Lord of War: Black Angel (41 page)

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Authors: Kathryn le Veque

BOOK: Lord of War: Black Angel
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The messenger was taken aback. “Sully, my lady.”

“You will take me there, Sully,” she commanded.  Already, she was on the move. “Annabeth, Bridget, you will remain here.  I must go to my husband.”

They were all following her out of the room, protests seeping from their lips. “My lady!” Annabeth gasped. “You cannot go! You are putting yourself in terrible danger!”

Ellowyn turned to her. “I understand,” she said patiently, “but Brandt is in danger. Mayhap he is even dying. Please do not ask me how I know this, but I do. I swear that I do. You must let me go to him.”

Annabeth’s mouth popped open in horror and she turned to Bridget for support.  Bridget was deeply concerned.

“My lady, please,” she begged. “It is pure madness to want to go to Poitiers now.  There is death and battle everywhere. You will be killed!”

Ellowyn shook her head. “I will not be killed,” she assured her. “Please understand me; I must go to my husband and I will risk my life to do it.  If anyone gets in my way, I will run them down and if anyone tries to stop me, I will kill them.  I must go to my husband
now
.”

Annabeth was in tears at this point.  They were all following her out into the entry hall, voices of reason pleading with a very determined lady.  It was chaotic as the servants took up the call and shouts of the duke’s death began to fly.  No one understood why Lady de Russe was so agitated but there could only be one explanation.

There was one voice, however, that was not pleading with Ellowyn to reconsider.  Rosalind had followed her out into the entry along with the group, listening to the protests.

“My lady,” she said. “I know that area well. My mother had relatives near Chavigney and we would travel there often. I will go with you and help you find my father.”

Above the objections, Ellowyn gazed into Rosalind’s face, seeing that she was indeed sincere.  She was also showing her father’s strength, something that impressed Ellowyn.  She knew she should deny her but it was difficult.

“I appreciate your offer, but Sully will escort me,” she said. “You cannot put yourself in such danger.”

Rosalind cocked her head and Ellowyn could see Brandt in that gesture. “I know the area better than he does,” she said. “If you are looking for my father, I will be able to help you find him better than a messenger.  I know every possible place to look, and I will know where to hide. You must take me.”

Ellowyn gazed steadily at the young woman. There was truth in what she said, but still, she shook her head.

“I cannot be responsible for your life,” she said softly. “I can only be responsible for mine.”

“You will not be responsible for me,” Rosalind insisted. “I alone am responsible for my life and for my actions, and everyone in this room is witness. You will not be blamed if something happens to me because I am going with or without your permission.”

Margarethe tried to talk to her sister but Rosalind gently pushed her away.  Her focus was on Ellowyn as the woman locked gazes with her.  It was evident that Ellowyn was very reluctant but she did not want to argue with Rosalind. Much like Brandt, the woman was evidently resolute and stubborn.  They could all see that trait.  Finally, Ellowyn nodded her head.

“Very well,” she said. “But we travel light and fast. In this weather, there is no telling how long it will take us to get there. Days if not weeks.”

Rosalind nodded firmly. “I will be ready.”

As Ellowyn continued to look at the young woman, she began to feel a bond with her, a common goal. Moreover, the woman was of Brandt’s blood. Ellowyn would love anything born from Brandt.  Rosalind was brave and determined much as her father was.

“Foolishness!” Mme. Simpelace cried. “Stupidity! You must not go!”

Ellowyn turned to the old chatelaine. “I
will
go,” she said, jaw ticking. “If you will not help me, then get out of my way.”

Mme. Simpelace seemed to go through the throes of fainting without actually accomplishing the act. She was distraught, as were they all, but there was no changing the course that Ellowyn and Rosalind were about to take.

They went their separate ways to prepare for the journey, both women with people trailing after them begging them not to go, but they were determined.  Eventually, those same people gave up the battle and began to help.  There was no discouraging the inevitable.

With a purpose, with resolve and bravery bred from a love for her husband that ran deeper than the earth itself, Ellowyn was mounted and ready to ride only a few hours later.  Astride a leggy warm blood stallion, she was dressed in peasant clothing disguised as a male just as Rosalind was.  It was determined that would be the safest way to travel.

With six armed soldiers from the contingent guarding Melesse and with Sully in the lead, Lady de Russe and Lady Rosalind thundered from Chateau Melesse, heading south into the fiery jaws of death and destruction.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT

 

20 September 1356

Near the woods of Nouaillè

 

 

Ellowyn on the edge of a meadow, looking at a massive castle in the distance, partially obscured by sheets of driving rain. In spite of the weather, smoke rose in ribbons over the damaged battlements.

Overhead, the sky was the color of pewter with fat, angry clouds, but upon earth, the field was flooded from the unforgiving rain that had been falling for days, perhaps weeks, mayhap even months. It was difficult to know.  It seemed as if it had been raining forever.

A great battle had concluded the day before upon the field and there was a sea of bodies strewn about, like pieces of driftwood upon an endless muddy sea.  Ellowyn’s heart was in her throat as she observed the scene, her breathing coming in panicked little gasps.  Something was here for her, something she loved so desperately that she couldn’t think of anything else.  Even though she couldn’t see Brandt, she knew he was here.

“Sweet Jesus,” Rosalind breathed at the sight. “Is this possible?”

Ellowyn couldn’t even speak. Her eyes were drinking in the horror that she had seen in her mind’s eye before.  Everything was as it should be down to the color of the sky.  The castle towards the northeast was heavily damaged, the top of the walls nearly sheared off from the projectiles flung at it.  With the rain and the debris, it gave the illusion that it was melting.

Melting….

Ellowyn fought down the panic.  She handed her reins over to the nearest soldier. It didn’t matter that she was exhausted from over a week of travel in horrible weather and still recovering from birthing a child.  All that mattered was that she locate her husband. She knew was out here, somewhere.  She had to find him.

“One of you stay with the horses,” she ordered in a trembling voice. “The rest of you fan out and look for the duke’s men.  Find them!”

The soldier holding Elloywn’s horse was designated to stay behind.  He collected everyone’s reins as the small group began to descend into the pit of hell where men were dead or dying, and a sea of mud was slowly swallowing everything up.  Rain, buckets of it, was falling and no matter how tightly Ellowyn pulled close the oiled cloak around her shoulders, she was still wet. She had been wet for days. But that did not deter her. Brandt was here and she had to find him.

She thought back to that terrible dream. She had found him lying beneath a tree.
A tree
. She began to look around frantically for something that seemed recognizable to her, but the landscape was slightly out of place from what her dream had conveyed.  Rosalind was next to her, peering at the dead and dying to see if she recognized Brandt’s colors and, indeed, she came across several dead men bearing Brandt’s standard.  There seemed to be quite a lot of them. Rosalind eventually turned to Ellowyn in confusion and horror.

“So many of my father’s men are lying here,” she hissed. “What does it all mean?”

Ellowyn was struggling to remain calm. God help her, she was.  “It means that they were the bravest,” she said hoarsely. “It means that they were the first into battle and fought the hardest.”

She trudged off with Rosalind hanging on to her and together the two of them slugged through the mud as Ellowyn tried to get her bearings, struggling to separate the dream from reality, looking for her husband with such desperation that her stomach was in horrific knots.  Twice they had to pause as she dry-heaved, riddle with nerves, but nothing would deter her. She had to find him.

“My lady!” Rosalind hissed, tugging at her and pointing off to the right. “Is that not one of the duke’s knights?”

Ellowyn was electrified with the possibility, straining to see through the rain at what Rosalind was indicating.  She began to move in that direction even though she couldn’t clearly see, but soon enough, a big man bearing the Duke of Exeter’s tunic. 

Ellowyn broke into a run, sliding over the slippery mud, getting stuck in it at other times. It was like a nightmare, the ground as it tried to suck her down and prevent her from getting to her husband. As she drew closer to the knight, she could see who it was.

“Stefan!” she screamed. “
Stefan!”

Le Bec had been tasked with assessing the duke’s dead.  He was looking down at group of infantry that had been brutally slaughtered when he heard his name. It as a woman’s voice and he thought that, quite possibly, he was going mad.  But his head came up, seeking the sources of the shout.  He could see two small peasants struggling towards him through the mud, but one peasant’s hood came free and he recognized Lady de Russe immediately.  He went into a panic.

“My lady!” he called, struggling towards her just as she was struggling towards him. “Here, my lady, here!”

“Stefan!” Ellowyn called again.

They came together near a pile of dead French infantry.  Stefan reached out to grab her.

“My lady!” he gasped. “What on earth are you doing here?”

“Stefan,” Ellowyn breathed, holding on to him for dear life. “Where is my husband?”

Stefan just looked at her, his pale and worn features tightening. “Oh… my lady,” he sighed.  “Why have you come? Who was stupid enough to let you come to this place of  death?”

Ellowyn was very aware that he had not answered her question.  Struggling to keep her terror at a manageable level, she fixed him in the eye.

“I will ask you one more time,” she said, sounding stronger. “Where is my husband? You will tell me now and you will not delay.”

Stefan stared at her.  Then, his eyes filled with tears; both Ellowyn and Rosalind could see it.

“He is this way,” he said hoarsely. “I will take you.”

Ellowyn clung to him as he led her out of the mud, moving away from the castle and the horrific dead.  In fact, both Ellowyn and Rosalind were trying not to look down at the many dead at their feet, but it was difficult considering how bad the footing was. They had to look down to make sure they didn’t stop on anything.  There were men without heads, without limbs, without faces.  Ellowyn thought it was even worse than the dream.

“Tell me what has happened,” she begged softly.

Stefan had a good grip on her as he pulled her carefully with him. “We met the armies of Jean yesterday,” he said quietly. “I will omit the most of the tactical details but in spite of being heavily outnumbered by the French, it was a decisive English victory. The Black Angel was once again victorious.”

Ellowyn listened carefully. “Why do I see so many de Russe men among the dead?”

Stefan sighed faintly. “Because we were charged with splitting the French forces in two,” he said. “We accomplished a great strategic victory that allowed the Prince of Wales to gain the upper hand.  It was very, very costly, however; we lost Dylan in the fight and Magnus was badly injured.”

They had come to the end of the sea of mud and stood on more solid ground. Ellowyn gained her footing as she digested Stefan’s words.  As they stood on firmer soil, she turned to the exhausted knight.

“Dylan is dead?” she asked.

Stefan nodded, his lower lip trembling. “Aye.”

Ellowyn was deeply and wholly saddened.  She closed her eyes at the thought of the brave, efficient knight now counted among the dead.

“Dear God,” she breathed. “Poor Dylan. Poor Annabeth! How badly is Magnus injured?”

“He lost an eye but the physic believes he will recover.”

“Thank God for small mercies,” she whispered. “And my husband?”

Stefan wouldn’t look her in the eye.  He began to pull her with him. “I am sorry to say that he was badly injured as well.”

Ellowyn’s knees buckled and it took both Stefan and Rosalind to steady her.  Her calm demeanor shattered, Ellowyn began to gasp, struggling not to scream or weep.  She had to keep her head.

“Take me to him now,” she gasped. “
Now
, Stefan.”

He was already on the move, half-carrying her, half-dragging her.  Even though Ellowyn had known what the answer would be, still, it was a shock to hear the truth. Her dream had forewarned her of this moment but she found she was wholly unprepared. 
He has been badly injured
.  The reality of it was too great.

There was a collection of hastily pitched tents off to the west and Stefan took her in that direction.  With the wind blowing and the rain pouring, they moved swiftly through the elements, making way to the large Exeter tent that Ellowyn had become so familiar with during her travels with Brandt.  She recognized it immediately.

Breaking free from Stefan, she ran as fast as her shaking legs would carry her and plunged into the de Russe tent.  Once inside, she nearly crashed into one of several men standing inside the tent.  Recoiling from the strange man, she looked around in a blind panic through the sea of unfamiliar faces until she came to one she recognized.  It was Alex de Lara. As she rushed to him, she realized that he was kneeling on the floor next to a supine body.  That body happened to be Brandt’s.

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