Timeline - Michael Crichton [153]
He was within bowshot of the archers still on the remaining bridge tower, and they began firing at him, arrows hissing into the water.
Almost immediately, a knight in full armor splashed out on horseback into the river from Arnaut’s side. The knight wore his helmet, and it was impossible to see his face, but he evidently feared nothing, for he placed his body and horse in a position to block the archers. His horse sank deeper as it came forward, and it was eventually swimming, the knight waist-deep in the water when he hauled Kate across his saddle like a wet sack and then grabbed Chris by the arm, saying, “Allons!” as he turned back to shore.
:
Kate slid off the saddle and onto the ground. The knight barked an order, and a man carrying a flag with diagonal red-and-white stripes came running up. He examined Kate’s head injury, cleaned it and stanched the bleeding, then bandaged it with linen.
Meanwhile, the knight dismounted, unlaced his helm, and removed it. He was a tall and powerful man, extraordinarily handsome and dashing, with dark wavy hair, dark eyes, a full, sensuous mouth, and a twinkle in his eyes that suggested amusement at the foolish ways of the world. His complexion was dark, and he looked Spanish.
When Kate had been bandaged the knight smiled, showing perfect white teeth. “If you will do me the great honor to accompany me.” He led them back toward the monastery and its church. At the side door to the church stood a group of soldiers, and another on horseback, carrying the green-and-black banner of Arnaut de Cervole.
As they walked toward the church, every soldier they passed along the way bowed to the knight, saying, “My Lord . . . My Lord . . .”
Following, Chris nudged Kate. “That’s him.”
“Who?”
“Arnaut.”
“That knight? You’re kidding.”
“Look how the soldiers behave.”
“Arnaut saved our lives,” Kate said.
Chris was aware of the irony. In twentieth-century historical accounts of this time, Sir Oliver was portrayed as something close to a soldier-saint, while de Cervole was a black figure, “one of the great evildoers of his age,” in the words of one historian. Yet apparently the truth was just the opposite of the histories. Oliver was a despicable rogue, and Cervole a dashing exemplar of chivalry—to whom they now owed their lives.
Kate said, “What about André?”
Chris shook his head.
“Are you sure?”
“I think so. I think I saw him in the river.”
Kate said nothing.
Outside the church of Sainte-Mère were long rows of men, standing with their hands bound behind their backs, waiting to go inside. They were mostly soldiers of Oliver in maroon and gray, with a few peasants in rough garb. Chris guessed there were forty or fifty men in all. As they went past, the men stared sullenly at them. Some of them were wounded; they all seemed weary.
One man, a soldier in maroon, said sarcastically to another, “There goes the bastard lord of Narbonne. He does the work too dirty even for Arnaut.”
Chris was still trying to understand this when the handsome knight whirled. “Say you so?” he cried, and he grabbed a fistful of the man’s hair, jerked his head up, and with his other hand slashed his throat with a dagger. Blood gushed down the man’s chest. The man remained standing for a moment, making a kind of rasping sound.
“You have made your last insult,” the handsome knight said. He stood, smiling at the man, watching as the blood flowed, grinning as the man’s eyes widened in horror. Still the man remained standing. To Chris, he seemed to stand forever, but it must have been thirty or forty seconds. The handsome knight just watched silently, never moving, the smile never leaving his face.
Finally the man fell to his knees, head bowed, as if in prayer. The knight calmly put his foot under the man’s chin and kicked him so he fell backward. He continued to watch the man’s death gasps, which continued for another minute or so. At last he died.