Heartstone

I walked slowly down the nave. Then I saw, in another side chapel, bent before the altar rail, a figure in a dusty white coat. George Leacon. He must have heard my footsteps stop for he turned round. He looked utterly weary.

‘Forgive me,’ I said quietly. ‘I came to look at the church.’

He smiled sadly. ‘I was trying to communicate with my Maker.’

‘I remember at York you were working hard at reading the Bible.’

‘I still have that bible.’ He looked at me, his face anguished now. ‘These days it strikes me how full of war the Bible is. The Old Testament, at least, and the Book of Revelation.’

I sat on the altar-rail steps. After that long day in the saddle I doubted I could kneel. ‘Yes,’ I agreed.

‘I need to get away from images of war.’ Leacon’s tone was suddenly fierce. ‘I read the New Testament, I pray for images of battle to stop crowding into my head, but – they will not.’

I wondered again at how the open boyish face I remembered had become so thin, so stark. ‘You said you were in France last year,’ I prompted gently.

‘Ay.’ He turned so he was sitting beside me. ‘Those recruits, they have no notion what war is. When you knew me four years ago, Master Shardlake, I had had an easy form of soldiering. Garrison duty on the northern border or in Calais, or guarding the King’s palaces. No war, only border ruffles with the Scots. Yes, I saw reivers there brought back dead for their heads to be displayed on Berwick Castle. But I had never killed a man. And then, you remember, I was dismissed.’

‘Unjustly.’

‘And so I returned to my parents’ farm, which you saved for us in that court action.’

‘I owed you a debt.’

‘That was a good life, if a hard one. But my parents grew older, they could do less work and we had to hire labourers. Then, in the spring of last year, my old captain came. He said the King was going to invade France and they needed all the soldiering men they could get. The pay was good and I agreed.’ He looked at me intently. ‘I had no idea what it would be like. Does that not sound stupid, childish, coming from one who was a professional soldier?’

‘What happened?’

Leacon now spoke with a sort of quiet, desperate fervour. ‘I sailed first to Scotland with Lord Hertford’s fleet. Did you know, the King ordered him to wage a war that would spare neither women nor children? Lord Hertford did not want to, but the King insisted. We landed at a place called Leith and sacked it, burned every house to the ground and set the women and children running into the countryside. My company stayed there so I saw no more action then, but the rest of the army went to Edinburgh and did the same, razed everything to the ground. The men came back laden with booty, anything of value they could take from the houses. The boats were so laden it was feared some might sink. But spoil is part of war – without hope of gain soldiers are reluctant to march into enemy country.’

‘And now the Scots threaten to invade us, with the soldiers the French have sent them.’

‘Yes. King Francis wants England humbled for good.’ Leacon ran a hand through his curls. ‘We sailed straight from Scotland to France. In July, just a year ago. I was in charge of a half-company of archers. They are all dead now.’

‘All?’

‘Every one. We landed in Calais and marched straight to Boulogne. The countryside between had already been ravaged by foraging soldiers. As in Scotland the fields had been trampled, villages burned. I remember local people standing by the road, old people and women and children in rags, everything they owned taken or destroyed. Starving in the rain, there was nothing but rain and cold winds in France last year. I remember how pale their faces were.’ His voice fell almost to a whisper. ‘There was a woman, a baby in one skinny arm, holding out the other for alms. As I marched past I saw her baby was dead, its eyes open and glassy. Its mother hadn’t realized yet.’ Leacon stared at me fixedly. ‘We were not allowed to stop. I could see it affected the men but I had to encourage them, keep them marching. You have to, you have to.’ He stopped, with a great sigh. ‘And the French will do the same if they land, for revenge. Their captains will cry, “Havoc,” and it will be the turn of their men to take booty from us.’

‘All because the King wanted glory,’ I said bitterly.

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