33


The Mediterranean Sea, May 1149

Alienor gazed at the sun-sparkle on the sea as the Sicilian galley ploughed white furrows through the deep sapphire water. A stiff breeze filled the sails and they were making swift headway towards their intended destination of Calabria. The cook was frying freshly caught sardines on deck and preparing to serve them with hot flatbread flavoured with garlic and thyme.

By narrowing her eyes, Alienor could make out the other vessels in the French fleet. Louis’s ship was naturally the largest, and flew a blue and gold fleur-de-lis pennant from the top of the mast. Her own vessel, bearing both the fleur-de-lis and the eagle of Aquitaine, was smaller but she was glad not to be sailing with Louis. Being in his company was like having a stone in her shoe.

They had been at sea for four days and it would be another fortnight before they reached Calabria, ruled by their ally King Roger of Sicily. And then from Calabria to Rome and the blessed relief of annulment.

The cook slid the sardines on to a platter and added a sprinkle of herbs. A squire presented the dish to Alienor and she had just taken the first, delicious bite when they heard a shout from one of the other vessels and horns sounding across the water.

She hastily chewed and swallowed. ‘What is it?’

The crew began shouting to each other and hastened to trim the sails, seeking to gain more speed. The cook took a jug of water and doused his fire. ‘Greeks, madam,’ he said tersely.

Filled with alarm, Alienor set her food aside. The Greeks were at war with the Sicilians, and since Louis had declared himself Sicily’s ally and their ships belonged to King Roger, they were open targets. Emperor Manuel Komnenos had promised a reward should any captain take the King and Queen of France hostage and bring them to him in Constantinople.

Alienor stepped aside as the crew hauled on the sail. They were on the outer edge of the convoy and, despite the efforts of the sailors, they were being left behind except for one other vessel. The others, rather than turning to fight, were breaking out the oars and running for all they were worth.

Tight-lipped she watched the enemy bearing down on them. The newcomers had more oars and were closing the gap so swiftly that there was nothing to be done. The Greek ships shone with bronze cladding at their prows, formed into the shape of elongated animal snouts. When primed, the tube at the end of the snout would blaze out deadly Greek fire.

‘I would rather throw myself overboard than go back to Constantinople,’ Alienor said to Saldebreuil, who was standing beside her, his hand on his sword hilt.

‘Madam, it will not come to that. Help will come.’

‘It had better.’ Briefly she put her face in her hands. Once again she was powerless because she could do nothing to avert what was happening.

The Greeks soon overhauled their smaller galley, forcing them to surrender. The Greek shipmaster was delighted at his prize and although he treated Alienor with deference, she could sense his smug satisfaction as he ‘welcomed’ them aboard his own vessel.

‘The King of France will make you pay for this,’ she said. She felt like a hissing cat cornered by a large dog.

He was highly amused when her words were translated to him. ‘Oh no,’ he said with a grin. ‘He will pay me!’ And patted the coin pouch at his hip to make his meaning clear.

Alienor retired to the deck shelter provided for their use. Some of the crew from her galley were taken prisoner and locked in irons. Others were left on board their own ship with the mast removed and all oars but six thrown overboard. Saldebreuil’s sword was confiscated; however he had managed to conceal a short dagger down the side of his boot.

Alienor’s possessions were treated as booty by the Greek captain. A beautiful ivory-cased mirror and comb that Melisande had given her disappeared into his baggage, as did a crimson silk dalmatic embroidered with golden eagles.

‘Sons of whores,’ Saldebreuil muttered. ‘I will slit their throats while they are sleeping.’

‘You will do no such thing!’ Alienor hissed. ‘You would be caught and we would all suffer. I cannot afford to lose you on top of everything else. Mark who takes what so we can retrieve it later.’

‘I will geld the one who has my sword,’ Saldebreuil said, his dark eyes gleaming.

They were sitting in a morose huddle when another shout went up and suddenly the Greeks were hoisting sails and running to their oar benches. The ship shuddered as the rowers began to pull, propelling her forward in long sweeps, gaining momentum with each surge. Alienor stood up and shaded her eyes. They were being pursued and even as the Greeks had caught her galley with ease, so they in their turn were being overhauled.

Saldebreuil stood up beside her. ‘Well, here’s an interesting pass,’ he said. ‘The big fish swallows the little fish, and then the whales swallow all.’

She looked up at him. ‘Do we want to be swallowed by a whale?’

‘Yes if it’s a Sicilian one.’ He narrowed his gaze and said softly, ‘Twenty biremes of a hundred oars apiece, and they’ll be carrying Greek fire. This ship only has sixty oars and the men have already fought once today. They’ll be on us before sunset.’

The Greek captain had Alienor’s knights put in fetters and chained to the sides of the ship, and set a soldier to guard their group. ‘What a unique experience to tell my grandchildren, should I live long enough to beget their father,’ Saldebreuil said, rattling his iron bracelet. ‘Does it become me, madam?’

‘Be quiet, you fool,’ she snapped.

‘It doesn’t then.’ His smile flashed. ‘I must needs be rid of this jewellery swiftly in that case.’

Alienor met his gaze and then glanced the slight bulge at the top of his boot.

The Sicilian biremes caught the Greek ships as the sun began to sink towards the horizon. An evening wind had got up, making the waters choppy, and clouds were chasing in from behind their pursuers, threatening a summer storm. Their ship, unable to outrun her pursuers, turned to fight. Alienor pressed her lips together as the Greek galley wallowed on the water. The crew at the bows was preparing the Greek fire to spew out of the bronze snout at their enemy and Alienor inhaled an alien smell: oily, greasy, chest-squeezing.

The two groups of ships closed on each other and spouts of flame roared from the brass tubes. Amid a chaos of bellowed orders, ships tacked frantically to avoid being hosed by deadly fountains of fire. Sails turned to blazing rags of red and gold, matching the sky. Men became living torches and leaped into the sea, where still they burned as the unquenchable Greek fire spread over the water like a fallen sunset.

Grapnel ropes clawed the wale of their ship and the crew sped to repel boarders with swords, clubs and axes. Saldebreuil delved to his boot, seized the knife and in a swift motion plunged it into the thigh of the soldier watching over them. As the man screamed and fell, Saldebreuil dragged him down, withdrew the knife and finished him. Then he used the man’s axe to strike through the fetter chain and stood in front of Alienor to defend her, although in the event it proved unnecessary. The battle between the Greeks and the Sicilians was bloody and brutal, but over swiftly.

Once more Alienor changed ships as the remnants of the Greek flotilla were either scuppered or taken into Sicilian hands. All that remained of the light was a dull red streak on the horizon, and numerous small fires on the water like fallen stars, illuminating bodies and flotsam.

The Sicilian captain, a solidly built olive-skinned man of middle years, escorted Alienor and her entourage to the deck shelter at the stern of the boat with deference. ‘We have been chasing these wolves for several days, madam,’ he said, ‘and looking out for your fleet.’

‘A pity you did not find us a few hours earlier,’ Alienor replied, ‘but I thank you nonetheless.’ She saw him looking expectantly at the items of baggage his men had transferred from the Greek ship. ‘Of course you must be rewarded.’ It was better to give them something than have her possessions rifled through yet again, and better too to keep the crew on good terms. But they were all pirates of one kind or another, and she still felt as if she had been captured all over again.

The captain bowed to her with a flourish. ‘Madam, to serve the Queen of France is enough, but I accept your generous offer.’

Alienor raised her brows. She had not said she was going to be generous.

It was full dark by now and the increasing wind caused the ship to buck like a frisky horse. She heard the sailors shouting to each other as they secured the vessel against the worsening weather and she swallowed a laugh. To have gone through all this only to succumb to a storm at sea would be the greatest irony.

Louis stood on the headland looking out to sea on a calm glittering day in late spring. The Sicilian sun was hot on the back of his neck, and the breeze was pungent with the smell of thyme and salt. ‘I do not know if she is alive or dead,’ he said to Thierry de Galeran. ‘No word comes, and it has been many weeks. If she had been captured by the Greeks, then I would have heard by now. They would have sent me gloating letters.’ He bit his thumbnail, which was already down to the quick.

‘Then that is obviously not her fate, sire,’ said de Galeran.

Louis grimaced. ‘I dreamed last night that she came to me in drowned robes, all glistening with weed, and she accused me of her murder.’

Thierry curled his lips. ‘It was but a nightmare, sire. You should pray to God for succour and peace.’

‘I should have turned back for her when the Greeks attacked.’

‘Would she have turned back for you?’ Thierry asked.

‘That is not the point,’ Louis said impatiently. ‘As we stand now, we do not know her fate. If I truly knew that dream was a portent and she is dead and drowned, I could mourn her and remarry the moment I return to France, and govern Aquitaine on behalf of our daughter. Instead there is silence, and what do I do about that? How much longer do I wait?’

The Templar laid his hand on Louis’s shoulder, his gesture sympathetic, intimate and controlling. ‘You should make arrangements to leave and if the Queen has not returned by the time you are prepared, then you must consider her lost.’

Louis pressed his lips together. Although at times he hated her, there were moments when his feelings from the early days broke through to trouble him. He needed to sever the ties, but when it came to the cut, he could not do it. And if that cut was to be her death at sea, he would bear the guilt to his own grave, no matter what Thierry said.

Alienor opened her eyes to a room glowing with rich and subtle colour. The bed was solid and firm. It didn’t sway with the waves; there was no roar of water against the hull, no flap of sail or rub of oars in their ports. Instead there was birdsong, the hushed murmur of servants and peace. Facing her bed was a mural of spotted leopards wearing superior expressions, their perambulations interspersed by date palms and bushy orange trees.

Slowly she remembered that she was safe in the Sicilian port of Palermo having finally made landfall last night. Severe weather had blown the bireme off course. Having survived two storms that had hurled them far to the south, they had repaired their damage at Malta and sailed for Sicily, only to be battered by another storm and involved in more skirmishing with the Greeks. By the time the ship dropped anchor in Palermo, Alienor had been at sea for more than a month.

The whisper of servants grew louder. The door opened and Marchisa tiptoed in, bearing a tray laden with bread, honey and wine. Alienor was not hungry. Indeed, she felt wretched. The period at sea had been a holding point, a time in limbo when she had not had to respond to anything but the simplest of needs. Now she had to take up the reins again, and it was an effort to do so.

She forced herself to eat and drink, and then donned the loose silk robe that was brought for her to wear. Palermo was the dominion of Roger of Sicily, one of the most powerful monarchs in the Christian world. Roger himself was elsewhere in his kingdom, but his son William welcomed her: a handsome, dark-eyed youth of eighteen, who showed her round the palaces and gardens with pride and courtesy.

The latter were drenched with the intense perfume of the roses that blossomed everywhere, deep crimson, their stamens tipped with powdered gold. Peacocks trailed the paths, their tails like iridescent brooms, their breasts sequinned with sea colours. Butterflies, dark and soft as purple shadows, lit among the blooms.

‘I will have our gardeners give you some roses to take back to France,’ William offered gallantly. ‘Have you seen these with cream stripes?’

Alienor found a smile for him, although it was difficult. While she appreciated the wonders, her feelings had become disconnected and she had seen so much that was similar, that it all seemed the same. ‘That is kind of you,’ she said. ‘They will look well in the garden at Poitiers.’

A servant was waiting for them as they reached the garden entrance and immediately knelt to her and the young Prince. ‘Sire, there is news from your father, difficult news.’ The servant’s gaze flickered to Alienor as he presented a scroll to his lord.

William broke the seal, read what was written, and turned to Alienor. ‘Madam, perhaps you should sit down,’ he said, gesturing to a carved bench near the wall.

She stared at him. Dear God, Louis was dead, she thought. She did as he suggested. Roses overhung the seat, heavy and red, their perfume filling each breath she took.

A frown clouded William’s smooth brow. ‘Madam,’ he said gently, ‘I grieve to tell you that Raymond, Prince of Antioch, has been killed in battle against the Saracens.’

Alienor continued to stare at him. The smell of the roses intensified and the air grew so thick that she could barely breathe, and what air she did inhale was drenched with the syrupy sweet scent of flowers on the edge of corruption.

‘Madam?’

She felt his hand on her shoulder, but it was a flimsy anchor. ‘How did he die?’ she asked in a constricted voice.

‘It was honourably, madam. His men were camping in the open; they were surrounded by Saracens and attacked. Your uncle could have fled and saved his life, but he chose to remain with his men.’

Alienor swallowed. There was bile in her throat. Her uncle was not a fool in matters of warfare; there was more to it than that: either he had been betrayed by his supposed allies – which was commonplace enough – or perhaps he no longer wanted to live as a wounded lion beset on all sides. Better a swift death than lingering in a net being drawn ever tighter. The latter thought was so painful that she doubled over, clutching her midriff.

Alarmed, the young man called for her women, but when they arrived Alienor fended them off. ‘I will never forgive him,’ she said vehemently to Marchisa, ‘never as long as I live.’

‘Forgive who, madam?’

‘Louis,’ Alienor said. ‘If he had agreed to march on Aleppo and aided my uncle as he should, this would not have happened. I hold him and his advisers accountable for my uncle’s … murder. There is no other word for it.’

Alienor rested in Palermo for three weeks before travelling by gradual stages to Potenza where Louis waited for her. She would rather not have seen or spoken to him ever again, but since they had to make a joint petition for annulment in Rome, she had no choice but to go to him. Doing so made her feel physically ill and when Louis embraced her, declaring how relieved he was to see her, it was all she could do not to push him away in public.

‘My only relief in all this is that we can go on together to Rome and have this marriage annulled,’ she said, her jaw clenched. ‘You shall force me no further.’

Louis looked hurt. ‘I barely slept for my worry over what had happened to you.’

Alienor raised a cynical eyebrow. She did not doubt his words, but she doubted his sleeplessness had been caused by concern for her. For himself perhaps … To one side of Louis, Thierry de Galeran was doing his best not to curl his top lip and not quite succeeding.

‘By all means let us hear what the Pope has to say,’ Louis said. ‘We must be ruled by God’s holy law.’ He took her arm to lead her to a couch and commanded a servant to pour wine into a rock-crystal cup.

Thierry remained standing behind Louis. ‘We were all deeply sorry and shocked to learn of the death of the Prince of Antioch,’ he said in his smooth, cold voice. ‘We heard he fought bravely, even if he brought death upon himself by his folly.’

Alienor felt as if Thierry was twisting the knife. She could sense the hatred emanating from beneath his cool, urbane exterior, but hers was a match for it. ‘Had we kept our promise to help him, he would not have been put in that position,’ she said. ‘I hold you responsible.’

‘Me? Ah, come now, madam.’ Thierry bowed and gave a supercilious half-smile. ‘I did not send him out into the desert to make camp in the open; that was entirely his own choice and a poor commander’s decision.’

‘As were your own at Damascus. Had you marched on Aleppo, my uncle would be alive now.’

‘Alienor, you know nothing of the business of war,’ Louis warned.

‘And you do? All I have ever seen of you and warfare is one disaster after another as you are led by the nose by your so-called advisers. I do not have to be a man to know strategy. You left my uncle no choice. His blood is on your hands.’

Louis flushed under her scathing assault. Thierry recoiled as if he had been struck by a snake. ‘Forgive me,’ he said. ‘Your uncle did have a choice and he made the wrong one and it cost him his head. I understand the emir Shukira struck it from his shoulders and had it embalmed and borne in a silver casket to the Caliph of Baghdad as a trophy.’

Alienor sprang to her feet and dashed her wine in Thierry’s face. ‘You misbegotten whoreson! Get out, get out now! How dare you!’

Thierry gave her a look that flashed daggers. ‘I am sorry, madam, I thought you knew all of the circumstances.’

‘Then there was no need to tell me now except to gloat.’

‘Leave us, Thierry,’ Louis said. ‘Go and wipe your face.’

De Galeran compressed his lips, bowed to Louis, narrowed his eyes at Alienor, and left the room, his great cloak sweeping behind him.

‘Why do you keep him by you?’ Alienor was shaking. ‘He poisons everything he touches. You let him whisper in your ear; he slept in your tent and in your bed all the time we were travelling on crusade while you barred me from ever entering.’

‘He cares for my welfare in ways you could not begin to understand,’ Louis said, and there was an almost bleak note in his voice.

‘Indeed that is true,’ Alienor said bitterly. ‘And he makes you less of a king because of it, and even less of a husband. With his advice you made the decision to go to war against Damascus and you let others pay the cost. All that you lost was the final shreds of your reputation as a leader of men. They will remember my uncle as a hero; they will remember you as a weakling under the sway of others who pulled you in all directions and warped your spirit out of true. And I shall never forgive you for the decisions you made that led to his death. Never, for as long as I live.’

‘Madam, enough.’ Louis set his shoulders. ‘You wonder why I barred you from my tent – then look no further than your behaviour. I thought I might find you in a mood for conciliation after all we have endured on our journeys, but that is plainly not the case.’

‘Why should you think that?’ Suddenly she was weary – exhausted with the futility of it all. ‘Neither of us has changed. I have no wish to continue this conversation. I am going to pray for my uncle’s soul, that it may find peace. There will be none for me.’

She left him standing in the chamber, clenching and unclenching his fists. Thierry was standing by the door waiting to go back in to Louis. He had wiped his face, but his hair was still wet at the front and she could smell the wine on him. She was afraid of him and hated him at the same time.

‘You deserve no mercy for what you have done,’ she said in a shaking voice. ‘God sees all and you will be judged.’

He bowed to her with a cynical flourish. ‘As shall we all. I do not fear His judgement when all I have done is to protect my king and serve my God.’

‘Truly you are sick in mind and deed,’ she said.

He gave her a look filled with venom. ‘Believe what you will, madam. I know what God tells me about the Serpent and the Whore of Babylon. I am the one with the King’s ear. What power do you have?’ He entered Louis’s chamber and closed the door behind him.

Alienor clenched her fists. She was trembling with anger, shame and grief. She should not have had to hear about her uncle from Thierry’s lips and forever have it associated with the Templar’s gloating. She should not be standing out here while Louis and Thierry were closeted together. But then perhaps if Thierry did not deserve mercy, he and Louis certainly deserved each other – and she deserved better.

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