CHAPTER 46
Simeon glanced up at the sky. Grey clouds jostled for position, obscuring the sun. He had journeyed some distance from the Cite already, but wanted to get back to his lodgings before the storm hit.
Once he reached the outskirts of the woods that separated the plains outside Carcassonne from the river, he slowed his pace. He was out of breath, too old to travel so far on foot. He leaned heavily against his staff and loosened the neck of his robe. It was not so far now. Esther would have a meal waiting for him, perhaps a little wine. The thought restored him. Perhaps Bertrand was right? Perhaps it would be over by spring.
Simeon did not notice the two men who stepped out behind him on the path. He was not aware of the raised arm, the club coming down on his head, until he felt the blow and the darkness took him.
By the time Pelletier arrived at the Porte Narbonnaise, a crowd had already formed.
‘Let me through,’ he shouted, pushing everyone out of his way until he reached the front. A man was slumped on all fours on the ground. Blood was flowing from a cut on his forehead.
Two men-at-arms towered above him, their pikes pointed at his neck. The man was evidently a musician. His tabor was punctured and his pipe had been snapped in two and tossed aside, like bones at a feast.
‘What in the name of Sant-Foy is going on?’ Pelletier demanded. ‘What is this man’s offence?’
‘He did not stop when ordered to do so,’ the older of the soldiers replied. His face was a patchwork of scars and old wounds. ‘He has no authorisation.’
Pelletier crouched down beside the musician.
‘I am Bertrand Pelletier, Intendant to the Viscount. What is your business in Carcassona?’
The man’s eyes flickered open. ‘Intendant Pelletier?’ he murmured, clutching Pelletier’s arm.
‘It is I. Speak, friend.’
‘Besièrs es presa,’ Béziers is taken.
Close by, a woman stifled a cry and clasped her hand to her mouth.
Shocked to his core, Pelletier found himself on his feet again.
‘You,’ he commanded, ‘fetch reinforcements to relieve you here and help get this man to the Chateau. If he does not regain his speech through your ill treatment, it will be the worse for you.’ Pelletier spun to the crowd. ‘Mind my words well,’ he shouted. ‘No citizen is to speak of what you have witnessed here. We will know soon enough the truth of the matter.’
When they reached the Chateau Comtal, Pelletier ordered the musician to be taken to the kitchens to have his wounds dressed, while he went immediately to inform Viscount Trencavel. Some little time later, fortified by sweet wine and honey, the musician was brought to the donjon.
He was pale but in command of himself. Fearing the man’s legs would not hold him, Pelletier ordered a stool to be fetched so he could give his testimony sitting down.
‘Tell us your name, amic,’ he said.
‘Pierre du Murviel, Messire.’
Viscount Trencavel sat in the middle, his allies around him in a semi-circle.
‘Benvenguda, Pierre du Murviel,’ he said. ‘You have news for us.’
Sitting bolt upright with his hands on his knees, his face as white as milk, he cleared his throat and began to talk. He had been born in Béziers, although he had spent the past few years in the courts of Navarre and Aragon. He was a musician, having learned his trade from Raimon de Mirval himself, the finest troubadour of the Midi. It was on the strength of this that he’d received an invitation from the Suzerain of Béziers. Seeing an opportunity to visit his family again, he’d accepted and returned home.
His voice was so quiet that the listeners had to strain to hear what he was saying. ‘Tell us of Besièrs,’ said Trencavel. ‘Leave no detail unspoken.’
‘The French army arrived at the walls the day before the Feast Day of Santa Maria Magdalena and pitched camp along the left bank of the river Orb. Closest to the river were the pilgrims and mercenaries, beggars and unfortunates, a tattered rabble of men, bare-footed and wearing only breeches and shirts. Further away, the colours of the barons and the churchmen flew above their pavilions in a mass of green and gold and red. They built flagpoles and felled trees for enclosures for their animals.’
‘Who was sent to parley?’
‘The Bishop of Besièrs, Renaud de Montpeyroux.’
‘It is said he is a traitor, Messire,’ said Pelletier, leaning over and whispering in his ear, ‘that he has already taken the Cross.’
‘Bishop Montpeyroux returned with a list of supposed heretics drawn up by the Papal Legates. I don’t know how many were set down on the parchment, Messire, but hundreds certainly. The names of some of the most influential, most wealthy, most noble citizens of Besièrs were written there, as well as followers of the new church and those who were accused of being Bons Chrétiens. If the Consuls would hand over the heretics, then Besièrs would be spared. If not . . .’ He left the words hanging.
What answer gave the consuls?’ said Pelletier. It was the first indication of whether or not the alliance would hold against the French.
‘That they would rather be drowned in the salt sea’s brine than surrender or betray their fellow citizens.’
Trencavel gave the slightest sigh.
‘The Bishop withdrew from the city, taking with him a small number of Catholic priests. The commander of our garrison, Bernard de Servian, began to organise the defences.’
He stopped and swallowed hard. Even Congost, bent over his parchment, stopped and looked up.
‘The morning of July the twenty-second dawned quietly enough. It was hot, even at first light. A handful of Crusaders, camp followers, not even soldiers, went to the river, immediately below the fortifications to the south of the city. They were observed from the walls. Insults were traded. One of the routiers walked on to the bridge, swaggering, swearing. It so inflamed our young men on the walls, they armed themselves with spears, clubs, even a makeshift drum and banner. Determined to teach the French a lesson, they threw open the gate and charged down the slope before anyone knew what was happening, shouting at the tops of their voices, and attacked the man. It was over in moments. They threw the routier’s dead body off the bridge into the river.’
Pelletier glanced at Viscount Trencavel. His face was white.
‘From the walls, the townspeople screamed at the boys to come back, but they were too dizzied with confidence to listen. The noise of the brawl drew the attention of the captain of the mercenaries, the Roi as his men call him. Seeing the gate standing open, he gave the order to attack. At last the youths realised the danger, but it was too late. The routiers slaughtered them where they stood. The few that made it back tried to secure the gate, but the routiers were too quick, too well armed. They forced their way through and held it open.
‘Within moments, French soldiers were hammering at the walls, armed with picks and mattocks and scaling ladders. Bernard de Servian did his best to defend the ramparts and hold the keep, but everything happened too quickly. The mercenaries held the gate.
‘Once the Crusaders were inside, the massacre began. There were bodies everywhere, dead and mutilated; we were in blood knee-deep. Children were cut from their mothers’ arms and skewered on the points of pikes and swords. Heads were severed from limbs and mounted on the walls for the crows to pick clean, so it seemed that a line of bloody gargoyles, fashioned from flesh and bone, not stone, gaped down on our defeat. They butchered all who they came upon, without regard to age or sex.’
Viscount Trencavel could remain silent no longer. ‘But how came it that the Legates or the French barons did not stop this carnage? Did they not know of it?’
Du Murviel raised his head. ‘They knew, Messire.’
‘But a massacre of innocent people goes against all honour, all convention in war,’ said Pierre-Roger de Cabaret.
‘I cannot believe that the Abbot of Citeaux, for all his zeal and hatred of heresy, would sanction the slaughter of Christian women and children, in a state of sin?’
‘It is said that the Abbot was asked how he should tell the good Catholics from the heretics: “Tuez-les tous. Dieu reconnâitra les siens”,’ said du Murviel in a hollow voice. “‘Kill them all. God will recognise his own.” Or so it is rumoured that he spoke.’
Trencavel and de Cabaret exchanged glances.
‘Go on,’ ordered Pelletier grimly. ‘Finish your story.’
‘The great bells of Besièrs were ringing the alarum. Women and children crowded into the Church of Sant-Jude and the Church of Santa Maria Magdalena in the upper town, thousands of people crammed inside like animals in a pen. The Catholic priests vested themselves and sang the Requiem, but the Crusaders broke down the door and slaughtered them all.’
His voice faltered. ‘In the space of a few brief hours, our entire city had been turned into a charnel house. The looting started. All our fine houses were stripped bare by greed and barbarity. Only now did the French barons, through greed not conscience, seek to control the routiers. They, in turn, were furious to be deprived of the spoils they had earned, so set the town alight so none could benefit. The wooden dwellings of the slums went up like a tinder-box. The roof timbers of the cathedral caught light and collapsed, trapping all those sheltering inside. So fierce were the flames, the cathedral cracked down the middle.’
‘Tell me this, amic. How many survive?’ said the Viscount.
The musician dropped his head. ‘None, Messire. Save those few of us who escaped the city. Otherwise, all are dead.’
‘Twenty thousand slaughtered in the space of a single morning,’ Raymond-Roger muttered in horror. ‘How can this be?’
Nobody answered. There were no words equal to the task.
Trencavel raised his head and looked down at the musicians.
‘You have seen sights that no man should see, Pierre du Murviel. You have shown great bravery and courage in bringing this news to us. Carcassona is in your debt and I will see you are well rewarded.’ He paused. ‘Before you take your leave, I would ask you one further question. Did my uncle, Raymond, Count of Toulouse, take part in the sack of the city?’
‘I do not believe so, Messire. It was rumoured he remained in the French camp.’
Trencavel glanced at Pelletier. ‘That, at least, is something.’
‘And as you travelled to Carcassona, did you pass anyone on the road?’ Pelletier asked. ‘Has the news of this massacre spread?’
‘I know not, Messire. I stayed away from the main routes, following the old passes through the gorges of Lagrasse. But I saw no soldiers.’
Viscount Trencavel looked to his consuls in case they had questions to ask, but no one spoke.
‘Very well,’ he said, turning back to the musician. ‘You may take your leave. Once more, our thanks.’
As soon as du Murviel had been led away, Trencavel turned to Pelletier.
Why have we received no word? It beggars belief we should not have heard whisperings at least. Four days have passed since the massacre.’
‘If du Murviel’s tale is true, then who is left to carry the news?’ said de Cabaret grimly.
‘Even so,’ said Trencavel, dismissing the comment with a wave of his hand. ‘Send out fresh riders immediately, as many as we can spare. We must know if the Host remains yet at Besièrs or already marches east. Their victory will give speed to their progress.’
Everyone bowed as he stood up.
‘Command the consuls to publish this ill news throughout the Ciutat. I go to the capèla Sant-Maria. Send my wife to me there.’
Pelletier felt as if his legs were encased in armour as he climbed the stairs to the living quarters. There seemed to be something around his chest, a band or a ligature, stopping him from breathing freely.
Alaïs was waiting for him at the door.
‘You have brought the book?’ she said eagerly. The look on his face stopped her in her tracks. ‘What is it? Has something happened?’
‘I have not been to Sant-Nasari, Filha. There has been news.’ Pelletier sat heavily down in a chair.
‘What manner of news?’ He heard the dread in her voice.
‘Besiers has fallen,’ he said. ‘Three, four days ago. None survive.
Alaïs stumbled to the bench. ‘All dead?’ she said, horrorstruck. Women and children also?’
We stand now on the very edge of perdition,’ he said. ‘If they are capable of visiting such atrocities on innocent. . .’
She sat down beside him. ‘What will happen now?’ she said.
For the first time he could remember, Pelletier heard fear in his daughter’s voice. We can only wait and see,’ he said.
He sensed rather than heard her draw breath.
‘But this makes no difference to what we agreed,’ she said carefully. ‘You will allow me to take the Trilogy to safety.’
‘The situation has changed.’
A look of fierce determination came over her. With respect, Paire, there is even more reason to let us go. If we don‘t, the books will be trapped within the Ciutat. That cannot be what you want.’ She paused. He made no answer. ‘After everything you and Simeon and Esclarmonde have sacrificed, all the years of hiding, keeping the books safe, only to fail at the last.’
‘What happened in Besièrs will not happen here,’ he said firmly. ‘Carcassona can withstand siege. It will withstand. The books will be safer kept here.’
Alaïs stretched across the table and took his hand.
‘I beseech you, do not go back on your word.’
‘Arèst, Alaïs,’ he said sharply. We do not know where the army is. Already, the tragedy that has befallen Besièrs is old news. Several days have passed since these events took place, even though they are fresh to us. An advance guard might already be within striking distance of the Ciutat. If I let you go, I would be signing your death warrant.’
‘But — ’
‘I forbid it. It is too dangerous.’
‘I am prepared to take the risk.’
‘No, Alaïs,’ he shouted, fear fuelling his temper. ‘I will not sacrifice you. The duty is mine, not yours.’
‘Then come with me,’ she cried. ‘Tonight. Let’s take the books and go, now, while still there is the chance.’
‘It is too dangerous,’ he repeated stubbornly.
‘Do you think I do not know that? Yes, it may be that our journey will end at the point of a French sword. But surely it is better to die in the trying, than let fear of what may come to pass take our courage from us?’
To her surprise, frustration also, he smiled. ‘Your spirit does you credit, Filha,’ he said, although he sounded defeated. ‘But the books stay within the Ciutat.’
Alaïs stared at him aghast, then turned and ran out of the room.