The Outlaws of Ennor: (Knights Templar 16)

The Outlaws of Ennor: (Knights Templar 16) by Michael Jecks

Book: The Outlaws of Ennor: (Knights Templar 16) by Michael Jecks Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Jecks
Tags: Fiction, General, blt, _MARKED, _rt_yes
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down as he hurried towards the castle and warmth, a huddled figure in his sodden cloak.
    He hadn’t realised how bad the weather would be. The squall had been a black slanting smudge on the horizon when he first glanced up, but it appeared to be about to pass to the north of the island. He hadn’t expected it to move over and envelop him on his way back to the castle.
    This place! It was as wet as Ireland. As wet
and
as miserable. There was no reason for him to be here, other than the obvious ones. He hated the place, and the people. They were nothing more than cattle.
    No. Not cattle. Here the peasants were more likely to grab a knife and try to avenge an insult immediately, rather than behaving like proper serfs. It was the atmosphere of this curious little place. Five islands men could live on more or less comfortably, but without much in the way of pasture or decent farming land. It was all hills. Even when the farming brought in a return, what little the peasantshad was always likely to be broken up and stolen or burned by pirates. The island of Ennor was the first place that many ships would see when they set sail for England, if they were blown from their course and approached from the west. That meant that hungry and thirsty sailors would arrive with pennies in their pockets, happy to pay any price for a good pot of ale – but it also meant that pirates and murderers from Brittany would sometimes arrive here instead of Cornwall or Devon, and denude the islands of all their stores, killing where they could. It was some years since the pirates had last come here, but that meant nothing.
    It certainly led to a particular … spirit of independence among the islanders. When they heard the warning bells from St Mary’s on Ennor, or from St Nicholas on the island named after the Priory, they would grab their tools and go to protect their land and families.
    The trouble with such independence, as Thomas knew only too well, was that it could sometimes lead to peasants getting above themselves. They grew to desire control over their own lives – and that was never a good idea. They were not powerful like him; he was free, and he had his own wealth as a result of his speculations.
    A drip ran from the back of his thick felt hat; he felt it trickle down his neck, and beneath his outer tunic to his shirt. It itched like a devil, and he had to set his teeth. Damn this place! Full of ignorant peasants and mud. That was it. Mud and peasants.
    Ennor, they called it. Imaginative arses! The old folks who could still speak the ancient tongue reckoned that it meant simply ‘The Land’. Ingenious, these peasants, he sneered to himself. Look at the ruddy place! He stopped and glared about him. The trees were rattling as the raindrops struck them, and all about him was the noise of water. Here, in the middle of the area called
Hal La Val
, the ‘low, marshy ground’ near La Val, all was soaked already. These wetlands sometimes made Thomas anxious. He had odd dreams, in which the sea rose here, in the middle of the island, and suddenly overwhelmed and consumed the population. It had happened in The Flood that all men were drowned, so the priests said, apart from the especially righteous one, whatever his name was.
    Ithad happened before here on the islands, too. Men spoke of a legend that all the islands were once one. They had been broken up by a terrible storm and now the sea was biding its time, ready to smother them entirely. Even since Thomas had arrived here, seven years ago, there had been one exceptionally bad storm during which the sea battered almost over the sands at Porth Mellon. It had been a terrifying sight. The waves pounding at the shore, white spume jetting up fifty feet and more, and then the thunderous crashing as the water hurtled down once more.
    This one could be as bad, he reckoned. The way that the sky had become suddenly black and the clouds had rushed over the sea as though to engulf Ennor and its

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