerset’s side, hammering a great dent into the armored plate and making the man gasp. The return blow sank Somerset’s ax upward into the man’s ribs, cutting his mail so that a dozen rings spilled to the cobbles with a sound like dropped coins. The yeoman soldier collapsed onto his face and Somerset raised his ax again with a huge effort. As he brought it down into the man’s back, he clipped the pub’s swinging sign. Salisbury saw Somerset look up as he wrestled the ax blade free of bone.

The pub’s name was The Castle and a crude picture of a fortress tower had been painted gray on black. All the blood drained from Somerset’s face as he saw it and he closed his eyes for an instant, strength and rage vanishing to leave him empty.

Salisbury made a sharp gesture and two knights ran in, smashing their swords against the knee joints of Somerset’s armor. He cried out as he dropped, a long sound that was cut off as a third man brought an ax down onto his neck, chopping through metal and flesh beneath.

For an instant, no one moved and half the men there expected Somerset to rise again. They had seen a king’s duke killed and the shock of that rippled through them. More than a few crossed themselves, looking to Salisbury for his reaction.

“That one for York,” Salisbury said. “Turn now for Percy. Then we are done.”

Leaving the body behind, Salisbury and his son John walked on along St. Peter’s Street to join Warwick. Salisbury’s men followed in silence, each one looking down at the bloody corpse of the king’s counselor as they passed.

The dwindling forces with Warwick had harried the enemy every step from the marketplace, struggling against Earl Percy’s most determined soldiers as they bore their noble master away. There was no quarter or respite given on either side, but Warwick’s numbers were fewer and only the narrowness of the street prevented them being flanked and overwhelmed. By the time his father caught up with him, Warwick had Earl Percy and Baron Egremont backed hard against another inn, the Cross Keys. A side road lay just beyond and Warwick’s men fought to reach Percy before the fight could widen and offer him a chance of escape.

Warwick looked back in fear at the sound of marching feet, then breathed in relief as he saw the eagles, crosses, and red diamonds on the shields of his father’s knights. He caught sight of his brother John and the younger Neville nodded to him, a moment of private satisfaction in the chaos of the day. They faced the men who had attacked John’s wedding and Warwick dipped his head, acknowledging his brother’s right.

Salisbury had brought two or three hundred of his best men along the street, leaving the rest of the fighting factions to secure the town on their own. Horns sounded somewhere further away, but Salisbury ignored them, shouting fresh orders as they joined Warwick’s redcoats and pressed through them to reach the enemy.

Facing this new rush of soldiers, Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, was exhausted. He had been forced to retreat along the main road, attacked again and again. His helmet had been knocked from his head and his white hair swung in rat’s tails, wet with perspiration. Gray in the face, he looked as if he could barely lift the sword he held in both hands. He and his son Thomas stood in the second rank of Percy men, resplendent in blue and yellow. The head of the Percy house would have fallen long before if it had not been for a small and wiry man in mail who carried a dagger like a needle point. Trunning allowed no man to close on his master without darting in and stabbing through an eye-slot or a joint with appalling accuracy. He was responsible for half a dozen bodies on the street already, and Warwick would have given his back teeth for just one of the archers he had left behind in his rush to the marketplace.

As the Percy forces retreated once more, the side road opened on their left flank. Warwick heard Earl Percy call to his soldiers that they faced those who had killed the king. He blanched at hearing that. The old man’s words gave new strength to those around him, so that they pushed back and won a few yards for themselves. Fresh blood ran from armored knights and spattered onto the cold street.

Warwick could only watch as his father’s men shoved pikes past shields, jabbing and piercing until the blades came back red, then plunging in again. He could see Earl Percy arguing with Egremont, the older man pushing his son away and pointing down the open road. Egremont was red in the face, unwilling to leave as his father embraced him and shoved him roughly away.

Salisbury came up, panting hard as he reached his son’s shoulder.

“King Henry is only wounded, though he may die yet,” he said. “You’ve done well. It was your breaking through the town that brought this ending here today. No other man.”

“Where is York?” Warwick asked, never taking his eyes off Percy and Egremont. The two men seemed almost unaware of the battle around them as Percy pointed once again down the open street. Some of the earl’s guards bowed their heads as they were given orders to accompany the Percy son. The boldest of them took Thomas, Lord Egremont, by the arms and walked him backward, though he fought their grip and called to his father. The old man turned his back on his son, once again facing the Neville lines. Warwick cursed softly under his breath. He might have imagined it, but Earl Percy seemed to catch his eye and raise his head as he did so, wearing an expression of bitter pride.

“York has gone to the abbey, no doubt to weep or pray over the king,” Salisbury said. “It doesn’t matter. Our business is here.” He took a massive breath, filling his lungs to blast his orders. “Bring them down! Cry ‘Salisbury!’ Cry ‘Warwick!’ Cry
‘Neville!’
And kill them all.”

The fighting intensified, aided by the loss of the Percy soldiers who had gone with Egremont. Warwick saw the small man with the needle dagger dart between two struggling knights, finding a space as if he knew exactly how they would turn. The Percy swordmaster slid between fighting men like a shadow, feinting left and passing a second rank as a soldier swung the wrong way. In just a heartbeat, he was through and facing them. Trunning lunged at Salisbury, but both Warwick and John Neville had seen the threat. They met his strike with outstretched swords and Trunning was pierced through. Even then, he grinned through bloody teeth at them, reaching out to jam his narrow dagger into John Neville’s shoulder joint. John cried out in agony as the man worked the blade, laughing as a stream of blood slid out across the polished metal. Warwick withdrew his sword with a jerk and cut into Trunning’s neck, letting him fall.

Salisbury howled in triumph as he saw Earl Percy tumble down in a crash of armor. One of the old man’s guards stood over his fallen form, using sword and shield with great skill to hold back the Neville soldiers. The nameless knight moved well, his strength seemingly unending. Yet he could not take a step away from his master. Wherever he turned and killed, another would strike until an axeman smashed his knee with a huge swing, so that he too fell to be broken underfoot.

The Percy forces were cut away from the old man, so that Warwick and Salisbury reached him. Earl Percy still lived, though his lips were tinged in blue. With a groan, the old man pushed himself up to a sitting position, braced on his locked elbows.

“John! Here!” Salisbury commanded.

His son’s arm had gone limp, the muscle cut through in his shoulder. He had pulled out Trunning’s dagger with his left hand. He was white with pain, but his eyes were fierce as he stood before his enemy.

“My dying does not make you less of a traitor,” Earl Percy said, wheezing audibly. The words and the old man’s gaze were aimed at Salisbury.

John Neville only shook his head. With the dagger still wet with his own blood, he reached out and speared the flesh under the old man’s chin. Earl Percy stiffened, giving out a growling, hissing cry of agony. His head was forced up with the blade as it pushed through his mouth. Watery blood spurted as John pulled it out and slashed it across the throat. The three Nevilles watched the earl fall onto his side, his eyes dulling as his mouth still worked to speak with no sound.

“Where is Egremont?” Salisbury said to his sons.

Warwick pointed down the open road where they could see a group of knights moving swiftly away. Horns were blowing again in the distance, and Salisbury’s mouth and jaw tightened at the sound. He had given his word to York and in the aftermath of violence he could feel exhaustion creeping over him. Salisbury turned to his son John and rested his hand on the younger man’s shoulder.

“This is our victory, John. Egremont can’t run so far that we can’t catch up with him. It’s done. Today is done.”

“Let me take a hundred, on his heels,” John Neville replied.

For an instant, he thought his father might allow it, but the earl’s head was dipping in weariness, not lack of will.

“No. Obey me. You’ll have your chance again.”

The earl filled his lungs, his gaze still on the body of his oldest enemy.

“Enough!” Salisbury shouted. On his left, some men still fought on both sides and he could hear York’s horns blowing a third time in the distance. His hour was up and he had his vengeance. “Blow horns who has them. Enough, I said. Put your swords away. No man need die now, after this. If you would live, put up your swords.”

Panting, bloody men heard him and gave in to the desperate hope that it could all stop, that they might survive the day. For as far as Salisbury’s voice carried, soldiers stood apart from the fray, and then further, as Neville captains repeated his orders and more horns sounded across the town, until the blare and shouts for peace could be heard in every street and every home.


R
ICHARD OF
Y
ORK WALKED
ACROSS
wide flagstones to the massive outer doors of the abbey. He could hear the tumult still going on behind him, the crash and shouting of thousands of men struggling to kill each other, yet crammed so tight in the roads they hardly had room to swing a sword. He looked back as a great roar sounded, but he could not guess the cause. Salisbury’s words troubled him, casting the previous months in a different light. York’s aim had always been to strip the whisperers away from King Henry’s side before his house was destroyed by them. He saw that Salisbury’s intention had been to break Percy, before all other considerations. It seemed their path had been the same, with both men carried to St. Albans. York shook his head, trying to twitch away worry and indecision. He was tired and hungry, but King Henry lay within the abbey that stood so tall before him. He did not know even if the king lived.

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