The Outlaws of Ennor: (Knights Templar 16)

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

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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neighbouring island St Nicholas, and then this heavy rain: it seemed more alarming than a normal storm.
    For him, a storm at this moment would be disastrous. His investments were heavy, and the cargo expensive. There was no point in smuggling small amounts when a large consignment was possible, and when his ship landed in Cornwall –
if
it did so, safely – Thomas would make a lot of money.
    The Sergeant to Ranulph de Blancminster was taking advantage of the confusion created by the sudden changes in the earldom. A short while ago, the earldom had been the possession of Earl Edmund, but since his death twenty-two or -three years ago, the earldom had been given to Piers Gaveston, just before he was exiled and then captured and executed, and more recently Queen Isabella had been granted it. There were new officials with each change in control, new men to bribe and flatter, but for all that Thomas reckoned he had some years of profit-making left to him. It would take an age for the earldom to realise that he was sending a ship of smuggled goods to Cornwall once a year and meantime profiting by the customs.
    It was easy. All ships which landed in the Earl’s lands had to pay customs for their cargoes. The money collected was for the Earl, of course, but Thomas had soon realised that since his own master, Ranulph de Blancminster, couldn’t read, the only reports that would be seen by the Earl’s officers were the ones Thomas bothered to send in. Since the Earldom was in a constant state of flux, it was easy tofalsify his reports. Thus, since Gaveston’s death, the Sergeant had been creaming off large amounts of the customs, which helped subsidise his investments in smuggling. Now he was independently wealthy, and he rarely sent in any customs reports at all.
    His ship was the reason why he had been out tonight. He had been hoping to see a sign of it coming towards land, but the horizon was devoid of hope, offering only an evil darkness that foretold of the storm. This meant that his ship was either in the middle of the storm, or had already foundered. Neither option was attractive. Thomas had invested heavily in this shipment. Over fifty tuns of wine, all paid for by himself. If that lot was at the bottom of the sea, he would be severely out of pocket. It was enough to make him scowl as he marched back towards the castle.
    There was a figure walking towards him in the gloom, and he slowed his steps. Living in the castle of Ranulph de Blancminster, one took no chances, for it contained the most unpleasant group of felons, thieves and outlaws Thomas had known. If one of them was out in this weather, he could only be enormously drunk, and in that state was more likely to pull out a sword and run him through than ask him to move aside. The locals were just as likely to try to kill Thomas if they could do so with any chance of escaping afterwards. No one liked the Lord of the Manor’s Sergeant.
    In the past, Thomas had relied on the fearsome reputation of his men to keep order. The peasants were a quarrelsome group at the best of times, but now they were furious because their taxes had risen sharply. Thomas had taken to spreading word of how he had found Robert, his gather-reeve, just to ensure that people were too scared to harm the fellow. But a drunk might forget his fears, and Thomas was the Lord’s administrative officer, detested even more than the man who collected the taxes.
    The shape hesitated, almost seemed about to turn away and hide among the trees, but then came on, and Thomas felt his hand make its way towards his sword almost as though it went of its own will and without his compliance.
    ‘Thank God!’ he muttered when he recognised the man. ‘What are you doing out here, Brother Luke?’
    ‘Comingto see you!’ Luke said, and his face held an unpleasant, set smile.
    There was no sleep for Jean de Conket and his Breton crew, that terrible night.
    It had looked so easy,
nom de Dieu
! The great lumbering cog,

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