On the morning of Shrove Tuesday, in the year of our Lord 1249, Sir Aimery
of Beaumanoir, the envoy of the most Christian king, Louis of France,
arrived in the port of Acre, having made the voyage from Cyprus with a
fair wind in a day and a night in a ship of Genoa flying the red and gold
banner of the Temple. Weary of the palms and sun-baked streets of Limasol
and the eternal wrangling of the Crusading hosts, he looked with favour at
the noble Palestine harbour, and the gilt steeples and carven houses of
the fair city. From the quay he rode to the palace of the Templars and was
admitted straightway to an audience with the Grand Master. For he had come
in a business of some moment.
The taste of Cyprus was still in his mouth; the sweet sticky air of the
coastlands; the smell of endless camps of packed humanity, set among
mountains of barrels and malodorous sprouting forage-stuffs; the narrow
streets lit at night by flares of tarry staves; and over all that rotting
yet acrid flavour which is the token of the East. The young damoiseau of
Beaumanoir had grown very sick of it all since the royal dromonds first
swung into Limasol Bay. He had seen his friends die like flies of strange
maladies, while the host waited on Hugh of Burgundy. Egypt was but four
days off across the waters, and on its sands Louis had ordained that the
War of the Cross should begin.
. . . But the King seemed strangely supine. Each day the enemy was the
better forewarned, and each day the quarrels of Templar and Hospitaller
grew more envenomed, and yet he sat patiently twiddling his thumbs, as if
all time lay before him and not a man's brief life. And now when at long
last the laggards of Burgundy and the Morea were reported on their way,
Sir Aimery had to turn his thoughts from the honest field of war. Not for
him to cry Montjole St. Denis by the Nile. For behold he was now
speeding on a crazy errand to the ends of the earth.
There had been strange councils in the bare little chamber of the Most
Christian King. Those locusts of the dawn whom men called Tartars, the
evil seed of the Three Kings who had once travelled to Bethlehem, had, it
seemed, been vouchsafed a glimpse of grace. True, they had plundered and
eaten the faithful and shed innocent blood in oceans, but they hated the
children of Mahound worse than the children of Christ. On the eve of
Christmas-tide four envoys had come from their Khakan, monstrous men with
big heads that sprang straight from the shoulder, and arms that hung below
the knee, and short thin legs like gnomes. For forty weeks they had been
on the road, and they brought gifts such as no eye had seen before--silks
like gossamer woven with wild alphabets, sheeny jars of jade, and pearls
like moons. Their Khakan, they said, had espoused the grandchild of
Prester John, and had been baptized into the Faith. He marched against
Bagdad, and had sworn to root the heresy of Mahound from the earth. Let
the King of France make a league with him, and between them, pressing from
east and west, they would accomplish the holy task. Let him send teachers
to expound the mysteries of Cod, and let him send knights who would treat
on mundane things. The letter, written in halting Latin and sealed with a
device like a spider's web, urged instant warfare with Egypt. "For the
present we dwell far apart," wrote the Khakan; "therefore let us both get
to business. "
So Aimery had been summoned to the King's chamber, where he found his good
master, the Count of St. Pol, in attendance with others. After prayer,
Louis opened to them his mind. Pale from much fasting and nightly
communing with God, his face was lit again with that light which had shone
in it when on the Friday after Pentecost the year before he had received
at St. Denis the pilgrim's scarf and the oriflamme of France.
"God's hand is in this, my masters," he said. "Is it not written that many
shall come from the east and from the west to sit down with Abraham in his
kingdom? I have a duty towards those poor folk, and I dare not fail."
There was no man present bold enough to argue with the white fire in the
King's eyes. One alone cavilled. He was a Scot, Sir Patrick, the Count of
Dunbar, who already shook with the fever which was to be his death.
"This Khakan is far away, sire," he said. "If it took his envoys forty
weeks to reach us, it will be a good year before his armies are on the
skirts of Egypt. As well make alliance with a star."
But Louis was in missionary mood. "God's ways are not as our ways. To Him
a thousand years are a day, and He can make the weakest confound a
multitude. This far-away King asks for instruction, and I will send him
holy men to fortify his young faith. And this knight, of whom you, my lord
of St. Pol, speak well, shall bear the greetings of a soldier."
Louis' face, which for usual was grave like a wise child's, broke into a
smile which melted Aimery's heart. He scarcely heard the Count of St. Pol
as that stout friend enlarged on his merits. "The knight of Beaumanoir,"
so ran the testimony, "has more learning than any clerk. In Spain he
learned the tongues of the heathen, and in Paris he read deep in their
philosophy. Withal he is a devout son of Holy Chutch."
The boy blushed at the praise and the King's kindly regard. But St. Pol
spoke truth, for Aimery, young as he was, had travelled far both on the
material globe and in the kingdom of the spirit. As a stripling he had
made one of the Picardy Nation in the schools of Paris. He had studied the
metaphysics of Aristotle under Aquinas, and voyaged strange seas of
thought piloted by Roger, the white-bearded Englishman. Thence, by the
favour of the Queen-mother, he had gone as squire to Alphonso's court of
Castile, where the Spanish doctors had opened windows for him into the
clear dry wisdom of the Saracens. He had travelled with an embassy to the
Emperor, and in Sicily had talked with the learned Arabs who clustered
around the fantastic Frederick. In Italy he had met adventurers of Genoa
and Venice who had shown him charts of unknown oceans and maps of Prester
John's country and the desert roads that led to Cambaluc, that city
farther than the moon, and told him tales of awful and delectable things
hidden beyond the dawn. He had returned to his tower by the springs of
Canche, a young man with a name for uncanny knowledge, a searcher after
concealed matters, negligent of religion and ill at ease in his world.
Then Louis cast his spell over him. He saw the King first at a great
hunting in Avesnes and worshipped from afar the slight body, royal in
every line of it, and the blue eyes which charmed and compelled, for he
divined there a spirit which had the secret of both earth and heaven.
While still under the glamour he was given knighthood at the royal hands,
and presently was weaned from unwholesome fancies by falling in love. The
girl, Alix of Valery, was slim like a poplar and her eyes were grey and
deep as her northern waters. She had been a maid of Blanche the Queen, and
had a nun's devoutness joined to a merry soul. Under her guiding Aimery
made his peace with the Church, and became notable for his gifts to God,
for he derived great wealth from his Flemish forbears. Yet the yeast of
youth still wrought in him, and by Alix's side at night he dreamed of
other lands than his grey-green Picardy. So, when the King took the croix
d'outre mer and summoned his knights to the freeing of Jerusalem, Sir
Aimery of Beaumanoir was the first to follow. For to him, as to others
like him, the goal was no perishable city made by mortal hands, but that
beata urbs without foundations which youth builds of its dreams.
He heard mass by the King's side and, trembling with pride, kissed the
royal hands and set out on his journey. His last memory of Louis was of a
boyish figure in a surcoat of blue samite, gazing tenderly on him as of
bidding farewell to a brother.
The Grand Master of the Templars, sitting in a furred robe in a warm upper
chamber, for he had an ague on him, spoke gloomily of the mission. He
would have preferred to make alliance with the Soldan of Egypt, and by his
aid recover the Holy Cities. "What Khakan is this?" he cried, "to whom it
is a journey of a lifetime to come nigh? What kind of Christian will you
make of men that have blood for drink and the flesh of babes for food, and
blow hither and thither on horses like sandstorms? Yours is a mad venture,
young sir, and I see no good that can come of it." Nevertheless he wrote
letters of commendation to the Prince of Antioch and the Constable of
Armenia; and he brought together all those about the place who had
travelled far inland to make a chart of the journey.
Aimery heeded little the Templar's forebodings, for his heart had grown
high again and romance was kindling his fancy. There was a knuckle of
caution in him, for he had the blood of Flemish traders in his veins,
though enriched by many nobler streams. "The profit is certain," a cynic
had whispered to him ere they left Aigues Mortes. "Should we conquer we
shall grow rich, and if we fail we shall go to heaven." The phrase had
fitted some of his moods, notably the black ones at Limasol, but now he
was all aflame with the quixotry of the Crusader. He neither needed nor
sought wealth, nor was he concerned about death. His feet trod the sacred
soil of his faith, and up in the hills which rimmed the seaward plain lay
all the holiness of Galilee and Nazareth, the three tabernacles built by
St. Peter on the Mount of Transfiguration, the stone whence Christ
ascended into heaven, the hut at Bethlehem which had been the Most High's
cradle, the sanctuary of Jerusalem whose every stone was precious.
Presently his King would win it all back for God. But for him was the
sterner task--no clean blows in the mellay among brethren, but a lone
pilgrimage beyond the east wind to the cradle of all marvels. The King had
told him that he carried the hopes of Christendom in his wallet; he knew
that he bore within himself the delirious expectation of a boy. Youth
swelled his breast and steeled his sinews and made a golden mist for his
eyes. The new, the outlandish, the undreamed-of!--Surely no one of the
Seven Champions had had such fortune! Scribes long after would write of
the deeds of Aimery of Beaumanoir, and minstrels would sing of him as they
sang of Roland and Tristan.
The Count of Jaffa, whose tower stood on the borders and who was therefore
rarely quit of strife, convoyed him a stage or two on his way. It was a
slender company: two Franciscans bearing the present of Louis to the
Khakan--a chapel-tent of scarlet cloth embroidered inside with pictures of
the Annunciation and the Passion; two sumpter mules with baggage; Aimery's
squire, a lad from the Boulonnais; and Aimery himself mounted on a Barbary
horse warranted to go far on little fodder. The lord of Jaffa turned back
when the snows of Lebanon were falling behind on their right. He had
nodded towards the mountains.
"There lives the Old Man and his Ishmaelites. Fear nothing, for his fangs
are drawn." And when Aimery asked the cause of the impotence of the
renowned Assassins, he was told--"That Khakan whom ye seek."
After that they made good speed to the city of Antioch, where not so long
before angels from heaven had appeared as knights in white armour to do
battle for the forlorn Crusaders. There they were welcomed by the Prince
and sent forward into Armenia, guided by the posts of the Constable of
that harassed kingdom. Everywhere the fame of the Tartars had gone abroad,
and with each mile they journeyed the tales became stranger. Conquerers
and warriors beyond doubt, but grotesque paladins for the Cross. Men
whispered their name with averted faces, and in the eyes of the travelled
ones there was the terror of sights remembered outside the mortal pale.
Aimery's heart was stout, but he brooded much as the road climbed into the
mountains. Far off in Cyprus the Khakan had seemed a humble devotee at
Christ's footstool, asking only to serve and learn; but now he had grown
to some monstrous Cyclops beyond the stature of man, a portent like a
thundercloud brooding over unnumbered miles. Besides, the young lord was
homesick, and had long thoughts of Alix his wife and the son she had borne
him. As he looked at the stony hills he remembered that it would now be
springtide in Picardy, when the young green of the willows fringed every
watercourse and the plovers were calling on the windy downs.
The Constable of Armenia dwelt in a castle of hewn stone about which a
little city clustered, with mountains on every side to darken the sky, He
was as swarthy as a Saracen and had a long nose like a Jew, but he was a
good Christian and a wise ruler, though commonly at odds with his cousin
of Antioch. From him Aimery had more precise news of the Khakan.
There were two, said the Constable. "One who rules all Western Asia east
of the Sultan's principates. Him they call the Ilkhan for title, and
Houlagou for name. His armies have eaten up the Chorasmians and the
Muscovites and will presently bite their way into Christendom, unless God
change their heart. By the Gospels, they are less and more than men.
Swinish drinkers and gluttons, they rise from their orgies to sweep the
earth like a flame. Here inside our palisade of rock we wait fearfully."
"And the other?" Aimery asked.
"Ah, he is as much the greater as the sun is greater than a star. Kublai
they name him, and he is in some sort the lord of Houlagou. I have never
met the man who has seen him, for he dwells as far beyond the Ilkhan as
the Ilkhan is far from the Pillars of Hercules. But rumour has it that he
is a clement and beneficent prince, terrible in battle, but a lover of
peace and all good men. They tell wonders about his land of Cathay, where
strips of parchment stamped with the King's name take the place of gold
among the merchants, so strong is that King's honour. But the journey to
Cambaluc, the city of Kublai, would fill a man's lifetime."
One April morning they heard mass after the odd Syrian fashion, and turned
their faces eastward. The Constable's guides led them through the
mountains, up long sword-cuts of valleys and under frowning snowdrifts, or
across stony barrens where wretched beehive huts huddled by the shores of
unquiet lakes. Presently they came into summer, and found meadows of young
grass and green forests on the hills' skirts, and saw wide plains die into
the blueness of morning. There the guides left them, and the little
cavalcade moved east into unknown anarchies.
The sky grew like brass over their heads, and the land baked and rutted
with the sun's heat. It seemed a country empty of man, though sometimes
they came on derelict ploughlands and towns of crumbling brick charred and
glazed by fire. In sweltering days they struggled through flats where the
grass was often higher than a horse's withers, and forded the tawny
streams which brought down the snows of the hills. Now and then they would
pass wandering herdsmen, who fled to some earth-burrow at their
appearance. The Constable had bidden them make for the rising sun, saying
that sooner or later they would foregather with the Khakan's scouts. But
days passed into weeks and weeks into months, and still they moved through
a tenantless waste. They husbanded jealously the food they had brought,
but the store ran low, and there were days of empty stomachs and light
heads. Unless, like the King of Babylon, they were to eat grass in the
fashion of beasts, it seemed they must soon famish.
But late in summertime they saw before them a wall of mountain, and in
three days climbed by its defiles to a pleasant land, where once more they
found the dwellings of man. It appeared that they were in a country where
the Tartars had been for some time settled and which had for years been
free of the ravages of war. The folks were hunters and shepherds who took
the strangers for immortal beings and offered food on bent knees like
oblations to a god. They knew where the Ilkhan dwelt, and furnished guides
for each day's journey. Aimery, who had been sick of a low fever in the
plains, and had stumbled on in a stupor torn by flashes of homesickness,
found his spirits reviving. He had cursed many times the futility of his
errand. While the Franciscans were busied with their punctual offices and
asked nothing of each fresh day but that it should be as prayerful as the
last, he found a rebellious unbelief rising in his heart. He was
travelling roads no Christian had ever trod, on a wild-goose errand, while
his comrades were winning fame in the battle-front. Alas! that a bright
sword should rust in these barrens!
But with the uplands peace crept into his soul and some of the mystery of
his journey. It was a brave venture, whether it failed or no, for he had
already gone beyond the pale even of men's dreams. The face of Louis
hovered before him. It needed a great king even to conceive such a
mission. . . . He had been sent on a king's errand too. He stood alone for
France and the Cross in a dark world. Alone, as kings should stand, for to
take all the burden was the mark of kingship. His heart bounded at the
thought, for he was young. His father had told him of that old Flanders
grandam, who had sworn that his blood came from proud kings.
But chiefly he thought of Louis with a fresh warmth of love. Surely the
King loved him, or he would not have chosen him out of many for this
fateful work. He had asked of him the ultimate service, as a friend
should. Aimery reconstructed in his inner vision all his memories of the
King: the close fair hair now thinning about the temples; the small face
still contoured like a boy's; the figure strung like a bow; the quick,
eager gestures; the blue dove's eyes, kindly and humble, as became one
whose proudest title was to be a "sergeant of the Crucified." But those
same eyes could also steel and blaze, for his father had been called the
Lion, his mother Semiramis, and his grandsire Augustus. In these wilds
Aimery was his vicegerent and bore himself proudly as the proxy of such a
monarch.
The hour came when they met the Tartar outposts. A cloud of horse swept
down on them, each man riding loose with his hand on a taut bowstring. In
silence they surrounded the little party, and their leader made signs to
Aimery to dismount. The Constable had procured for him a letter in Tartar
script, setting out the purpose of his mission. This the outpost could not
read, but they recognised some word among the characters, and pointed it
out to each other with uncouth murmurings. They were strange folk, with
eyes like pebbles and squat frames and short, broad faces, but each horse
and man moved in unison like a centaur.
With gestures of respect the Tartars signalled to the Christians to
follow, and led them for a day and a night southward down a broad valley,
where vines and fruit trees grew and peace dwelt in villages. They passed
encampments of riders like themselves, and little scurries of horsemen
would ride athwart their road and exchange greetings. On the second
morning they reached a city, populous in men but not in houses. For miles
stretched lines of skin tents, and in the heart of them by the river's
edge stood a great hall of brick, still raw from the builders.
Aimery sat erect on his weary horse with the hum of an outlandish host
about him, himself very weary and very sick at heart. For the utter folly
of it all had come on him like the waking from a dream. These men were no
allies of the West. They were children of the Blue Wolf, as the Constable
had said, a monstrous brood, swarming from the unknown to blight the
gardens of the world. A Saracen compared to such was a courteous knight. .
. . He thought of Kublai, the greater Khakan. Perhaps in his court might
dwell gentlehood and reason. But here was but a wolf pack in the faraway
guise of man.
They gave the strangers food and drink--halfcooked fish and a porridge of
rye and sour spiced milk, and left them to sleep until sundown. Then the
palace guards led them to the presence.
The hall was immense, dim and shapeless like the inside of a hill, not
built according to the proportions of mankind. Flambeaux and wicks
floating in great basins of mutton fat showed a dense concourse of
warriors, and through an aisle of them Aimery approached the throne. In
front stood a tree of silver, springing from a pedestal of four lions
whose mouths poured streams of wine, syrup, and mead into basins, which
were emptied by a host of slaves, the cup-bearers of the assembly. There
were two thrones side by side, on one of which sat a figure so motionless
that it might have been wrought of jasper. Weighted with a massive
head-dress of pearls and a robe of gold brocade, the little grandchild of
Prester John seemed like a doll on which some princess had lavished wealth
and fancy. The black eyelashes lay quiet on her olive cheeks, and her
breathing did not stir her stiff, jewelled bodice.
"I have seen death in life," thought Aimery as he shivered and looked
aside.
Houlagou, her husband, was a tall man compared with the others. His face
was hairless, and his mouth fine and cruel. His eyes were hard like
agates, with no light in them. A passionless power lurked in the low broad
forehead, and the mighty head sunk deep between the shoulders; but the
power not of a man, but of some abortion of nature, like storm or
earthquake. Again Aimery shivered. Had not the prophets foretold that one
day Antichrist would be reborn in Babylon?
Among the Ilkhan's scribes was a Greek who spoke a bastard French and
acted as interpreter. King Louis' letter was read, and in that hall its
devout phrases seemed a mockery. The royal gifts were produced, the
tent-chapel with its woven pictures and the sacred utensils. The
half-drunk captains fingered them curiously, but the eyes from the throne
scarcely regarded them.
"These are your priests," said the Khakan "Let them talk with my priests
and then go their own way. I have little concern with priestcraft."
Then Aimery spoke, and the Greek with many haltings translated. He
reminded Houlagou of the Tartar envoys who had sought from his King
instruction in the Christian faith and had proclaimed his baptism.
"Of that I know nothing," was the answer. "Maybe 'twas some whim of my
brother Kublai. I have all the gods I need."
With a heavy heart Aimery touched on the proposed alliance, the advance on
Bagdad, and the pinning of the Saracens between two fires. He spoke as he
had been ordered, but with a bitter sense of futility, for what kind of
ally could be looked for in this proud pagan?
The impassive face showed no flicker of interest.
"I am eating up the Caliphs," he said, "but that food is for my own table.
As for allies, I have need of none. The children of the Blue Wolf do not
make treaties."
Then he spoke aside to his captains, and fixed Aimery with his agate eyes.
It was like listening to a voice from a stone.
"The King of France has sent you to ask for peace. Peace, no doubt, is
good, and I will grant it of my favour. A tribute will be fixed in gold
and silver, and while it is duly paid your King's lands will be safe from
my warriors. Should the tribute fail, France will be ours. I have heard
that it is a pleasant place."
The Ilkhan signed that the audience was over. The fountains of liquor
ceased to play, and the drunken gathering stood up with a howling like
wild beasts to acclaim their King. Aimery went back to his hut, and sat
deep in thought far into the night.
He perceived that the shadows were closing in upon him. He must get the
friars away, and with them a message to his master. For himself there
could be no return, for he could not shame his King who had trusted him.
In the bestial twilight of this barbaric court the memory of Louis shone
like a star. He must attempt to reach Kublai, of whom men spoke well,
though the journey cost him his youth and his life. It might mean years of
wandering, but there was a spark of hope in it. There, in the bleak hut,
he suffered the extreme of mental anguish A heavy door seemed to have
closed between him and all that he held dear. He fell on his knees and
prayed to the saints to support his loneliness. And then he found comfort,
for had not God's Son suffered even as he, and left the bright streets of
Paradise for loneliness among the lost?
Next morning he faced the world with a clearer eye. It was not difficult
to provide for the Franciscans. They, honest men, understood nothing save
that the Tartar king had not the love of holy things for which they had
hoped. They explained the offices of the Church as well as they could to
ribald and uncomprehending auditors, and continued placidly in their
devotions. As it chanced, a convoy was about to start for Muscovy, whence
by ship they might come to Constantinople. The Tartars made no objection
to their journey, for they had some awe of these pale men and were glad to
be quit of foreign priestcraft. With them Aimery sent a letter in which he
told the King that the immediate errand had been done. but that no good
could be looked for from this western Khakan. "I go," he said," to Kublai
the Great, in Cathay, who has a heart more open to God. If I return not,
know, Sire, that I am dead in your most loving service, joyfully and
pridefully as a Christian knight dies for the Cross, his King, and his
lady." He added some prayers on behalf of the little household at
Beaumanoir and sealed it with his ring. It was the ring he had got from
his father, a thick gold thing in which had been cut his cognisance of
three lions' heads.
This done, he sought an audience with the Ilkhan, and told him of his
purpose. Houlagou did not speak for a little, and into his set face seemed
to creep an ill-boding shadow of a smile. "Who am I," he said at length,
"to hinder your going to my brother Kublai? I will give you an escort to
my eastern borders."
Aimery bent his knee and thanked him, but from the courtiers rose a hubbub
of mirth which chilled his gratitude. He was aware that he sailed on very
desperate waters.
Among the Tartars was a recreant Genoese who taught them metal work and
had once lived at the court of Cambaluc. The man had glimmerings of
honesty, and tried hard to dissuade Aimery from the journey. "It is a
matter of years," he told him, "and the road leads through deserts greater
than all Europe and over mountains so high and icy that birds are frozen
in the crossing. And a word in your ear, my lord. The Ilkhan permits few
to cross his eastern marches. Beware of treason, I say. Your companions
are the blood-thirstiest of the royal guards."
But from the Genoese he obtained a plan of the first stages of the road,
and one morning in autumn he set out from the Tartar city, his squire from
the Boulonnais by his side, and at his back a wild motley of horsemen,
wearing cuirasses of red leather stamped with the blue wolf of Houlagou's
house.
October fell chill and early in those uplands, and on the fourth day they
came into a sprinkling of snow. At night round the fires the Tartars made
merry, for they bad strong drink in many skin bottles, and Aimery was left
to his own cold meditations. If he had had any hope, it was gone now, for
the escort made it clear that he was their prisoner Judging from the chart
of the Genoese, they were not following any road to Cambaluc, and the
sight of the sky told him that they were circling round to the south. The
few Tartar words he had learned were not enough to communicate with them,
and in any case it was clear that they would take no orders from him. He
was trapped like a bird in the fowler's hands. Escape was folly, for in an
hour their swift horses would have ridden him down. He had thought he had
grown old, but the indignity woke his youth again, and he fretted
passionately. If death was his portion, he longed for it to come cleanly
in soldier fashion.
One night his squire disappeared. The Tartars, when he tried to question
them, only laughed and pointed westward. That was the last he heard of the
lad from the Boulonnais.
And then on a frosty dawn, when the sun rose red-rimmed over the barrens,
he noted a new trimness in his escort. They rode in line, and they rode
before and behind him, so that his captivity was made patent. On a ridge
far to the west he saw a great castle, and he knew the palace of Houlagou.
His guess had been right; he had been brought back by a circuit to his
starting-point.
Presently he was face to face with the Ilkhan, who was hunting. The Greek
scribe was with him, so the meeting had been foreseen. The King's face was
dark with the weather and his stony eyes had a glow in them.
"O messenger of France," he said, "there is a little custom of our people
that I had forgotten. When a stranger warrior visits us it is our fashion
to pit him in a bout against one of our own folk, so that if he
leaves us alive he may speak well of his entertainment."
"I am willing," said Aimery. "I have but my sword for weapon."
"We have no lack of swordsmen," said the Ilkhan. "I would fain see the
Frankish way of it."
A man stepped out from the ring, a great square fellow shorter by a head
than Aimery, and with a nose that showed there was Saracen blood in him.
He had a heavy German blade, better suited for fighting on horseback than
on foot. He had no buckler, and no armour save a headpiece, so the
combatants were fairly matched.
It was a contest of speed and deftness against a giant's strength, for a
blow from the great weapon would have cut deep into a man's vitals. Aimery
was weary and unpractised, but the clash of steel gave life to him. He
found that he had a formidable foe, but one who lacked the finer arts of
the swordsman. The Tartar wasted his strength in the air against the new
French parries and guards, though he drew first blood and gashed his
opponent's left arm. Aimery's light blade dazzled his eyes, and presently
when breath had grown short claimed its due. A deft cut on the shoulder
paralysed the Tartar's sword arm, and a breaststroke brought him to his
knees.
"Finish him," said the Ilkhan.
"Nay, sire," said Aimery, "it is not our custom to slay a disabled foe."
Houlagou nodded to one of his guards, who advanced swinging his sword. The
defeated man seemed to know his fate, and stretched out his neck. With a
single blow his head rolled on the earth.
"You have some skill of the sword, Frenchman," said the Ilkhan. "Hear,
now, what I have decreed concerning you. I will have none of this journey
to my brother Kublai. I had purposed to slay you, for you have defied my
majesty. You sought to travel to Cathay instead of bearing my commands
forthwith to your little King. But I am loath to kill so stout a warrior.
Swear to me allegiance, and you shall ride with me against the Caliphs."
"And if I refuse?" Aimery asked.
"Then you die ere sundown."
"I am an envoy, sire, from a brother majesty, and of such it is the custom
to respect the persons."
"Tush!" said the Ilkhan, "there is no brother majesty save Kublai. Between
us we rule the world."
"Hear me, then," said Aimery. The duel had swept all cobwebs from his
brain and doubts from his heart. "I am a knight of the Sire Christ and of
the most noble King Louis, and I can own no other lord. Do your work,
King. I am solitary among your myriads, but you cannot bend me."
"So be it," said Houlagou.
"I ask two boons as one about to die. Let me fall in battle against your
warriors. And let me spend the hours till sundown alone, for I would
prepare myself for my journey."
"So be it," said Houlagou, and turned to his hounds.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The damoiseau of Beaumanoir sat on a ridge commanding for fifty miles the
snow-sprinkled uplands. The hum of the Tartars came faint from a hollow to
the west, but where he sat he was in quiet and alone.
He had forgotten the ache of loss which had preyed on him. . . . His
youth had not been squandered. The joy of young manhood which had been
always like a tune in his heart had risen to a nobler song. For now, as it
seemed to him, he stood beside his King, and had found a throne in the
desert. Alone among all Christian men he had carried the Cross to a new
world, and had been judged worthy to walk in the footprints of his captain
Christ. A great gladness and a great humility possessed him.
He had ridden beyond the ken of his own folk, and no tale of his end would
ever be told in that northern hall of his when the hearth-fire flickered
on the rafters. That seemed small loss, for they would know that he had
ridden the King's path, and that can have but the one ending. . . . Most
clear in his memory now were the grey towers by Canche, where all day long
the slow river made a singing among the reeds. He saw Alix his wife, the
sun on her hair, playing in the close with his little Philip. Even now in
the pleasant autumn weather that curly-pate would be scrambling in the
orchard for the ripe apples which his mother rolled to him. He had thought
himself born for a high destiny. Well, that destiny had been accomplished.
He would not die, but live in the son of his body, and his sacrifice would
be eternally a spirit moving in the hearts of his seed. He saw the thing
clear and sharp, as if in a magic glass. There was a long road before the
house of Beaumanoir, and on the extreme horizon a great brightness.
Now he remembered that he had always known it, known it even when his head
had been busy with ardent hopes. He had loved life and had won life
everlasting. He had known it when he sought learning from wise books. When
he kept watch by his armour in the Abbey church of Corbie and questioned
wistfully the darkness, that was the answer he had got. In the morning,
when he had knelt in snow-white linen and crimson and steel before the
high altar and received back his sword from God, the message had been
whispered to his heart. In the June dawn when, barefoot, he was given the
pilgrim's staff and entered on his southern journey, he had had a
premonition of his goal. But now what had been dim, like a shadow in a
mirror, was as clear as the colours in a painted psaltery. "Jerusalem,
Jerusalem," he sighed, as his King was wont to sigh. For he was crossing
the ramparts of the secret city.
He tried to take the ring from his finger that he might bury it, for it
irked him that his father's jewel should fall to his enemies. But the
wound had swollen his left hand, and he could not move the ring.
He was looking westward, for that way lay the Holy Places, and likewise
Alix and Picardy. His minutes were few now, for he heard the bridles of
the guards, as they closed in to carry him to his last fight. . . . He had
with him a fragment of rye-cake and beside him on the ridge was a little
spring. In his helmet he filled a draught, and ate a morsel. For, by the
grace of the Church to the knight in extremity, he was now sealed of the
priesthood, and partook of the mystic body and blood of his Lord. . . .
Somewhere far off there was a grass fire licking the hills, and the sun
was setting in fierce scarlet and gold. The hollow of the sky seemed a
vast chapel ablaze with lights, like the lifting of the Host at Candlemas.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The tale is not finished. For, as it chanced, one Maffeo of Venice, a
merchant who had strayed to the court of Cambaluc and found favour there,
was sent by Kublai the next year on a mission to Europe, and his way lay
through the camp of Houlagou. He was received with honour, and shown the
riches of the Tartar armies. Among other things he heard of a Frankish
knight who had fallen in battle with Houlagou's champions, and won much
honour, they said, having slain three. He was shown the shrivelled arm of
this knight, with a gold ring on the third finger. Maffeo was a man of
sentiment, and begged for and was given the poor fragment, meaning to
accord it burial in consecrated ground when he should arrive in Europe. He
travelled to Bussorah, whence he came by sea to Venice. Now at Venice
there presently arrived the Count of St. Pol with a company of Frenchmen,
bound on a mission to the Emperor. Maffeo, of whom one may still read in
the book of Messer Marco Polo, was become a famous man in the city, and
strangers resorted to his house to hear his tales and see his treasures.
From him St. Pol learned of the dead knight, and, reading the cognisance
on the ring, knew the fate of his friend. On his return journey he bore
the relic to Louis at Paris, who venerated it as the limb of a saint; and
thereafter took it to Beaumanoir, where the Lady Alix kissed it with proud
tears. The arm in a rich casket she buried below the chapel altar, and the
ring she wore till her death.