Afonso stood, and without a backward glance, walked from the cloister out to the courtyard, Baldwin following. As soon as Afonso opened the gate and stepped out, there was a shrill cry, and the little boy whom Baldwin had seen before, ran past, clipped Afonso’s leg, and fell headlong. For a moment, there was no noise from him, but then he began to shriek with pain and surprise.
Baldwin saw the lad sit up, his mouth a blood-filled hole where he had fallen and dragged the inner surface of his bottom lip along the gravel-strewn ground. Baldwin felt his courage quail within him, but Afonso had no hesitation. He picked up the boy, and with a piece of his tunic, began to hook out the stones and grit which had been caught in the little fellow’s mouth, not stopping until he had most of them out. Then he walked to a hut and demanded some watered wine for the boy. Only when he had seen the boy drink a little, still crying pitifully, and had found another to look after him, did he turn back to Baldwin.
‘Why did you want to talk to me?’ he demanded.
‘Because I wanted to kill you,’ Baldwin said seriously. ‘And now I am not sure.’
Chapter Twenty-Five
‘Yes, I wanted to kill him. I hated him — I still do,’ Afonso said passionately.
Baldwin felt his hackles rise. ‘An old man like that? What had he ever done to you?’
Afonso gave him a ferocious stare and his mouth opened, but then he shook his head and stared out over the town below them.
They had walked out from the castle and were sitting on a low wall a short distance away. Afonso had been quiet all the way, as though helping the boy had exhausted all his energies, but Baldwin was seething with a curious emotion. He wanted to strike the man, but something restrained him … probably Joao’s words. ‘
‘Were you told to go there to the graveyard?’ he asked.
‘No. I went there to find some peace and to pray. The
There was a strange listlessness to him still as he began his story, as though he had been on a long journey, but had at last finished it. He was home.
‘I am called Afonso de Gradil. I was the second son of Dom Alvaro, but my older brother died when I was young. My grandfather helped fight the Moors and won back our lands, and my father felt the debt to God deeply. When I was young, he renounced the world and took on the white robes. He became a Knight Templar, living here in Tomar.
‘Like my mother, I was proud of him. I honoured him for taking up the sword in God’s name. When she died, I thought that I might wish to come and join him here in the castle, but before I could do so, the Templars were arrested.’
He looked at Baldwin. ‘The accusations against those men were false. I know this. And then they began the foul process of destroying the Order — all on the words of a few lying men.’
‘I know,’ Baldwin said impatiently. ‘So why did you choose to punish another innocent Templar?’
‘Innocent? Brother Matthew was an agent of the French King sent to destroy the Templars!’ Afonso spat. ‘He was here for a while, but he invented stories about worshipping a devil’s head, about urinating on the cross … all kinds of nonsense! Then he took those stories back with him to France and gave evidence against the Templars, helping to have them destroyed. And one of the men who died was my father.’
Baldwin fell back in his seat, and he felt a hideous crawling sensation over his flesh, as though tiny demons were enjoying his discomfiture. Suddenly the remoteness of Matthew, the ‘otherness’ of his behaviour, made sense. It was why he had never been tortured; he had no need of torture. He had willingly given evidence against his own brethren. ‘No!’
‘My father heard of the courts being held in France and travelled with others to give evidence in support of the Templars. Many were listened to, but because of Matthew, my father was captured. In 1310, he was burned to death with fifty others outside Paris, in a meadow near the Convent of Saint Antoine.’
Baldwin knew that place. Saint Antoine des Champs, on the road to Meaux, was a huge fortified precinct, entirely walled and moated. The Templars had been taken there to break the spirits of those who still denied guilt, and had been led there on wagons, shouting their innocence still. Chained and manacled, they could not escape when the King’s men slipped the horses from their harnesses and set fire to the wagons, not even giving the men the dignity of a stake.
‘I knew Matthew … are you sure he was guilty?’
‘My uncle saw the records.’
‘Your uncle?’