The Immortal Knight Chronicles Box Set 2

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The Immortal Knight Chronicles Box Set 2 Page 79

by Dan Davis


  “And yet the problem remains. How can we find and support and supply so many? Already, I worry about the men we have.”

  He nodded, warily. “We would have to trust the men completely. We would need enormous amounts of mortal blood. And it would need to be done in secret, lest we are challenged, declared enemies, outlaws, expelled from Christendom.”

  “All great challenges that must be overcome,” I said. “I see it now, with my eyes clear and open. Because the only way we will ever stop William from conquering all of Christendom is with our own army of immortals.”

  7. Wallachia

  1456

  Of course, creating an army of immortals was more easily said than done. It was a clear goal but how we could accomplish such a thing was far from resolved.

  It took months to make our way back to Hungary in safety, first by sea and then by land.

  In Buda, the court was subdued and focused on internal issues. When we told our friends and contacts, whether merchants or knights, that we had been in Constantinople for the siege, few seemed interested in discussing it further. It was a matter that people already seemed to believe best forgotten, even though the implications were enormous. It was as though they could deny it had ever happened, if only it was never spoken of.

  The Turks continued to reinforce the frontier. And all the Christian lands under Turkish authority continued to be subjected to the devshirme, the Blood Tax. Hunyadi had a report compiled by a group of monks who believed that fifteen or twenty-thousand Christian boys were being incorporated into the Janissaries every single year. Twenty thousand of our strongest boys, every year, taken as slaves and used against us. That says nothing of slaves taken from the Rus and other people of the north by the Golden Horde.

  Our Albanian warlord Skanderbeg made a swift and secret visit to his allies in Naples to discuss the strategic implications of the loss of Constantinople and discussions were begun regarding a new crusade to retake the city. We long held out hope, for all of the years 1454, and 1455, but it came to nothing. In the meantime, I trained the survivors of our company and we sought new armour and weapons and supplies. Hunyadi was glad enough at my return to fund us once more so that we would be on hand, though he did not have much use for us. Still, we took the opportunity to regain our strength and improve our skill. The new immortals delighted in their new abilities and they gave me little trouble.

  Eva and Stephen re-established contact with their agents and brought many to our company’s house to provide regular reports of enemy activity.

  By 1456, the Sultan had about ninety thousand soldiers in Edirne and a fleet of sixty ships at the mouth of the Danube. Agents provided word that the Turks were producing cannons in new foundries in Serbia, which would save them the time and effort needed to bring them up from Greece or Anatolia.

  It became ever clearer the Turks meant to take Belgrade.

  Swiftly, Vladislaus II the Voivode of Wallachia turned even further toward the Turks and was said to be making ever more promises to the Sultan. If Wallachia could not be brought to heel then it would soon fall, perhaps without a fight. More immediate a problem though was that Vladislaus had begun raiding across southern Transylvania with Turkish soldiers. This raiding tied down thousands of Hunyadi’s best men who were guarding against this new Wallachian assault.

  “But I need those men,” Hunyadi said, after summoning me to his private chambers. I knew that it meant he had finally found a use for me and my company. “I need them for the defence of Belgrade. It is there that the Sultan’s hammer blow will fall next.”

  “Why not remove Vladislaus now?” I asked. “You have known it needed to be done for a long time. But it cannot wait any further.”

  “You are more right than you know. Vladislaus has stirred up the people of Fogaras, encouraged them into a full rebellion against me. Against Hungary. They sent word that they are no longer my vassals but the vassals of Sultan Mehmed. This means they will throw themselves into the arms of the Turks when they arrive and so already we have a Transylvanian town lost to us and gained by the enemy. We cannot allow them to do this.”

  “So send an army, take back Fogaras and march over the mountains into Wallachia and be rid of Vladislaus.”

  “An army, Richard?” he shook his head. “I cannot take even more men from Serbia and send them into Wallachia. You have seen the country. Seen those mountains. You have fought in them. If Vladislaus refuses battle, which he will do if he has any sense, we could have ten thousand men tied up there for years. We do not have time.”

  I could not disagree with that. “But you have something in mind, or you would not have asked to speak to me.”

  Hunyadi sighed and gestured to a servant to bring us more wine. “You seemed to do well with young Vlad Dracula last time you were with him, in Transylvania. Are you on good terms?”

  “I kept my men clear of him, truth be told. But I made my peace with him before I left for Constantinople and we parted on good terms, certainly.”

  “What did you think of his abilities?”

  “We did not do any fighting and neither did he. But throughout the negotiations and during the journey from place to place, he seemed a perfectly steady young prince.”

  “Steady?” Hunyadi drank his wine and frowned. “Do you damn him with faint praise, sir?”

  “Not at all. Young Dracula knew what he wanted, he told his men clearly what he expected, and they obeyed him. He knows how to lead.”

  “Good, yes. But you were not impressed?”

  “It is not that I was unimpressed. He is young and untested. But most of all, I still wonder where his true loyalties lie. You wish to put him on the throne and so make a true ally of Wallachia again. But this is what we did ten years ago, and your man has turned to the Turks even more thoroughly than the old Vlad Dracul ever did.”

  He sighed and scratched his cheek. “And you fear I will make the same mistake again. It is certainly a possibility. But there seems to be a deep well of contempt in the young man’s heart, reserved above all for the Turk.”

  “Perhaps he is deceiving you. Perhaps he has been their man ever since they released him. After all, why would they do so? I believe the Turks yet hold his younger brother, Radu. Is that still the case?”

  Hunyadi made an unhappy growling sound in his throat. “It is. It appears that he is serving the Sultan in a military capacity.”

  “Perhaps they threaten to end Radu’s life if Vlad does not do as they command.”

  “Do you have a brother, Richard?”

  I swallowed. “Why do you ask?”

  “I merely wondered what you might do for the life of a younger brother. How far you would go. What would it take for you to trade your honour as a prince and a knight, and a life as an independent ruler for that of a slave subordinate to the Turks? Would you do it to save the life of your brother?”

  “You are speaking to a lowly and landless knight with no family, my lord. I have never had to consider such a question. But I take it you do not believe the threat to his brother’s life would be enough to bind him in servitude to the Turks? Perhaps not. We cannot know what is in his heart. But you have asked me here and you speak to me of Wallachia and Vlad Dracula instead of the coming battle at Belgrade. And so I take it that you have decided to make your move with young Vlad? To place him on the throne?”

  “No.” Hunyadi drank off his wine and snapped his fingers for another. “I cannot place him there. He must take it for himself. But I will provide him with a small number of soldiers, as many as I can spare from the defence of Belgrade. Perhaps Dracula can make his way into Wallachia and overthrow the voivode, with the help my men and of loyal boyars who have been exiled by Vladislaus.”

  “How many men do you mean, my lord?”

  “Boyars? Almost thirty, with their retinues. And I have secured the services of six hundred Hungarian mercenaries and five hundred more from Transylvania and Wallachia.”

  I laughed aloud. “You are sending, what,
fifteen hundred men against the armies of Wallachia and the Turks he controls? They will be outnumbered ten to one. It is madness.”

  “Madness, yes,” Hunyadi said, smiling. “And that is precisely why I thought of you.”

  ***

  “We’re doing what?” Walt said, after I explained it to them. He sat at my right hand at the top table and I looked down at him from where I stood before looking around at the rest of the men seated below me.

  Our hall in Buda was large enough for the company to assemble. I had not recruited anyone to make up our numbers as I was concerned about a company of immortals and mortals mixing together. Certainly, the servants could not be trusted to hold their tongues about the nature of their masters and any new mercenaries would have to become members of the Order. Indeed, the Company of Saint George had become essentially synonymous with the Order of the White Dagger. The outside world saw us as a small but elite mercenary company retained by the Regent of Hungary and yet we knew ourselves to be the Order, committed to destroying William de Ferrers and all his evil, immortal followers.

  Some of the men took time to understand what a fine line it was to thread between these two realities. Indeed, I struggled to do so myself every day.

  “It might be done,” I said. “Though it will be a challenge, I do not doubt it.”

  They all looked at one another and said nothing.

  “What is in it for us?” Stephen said. “How does agreeing to win Vlad Dracula his kingdom help us make the immortal army we need to defeat William?”

  I nodded and clasped my hands before me.

  “If it works,” I said, “and if we show ourselves to be indispensable, then we might find ourselves with a ruler in Dracula who can give us the sanctuary we need.”

  Rob rapped his knuckles on the table and pointed across the hall to Serban, sitting far away below the salt. “What do you say, Serban? What do you make of Vlad’s chances?”

  Old Serban dragged himself to his feet and glanced around the hall, all eyes turned to him. “It can certainly be done, my lord. It has been done before. The throne of Wallachia changes hands more often than a halfpenny strumpet.”

  Walt burst out laughing and banged the table and most of the men laughed with him.

  “I take it you taught him that?” I asked Walt as he wiped his eyes. “Thank you, Serban, for sharing with us your expert local knowledge. That will be all from you.”

  Stephen cleared his throat. “Do you truly believe Vlad could be the ruler we need? He may be working for the Turks. He may be a weakling. He still may turn on you and have you killed because of his father.”

  “Yes,” I agreed, clapping my hands together. “All that you say is true. But where else might we find our friendly ruler? So, before we conclude, are there any other objections to be made?”

  “So,” Stephen said, getting to his feet. “No matter what we say today, you have decided that we will ultimately agree to this mad scheme?”

  “I have agreed already. Make your preparations. We return to Transylvania.”

  It was June 1456 when we slipped over the mountains from Transylvania and into Wallachia with our small, makeshift army. Those mountain peaks were black and jagged, with grey streaks and were inhumanly large and intimidating and entirely unscalable. On their flanks clung dense forests of pine trees so dark when in shadow that they seemed black as charcoal. The passes and valleys were prone to sudden changes in elevation, but they were often lush and green, whether with meadows grazed by hardy sheep and mad goats, or in broadleaf woods thick with herds of pigs. Below, the lands were crossed with rivers running from the mountains to the distant plains and on to feed the mighty Danube, sometimes becoming long, narrow, and spectacular lakes. In between was a wild land of forests of beech, oak, and elm in the lowlands, or pines and spruce and fur above.

  Our leader, the young Vlad Dracula was in fine form. Whether with the exiled boyars or the mercenary captains, he was always at ease. His own men, young lords or sons of lords or other Wallachian adventurers who had thrown their lot in with him, clearly adored him and hung on his every word. Though he was often the shortest man in any group, he seemed to dominate it with his loud voice and sure gestures. The young prince was born to rule and had been raised in that very expectation. Despite his prolonged period of confinement in the lands of his enemies, he certainly appeared to believe in himself deeply.

  The only man he was wary of was me.

  Despite my presentation of his father’s sword and dragon amulet, young Vlad kept his distance. At councils of war, though he was courteous enough and listened to my suggestions just as he did for others, with me he was always reserved.

  “He does not favour me,” I muttered to Walt as we left his tent a week after crossing the border.

  “You cut off his dad’s head,” Walt said.

  “There is that.”

  “Reckon he means to take yours?” Walt asked.

  “I think it is a distinct possibility.”

  “Don’t worry, Richard, I’ll watch your back.”

  Vlad’s plan relied on bringing as many of the boyars to his side as he could before open fighting began. Without wooing former allies of his father and enemies of Vladislaus, the attempt on the throne would be doomed to failure. With that in mind, we made for the fortress of Copăceni at the head of a severe valley in the north. Once our army filed into the valley and approached the fortress, Vlad took some of us up the final steep approach and there demanded to see the lord, a boyar named Bogdan.

  At the gate, our horses were breathing heavily from the climb. I was at the rear of the party, with a few of my men to accompany me. The gatekeeper looked down on us and raised his voice, which echoed from the rocks and thick stone walls. “Who are you and why do you come here?”

  I looked up at the dragon banner held aloft over our party and shook my head at the gatekeeper’s absurd attempts at haughtiness.

  “You know who we are,” Dracula said, his voice projecting over the entire fortress. “Tell your lord I will speak with him.”

  “State your name,” the gatekeeper said.

  Vlad paused for half a moment before answering, the silence filled with his contempt for the stupidity of the question.

  “I will not be kept waiting,” Dracula replied.

  The man hesitated, looked at the soldiers flanking him, and disappeared into the tower. We stood in silence on our horses.

  It was not long before the gatekeeper reappeared. “You, my lord, and ten men. No more. And no weapons.”

  “Ten men it is,” Dracula agreed. “But we shall keep our weapons. Open the gate.”

  The gatekeeper pursed his lips and his gloved fingers drummed on the parapet before he muttered to the man beside him, who hurried off. A few moments later the gate below creaked into life as it swung slowly inward.

  “That was easy,” Walt said, grinning. “We’ll be camped in the valley tonight, then. Wonder if the lads might shoot a deer. Do you reckon there’s boar in these woods?”

  “Undoubtedly,” Rob said, his tone miserable, staring at his stump.

  Before he dismounted, Dracula called out the names of his men, commanding them to accompany him inside the fortress of Copăceni.

  The tenth name he called was mine.

  Caught off guard, I hesitated but swung down from my saddle.

  “Do not do it,” Rob muttered. “It may be a trap.”

  “Might be,” I said, adjusting my clothes and slipping an extra knife up inside my doublet.

  “This may all be theatre,” Stephen said, hurrying forward and whispering. “This entire event.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “It was rather easy to gain access to this supposed enemy stronghold, was it not? What if it was prearranged? What if the purpose was to separate you from your men?”

  I turned to Serban. “What do you think?”

  “I think at such times a man must flee,” he said, shrugging. “Or go forward to meet his fate.”<
br />
  “Do you know something about this trap, Serban?” Stephen said, reaching for him. “Are you in on it? Are you a part of it? If you are, you will speak now, or I shall flay you myself.”

  Serban stared back, his wrinkled face filled with contempt and bitter amusement.

  “Enough, Stephen,” I said, smiling and patting him on the back. “Our Wallachian friends are looking.”

  “Be careful,” Eva said. “And hurry up. They are waiting for you.”

  I winked at her and followed Dracula and his nine companions into the fortress. It was a small place but sturdy enough. Like so many such structures in those highlands, it was a stronghold where a lord could feel safe from raids and assassinations and other mischief started by his neighbouring lords, while ruling over the villages in his valley below.

  There seemed to be no more than forty soldiers and as many servants. A hundred men and women in the entire place, mostly men.

  We were escorted into the small, dark hall. A table and benches had been set in the centre of it while a fire burned in a surprisingly modern fireplace on the side.

  At the head of the hall sat Lord Bogdan of Copăceni, a big man even seated in his chair, with wild eyes and a thick, greying moustache.

  “So,” Bogdan said, his voice gruff. “You have come. Sit at my table and take refreshment. Then I will hear your requests.”

  While we stood in a line at the rear, Dracula said nothing and strode the length of the hall toward the seated old boyar. He stopped an arm’s span from him, looking down.

  “You, Bogdan, have sworn to follow the false prince Vladislaus,” Dracula said.

  The boyar shifted in his seat, discomforted. “But of course. He is the Voivode of Wallachia.”

  “Not for long,” Dracula said.

  The boyar peered around Dracula, looking at his men for help, even at us. I glanced at Dracula’s men, his bodyguards and exiled boyars. None moved to help Bogdan. Some were smiling.

  “Come, let us drink,” Bogdan said, attempting to take control of the situation. “Let us eat. Then we can discuss things.”

 

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