CHAPTER 38
Night had fallen over the Crusader camp.
Guy d’Evreux wiped his greasy hands on the cloth a nervous servant was holding out to him. He drained his cup and glanced towards the Abbot of Citeaux at the head of the table to see if he was ready to rise.
He was not.
Smug and self-satisfied in his white robes, the Abbot had positioned himself between the Duke of Burgundy and the Count of Nevers. The constant jockeying for position that went on between the two and their followers had started before the Host had even left Lyon.
From the glazed look on their faces, it was clear that Arnald-Amalric was once more castigating them. Heresy, the fires of hell, the dangers of the vernacular, all subjects about which he was capable of lambasting an audience for hours.
Evreux had no respect for either of them. He thought their ambitions pathetic — a few gold coins, wine and whores, a little fighting, then home in glory having served their forty days. Only de Montfort, seated a little further down the table, seemed to be listening. His eyes burned with an unpleasant zeal matched only by the Abbot’s own fanaticism.
Evreux knew de Montfort by reputation only, even though they were near neighbours. Evreux had inherited land to the north of Chartres with good hunting. A combination of strategic marriage and repressive taxation had ensured the family’s wealth had grown steadily over the past fifty years. He had no brothers to challenge his title and no significant debts.
De Montfort’s lands were outside Paris, less than two days’ ride from Evreux’s estate. It was known de Montfort had taken the Cross at the personal request of the Duke of Burgundy, but his ambition was common knowledge, as were his piety and courage. He was a veteran of the eastern campaigns in Syria and Palestine, one of the few Crusaders who’d refused to take part in the siege of the Christian city of Zara during the Fourth Crusade to the Holy Land.
Although now in his forties, de Montfort was still as strong as an ox. Moody, introspective, he inspired extravagant loyalty in his men, but was distrusted by many of the barons who thought him devious and ambitious beyond his status. Evreux despised him, as he despised all those who proclaimed their actions as the work of God.
Evreux had taken the Cross for a single reason. As soon as he had accomplished his purpose, he would return to Chartres with the books he had been hunting half his lifetime. He had no intention of dying on the altar of other men’s beliefs.
‘What is it?’ he growled to the servant who’d appeared at his shoulder.
‘There’s a messenger come for you, my lord.’
Evreux glanced up. Where is he?’ he said sharply.
‘Waiting just outside the camp. He would not give his name.
‘From Carcassonne?’
‘He would not say, my lord.’
Bowing briefly to the top table, Evreux excused himself and slipped away, his pale face flushed. He walked quickly between the tents and animals to the glade on the eastern boundary of the camp.
At first, he could pick out only indistinct shapes in the dark between the trees. As he got closer, he recognised the man as a servant of an informer in Béziers.
‘Well?’ he said, disappointment hardening his voice.
The messenger dropped to his knees. We found their bodies in woods outside Coursan.’
His grey eyes narrowed. ‘Coursan? They were supposed to be tailing Trencavel and his men. What business had they in Coursan?’
‘I cannot say, my lord,’ he stammered.
At his glance, two more of his men appeared from behind the trees, their hands resting lightly on the hilts of their swords.
‘What was found at the site?’
‘Nothing, my lord. Surcoats, weapons, horses, even the arrows that killed them were . . . were not there. The bodies had been stripped. Everything was taken.’
‘So their identity is known?’
The servant took a step back. ‘The talk within the castellum is all of Amiel de Coursan’s bravery, not so much of who the men were. There was a girl, the daughter of Viscount Trencavel’s steward. Alaïs.’
‘She was travelling alone?’
‘I know not, my lord, but de Coursan escorted her personally to Besièrs. She was reunited with her father in the Jewish quarter. They spent some time there. In a private house.’
Evreux paused. ‘Did they indeed,’ he murmured, a smile forming on his thin lips. ‘And the name of this Jew?’
‘I was not given his name, my lord.’
Was he part of the exodus to Carcassonne?’
‘He was.’
Evreux was relieved, although he did not show it. He fingered the dagger in his belt. Who else knows of this?’
‘No one, my lord, I swear. I have told no one.’
Evreux struck without warning, plunging the knife clean into the man’s throat. Eyes alive with shock, he started to choke as his dying gasps hissed from the wound and blood, pumping red, sprayed the earth around him. The messenger dropped to his knees, clawing frantically at his throat to remove the blade, lacerating his hands, then fell forward.
For a moment, his body lay jerking violently on the stained earth, then he gave a final shudder and was still.
Evreux’s face expressed no emotion. He held out his hand, palm up, waiting for one of his soldiers to return his dagger. He wiped it on the corner of the dead man’s tunic and returned it to its sheath.
‘Get rid of him,’ Evreux said, prodding the body with the toe of his boot. ‘I want the Jew found. I want to know if he is still here or is already in Carcassonne. You have a physical likeness?’
The soldier nodded.
‘Good. Unless there is news from there, do not disturb me again tonight.’