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Authors: Clifford Beal

BOOK: The Ravens’ Banquet
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The tent flap moved but little now, twitching lazily, for it seemed that the winds had died some, and my candle struggled but yet burned. I lay still. Again, I began the drift downwards into sleep. Then someone spoke to me. It is strange, but I did not start or jump up, for the voice was but a soft whisper in my ear. Another comrade turning in. I turned my head to the opening of the tent and saw there a figure in shadow, half-in and half-outside my shelter. It was this figure who had spoken as if leaning into my very ear. But whoever it was must be six feet away. I could, in truth, almost feel the touch of his breath on the ear itself. The wrongness of it set my skin to tingle.

The figure did not move yet I could see even in the poor light that the profile was his. And then, too, did I pick up the smell. It was a smell that had not entered our encampment before, and one distinct from the mud reek that my nostrils had grown accustomed. More a stench of mould, wood-rot and something sweet besides. The flap stirred again and I spied a worn pair of velvet breeches, stained and shorn of decoration and likewise a handsome pair of boots now covered in greenish hue. A head of long, fair hair, tangled with dead leaves and twigs was glimpsed for but a moment but long enough to shrink my bollocks.

“Samuel,” I heard myself say aloud. “Why?” I breathed, unable to move.

And the whisperer answered me. “Colonel Nells still draws my pay as a sutler’s man at muster time. He should let me go to my rest.”

I could hardly form the words to speak. “What do you want?”

“I have come to tell you something, Master Treadwell,” replied the whisperer.

There was silence for a moment, and then, his strangely distant and strangled voice came again, “You did not treat me well, sir.”

“Samuel,” I whispered, too frozen to utter anything further. But he didn’t wait to hear more of my reply.

“And I did not treat you justly, either,” said the whisperer in my ear. “I know that now. And now I must speak in Truth. I have come to tell you that the Great Wheel is about to turn again. You had better find the mettle to see it through.”

“What… what are you saying?” I asked, my voice barely a croak.

“You must seize your chance when it shows itself, Master Treadwell. For but one chance will you have... You must rise now. Steel your heart. It does all begin this night.”

And the whispers ceased. And just as Samuel was there, standing plain to see, suddenly he was not.

Then another voice sounded from outside, a voice alive.

“Treadwell, are you in there? Bestir yourself!” It was Cornet Krebs, our standard bearer.

I jumped so fast that I rolled out and fell on the wet ground, the cot spinning down on top of me and landing on my back. Krebs threw back the tent flap and entered, wheezing in the thick mist and nearly out of breath.

“For the love of the Virgin, get up! We’re beating quarters this very hour. We’re bloody running again. Back north!”

VIII
The Cornet
August 1626
The Tower
Ninth of July 1645

I
HAD NOT
heard his voice for many years, yet I knew it was he even as he climbed the steps to my cell, exchanging pleasantries with the warder. How long had he waited for such an opportunity to present itself? That he could visit his wayward brother and dangle deliverance before him like food before a starving man, that was a moment that dear William must have long dreamt of.

I did not rise to greet him as he entered. I merely set down my sheaf of papers and regarded him without emotion. He approached, but did not offer his hand. He stood over me and folded his cloak slowly before setting it upon a corner of the table.

“Brother,” he spoke, “It need not be said that our differences these many years have been deep ones. Yet believe me, sir, when I tell you that I am here to help you.”

“William,” I replied, looking up at him dressed in his black satin and pearls, “I don’t doubt that you are. It’s the price that most concerns me.” I waved my arm expansively. “As you can see, I am a man of little means nowadays.”

He shook his greying head and doffed his hat, adding it to the pile he was creating upon my only stick of furniture.

“I would ask of you nothing more than to do what is right by our family.”

I laughed a little. “Is that why you’ve taken my house and wife from me? That seems a heavy price and yet still I linger here in gaol.”

William’s cheek twitched, but I could tell he endeavoured to hold back from my taunt.

“Your wife asked for my protection, Richard. I have taken nothing from you but rather, have increased your chances of holding on to what you still possess. I’ve sent retainers down to Devon to guard the property and ensure no harm will fall when Parliament’s forces enter your lands.”

“I think your generosity will count for little. Surely I will be attaindered and lose all regardless,” I said.

“It is the chief purpose of my visit, brother, to ensure that such does not befall you. Will you hear me out?”

Many years have gone by since that tall black-haired youth bullied me before I left to go soldiering in Germany. Though the lines of age have creased his face and white tinges his beard and head, he is still just as haughty and reeks of conceit. Even so, I deigned to listen to what he had to say.

It was black news indeed. Though I have yet to hear formal charges read against me, William told me that the King’s correspondence captured at Naseby had clearly implicated me in entreaties to the prince of Denmark. That great fool Digby, the king’s secretary, in his impolitic correspondence with the King, mentioned the Danes and my own good services in attempting to convince them to come over and aid the Cause. It was more than enough to get me hanged by anyone so inclined.

“You’re to be examined a few days hence, I am told,” said my brother as if he were talking to a schoolboy. “They will take your statement from you… or a confession. It is my advice that you tell all and strive most directly to show some remorse. Explain that you were cozened – or coerced into writing those letters because of your past service to the Danish crown.

I will do my part to see that you’re offered pardon if you co-operate with the Committee of the Two Kingdoms. A full account of what you know and a denunciation of the King’s ministers will save you. You may also need to take a commission to serve Lord Fairfax.”

“A denunciation,” I said to him quietly, my rage stoking.

“It is infinitely preferable to the rope, Richard. Your wife begs that you consider this course of action to save yourself and your family’s fortune and honour.”

I pushed my chair back and grasped the table edge. “Her words amaze me not and are of the same tune she so shrilly sings in her letter to me.”

“That tender creature is possessed of wisdom beyond her years. Heed her.”

“It would solve the matter neatly, wouldn’t it?” I replied. “You finally gain mastery over the family. How many years have you been waiting for me to fall into this pit that you may pluck me out at the cost of my soul?”

William shook his head, disgust clearly spelled out on his face, and retrieved his hat and cloak.

“A week in the Tower is enough to addle any man, I confess. But mark me, time is running out for you. Think well upon what I have told you. God knows why, but I will come back to you again on the morrow if I gain more intelligence of your situation.”

And he bid me good-bye and banged on the door for the warder. I instantly felt shame for my venomous tongue but I could not bring myself to bid him goodbye as he left the cell.

I know full well of matters concerning denunciation. I carry upon my head the dark memories of one such act, committed in the fullness of my youth when Courage once deserted me. In Germany.

T
HE EVENTS THAT
followed my spectral visitor came upon me so rapidly that I scarce had time to even reflect on what I had witnessed with my own eyes. After a few hours in the saddle and a few musket balls singing over my head, blessed distractions such as these drove Samuel’s ghost from my mind. It became the easier to regard his visit as nightmare and not a warning from the grave. Battle was fast upon us, a swift tide that rolled up from behind.

As we rode out from the valley of Seesen on the twenty-sixth day of August 1626, and into the broad rising plain that led to the town of Lütter-am-Barenberge, I could not know that this two-mile-long reach of sodden pasture land would be the place of our undoing. Yet I did know, as did my comrades, that we could run no farther.

Our regiment was not the first to reach Lütter, indeed much of the Army was spread out before us just north of a stream and a tiny hamlet that lay at the edge of the plain. Behind us to our right, the mist-shrouded Harz mountains rose up slowly, thick with pine. To the left, above the hamlet of Nauen, a steep ridge lay, beyond which was open ground once again and the road to Hanover. The town of Lütter rested due north, some two miles ahead, the twin spires of its church and its chateau all that we could see.

What a woeful parade we made. All was topsy-turvy confusion. By Christ’s Blood, how could the King have cast the die to withdraw even as we camped for battle on the morn? The raging campfires that we left well-stoked did not fool the enemy across the plain. They knew we had struck the camp and fled.

The Lieutenant kept up an endless stream of cursing as he and his mount were lashed by the rains, and he rode fore and rearwards to keep the company ordered in the dark. Pitch-fired torches sputtered on the creaking wagons to light the way while we in the van struggled along the road near half blind. The whole of the Danish host, 15,000 strong, strained to turn itself like a creeping caterpillar, in painful slowness, back the way that it had come. The rearguard came under attack even before the sky began to lighten with the dawn. Companies of harquebusiers were sent to relieve the rearguard at intervals. By sixof-the-clock the word went around that the dreaded Croats were snapping at our heels. And their reputation preceded them so well that they were as feared as the Devil incarnate.

By midday, when the order came for us to wheel round and defend the baggage train, we had covered barely a few miles. Though near half the army was comprised of Horse, we could go no faster than a man could march lest the foot soldiers be left behind to the mercy of Tilly’s cavalry.

When it came upon us to take our turn into action, we fought hard. The greater enemy was the damp. I watched two men get shot from their saddles as their carbines clicked and sputtered out cold leaving them to furiously reprime their pieces while the Imperials gave fire in return. Our army held back, harrying the enemy with ordered firings, by troop, then wheeling back to reload and advance once again. Our only intent was to keep Tilly’s men off our tail as we clawed our way back North. But to where? Refuge there was none. We were as a blooded stag, still pounding, yet bleeding out nonetheless. We ate not the whole of that day nor slept much that night but what little we could manage we did in the saddle. It is a woeful kind of sleep that makes one feel as if to fall. There is no rest in it nor comfort.

Over the next two days I only managed naps in the saddle. Grub was a few mouthfuls of cold salt ham that crunched as one chewed it thanks to the road grit ground into it. And then, as the third day grew light at about five of the clock, and clear for the first time in many a day, we spied this vast plain with Lütter-am-Barenberge at its crest. And when Tollhagen and I saw the regiments of pike and the red-coated musketeers being ordered into
Battalia
, we knew that this would be the day we had waited for nearly a year.

“Hey, come with us,” shouted Andreas as he reined-in his horse. “Two companies of Colonel de Courville’s troopers have returned from the rearguard. Let’s find out what is happening back there.”

I should have stayed with the company and joined with the other corporals in preparing for battle. But I was more eager to learn how close the enemy was. With a quick glance to make sure the Lieutenant had not spied us, I pulled myself up into the saddle and spurred my horse to follow Balthazar and Andreas down to the stream where the rearguard, pummelled and exhausted, was finally catching up the rest of the army.

We splashed across and climbed the opposite bank then cantered toward what remained of de Courville’s harquebusiers.

“What, ho!” cried out Balthazar as we joined up with the straggling mob. “What news of the enemy?”

He was met with hard silence and a few foul gestures.

I heard Andreas mutter, half to himself. “They’ve been cut to pieces. Christ, look at them.”

Many were bloodied, and several troopers led riderless mounts. Most hard of all was the quietness among them. Only the thump of stumbling hooves carried across to us. That and the cough of a wounded man.

Andreas fell into pace with one group, and we behind him.

“I wouldn’t stay here if I were you,” said one trooper turning to Andreas. “They might be as tired as we are but by Jesus they’re of a mind to do some business.”

“How far back?” asked Andreas.

“Not far enough for you to get away, friend. I reckon their van will be here within the hour. We rode hard to get back this far. Left two companies of musketeers to Tilly’s Croats, poor bastards. We couldn’t do much else and all of us are down to a single cartridge.”

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