Another
chapter from the Villehardouin novel I mostly wrote 25+ years ago and
never completely finished. This chapter is about Boniface of
Montferrat. Remember, this is fiction, unimpeded by the amazing historical research of
the last two decades.
*
* * * * * * * * *
II.
THE LION
Boniface
de Montferrat was riding south.
Nowhere
in his path was there anyone who had not heard of bloody
Constantinople. Nor was there anyone who had not heard of
Montferrat, heard of that Thursday in Constantinople when blood stood
in the depressions of the cobblestones, when Montferrat on his
massive destrier rode from the harbor gate to the great palace of
Boukoleon: the streets were piled with bodies and the air was full of
black smoke, and all the way his hands never touched the reins and
his horse's hoofs never touched the ground.
Nor
was there anyone who had yet to learn of the flight of the Emperor,
of greedy, lazy Alexios III who eloped from the City with the crown
jewels. Who stole from the City's defense whatever was left of the
treasury of the Empire, and divided it among his doxies and his flute
girls for easy carrying. Who left his Empress and his daughters and
his City to the whims of the Frankish warlords.
And
Montferrat, Frankish King of Salonika, reaped the benefit of this
knowledge and the despair it brought. And wherever Montferrat held
out his hand, another city fell into it as easily as a late-summer
plum.
So
it was that at word of his approach, town after town poured out its
inhabitants and wealth to greet him. He rode at the forefront of his
army: a towering man, broad-shouldered and with a mane of white hair,
on a great red warhorse, the banner with the golden lion fluttering
overhead. The road was lined with weeping women and excited children
who scattered branches of laurel in his path and wreathed his horse
with flowers and cried, "Na
zeisete! Chronia polla!" May
you live long and prosper!
And
at each town, the elders came out to meet him -- the gerontes and the
archons in their furs, the ephors and phylaxes and logothetes and
protonotaries with their seals of office and their books and keys,
the bishops with jewelled crowns and golden dragons on their staffs,
the priests in tall black hats and brocaded robes. Holding their
gold and crimson icons above their heads, bearing before them the
silvered coffers of holy relics of their saints, and the revenues of
their towns in wooden boxes, they greeted him and fell to their knees
and cried, "Na zeisete, na
vasilisete!" May you live and
reign!"
Montferrat
acknowledged their greetings with a wave of his white-gloved hand,
and accepted their homage and their gifts, and then it was seen that
his authority over his men was as absolute as over his horse: nowhere
was anything touched, or any woman offended, or any church defiled.
Greeks asked to ride with him, to join his army, for under
Montferrat's lion rode Prince Manuel of Constantinople, the son of
his bride and boy-heir to the throne of the Greeks.
Behind
Montferrat, the cloud of dust stretched for two miles, stirred by
five hundred knights and a thousand foot, their destriers and war
horses and palfreys, squires and servants, pack mules and laundresses
and wagons. They straggled along cheerfully, barelegged in the heat,
their stockings hanging from their belts, their shirts tied around
their heads to keep the sweat from their eyes. They sang:
We
be soldiers three!
Pardonnez-moi,
je vous en prie.
Lately
come forth from Con-sti-no-ply,
With
nary a lepta of money!
The
long summer days were hot and cloudless, the wheat had been
harvested, the markets were mounded with fruit. The knights and
sergeants and arbalestriers and foot soldiers paid whatever price was
asked of them, for they and their horses and wagons were piled with
plunder from Constantinople. For three days, these knights and
soldiers had been set loose on the City to work their wildest
imaginings, and after those three days of untrammeled violence and
unparalleled destruction, the money and gold and plate and jewels,
the furs and silks and ivory, had been piled together; a dozen
churches and convents had been filled, room after room mounded from
floor to ceiling, and the Venetian bankers had spent more than a week
counting and measuring and estimating and weighing. After the lords
and barons and Bishops and Doge claimed the gold and jewels, the rest
was divided into shares: one for each foot soldier; for a sergeant,
two, and for a knight, four.
Most
spent their wealth soon enough, got rid of the brocades and silks,
the silvered basins and ewers, for a soldier on the march can do
nothing with brocade but hire a woman to travel along and provide the
cooking and washing and such that a man might need. And Montferrat
held out to them hope of more wealth, for he gave away to his
followers the lands through which they passed. And every day or two,
the line of knights riding along the dusty Greek roads grew shorter,
as the newest landholder took possession of his fief, and gave out
farms and lands to the knights and soldiers in his companies, and
sold off others to the hangers-on.
For
Montferrat had need of loyal followers. Ambition controlled him as
surely as he controlled his horse. At fifty, he craved to be far
greater than Marquis, for though in the courts of France and Italy he
had precedence in the first rank of the nobility, in his family he
was the least. Only four months earlier, he was confident of
triumph: the throne of the Empire of Byzantium was in his grasp, a
prize far beyond anything his brothers had won -- though one was
Regent of Jerusalem and King of Jerusalem, and the other had been
King of Salonika, and even his sister was Queen of Cyprus. So when
Constantinople fell, Montferrat rode on the Imperial Palace of
Boukoleon -- so called because of its great prophetic sculpture of a
bull locked in mortal combat with a lion -- assured the throne was
his.
So
sure that, on that same blood-drenched, smoke-blinded day, he married
the young Queen Mother: Margaret of Hungary, twice Empress, sister
and daughter to kings of Hungary, grand-daughter to Louis VII of
France, and mother of the heir to the throne of Byzantium. That the
Lady Margaret was beautiful, that she had both French wit and
Hungarian cheekbones, was delightful, but Montferrat desired the
throne far more than he had ever desired a woman and his desire for
the throne blinded him to any other consideration. And so he did not
consider the power of the blind Doge to control his fate. Now Doge
Dandolo feared the Marquis whose lands in Italy adjoined those of
Venice, and who as Emperor would rule alone, and so he gave the
election to the man he could dominate, to dour Baudouin, the pious
and anxious Count of Flanders.
Baudouin
was crowned in Agia Sophia under clouds of incense, and gold mosaics
glittering in the light of a thousand silver lamps. His robe was
cloth-of-gold sewn with jewels, his mantle was of purple and furs,
and Montferrat held out to him the gold crown of the Emperors of
Byzantium. Six bishops together placed the crown on Baudouin's head
and his thin face was shadowed by the heavy pendants of pearls which
hung down to his shoulders. For all the previous day and night,
Baldwin had fasted and kept vigil: he swayed with the weight and the
heat, and the crown which was too large slipped.
Montferrat
was first of the great lords to swear homage: the green lion of
Montferrat dipped before the black and gold lion of Flanders. In
white leather and silk, and emerald brocade mantle, he knelt before
the new Emperor in the ancient ritual of fealty. He touched the
uncertain crown with his right hand, and then, his broad shoulders
blocking Baudouin from view, he placed his hands between Baudouin's
hands, and swore the great oath:
"I,
Boniface, Marquis de Montferrat, do hereby swear myself your liege
man of life and limb, and of earthly worship and faith and truth I
will bear unto the honor of my lord and his heirs against all manner
of folks, so long as I shall live."
And
they sealed the oath by kissing on the mouth, and Montferrat hissed,
"Now keep your throne," and the spittle from his mouth
spattered Baudouin's cheek and those who stood nearest saw stains on
the purple.
Then
was the Emperor Baudouin truly afraid, and he did refuse to invest
the Marquis with his rightful lands, and the Marquis de Montferrat
rebelled and took his lords and followers from the city. Already
regretting the choice of Emperor, fearing civil war, and fearing for
the safety of the city against Kalojan of the Bulgarians, the great
overlords of the Crusade persuaded both men to agree to give the
decision to Council. Then did the Council give to Montferrat the
lands in northern Greece which he desired, for as the old Doge said:
"Give him what he wants. He is too tall to hang." And
many who had formerly supported Baudouin left him for service with
Montferrat.
After
humiliation and bloodless conquest, Montferrat's hunger ran thus: I
am King of Salonika, but even so was my brother at seventeen. I can
do more. They come to my side every day. By this time next year,
all Greece can be mine. Baudouin will well have to tolerate whatever
I do here because he has great need of me: without me, he is helpless
against Kalojan, and he needs me against the Saracens. I can defeat
Kalojan when I am ready. The Pope's lands adjoin mine: he will not
risk those, and his fear for the safety of Cristendom in the East
will take care of the rest. Dandolo will be difficult, but I will
control the near ports, and Venice will come on her knees to me if
Kalojan pushes west. With Greece behind me, I can cut through to
Hungary, and when I ally with Margaret's brother, Kalojan will be
surrounded. And then nothing can keep me from Constantinople . . .
*
* * *
Leon
Sgouros was riding north.
Late
that summer, he had sent a summons throughout his lands for all men
with horses or bows or swords, for anyone who wanted the rewards of
victory, to join him at the Isthmus. From there, his company rode on
high-walled Thebes. Expecting formidable opposition, Sgouros was
taken aback when the Theban archons met him at the city gates, the
gates wide open, and suspicious, when, before he could demand their
surrender, they handed him a soft leather bag of gold coins and a
prepared address requesting him to lead their defense against the
Franks. And gave him the information that the Emperor Alexios with
the Empresses, was at Larissa, a hard week's march away.
Sgouros
never dismounted. He wiped his dusty face, ordered the Thebans to
bring him food and water, and water and oats for the horses.
Cramming the prepared address into a pouch without reading it, he
began a series of brusque instructions, speaking rapidly to one
assistant and then another, and never to the Thebans themselves. He
demanded that the private brigades employed by the Theban merchants
present themselves within half an hour, ready for service with their
horses and a three-day supply of food. He assigned soldiers to
accompany Chamateros to see the Theban treasurer about tribute and
taxes. He assigned another aide to watch Chamateros.
When
the hastily-equipped Theban guards came out, Sgouros jerked his
horse's head around and started off at a gallop, followed by a small
party of horsemen. He planned as he rode: How much time do I have?
We have nothing to fight them with. Nothing. The Franks will come
all the way down. They are unstoppable. I am the strongest man in
Greece, and I won't be able stop them but I will have to fight them
somewhere. We can hold them at the Isthmus for a while, do business
there. The Emperor will be of little help against the Franks, he
doesn't have any soldiers. As a hostage? Maybe. At the very least,
I can hold him and his family for ransom. The Franks will want the
Emperor, and if I have him, they will have to deal with me. The
Emperor is a fool, but he has daughters. I can marry one. Then at
the Emperor's death, I will be Emperor. One son-in-law already was.
That other one, that Laskaris who claims to be Emperor now -- he will
be the main problem. But if I have an heir who is also the heir to
the Emperor. The Emperor will be no problem. He drinks. He's fat.
Sgouros
arrived at Larissa after two days of hard riding, sleeping barely
four hours in a night, and taking new horses in each town. He swung
down from the saddle and demanded to see the Emperor. One of the
servants told him that the Emperor was in bed, sick -- unable to
receive guests. Sick with fear, Sgouros thought, and stalked into
the Emperor's room in mid-sentence, ignoring the protests of the
servants, laying out his plans. His hands made short, chopping
motions. He did not bow. He ignored the presence of the girl in
the bed with Alexios.
Alexios
jerked his embroidered covers up around his neck. Kataramene
Criste, he thought, this man is
uncouth! And dangerous. And he's is all I've got. He's threatening
me. He has to be controlled. He can marry Eudocia. I have no idea
how a daughter of mine can have so little of what attracts a man.
Takes after her mother. Thank God the others aren't like that. Too
bad one of them isn't here. Eudocia is wealthy, though. Fortunate
now, she's a widow. Good thing I brought her jewels along. It's
going to be a bitch getting them back from the girls, but I may have
to do it.
Alexios
offered Eudocia, mentioning in an off-hand way what Sgouros already
knew: that her private land-holdings covered much of the northern
Peloponnesos; added to his, this would give him control of all the
country between Thebes and Arkadia, Patras and Nauplion. Sgouros
demanded the Empress Euphrosyne's lands south of Larissa for himself.
Alexios agreed. He was glad to let Sgouros argue with her. Thus,
in ten minutes of talking, Sgouros acquired for himself ten times the
land gained by all his previous conquests: he was now ruler of a
third of the lands of Greece.
The
Empress was not consulted. Nor was Eudocia, in mourning, recently
and brutally deprived of her husband, the towering Alexios Doukas
Mourtzophlous she had adored from girlhood. In a final desperate
attempt to save Constantinople, he led a rebellion to overthrow the
puppet rulers of the Franks. Then the Franks attacked the Queen of
Cities with fire and axe. Mourtzophlous brought Eudocia and her
mother out of the flaming City by main force, butting his way through
the mob, bellowing and swinging his staff to clear the panicked crowd
out of his way. And when she was too tired to walk, Mourtzophlous
carried her in his arms like a child.
They
went to Adrianople where Mourtzophlous had land and influence. There
was a month or two of quiet, and sometimes pleasure, while he brought
together an army of refugees from the City and armed bands from the
towns and estates of eastern Thrace. But their short javelins and
unarmored Arabians could not compete with the long spears and armored
destriers of the Franks, and once again, Mourtzophlous saved Eudocia
and her mother, although he had to abandon the Imperial scarlet
pavilion.
Mourtzophlous
brought Eudocia and the Empress to their lord and father Alexios, to
his small court in a villa beside a lake. They arrived in the heat
of the day, exhausted, to find no one at the gate to greet them, no
one at the door to guard the villa. Curtains blew in the breeze, and
they heard a flute. They followed its melody through the dusty,
disorderly villa to a terrace overlooking the water where Alexios
reclined on pillows. The flute-player was a sparsely-dressed girl,
and another not dressed at all massaged his feet. He was not best
pleased at his family's arrival.
He
shook his head at the Empress: "To think of what you must have
gone through, my dear," he said dryly. And to Eudocia, "When
will you learn how to dress?"
Thinking
quickly, Alexios invited his exhausted and unwashed son-in-law into a
steam bath to clean off the marks of the journey. The luxurious
heat, the perfume of the bath oils, made Mourtzophlous drowsy. He
stretched out for an attendant to pummel his back. Under the firm,
steady hands, he drifted in and out of sleep to jerk awake shouting
when rough hands seized his arms and legs. It took six men to hold
him. Alexios stood by, belly hanging over the towel which he
clutched with one hand, waving the steam from his face with the other
and laughing loudly. He summoned Eudocia and the Empress Euphrosyne,
and before their eyes the eyes of their rescuer were blinded. Which
rescuer, the Emperor Mourtzophlous, was then dressed and taken to the
roadway north of town where a stick was put into his hand, and he was
told to start walking.
And
he had started walking, and for the price of a few lepta, the beggars
had pelted him with dung and stones, shouting, "Embezzler!"
and "Usurper!" and sometimes, "Coward!"
Mourtzophlous walked for days, asking to be directed to the next
town, begging for bread, for water, sleeping against walls. Until
the day when he was taken prisoner by Frankish soldiers who
recognized him from Constantinople and brought him to Montferrat.
"My tent is your tent," he said wryly, holding up the
scarlet flap as he guided the blind Emperor to enter.
He
ordered his servants to help Mourtzophlous eat and wash. Then
Montferrat tried to question the blind man, but Mourtzophlous was
defiant. Montferrat shrugged, "You should have treated with me
long ago," and sent him on his way with a little money and food
and a clean mantle. The blind giant made his way across Thrace, to
the shore of the Sea of Marmara where a fisherman remembered him and
helped him to cross to Asia Minor, and for a brief time, the
dispossessed and those who still wanted to fight gathered around him.
Such loyalty came to the attention of Thierry de Loos who held that
land in fief of the Emperor Baudouin, and he ordered Mourtzouphlous
arrested and taken to Constantinople.
Baudouin,
tense and pious, refused to see his predecessor. He discussed
heresy. He threw out problems of precedence and etiquette and
entitlement to High Justice, talked about the laws of God and
unrighteous kings. Talked about a man's betrayal of his Emperor and
the violation of covenants. Hemmed and hawed about the possibilities
of a trial for treason, about the legal definitions being unclear.
Hemmed and hawed long enough for some of his captains to detect his
secret wish.
On
an avenue of the City stood a series of triumphal columns, one of
them carved on the outside and hollow inside. Inside the column, a
narrow, slippery stair curled to the top where there was a platform
with a statue of an Emperor. They climbed the stairs, dragging and
bumping the bound and cursing Mourtzophlous between them. At the
top, they unbound him, bloody and bruised, and tried to force him to
stand. He slipped and fell against the statue. They laughed, kept
laughing, and one of them blew blasts on a hunting horn and shouted
down to the crowd. Then they hurled the last Emperor of Byzantium
off the column. And the Doge shrugged and punned, "High justice
for such a tall man." He said it in Greek because it was the
same word, psilos,
for both high
and tall,
and they left the body to the dogs and pigs.
*
* * * *
The
Franks were less than a day away from Larissa. Sgouros in armor and
Eudocia in black, on horseback and ready to leave, were hurriedly
married by an old priest too senile to understand who was before him.
They left Larissa within the hour, Sgouros and the Emperor first,
Eudocia riding beside her mother's litter. It was sunny and dry, the
imperial robes were wretchedly hot. An hour out of Larissa, Sgouros,
impatient, insisted they abandon the litters which were slowing them
fatally: the women could ride the sumpter mules. This meant some of
the men would have to walk and carry bundles. They tried to buy more
animals from the peasants who came out to look, but any animals the
peasants possessed seemed inordinately expensive and unaccountably
difficult to round up.
The
Imperial party rode as best they could from Larissa to Farsala, and
then to Domokos. Sgouros looked with little satisfaction at these
rich plains and gentle hills, now his, for the officials who should
have received the party, fed them, supplied armed men, and rendered
homage and taxes, were inexplicably unavailable. Just after Domokos,
they encountered the rest of Sgouros's army marching up from Thebes.
It was a reluctant, rag-tag group, irregularly armed with the produce
of random armories and piracies, contrasting poorly with the Thebans
who were uniformed in scarlet tunics and scaled breastplates and
marched separately. When Frankish outriders appeared on a hill,
Sgouros stationed a rear guard, those men without horses, to create a
delay.
The
guard were quickly routed by a group of foot soldiers. The Franks
bothered neither to collect prisoners nor to kill them. They
resheathed their swords, picked up those of the Greeks, and set off
after Sgouros and the Emperor.
Whatever
his worth as Emperor, Alexios was worthless to his own party. The
Brother of the Sun and Moon was left to pull himself up onto his
horse, dip his own water, spread out his own sunshade. Everyone
deferred to Sgouros who wore authority like a skin and ignored his
bride. Eudocia was too shaken to speak, Euphrosyne too furious to
keep silent. She kept up a steady diatribe against the upstart
Sgouros, the incompetence and stupidity of the Emperor, the existence
of the doxies, the total lack of planning for travel, and the
weather. "Years ago," she whispered tight-lipped to
Alexios, "years ago my brother-in-law warned you about that man.
And you never listened to him, or to me, either." Alexios
found himself glancing toward Sgouros for succor; Sgouros finally
ordered some of the soldiers to take her to the rear of the train and
keep her there.
The
only chance Sgouros might have even to slow the Franks would be at
the single mountain pass leading south. They halted just before the
entrance to the pass, near a cluster of summer villas built on the
hillside above hot sulphur springs, and the army prepared to fight.
Most had short, broad-bladed swords or javelins. Some wore armor,
some had chestpieces of boiled, hammered leather, or breastplates
with metal scales, or even short-sleeved coats of mail. The men from
Corinth carried bows and arrows, and wicker shields. The rest tried
to make-do by using buckets or pots for helmets, tying quilts or rugs
or even saddles around themselves for protection. Sgouros, whip in
hand, wheeled his horse back and forth, demonstrating a confidence he
did not possess:
"Thebans
to my left. Javelins into the pass, up the hillside! Swords below.
You in the pass, collect stones. Move it! Bryennios, see to them!
They throw together on your command. Go for the horses! Get the
horses down."
"Corinthians
to the mound! Archers, past the javelins, into the rocks at the
curve. Pile `em up! Block them with their own horses! Swords,
below! Their foot will have to come in to get the horses out of the
way. Then you swords go for them. Move! Now!"
They
could hear the shouts and trumpet calls from the Frankish army, then
the neighing of excited horses. The Greek horses, untrained to
trumpets and sudden noise, nickered and snorted in fear, jerking
against each other and entangling gear.
"Every
man into the fight!" Sgouros shouted after the baggage handlers
who dropped their baggage and ran after the Imperial party which was
retreating into a protected stand of trees. Alexios, remembering the
imperial dignity, ordered them to prepare the tents and carpets, but
Sgouros galloped onto the carpets, lashing out with his whip, livid:
"I said every man into the fight! Your Emperor won't need his
carpets if you don't get out of this!"
He
dashed back to the pass. "Archers here and here, Doukas! Now!
If you can't take a man, take his horse! An arrow in the throat!
Makarios, I want the javelins in the ground -- a curve from here
across to here. Space them out, space them out!
"Thebans,
to the left! Move to their flank, use your javelins where they're
unprotected. Stay together, don't get cut off. Move it! Move it!
Horsemen, watch out for the marsh on the right! Don't get forced
into the pass; there's no room to maneuver, but if you can lure the
Franks in, the swords can rush them."
Waving
to a party to accompany him, he nudged his horse to the top of the
mound among the archers. "I know what you have heard about
these people," he screamed, "but they are helpless without
their horses. Go for the horses! Hit the ground rolling! Go in
under the lances and attack the horses. Slash the muscles in the leg
or the belly. Get your man when he's coming down. Their swords are
too long to fight close -- you have the advantage there. Go for the
horses!"
The
Frankish line was moving from the right, a long row of flashing
spears pointing toward the sky. They came slowly at first, hoofs
pounding in unison, and then as they picked up speed, the horses
moved apart, the line lengthened and curved, the lances flashed down.
They were closing fast, shouting, "A Montferrat!" The
Greek horses whinnied and reared, flung their riders against each
other.
At
the right end of his line, near the sea, Sgouros saw his riders bolt.
The first ran headlong into the marsh where they stuck, screaming;
those following stumbled and turned, desperate for solid ground or a
path through. The archers near Sgouros dropped their bows and
started to run. He ordered retreat, wheeled his horse around, and
they fled into the pass. All but the Thebans who rode toward the
enemy, threw down their weapons and dismounted, hands high.
The
first knights in the charge reined in their horses before the pass,
suspecting an ambush. Nothing happened. It was several moments
before they realized that Sgouros had disappeared and the Thebans
were surrendering. The Imperial party was instantly recognized and
surrounded. They were brought to where Boniface de Montferrat leaned
on his high-pommelled saddle, grinning.
"Find
Pallavicini!" he called as a group of men in armor rode up,
pulling off their helms. One saluted.
"Montferrat!"
he shouted, brandishing a fist.
"A
nice ride, Guido!" Montferrat nudged his horse closer to
Pallavicini.
"All
dressed up and no place to go!" A loud laugh went up around
them.
Montferrat
pulled off one of his white leather gloves and held it out. "Your
fief. This." He gestured up toward the mountains, back in the
direction from which they had come. Pallavicini came closer, took
the glove and brandished it. A shout went up from his company and
they beat on their shields with their swords. Montferrat and
Pallavicini leaned out from their saddles and clasped arms and as
they released their grasp, Montferrat gave him a blow to the jaw.
"Remember!"
Pallavicini
nodded and made a gesture of salute and spat out blood. Then they
turned their attention to the Imperial party. The Emperor, in
sweat-stained vermillion silks, shook himself loose and came forward
importantly.
He
began, "Worthy lords, we have all met before," but the
Empress Euphrosyne cut him off, demanding the courtesies due her
rank. Even with the fatigue and filth of their escape, even without
her hairdresser and wardrobe attendants, she showed some of the
beauty and all of the arrogance for which she had been famous. She
claimed friendship with Montferrat's wife, the Lady Margaret.
Montferrat looked at her obliquely and sent his squire to find the
young Prince Manuel.
"You
know these people?" he said to the boy.
"He
is my father's brother," said Manuel. Euphrosyne seized the
Prince's bridle and patted his knee. She told him what a
good-looking man he was growing up to be, she reminded him of how
fond she had always been of him, she described what a sweet baby he
had been, how advanced for his age. Montferrat looked at Manuel,
amused. The boy looked steadily back at him and said, "They
blinded my father and took his throne."
Said
Montferrat, "Then rightly, they should be your prisoners."
Manuel
was quiet. Then he took a deep breath. "With your permission,
Sir?"
"No
permission necessary. They are yours. What do you want to do?"
"I
would like to send them as a gift to my mother."
Montferrat
raised an eyebrow, grinned. "Admirable! And diplomatic!"
No one looked at Alexios. Montferrat gestured and soldiers took the
Imperial family away. He called to a soldier who had a woman
travelling with him and told them both to look after Eudocia. His
captains, meanwhile, questioned the other members of the party about
Sgouros's route and intentions, but learned quickly that the cooks
and bath attendants had nothing to relate. Montferrat ordered them
released to follow their employers or go free, as they wished. Some
enterprising Greeks in the Frankish company erected the Imperial
tents, and the doxies were soon fully employed.
The
party for Salonika started without waiting to spend the night. They
passed a raucous group of naked soldiers splashing in the steaming
sulphur water of the hot springs, gargling and spitting. More were
bathing in the sea or sprawled on the sand. Some rummaged through
the abandoned luggage. A leather trunk had burst open: fragments of
glass glittered among the weeds. Three naked soldiers exclaimed over
a great red jewel, large as an apple, hooped with gold; they tossed
it back and forth among themselves. One of them saw Montferrat
watching in amusement, shouted "A Montferrat!" and tossed
him the jewel. He swung out from the saddle, scooped it up and in an
easy continued motion tossed it to his troubadour, Raimbaut.
Raimbaut pulled two apples from of his pack and began juggling them
together, the jewel and the apples.
"What
is the name of this place?" asked Montferrat, looking about him.
One
of the Greeks volunteered, "It has always been called the 'Hot
Gates'." He gestured from the
hot springs to the narrow pass.
Word
of the Hot Gates spread before Montferrat. There was no one who did
not learn of how the army of Sgouros had fled, of how pudgy Alexios
had been found hiding from the battle, his servants scattered and his
women quarreling. Of how, when they came upon him, he was sitting on
a rolled-up rug, trying frantically to unlace the red boots
embroidered with eagles which identified him as Emperor of Byzantium.
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