Read The Tournament of Blood Online
Authors: Michael Jecks
THE TOURNAMENT OF BLOOD
Also by Michael Jecks
The Leper’s Return
Squire Throwleigh’s Heir
Belladonna at Belstone
The Traitor of St. Giles
The Boy Bishop’s Glovemaker
The Sticklepath Strangler
The Devil’s Acolyte
The Oath
King’s Gold
Templar’s Acre
City of Fiends
First published in 2001 by Headline Books Publishing
This edition published in Great Britain in 2013 by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
A CBS COMPANY
Copyright © 2012 by Michael Jecks
This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.
No reproduction without permission.
All rights reserved.
The right of Michael Jecks to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents
Act, 1988.
Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
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Simon & Schuster Australia, Sydney
Simon & Schuster India, New Delhi
A CIP catalogue copy for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-47112-627-7
eBook ISBN: 978-1-47112-628-4
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual people, living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.
For
Katie Marjorie Bond Jecks,
with all a father’s love.
Aketon | A long-sleeved garment, of fustian or similar thick cloth, often padded with wool and sewn like a quilt, which was worn over the shirt but beneath |
À outrance | Fighting under conditions of war. In a tournament this meant using weapons of war: sharp sword, sharp lance, dagger and all other equipment |
À plaisance | Fighting for show or entertainment. When demonstrating their speed and prowess, knights often used bated, or blunted, weapons to reduce the danger |
Banneret | A knight who was entitled to command other knights and men-at-arms under his own banner; also a title of knighthood conferred by the King for |
Béhourd | This was a limited |
Ber frois | The grandstands built to accommodate ladies, nobles and the wealthier classes. They would have surrounded the main fighting area, forming an |
Coat armour | Over the |
Collée | This was the term given to the light blow from the hand, according to the |
Commencailles | The initial stage of a |
Course | One run through the |
Cuir Bouilli | Leather boiled, shaped and hardened to form a solid, but light covering, used to protect both men and horses. |
Diseur | Just as with any sport, rules were invented and must be monitored by professional judges. These referees were called |
À l’estoc | Literally ‘at the point’ of a sword. |
Gypon | See |
Harbinger | The members of a household sent on before the Lord’s arrival in a new location to prepare the way for him, ensuring that rooms were |
Hastilude | Literally ‘spear-play’ from the Latin |
Hauberk | The name given to the coat of mail worn over the |
Heralds | Heralds |
Heraldry | As warfare and the |
Joust | Generally this meant single combat on horse or on foot. Commonly in this period, a |
Lists | Once the |
Mêlée | Also called a |
Misericorde | Literally ‘compassion’ or ‘mercy’, this name applied to small shelves for monks to rest on and save their legs during long |
Pair of plates | The name given to the stout armour worn over the |
Tenant | Occasionally a knight wishing to prove his prowess and strength would issue a challenge to all-comers, promising to fight whomsoever took up his |
Tilt | To prevent horses running into each other while charging, a rope was sometimes slung between two posts, a cloth draped over it, and the horses |
Venant | A man who answered a |
Vespers | Although this commonly meant the sixth canonical service (now called Evensong), |
Sir Baldwin de Furnshill | Once a Knight Templar, Sir Baldwin has returned to his old home in Devon and is Keeper of the King’s Peace. He’s known to be an astute |
Lady Jeanne | His wife, to whom he has been married only a year. Jeanne is a widow whose first husband treated her cruelly, and now she is learning to enjoy |
Edgar | Baldwin’s servant and trusted steward. Edgar was Baldwin’s Sergeant when he was a Knight Templar and is, like his master, a highly |
Simon Puttock | The Bailiff of Lydford is the Stannary Bailiff, responsible for law and order on Dartmoor under Abbot Champeaux, the Warden of the Stannaries. |
Sir Roger de Gidleigh | Exeter’s Coroner and for some months a friend of Sir Baldwin. |
Margaret Puttock (Meg) | Simon’s wife, daughter of a local farmer, whom he married many years before. |
Edith | Simon and Margaret’s daughter, nearly fourteen years old. |
Hugh | Hugh has been Simon and Margaret’s servant for many years. Although the previous year he left them to marry, he has now rejoined them. |
Lady Alice | The teenaged daughter of a neighbour of Sir John’s, orphaned when she was a small child and subsequently taken by Sir John as his ward. |
Squire Andrew | Sir Edmund’s squire is a battle-hardened older man with the quick reflexes of a professional man-at-arms. |
Sir Peregrine of Barnstaple | Lord Hugh’s loyal servant. This banneret is as keen as his lord to see how skilled Lord Hugh’s host, his army, is. |
Sir Walter Basset | Known for his violence in tournaments, Sir Walter of Cornwall is quick to anger and never forgets an insult. In great debt to money-lenders, he is |
Lady Helen | Sir Walter’s beautiful and loyal wife. |
Wymond Carpenter | Master-builder and craftsman, Wymond has worked alongside Hal for several years. Morose, and truculent with it, Wymond is disliked by his workers |
Lord Hugh de Courtenay | This nobleman has decided to patronise a tournament, in order to assess the skills and loyalty of his vassals in the wake of the Battle of |
Sir John de Crukerne | A knight from West Dorset who is attending the tournament with his son. He is Lady Alice’s legal guardian. |
Squire William | Sir John’s son, whom Sir John would like to see engaged to Alice and who is expecting to be knighted at the tournament. |
Benjamin Dudenay | A usurer, Benjamin has often helped knights who need to raise money, either to pay ransoms or to buy arms and armour. He also helps men like Lord |
Squire Geoffrey | Alice’s lover who, like William, anticipates being knighted at the tournament. |
Sir Edmund of Gloucester | This wandering knight is without a lord since Boroughbridge and wishes to impress Lord Hugh with his prowess in the lists. |
Helewisia | Alice’s maid, a servant from Sir John’s household. |
Herald Odo | A herald who has returned to England after some years in France and Germany learning new songs and a little about the Continental approach to |
Sir Richard Prouse | Grievously wounded many years before in another tournament, Sir Richard is bitter about his hideous scars and disabilities. |
Hal Sachevyll | A renowned architect of the buildings involved in a tournament, Hal also considers himself an expert on the pageantry associated with these |
Mark Tyler | Lord Hugh has one herald who remains with him and who bears the title ‘King Herald’ of his household. Mark is a middle-aged man, |