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Knight and Squire - 21. Chapter 21
Knight and Squire
The Shadow of August
Dawn crept over the marsh in a thin grey veil, pale as breath on cold glass. The watchmen upon Wynthorpe’s palisade leaned forward, expecting the glint of French helms, the restless snort of horses, the stirring of an army poised for wrath.
But the fields lay empty.
The French encampment — so loud, so bristling with menace the night before — stood silent as a graveyard. Tents sagged in the morning wind. Cookfires smoldered unattended. A banner hung torn upon its pole, fluttering like a ghost’s ragged sleeve.
No soldiers moved among the rows. No horns sounded. No voices rose.
They were simply gone.
Kaylen mounted the wall beside Tomas, his breath catching at the sight. Ronan joined them moments later, rubbing sleep from his eyes — then freezing as he took in the abandoned camp.
“What sorcery is this?” he muttered.
Tomas shook his head slowly. “No sorcery. Tracks lead east. Many tracks. They marched in the night.”
Wulfric’s voice drifted up from below, low and certain. “To Dover.”
Kaylen felt the truth settle like frost along his spine. “Louis withdraweth not in fear. He withdraweth with purpose.”
The marsh was still — too still — as though it, too, listened for the echo of retreating boots.
Ronan spat over the wall. “Let him flee. We bloodied him well.”
“Nay,” Tomas murmured. “This is no flight. This is a hunter seeking another path.”
Kaylen’s gaze lingered on the empty field, the abandoned tents, the cold ashes of last night’s fires.
“This is but a pause,” he said quietly. “The storm hath not passed. It gathereth anew.”
And as the sun climbed over the fen, Wynthorpe understood that the true danger had only just begun.
By August, the towns beneath the keep stirred with relentless purpose. The grain from the summer fields came in heavy and golden, and every millstone in Wynthorpe turned from dawn until the stars rose. Men and women labored without cease, hauling sacks, tending ovens, grinding wheat into the fine white flour that would see the barony through the coming trials. The air itself seemed dusted with the scent of harvest and sweat.
The baron walked among them often, his face uncharacteristically light. “A good yield,” he murmured more than once. “A blessed yield.” For the first time since Louis’s banners had appeared on the horizon, Wynthorpe felt the faint stirrings of hope.
News traveled slowly from the coast, carried by traders and marsh‑folk alike. Yet all tales agreed on one thing: the siege of Dover had dragged on for a full month, and still the French had not broken the walls. Louis’s fury was said to shake the very cliffs, but the fortress held firm, its garrison stubborn as stone.
Ronan brought the latest tidings to the hall, dust still on his boots. “No breach,” he reported. “No surrender. And no end in sight.”
The baron allowed himself a rare smile. “Then the prince’s wrath is well spent far from our gates.”
But Kaylen, standing at the window, watched the marsh sway under the late‑summer sun. “Aye,” he said softly. “Yet wrath spent is not wrath forgotten.”
Outside, the mills groaned on, steady as the turning of the year.
The fighting at Dover had been going for a month.
A full month of stones hurled against the walls, of arrows hissing through the salt wind, of drums beating through the night like the pulse of some great, tireless beast. A month of sappers clawing at the earth beneath the towers, of firepots bursting against the gatehouse, of French horns sounding at dawn and dusk alike.
Within the fortress, the men wore the siege upon their faces. Mail hung heavier. Steps dragged. Even the horses seemed gaunt with weariness. Yet none spoke of surrender, for Hubert de Burgh’s resolve held them as firmly as the mortar bound the stones.
Each morning the mist rolled in from the Channel, veiling the valley where Louis’s host lay encamped. And each morning, as the sun burned the fog away, the French banners reappeared — red, blue, and gold — like wounds reopening upon the land.
Hubert walked the ramparts with the same steady tread he had kept since the first day. He paused often to lay a hand upon the stones, as though drawing strength from the ancient walls.
“Hold fast,” he murmured. “Hold as ye have held since the world was young.”
Below, the French engines creaked forward once more.
And Dover braced itself for yet another day of war.
Dover Castle stood stark upon the white cliffs, like a great stone keep set by God Himself to bar the way. For a full month had the French host lain before it, their tents strewn across the downs, their engines groaning day and night. Many a time had their arrows darkened the sky, and many a time had their towers crept toward the walls like timbered beasts. Yet still the fortress endured.
Within, the garrison moved with the grim steadiness of men long wedded to hardship.
Hubert de Burgh stood upon the inner rampart, his cloak snapping in the sea‑wind. Though age had set its mark upon his beard and brow, his gaze was keen as any hawk’s.
A young knight came hastening to him, helm beneath his arm. “My lord, the French engines smite the outer gate anew.”
Hubert answered without turning. “Let them beat their fill. That gate hath withstood tempests fiercer than any wrought by Louis.”
The knight shifted uneasily. “Their sappers delve beneath the wall. If they break the foundations—”
Hubert raised a hand. “We have counter‑tunnels, and men who know the earth as well as any mole. Bid Captain Morley to flood the lower trench. The sea shall serve us better than a hundred swords.”
The knight bowed and withdrew.
Hubert remained, gazing down upon the enemy lines. Fires guttered in the half‑light. Siege towers loomed like gaunt spectres. Drums thudded slow and sullen.
Yet something in the French camp seemed amiss. Their movements were sharp, fretful. Their banners hung low, as though wearied by their own prince’s wrath.
A grizzled sergeant joined him. “They stir ill at ease, my lord.”
“Aye,” Hubert murmured. “Louis deemed Dover would bow within a week. Pride is a poor counsellor.”
The sergeant spat over the wall. “If he would have our stones, he must climb them one by one.”
Hubert allowed himself a thin smile. “And break his teeth upon each.”
Below, a horn sounded — long and low, the call of labor spent and hope soured. Not the cry of assault, but of failure.
Hubert’s smile faded. “They will come again at dusk. They ever do.”
“Aye, my lord.”
“See the men fed. Double the watch upon the north tower. And bid the archers wax their bowstrings ere the sun falleth.”
The sergeant saluted and strode off.
Hubert lingered upon the rampart, the wind tugging at his cloak. He looked eastward, toward the grey line of the sea. Beyond that lay France — and the prince who sought to claim England as his prize.
“Thou shalt not have her,” Hubert whispered. “Not whilst breath remaineth in me.”
A distant crash echoed from the outer gate — another stone cast from a French trebuchet. Dust drifted from the mortar. The wall shuddered, but held.
Hubert laid his hand upon the ancient stones. “Stand with me,” he murmured. “As thou hast stood with kings aforetime.”
The keep groaned softly, as though answering his charge.
Ronan strode into the hall, dust upon his boots. “News from the coast,” he said. “Dover yet standeth. Hubert de Burgh holdeth firm.”
The baron exhaled, relief easing his brow. “Then Louis’s fury is spent upon stone, not upon us.”
Kaylen, standing by the window, shook his head. “Nay. Louis spendeth naught. He gathereth. And when Dover falleth — if it falleth — he shall turn his hungry eyes upon the marsh once more.”
Wulfric murmured, “Then must we be ready.”
Outside, the mills groaned on, and the late‑summer sun glimmered upon the fen like a blade half‑drawn.
September had come, and with it a chill that crept from the sea and settled over the French encampment like a shroud. The long days of summer were spent, and the nights grew sharp, carrying the scent of damp earth and smoldering pitch. Within the great pavilion at the heart of the host, Prince Louis held council.
The tent was vast, its canvas dyed deep red, its poles carved with lilies. Lanterns swung from the beams, casting wavering light upon maps strewn across a long oaken table. The air was thick with the smell of wax, sweat, and the iron tang of frustration.
Louis stood over the table, hands braced upon its edge. His armor lay discarded upon a stool, dented and smoke‑stained from a month of fruitless assaults. His eyes, however, burned with a feverish brightness.
“Another tower lost to their fire,” muttered one of his captains, a grizzled knight with a scar across his cheek. “Their archers shoot truer than ours. Their walls stand as though God Himself upholdeth them.”
Louis did not look up. “God upholdeth no man,” he said softly. “Only will. And mine is the stronger.”
A scholar in dark robes stepped forward, bowing low. “My prince, the men grow weary. Supplies dwindle. The townsfolk within Dover yet resist. If we press the siege into winter—”
Louis straightened, his gaze sharp as a drawn blade. “Winter mattereth not. Dover must fall. England must kneel. And Hubert de Burgh must be broken.”
The scholar swallowed. “Aye, my prince.”
Louis paced the length of the tent, cloak trailing behind him like a shadow. Outside, the muffled sounds of the camp drifted through the canvas — the ring of hammers, the groan of siege engines, the weary murmurs of men who had seen too many dawns without victory.
He halted before the tent’s entrance, where the wind tugged at the flaps. Beyond lay the faint glow of watchfires, scattered across the downs like dying stars.
“Hubert mocketh me,” Louis said, voice low. “Each day he holdeth the walls, he proclaimeth me weak. Each night he refuseth surrender, he stealeth breath from my claim.”
A captain cleared his throat. “Shall we attempt the mines again, my lord? Or bring forth the great ram?”
Louis turned, eyes narrowing. “We shall bring forth all. Engines, towers, rams — and the will to use them. I care not if the cliffs themselves crumble. Dover shall yield.”
He stepped closer to the table, placing a finger upon the map where the castle’s gatehouse was marked. “Here,” he said. “Here we strike next. And we strike until the stones bleed.”
The captains exchanged uneasy glances. They had seen Louis wrathful before, but this was something colder — a resolve that bordered on obsession, a hunger sharpened by the relic he had failed to seize.
Outside, thunder rumbled over the Channel, though no storm yet showed in the sky.
Louis smiled faintly. “Even the heavens stir. Let them witness what cometh.”
He dismissed his council with a flick of his hand. One by one, the captains bowed and withdrew, leaving the prince alone amid the lantern‑lit maps and the restless wind.
Louis stood motionless for a long moment, listening to the distant roar of the sea against the cliffs.
“Kaylen,” he murmured, almost to himself. “Thou hast hidden the stone from me. But thou canst not hide forever.”
His fingers tightened upon the edge of the table.
“Dover first. Then Wynthorpe. Then the marsh itself.”
The lanterns flickered as the wind rose, and the tent seemed to breathe around him.
August came upon King John with a weight he could neither cast off nor outrun.
He rode ceaselessly through the shires, driving his household knights at a pace that would have broken lesser men. From Winchester to Marlborough, from Marlborough to Devizes, from Devizes into the Midlands, the king moved like a hunted stag — swift, restless, and never still. Dust clung to his cloak, sweat to his brow, and fear to his shadow.
Though he spoke little of it, the strain carved itself plainly upon him. His face grew gaunt, his eyes hollow, and his temper sharp as a drawn blade. Chroniclers would later write that August was the month when the king’s strength first began to fail, though none dared say so aloud at the time.
At each stronghold he paused only long enough to levy men, demand provisions, or hold hurried counsel. His meals were heavy — too heavy — and he ate with a hunger that seemed less for food than for comfort. Some whispered that such feasting was unwise in the heat of the season; others murmured that the king sought to fill a void no banquet could satisfy.
Yet the tidings that reached him offered no solace.
Messengers came daily, their horses lathered, their faces drawn.
“Sire, Louis presseth Dover without cease.”
“Sire, the barons reclaim the castles behind thee.”
“Sire, the Welsh stir again.”
“Sire, the Scots muster in the north.”
Each report struck John like a blow. He clenched his jaw, barked orders, and spurred his retinue onward. But the kingdom seemed to shift beneath him like sand, loyal ground slipping away with each passing week.
And all the while, his health waned.
The heat of August weighed upon him cruelly. He sweated through his tunic even in the morning cool, and by midday he rode slumped in the saddle, his breath ragged. His attendants noted how often he pressed a hand to his stomach, how his complexion paled after each heavy meal, how he woke in the night with a feverish sheen upon his brow.
Still he refused rest.
“England burneth,” he muttered more than once, “and I must stamp out the flames.”
But the flames grew faster than he could ride.
By mid‑August he reached the West Midlands — the last region still firmly loyal — yet even there the whispers followed him like smoke.
“The king is running out of places to hide.”
John heard them. He heard everything. And though he snarled at his enemies and snapped at his servants, the truth gnawed at him: his body was failing him, and the realm was slipping from his grasp.
He pushed on regardless.
He rode through villages where the harvest was beginning, through forests where the leaves had not yet turned, through towns where the people bowed low but watched him with wary eyes. His cloak clung to him with sweat, and his breath grew shorter with each passing day.
By the last week of August, the signs could no longer be ignored. His appetite faltered. His strength waned. His bowels troubled him. His sleep was broken by fever and chills. Chroniclers would later mark this month as the beginning of the illness that would carry him to his grave.
Yet still he rode.
For August was ending, and September — with all its reckonings — crept toward him like a gathering storm.
All through August, the keep at Wynthorpe laboured as though winter itself pressed at the gates.
The mills turned without cease, the granaries filled, and the watch upon the palisade was doubled. Word traveled swiftly along the marsh paths and through the traders who braved the fen: tidings of rebellion in the shires, of Louis tightening his grip upon the coast, and — most troubling of all — of King John’s failing health.
The baron kept a map spread upon his hall‑table, weighted at the corners with stones. Each new report was marked upon it, and each mark darkened the mood of the household. Kaylen read the messengers’ letters by torchlight, his brow furrowed, while Ronan listened in silence, his face unreadable.
For the realm itself seemed to tremble.
John rode ceaselessly, they said, as though chased by his own doom. His strength waned. His temper frayed. His meals sat ill with him. Some whispered that the king was sickening; others that he was cursed. And though no man in Wynthorpe dared speak treason, all felt the same cold truth settling upon them like a shadow.
If John died, England would be thrown to the wolves.
The baron stood often upon the battlements at dusk, watching the marsh darken beneath the reddening sky. “A storm gathereth,” he murmured more than once. “And we stand in its path.”
The villagers felt it too. Mothers hushed their children earlier than usual. Men sharpened tools that were not meant for war. Even the marshfolk, who seldom showed fear, moved with a wary stillness, as though listening for something beneath the wind.
By month’s end, the fear had grown into something palpable — a heaviness in the air, a darkness that seemed to seep into the very stones of the keep. For the tidings from the west grew worse with each passing day: the king’s strength failing, his face pale as parchment, his bowels troubled, his sleep broken by fever.
And the whispers spread.
If the king falleth, who shall hold the realm? Who shall stand against Louis? Who shall keep the marsh safe?
Kaylen heard those whispers in the courtyard, in the hall, even in the quiet of the chapel. He felt them settle upon his shoulders like a mantle he had not asked to bear.
August waned. The nights grew colder. And the fear of John’s death — once a distant dread — became a shadow that walked beside every man in Wynthorpe.
The keep had more arrows now than when Louis first came — far more. The fletchers worked day and night beneath the torchlight, their benches piled high with shafts and goose‑feathers. Every arrow was black‑fletched, dyed with soot and pitch so they would vanish against the night sky. It was said a man could not walk the courtyard without hearing the soft rasp of feathers being bound to wood.
And more than a few birds were missing their plumage.
Children whispered that the marsh‑geese flew ragged that season, half‑plucked by unseen hands. Hunters swore the herons along the fen rose in uneven flight, their wings bare in patches where fletchers had taken what they needed. Even the crows circling the battlements seemed thinner, as though the keep itself had reached up and stripped them for war.
By late August, the arrow‑stores were stacked high in the armoury — bundles upon bundles, enough to darken the sky should Louis return. Kaylen inspected them often, running a thumb along the black feathers, feeling the tension in the bowstrings, hearing the quiet hum of readiness in every corner of the keep.
For all knew the storm was coming.
And the black‑fletched arrows, like the fear that hung over Wynthorpe, only grew in number as September crept nearer.
Kaylen armed all boys of fourteen years and older, placing bows in their hands and quivers heavy with black‑fletched arrows. It was a grim duty, one he had prayed never to see, yet the times allowed no gentler course. The marshfolk understood this well enough; fear had sharpened them, and even the youngest among them bore themselves with a hard, quiet resolve.
In the courtyard, the boys stood in uneven lines, their faces pale in the torchlight. Some tried to hide their trembling. Others gripped their bows with fierce determination, eager to prove themselves men before their time. The fletchers moved among them, adjusting grips, correcting stances, murmuring low words of instruction.
Kaylen walked the row slowly, his gaze steady, his heart heavy. He saw in each face a life that should have been spent in fields, in boats upon the fen, in laughter and mischief — not upon battlements awaiting a prince’s wrath. Yet the realm was darkening, and the shadow of King John’s failing health stretched long across the land.
“This will be a fight to the death, should it come,” Kaylen said, his voice carrying across the yard. “But ye shall not stand alone. The keep standeth with you. The marsh standeth with you. And I stand with you.”
The boys nodded, some swallowing hard, others lifting their chins with newfound courage.
Above them, the wind stirred the banners upon the palisade. The sky was low and grey, as though the heavens themselves watched in uneasy silence.
For all knew the storm was coming.
And Wynthorpe would meet it with every hand that could draw a bow.
Training began at first light.
The boys — fourteen years and older, though some looked scarcely twelve — gathered in the lower yard with bows in hand and quivers heavy with black‑fletched arrows. The morning mist clung to their tunics, and the chill of the marsh made their breath rise in pale clouds. They stood in uneven ranks, shifting from foot to foot, trying to look braver than they felt.
Kaylen walked before them, his cloak stirring in the wind. He carried no sword today, only a bow of yew polished smooth with long use. His voice, when he spoke, was steady and low.
“Ye are not children now. Should Louis return, every hand that can draw a bow shall be needed. This keep standeth because we stand together.”
Some of the boys swallowed hard. Others lifted their chins.
The fletchers moved among them, adjusting grips, correcting stances, tightening bowstrings. Old Harl, whose fingers were twisted with age but whose eye was still sharp as a hawk’s, tapped one lad on the shoulder.
“Stand square, lad. A crooked stance looses a crooked arrow.”
Another boy flinched as the bowstring snapped against his wrist. Kaylen stepped to him, gently adjusting his elbow.
“Hold firm. The bow is no enemy. It is the arm that striketh farther than any sword.”
They practiced until the sun climbed high, loosing arrows into straw butts set against the palisade. The thrum of bowstrings filled the yard — a sound like distant thunder, steady and relentless. Black‑fletched shafts struck home again and again, quivering in tight clusters.
By midday, the boys’ arms trembled with fatigue, but none dared complain. They knew what was at stake. Word of King John’s failing health had reached even the youngest ears, and fear walked the keep like a silent guest.
When the final horn sounded, Kaylen gathered them close.
“Remember this,” he said. “If the storm breaketh upon us, ye shall not stand alone. The marsh standeth with you. The keep standeth with you. And I stand with you.”
The boys nodded, some with fierce resolve, others with quiet dread.
Above them, the wind stirred the banners upon the walls. The sky was low and grey, as though the heavens themselves watched in uneasy silence.
For all knew the storm was coming.
And Wynthorpe would meet it with every hand that could draw a bow.
The baron came to the training yard at dusk, drawn by the steady thrum of bowstrings. The sun hung low over the marsh, casting long shadows across the courtyard where the boys stood in their ragged lines, loosing black‑fletched arrows into the straw butts.
He paused beneath the archway, saying nothing.
Kaylen noticed him first and stepped aside, allowing the baron to take in the sight. The older man’s face, usually stern as carved oak, softened — not with pride, but with a sorrow too deep for words. His gaze lingered on each boy: sons of fishermen, millers, marsh‑herds, and crofters. Children who should have been chasing geese along the fen, not preparing to face a prince’s wrath.
One lad loosed an arrow that struck wide. He cursed under his breath. The baron stepped forward, laying a gentle hand upon the boy’s shoulder.
“Steady, lad,” he murmured. “Fear shaketh the hand more than any foe. Breathe, and let the bow do its work.”
The boy nodded, swallowing hard, and drew again. This time the arrow struck true.
The baron straightened, his eyes glistening in the fading light. “Kaylen,” he said quietly, “I had hoped never to see such a day. Yet here we stand.”
“Aye, my lord,” Kaylen replied. “But they stand ready.”
The baron looked out over the marsh, where the wind stirred the reeds like whispering ghosts. “May God grant that their arrows fly straight… and that they need not fly at all.”
He turned away then, for the weight upon his heart was too great to bear in the sight of those young faces.
Word spread quickly through the fen that the boys of Wynthorpe had taken up the bow. By the next morning, the marshfolk began to arrive at the keep gates — not in crowds, but in quiet trickles, like the tide creeping in.
An old woman came first, her back bent, her hands knotted with age. She carried a bundle of goose‑feathers wrapped in linen. “For the fletchers,” she said simply. “Take them. My birds can spare more than my heart can.”
A fisherman followed, laying a small pouch of dried eel upon the table. “For strength,” he muttered. “The lads will need it.”
A young mother brought a strip of leather, soft and well‑oiled. “For bowgrips,” she whispered, her voice trembling. “My boy is but twelve… but he will stand with the others when his time cometh.”
Even the marsh‑hermits — those strange, half‑wild folk who dwelt in huts of reeds and driftwood — came forth. One laid a charm of woven rushes at the gate, muttering a blessing in a tongue older than the keep itself.
By noon, the courtyard tables were covered with offerings: feathers, leather, dried meats, herbs for strength, salves for blisters, and small tokens of protection. The boys watched in awe as the gifts piled higher.
Kaylen stood among them, humbled.
“These folk trust us,” he said softly. “They trust you. Remember that when ye draw the bow.”
The boys nodded, their faces solemn.
For the marshfolk had given not only feathers and food — but their hope, their fear, and their faith.
And Wynthorpe felt, for the first time in many weeks, like a single heartbeat.
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
